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Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders Getting Major Pay Raise

Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders Getting Major Pay Raise

Entrepreneur4 hours ago

The new season of Netflix's "America's Sweethearts" reveals a big score for members of the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders squad.
The second season of the Netflix series "America's Sweethearts," which chronicles the lives of the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders, reveals a pretty big touchdown for members of the storied squad: They will be receiving a 400% pay increase this coming season.
Per the New York Times, this marks the end of a long battle for higher wages that began in 2018 when former cheerleader Erica Wilkins sued the team for unfair pay. In her suit, which was settled out of court in 2019, she stated that cheerleaders were paid approximately $7 per hour with no overtime pay and got a flat rate of $200 per game — less than the team's mascot.
The suit read in part: "Plaintiff and other cheerleader employees of [the Dallas Cowboys], who were all female... are/were paid at a rate less than [team] mascot, 'Rowdy,' who, at all times relevant, was male."
Related: Mark Cuban and Dallas Cowboys' Micah Parsons on Success
Speaking to the New York Times, former cheerleader Jada McLean explained that the cheerleader pay scale is based on experience, and said that she made $15 an hour and $500 for each appearance in 2024. With the new increased wages, she said veteran cheerleaders could now be making more than $75 an hour.
She noted that the team does not provide health insurance, but has access to a team doctor and a physical therapist.
As many viewers of the top ten-ranked Netflix show know, cheerleading is basically a high-profile side hustle, and many of the squad members hold down full-time day jobs.
Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders squad director Kelli Finglass described the changes as "60-plus years long overdue."
Related: Her Postpartum-Inspired Side Hustle Hit $30,000 Revenue in 2 Months — Now It's Making About $500,000 a Year: 'I Truly Love Everything About It'

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Hard work and 35,000 practice shots pay off for Clarkson defenseman Haley Winn entering PWHL draft
Hard work and 35,000 practice shots pay off for Clarkson defenseman Haley Winn entering PWHL draft

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Hard work and 35,000 practice shots pay off for Clarkson defenseman Haley Winn entering PWHL draft

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Indiana Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton suffered a torn right Achilles tendon in Game 7 of NBA Finals, per multiple reports
Indiana Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton suffered a torn right Achilles tendon in Game 7 of NBA Finals, per multiple reports

CNN

time24 minutes ago

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Indiana Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton suffered a torn right Achilles tendon in Game 7 of NBA Finals, per multiple reports

Indiana Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton suffered a torn right Achilles tendon during Sunday night's Game 7 of the NBA Finals, according to multiple reports. The news – first reported by ESPN's Shams Charania – builds on what Haliburton's father told ESPN's broadcast during the game, which was that the point guard had suffered an Achilles injury. CNN has reached out to the Pacers for comment. Haliburton's injury was a brutal moment. Starting the game with three 3-pointers, Haliburton was talking trash to the Oklahoma City crowd, bouncing around like a ball of energy and looked ready to put his team on his back in the biggest game of his life. But with about five minutes to go in the first quarter, he made a quick move and planted his right foot onto the court. In slow-motion replays that were eventually shown repeatedly throughout the broadcast, the snap of his Achilles tendon was clearly visible, and he crumpled to the floor. 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The New Cannabis Power Play: B-Real, Tyson, Method Man Bet On Seeds
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Forbes

time37 minutes ago

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The New Cannabis Power Play: B-Real, Tyson, Method Man Bet On Seeds

