The Dire Wolf Company's Next Target? A Giant Flightless Bird

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<p>Jeffrey KlugerJuly 9, 2025 at 4:08 AM</p>

<p>An artist's rendering of a fully grown moa Credit - Colossal Biosciences</p>

<p>It has taken no end of imagination for Sir Peter Jackson, the Academy Award winning—and, not incidentally, knighted—director of the Lord of the Rings and Hobbit films, to produce his entire body of cinematic work. It's a quality Jackson has had since he was a small child, when he would conjure up visions of the future. "When I was a kid [I dreamed of] personal jet packs and flying cars and things," Jackson said in a recent conversation with TIME. "One of those other things I always dreamed of was to be able to bring back extinct species."</p>

<p>No-go on the jet packs and the flying cars. But the business of de-extinction? That's very much happening. In April, the Dallas-based biotech company Colossal Biosciences announced that it had successfully brought back the dire wolf, an animal whose howl had not been heard on Earth since the last member of the species vanished more than 10,000 years ago. Three young dire wolves currently live on a 2,000-acre preserve in an undisclosed location to protect them from the media and curiosity-seekers, and Colossal aims to produce more of the animals, with the ultimate goal of perhaps rewilding the species.</p>

<p>Read more: The Return of the Dire Wolf</p>

<p>The company is not stopping there. Colossal also wants to bring back the dodo, the woolly mammoth, the Tasmanian tiger—or thylacine—and more. The goal is both to increase genetic diversity and to hone genetic editing techniques to fortify existing but threatened species. Now, Colossal has announced one more species to add to its growing menagerie: the emu-like moa, a giant flightless bird that stood up to 12 ft. (3.6 m) tall, tipped the scales at more than 500 lbs (230 kg), and once ranged across New Zealand, before it was hunted to extinction by humans about 600 years ago. Like the moa, Jackson is a native New Zealander; "I am a very proud kiwi," he says. He is also a Colossal investor and acted as intermediary and facilitator bringing the company into partnership on the moa project with the Ngāi Tahu Research Center, a group that was founded in 2011 to foster intellectual development and conduct scientific studies for and by the Ngāi Tahu tribe of the Indigenous Māori people.</p>

<p>"Some of those iconic species that feature in our tribal mythology, our storytelling, are very near and dear to us," says Ngāi Tahu archaeologist Kyle Davis, who is working on the moa de-extinction project. "Participation in scientific research, species management, and conservation has been a large part of our activities."</p>

<p>"This is completely a Māori initiative," adds Ben Lamm, CEO and co-founder of Colossal. "We feel like the Colossal team is an extension of the research center and the Māori."</p>

<p>Bringing back the moa would have implications not only for the species itself but for the environment it once inhabited and could again. The bird was what is known as a cornerstone species, one whose grazing and browsing helped prune and shape the jungle flora. Moas were also prolific dispersers of seeds from the plants they ate. The loss of the species not only eliminated that forest-restoring function, but also led to the related extinction of the Haast's eagle, which relied almost exclusively on the moa as prey. Restoring the moa would not bring the eagle back but could help at least partly restore the primal New Zealand woodlands.</p>

<p>Bringing back the moa is of a piece with Colossal's other work, which seeks not only to restore vanished species, but to prevent related ones from slipping over the event horizon of extinction. Genetic engineering mastered in the dire wolf project, for example, is being used to edit greater diversity into the genome of the endangered red wolf. Knowledge gained in the effort to bring back the thylacine could similarly help preserve the related northern quoll.</p>

<p>"There are some species of birds on the South Island of New Zealand that are endangered due to the fact that they have reduced gene pools," says Paul Scofield, senior curator of natural history at Canterbury Museum, author of 20 papers on the moa genome, and one of the scientists working on the de-extinction project. "Some of the technology that Colossal is working with is very applicable to them."</p>

<p>Read more: Scientists Have Bred Woolly Mice on Their Journey to Bring Back the Mammoth</p>

<p>That technology is decidedly challenging. De-extincting the dire wolf involved sequencing ancient DNA collected from fossil specimens and then rewriting the genome of cells from a gray wolf to resemble the extinct species with the lost ancient genes. The edited nucleus was then inserted into a domestic dog ovum whose own nucleus had been removed. That ovum was allowed to develop into an embryo in the lab and then implanted into the womb of a surrogate domestic dog, which carried the dire wolf pup to term."</p>

