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Cracker Barrel’s marketing fiasco shows investors are making woke a massive risk factor

If the Cracker Barrel market puke has anything to teach Wall Street, it’s that investors who are deciding where to put their money must add corporate “wokeness” to their menu of risks to digest.
In fact, making “woke” an investing risk factor — in some cases as important as the direction of interest rates and inflation — seems so obvious that I hesitated to write this column. Recall Bud Light’s Dylan Mulvaney fiasco, or Target CEO Brian Cornell’s recent exit following his ill-fated obsession with DEI.
Wokeness is generally defined as subjecting the culture and business to left-wing dogma involving race, sex and viewing all things Americana as anathema. It simply doesn’t sell to mass audiences.
And yet companies keep going there. Corporate managers, it turns out, are a politically and socially tone-deaf bunch. They are lousy at reading the current mood of the country and its hatred of progressive indoctrination — whether in the classroom or when they simply want to enjoy a beer. Their advisers may be even worse.
That’s why shareholders must demand — whether it’s at annual meetings, on earnings calls or with testy phone calls to Investor Relations — that the C-suite extricate wokeness from corporate decision-making.
While it’s not mainstream, there are some savvy Wall Street types adding “woke risk” to their models, just not using that exact terminology. Bob Sloan, founder of the data analytics firm S3 Partners (and my co-host on the “Risk and Return” podcast), is among them. For weeks he has been watching Cracker Barrel’s stock for an unconventional catalyst that could send it higher or lower.
The data he came across suggested the stock was ripe for something big even if big isn’t something you might associate with Cracker Barrel. It’s a relatively sleepy restaurant chain that has been around for decades.
It features country-style food at highway rest stops mainly in middle America. It’s known for its yellow signage and its image of “Uncle Herschel,” an old white guy clad in overalls and seated next to the eponymous barrel.
It has a smallish market cap; around $1.2 billion. It’s profitable though it faces some headwinds like all mature businesses.
What caught Sloan’s eye a few weeks ago is what S3 specializes in: Looking at investor sentiment around a stock. That is, the degree to which investors believed in the stock and were “active” longs (they might buy more under the right conditions), and those who were bearish, so-called active shorts betting against it and willing to double down on their bets.
Sloan noticed the active long and short sentiment was pretty evenly split. “That means all it takes is some event to move shares significantly in either direction,” he tells me.
Cracker Barrel shares, trading under the symbol of CBRL on the Nasdaq, were placed on Sloan’s “battleground stock list,” meaning they were poised for a move in either direction depending on the catalyst.
That catalyst, of course, was a new logo with what was perceived as woke overtones. Gone was Uncle Herschel and his barrel. Remaining was the company name against its standard yellow background.
The internet erupted. The stock on Thursday lost nearly $100 million in market value.
Wait to rebrand
“Moral of this story is if you’re going to do a rebranding of this type with long and short sentiment so evenly split, you should wait,” Sloan said.
But as outlined in my book “Go Woke Go Broke; The Inside Story of the Radicalization of Corporate America,” waiting is often not an option. For all the customer backlash against woke image-making, it remains a staple in marketing departments looking to appeal to new audiences including those that don’t exist.
That goes double for the image-making clique on Madison Avenue. They haven’t changed nor will they, which is something Wall Street must now consider.
In a statement to The Post, Cracker Barrel said Uncle Herschel hasn’t been totally canceled, and that customers can find him on the chains’ menus. “Our values haven’t changed, and the heart and soul of Cracker Barrel haven’t changed,” it added.
But the damage is done from an investor standpoint, with a stock most people never heard of becoming a lightning rod in the cultural wars and feeling the pain. Sloan notes that American Eagle faced similar market dynamics as Cracker Barrel, but the company didn’t embrace a woke rebranding.
Instead, the jeans retailer went non-woke; it re-branded with an all-American hottie Sydney Sweeney ad. That pissed off the cultural left that bizarrely attempted to frame it as a play on white nationalism. It delighted the rest of us — consumers and stockholders alike — because anti-woke messaging sells. American Eagle shares are up around 20% in the month since the ad first appeared.
My advice to Wall Street, stock analysts and investors is to keep a Post-it note on your computer with this simple message: “Go Woke, Go Broke.” Keep reminding yourself of that — and start reminding corporate managers.
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Billionaire family offices bet on drones, nuclear energy in August

Key Points
- Billionaire family offices inked high-profile investments in an otherwise slow month for deal-making, according to Fintrx.
- Four billionaires’ private investment firms joined an $863 million fundraise for a nuclear fusion startup.
- Peter Thiel, a longtime investor in defense tech, backed a German drone maker as other high-net-worth investors flock to the sector.
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Philips Hue launch turns bulbs into motion sensors, doorbell, more