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But with new laws rolling out globally and home grow regulations softening in key markets, the spotlight is shifting to the beginning of the supply chain: genetics. In 2022, the U.S. cannabis seed market was valued at $567.76 million, with forecasts projecting it could surpass $2 billion by 2030, according to Data Bridge Market Research. Globally, Allied Market Research projects the market could top $6.5 billion by 2031, growing at over 18% annually. What's fueling that growth? Home growers. Consumers looking for quality control. And regulatory quirks that make seeds, especially dormant ones, easier to ship across borders than the flower they eventually produce. Unlike typical cannabis product lines, which are locked behind layers of jurisdiction, seed sales often fall under hemp rules. A 2022 clarification by the U.S. DEA confirmed that cannabis seeds are federally legal as long as they contain less than 0.3% THC. That opened the gates for both domestic and international commerce. 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The Wu-Tang Clan icon has always repped cannabis culture, but 2025 marked his official entry into the genetics arena through TICAL's first international seed drop. 'Entering the genetics space is a natural evolution for TICAL,' says Bryan Zabinski, co-founder of the brand. 'It takes time to get it right.' The team spent five years working with FreeWorld Genetics to develop a lineup that reflects both quality and purpose. The debut line includes eight exclusive cultivars (Shaolin Spritzer, Sweet Morning Mimosa, 24K Gold Fangs and others) developed in collaboration with FreeWorld Genetics and distributed by Zamnesia, a leading European seed bank and cannabis marketplace. Method Man 'It all started with the home grower,' Zabinski says. 'Getting these seeds into the hands of passionate cultivators, whether in the U.S. or Europe, means the spirit of TICAL lives beyond the shelf. It grows in people's homes.' 'This drop is as much about growing with the people and bridging cultures as it is about genetics,' he adds. 'If one grower plants a TICAL seed in their backyard, basement or closet, they're growing a piece of hip-hop history.' From phenotype selection to naming, the TICAL team was involved in every detail. The goal wasn't just quality, but recognition and respect for the plant's lineage. 'Our team was very involved with the creative development of these strains,' Zabinski says. 'From the genetics used, to the profiles we like, to choosing the names as a nod of respect—recognizing the lineage and honoring the OG breeders who helped curate this cultural journey.' 'When cultural leaders engage at the genetic level, it creates a different kind of legacy.'While TICAL is rooted in Method Man's legacy, the seeds are more than merch. They're curated storytelling in living form. 'The standard is real or nothing,' Zabinski says. 'Potent. Stable. Created with care. If our name is on it, it better grow strong, smoke clean, and leave a mark.' 'When cultural leaders engage at the genetic level, it creates a different kind of legacy,' he continues. 'Not just influencing what people consume, but what they grow.' Tyson's Knockout Genetics Mike Tyson's cannabis brand, Tyson 2.0, has long focused on high-impact flower, vapes and edibles. But in 2024, the former champ entered the seed space with a rollout through Barcelona's Royal Queen Seeds. 'It's a no-brainer to collaborate with them,' Tyson told Forbes in 2024. 'If you're the best in the world at what you do, most likely, we're going to be partners.' The first wave included six strains (Gelato 44, Dynamite Diesel, NYC Sour D Auto, GOAT'lato Auto, Punch Pie and Corkscrew Auto) with more expected over a three-year partnership. Tyson 2.0 seeds are currently available in the U.S., excluding Kansas and Kentucky, Europe, Thailand, and soon, South America. 'Growing cannabis at home has long been a pastime of this community,' said Adam Wilks, CEO of Carma HoldCo, which owns Tyson 2.0. 'Our collaboration makes it easy for consumers to know the seeds they buy produce the same high-quality cannabis that Tyson himself expects.' Hispanics Have Joined The Chat Outside the U.S., artists across Latin America and Europe are also releasing branded seeds, often in collaboration with local seed banks. In fact, they have been doing it for years, well before Tyson, B-Real or Method Man. Others are stepping in, too. From Wiz Khalifa's breeding program with Compound Genetics to Berner's Cookies empire, long powered by genetics from collaborators like Seed Junky and Powerzzzup, the move to seed-level branding is gathering steam. Each drop isn't just a product; it's a piece of identity. The message may be wrapped in marketing, but what's planted is personal. What Comes Next This didn't start in a boardroom. It started where most good weed stories do: in the shadows, in closets, in quiet corners of defiance and creativity. Now, as cannabis spreads across borders and legal systems, seeds have become something else: an anchor, a message, a way to leave fingerprints on the future of the plant. Celebrities stepping into genetics aren't chasing the next product. They're choosing the long road. The patient one. The one that starts in soil, not strategy decks. Because the real flex in 2025 isn't just smoking good weed. It's growing it.

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