<p>Bringing back the extinct moa is harder since the incubating will be done outside the body, inside an egg. The first step in this work once again calls for sequencing the genome of the extinct target species and once again turning to a closely related living species—either the tinamou or the emu—for help. Colossal scientists will extract primordial germ cells—or cells that develop into egg and sperm—from a tinamou or emu embryo and rewrite their genome to match key features of the moa. Those edited cells will then be introduced into another embryonic tinamou or emu inside an egg. If all goes to plan, the cells will travel to the embryo's gonads, transforming them so that the females produce eggs and the males produce sperm not of the host species but of the moa. The result will be an emu or tinamou that hatches, grows up, mates, and produces eggs containing moa chicks.</p>

<p>"We've had some pretty big successes so far," says Lamm. "We have a breeding colony of tinamous but not emus, but have access to emu eggs through the many breeders out there."</p>

<p>None of this means that the work is remotely done. Lamm concedes it could be up to ten years before a moa once again walks New Zealand—though it could come sooner. "I'd rather underpromise and overdeliver," he says. For now, Colossal and the Ngāi Tahu Research Center are still working to sequence the moa genome, and to do that they have to get their hands on more DNA samples. Museum specimens of moa remains satisfy some of that demand, but DNA degrades significantly over the centuries and what can't be harvested from private collections has to be dug up in field excavations—with a special eye to long, DNA-rich moa bones like the femur and tibia.</p>

<p>"There are a couple of really significant fossil sites, particularly one in North Canterbury, about an hour north of Christchurch," says Scofield. "So far we've sampled more than 60 individuals." If those don't prove sufficient, he adds, "we will have to go out and dig some more holes."</p>

<p>None of this comes cheap, and while Lamm does not disclose the exact funding for the moa de-extinction project, he does say it is an eight-figure sum. "I saw the new Jurassic World movie and someone in it says it costs $72 million to bring back one animal," he says. "I was like, 'That's probably accurate.'"</p>

<p>That up-front expenditure could pay off handsomely down the line, boosting ecotourism to New Zealand and benefiting Colossal's basic research, which is already showing for-profit potential. So far, Colossal has spun off two new companies: One, called Breaking, uses engineered microbes and enzymes to break down plastic waste. The other, Form Bio, provides AI and computational biology platforms for drug development.</p>

<p>But it's the intangibles—the wonder of midwifing a long-extinct species back to the global family of extant ones—that is Colossal's and the Māori's most transcendent work. "This has an excitement value to it that movies don't have," says Jackson. "When I see a living moa for the first time I'm going to be absolutely amazed beyond anything I've ever felt."</p>

<p>Write to Jeffrey Kluger at [email protected].</p>

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The Dire Wolf Company's Next Target? A Giant Flightless Bird

<p>- The Dire Wolf Company's Next Target? A Giant Flightless Bird</p> <p>Jeffrey KlugerJuly 9,...

Minnesota state Sen. John Hoffman, shot 9 times by a man posing as an officer, leaves the hospital

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<p>STEVE KARNOWSKI July 9, 2025 at 1:56 AM</p>

<p>1 / 5Minnesota-Lawmakers-ShotThis photo provided by shows Sen. John Hoffman gives a thumps up as he was moved from a hospital to a rehabilitation facility on Monday, July 7, 2025. (Courtesy of the Hoffman family via AP)</p>

<p>MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Minnesota state Sen. John Hoffman, who was shot nine times by a gunman posing as a police officer who authorities say went on to kill another lawmaker, is out of the hospital and is now recovering in a transitional care unit, his family said.</p>

<p>"John has been moved to a rehab facility, but still has a long road to recovery ahead," the family said in a statement Monday night.</p>

<p>The family released a photo showing a smiling Hoffman giving a thumbs-up while standing with a suitcase on rollers, ready to leave the hospital.</p>

<p>Hoffman and his wife, Yvette, were awakened around 2 a.m. on June 14 by a man pounding on the door of their home in the Minneapolis suburb of Champlin who said he was a police officer. According to an FBI agent's affidavit, security video showed the suspect, Vance Boelter, at the door wearing a black tactical vest and holding a flashlight. He was wearing a flesh-colored mask that covered his entire head.</p>

<p>Yvette Hoffman told investigators they opened the door, and when they spotted the mask, they realized that the man was not a police officer. He then said something like "this is a robbery." The senator then lunged at the gunman and was shot nine times. Yvette Hoffman was hit eight times before she could shut the door. Their adult daughter, Hope, was there but was not injured and called 911.</p>

<p>Boelter is accused of going to the homes of two other lawmakers in a vehicle altered to resemble a squad car, without making contact with them, before going to the home of former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, in nearby Brooklyn Park. He allegedly killed both of them and wounded their dog so seriously that he had to be euthanized.</p>

<p>The chief federal prosecutor for Minnesota has called the lawmaker's killing an assassination.</p>