We’ve known for some time that there was major news on the way from Philips Hue, and the company has now announced all of the details.
One of the headline features is a new Bridge Pro which turns your existing smart bulbs into motion sensors. Bulbs also get more affordable, light strips get brighter, and there’s support for Matter-over-Thread. Finally, the smart doorbell leaked earlier in the year is now official …
Plans to turn existing Philips Hue light bulbs into motion sensors were leaked at the beginning of this year. We also discovered there was a smart doorbell on the way through an update to the Hue app.
Turning existing Hue bulbs into motion sensors
Although you won’t need to update any of your bulbs to get this new functionality, you will need to swap out your existing Hue Bridge for the new Bridge Pro.
This is a $90 purchase, but there are some other new features to help ease the pain. The Verge reports that It can support three times as many devices and store over 500 lighting scenes to provide faster response times.
[It adds] features like lighting scenes, dynamic effects, schedules, and out-of-home control. Sporting a new black look, it has a faster processor, more memory, and increased capacity. Designed to appeal to Hue super-users, it can connect 150 lights and 50 accessories (a soft limit) […]
Additionally, the Pro can store over 500 custom lighting scenes and provide faster response times […] The Pro finally brings Wi-Fi (2.4GHz) to a Hue bridge, so it doesn’t have to sit next to your router.
If your head aches at the thought of reconfiguring all your Hue devices to swap bridges, the company says that a migration tool will transfer all of the settings for you. If you have multiple bridges, then you’ll want to hold fire for a while as there will be support for migrating these to a single Bridge Pro by the end of the year.
Hue Secure smart doorbell
The new Hue Secure Doorbell is intended to compete with Ring and Nest by offering a higher resolution 2K fisheye camera. Engadget reports that it also includes 24-hour video history without a subscription.
It of course pairs with Hue lights so that you can set it to automatically turn on outdoor lights as somebody approaches the front door, as well as the option to trigger interior lights to supplement the chime with visual alerts.
It will go on sale in the US, Europe and the UK next month for $170. However, Apple Home support won’t be available at launch, the company instead promising that this will arrive at an unspecified later date.
Cheaper Hue lights
A new range of Hue Essential lights are being launched with prices starting at just $20 each when purchased as a pack of four. Hue Blog has the details.
With the new Hue Essential series, Philips Hue will in future offer simple light bulbs with E27 and GU10 sockets at an affordable price. The Essential series is based on the same software and connectivity as the main Philips Hue product range, but with a smaller white spectrum, slightly less brightness, and less deep dimming.
But the prices are impressive. The colored bulbs cost $24.99 each, and multi-packs are even cheaper. Four bulbs in a pack cost only $59.99. The new Hue Essential bulbs are available now.
The Hue Essential portfolio will be expanded in December 2025 with two new light strips, each 5 or 10 meters long: the Hue Essential Lightstrip (starting at $59.99) and the Hue Essential Flex Lightstrip (starting at $99.99). The latter appears to be an adaptation of the previous Hue Ambiance Gradient Lightstrip.
Five new light strips
There will also be five new light strips, with the first of these available from next month. These have closer LED spacing to provide brighter and more uniform lighting. The company also promises that they are more flexible, making it easier to turn corners and flow curves.
- Hue OmniGlow Lightstrip (3/5/10 meters) from $139.99 – launching in November 2025 (EU&US)
- Hue Flux Gradient Lightstrip (3/4/5/6/10 meters) from $69.99 – launching in October 2025 (EU) and March 2026 (US)
- Hue Flux Ultra Bright Gradient Lightstrip (3/5/10 meters) starting at $99.99 – launching in October 2025 (EU)
- Hue Flux Gradient Outdoor Lightstrip (5/6/10 meters) starting at $149.99 – launching in October 2025 (EU) and March 2026 (US)
- Hue Neon Gradient Outdoor Lightstrip (3/5/10 meters) starting at $139.99 – launching in October 2025 (EU) and March 2026 (US)
Finally, there will be new outdoor Festavia Globe string lights.
- Hue Festavia Globe with outdoor power supply in 7, 14, and 21 meters starting at $159.99
- Hue Festavia Globe without power supply in 7, 14, and 21 meters starting at $129.99
- 2-pack replacement bulbs for $19.99
- The 7-meter short versions will be available in September, and the longer string lights in December 2025
Check out the video below for a look at all the new products.
Highlighted accessories
Image: 9to5Mac collage with images from Philips and Codioful on Unsplash
FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.
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Houston player wins $2M in Powerball drawing – KHOU

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