<p>Yvette Hoffman was released from the hospital a few days after the attacks. Former President Joe Biden visited the senator in the hospital when he was in town for the Hortmans' funeral.</p>

<p>Boelter, who remains jailed without bail, is charged in federal and state court with murder and attempted murder. At a hearing Thursday, Boelter said he was "looking forward to the facts about the 14th coming out."</p>

<p>Prosecutors have declined to speculate on a motive. Friends have described him as an evangelical Christian with politically conservative views.</p>

<p>It will be up to Attorney General Pam Bondi to decide whether to seek the federal death penalty. Minnesota abolished its state death penalty in 1911.</p>

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Minnesota state Sen. John Hoffman, shot 9 times by a man posing as an officer, leaves the hospital

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Trump says he will impose 50% tariff on copper imports

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<p>Kevin Breuninger, CNBCJuly 9, 2025 at 4:12 AM</p>

<p>Coils at a copper tube factory in Alabama in 2015. (Michael S. Williamson / The Washington Post via Getty Images file)</p>

<p>President Donald Trump said he will impose a 50% tariff on copper imports on Tuesday, and suggested more steep sector-specific duties are on the way.</p>

<p>"Today, we're doing copper," Trump said during a Cabinet meeting at the White House. "I believe the tariff on copper, we're going to make it 50%." He did not say specifically when that tariff would take effect.</p>

<p>Trump also said he would soon announce tariffs "at a very, very high rate, like 200%," on pharmaceutical imports.</p>

<p>Pharmaceutical companies could have up to a year and a half to start producing their products in the U.S. before those new tariffs take effect, Trump added.</p>

<p>Copper prices jumped to a record high after Trump's abrupt announcement, with the September futures contract surging 10.5% to $5.8955 per pound.</p>

<p>Shares of copper miner Freeport-McMoRan, meanwhile, rose 5% as investors expect domestic producers to benefit from the tariff.</p>

<p>Copper is the third-most-consumed metal, behind iron and aluminum. The U.S. imports nearly half of the copper it uses, most of which comes from Chile, according to data from the U.S. Geological Survey.</p>

<p>A man works with copper at El Teniente mine, reportedly the world's largest underground copper mine, in Machali, Chile, in April. (Raul Bravo / AFP - Getty Images)</p>

<p>Trump in late February ordered a probe into potential new tariffs on copper imports on national security grounds.</p>

<p>Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said on CNBC's "Power Lunch" later Tuesday that that investigation was finished.</p>

<p>"The idea is to bring copper home, bring copper production home," Lutnick said. He noted that Trump's move will bring copper tariffs in line with U.S. duties on imports of steel and aluminum, which Trump doubled to 50% in early June.</p>

<p>Lutnick said he expected Trump to soon sign a proclamation that would put the copper tariff in place by the end of July.</p>

<p>The new trade announcements on copper and pharmaceuticals are separate from the "reciprocal" tariffs that Trump unveiled in early April, when he imposed a baseline 10% duty on imports from nearly all other countries, as well as much higher rates on dozens of individual nations.</p>

<p>Trump has repeatedly delayed the higher reciprocal tariffs from taking effect. But on Monday, he sent out a spate of letters dictating new tariff rates on imports from 14 countries, including Japan, South Korea and Thailand.</p>

<p>Those individualized blanket tariff rates, which ranged from 25% to 40%, are set to take effect Aug. 1.</p>

<p>— CNBC's Spencer Kimball contributed to this report.</p>

<p>More from CNBC: -</p>

<p>CNBC's Most Valuable Sports Empires 2025: Here's how the top 20 empires in the world stack up</p>

<p>Former UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak returns to Goldman Sachs</p>

<p>Tech founders call on Sequoia Capital to denounce VC Shaun Maguire's Mamdani comments</p>

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Trump says he will impose 50% tariff on copper imports

<p>- Trump says he will impose 50% tariff on copper imports</p> <p>Kevin Breuninger, CNBCJuly 9, 2...

EU migration delegation ordered deported from eastern Libya on alleged entry violations

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<p>July 9, 2025 at 4:21 AM</p>

<p>This is a locator map for Libya with its capital, Tripoli. (AP Photo)</p>

<p>CAIRO (AP) — Authorities in eastern Libya refused entry to three European ministers and the EU commissioner for migration on alleged entry violations, apparently after they stopped first in the rival Libyan capital of Tripoli in the west.</p>

<p>A statement from the prime minister of the eastern part of Libya, Osama Hammad, said the interior ministers of Italy, Greece, Malta and the EU migration commissioner, Magnus Brunner, were "persona non-grata" after they were denied entry shortly after their arrival in Benghazi. It said the ministers had entered illegally and had not followed Libyan diplomatic conventions.</p>

<p>The ministers were in "flagrant contravention of established diplomatic norms and international conventions, and through actions that demonstrably disregard Libyan national sovereignty, as well as in violation of Libyan domestic laws," the statement said. The delegations "are urged to engage with the Libyan Government in accordance with the principle of reciprocity, as enshrined in international agreements, treaties, and diplomatic custom," it added.</p>

<p>In addition to Brunner, the delegation included Greek Migration and Asylum Minister Thanos Plevris, Italian Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi and Maltese Home Affairs Minister Byron Camilleri.</p>

<p>The delegation was visiting Libya seeking tougher migration measures against boats carrying migrants from Libya. The EU has spent years and millions of euros trying to stem the people smuggling operations that have thrived in Libya's lawlessness and brought hundreds of thousands of desperate people to European shores.</p>

<p>Libya plunged into chaos after a NATO-backed uprising toppled and killed longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi in 2011. In the chaos that followed, the country split, with rival administrations in the east and west backed by rogue militias and foreign governments. Currently, Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah heads the internationally recognized government in the capital of Tripoli in the west while Hammad heads the administration in the east, where the powerful military commander Khalifa Hifter continues to also hold sway.</p>

<p>The EU delegation had met first with Dbeibah, and the deportation incident was apparently caused because the European delegation stopped first in Tripoli, said Greek Deputy Prime Minister Kostis Hadzidakis. Usually foreigners including diplomats coordinate with both administrations if they want to visit western and eastern Libya.</p>

<p>Speaking to state-run ERT television in Greece, Hadzidakis said the Tripoli meeting went ahead as planned.</p>

<p>"However, in Benghazi —perhaps because the visit to Tripoli came first — the Benghazi government decided it would not receive the European Commissioner and the three ministers. I don't think that was a constructive move, especially given that the European Union is genuinely trying to find a solution to this very unusual situation — just as it has tried with our other southern and eastern neighbors — on a complex issue like migration."</p>

<p>For southern and eastern Libya, which are under the control of Hifter's forces, visitors have to coordinate and get permits from the east-based government, which is allied with Hifter. It's not clear if such permits were sought or granted.</p>

<p>In Italy, opposition lawmakers who have criticized the hard-line stance against migration of the government of Premier Giorgia Meloni were quick to point out the irony that her migration minister was deported from a country on alleged immigration violations.</p>

<p>"Piantedosi was turned back from Libya because he was accused of illegal entry," Democratic Party lawmaker Matteo Orfini wrote on Facebook. "I was thinking of an ironic comment but I'd say that's good as is."</p>

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EU migration delegation ordered deported from eastern Libya on alleged entry violations

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Trump unloads on Putin after promising more military aid to Ukraine

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<p>Katherine DoyleJuly 9, 2025 at 4:16 AM</p>

<p>President Donald Trump expressed mounting frustration with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday, promising during a lively cabinet meeting to boost U.S. military aid to Ukraine.</p>

<p>"We get a lot of bull--- thrown at us by Putin, if you want to know the truth," Trump told reporters, who attended a nearly two-hour stretch of the meeting. "He's very nice all the time, but it turns out to be meaningless."</p>

<p>The comments echoed his remarks from Monday, when he described himself as "not happy" and "disappointed" with Putin's actions. The last known conversation between the two leaders was on July 3.</p>

<p>When asked about a reported pause for some weapons shipments to Ukraine, Trump seemed to dismiss the idea, saying he wanted to equip "brave" Ukrainians with defensive arms. Putin "is not treating human beings right," he said. "He's killing too many people, so we're sending some defensive weapons to Ukraine, and I've approved that."</p>

<p>At last month's NATO summit at The Hague, Trump suggested the U.S. was exploring options to send Patriot air defense missiles to Ukraine. "They do want to have the anti-missile missiles," Trump said of Kyiv at the time. "As they call them, the Patriots, and we're going to see if we can make some available."</p>

<p>However, a subsequent shipment that included dozens of Patriot interceptors capable of defending against incoming Russian missiles was paused over concerns about low U.S. stockpiles, according to two defense officials, two congressional officials and two sources with knowledge of the decision. When pressed on who ordered the pause, Trump responded sharply: "I don't know, why don't you tell me?"</p>

<p>Trump also said on Tuesday that he was closely eyeing a sanctions bill targeting Russia, saying that he might support it.</p>

<p>U.S. officials had been attempting to broker a peace deal to end the war in Ukraine, but negotiations have stalled in recent weeks. Trump had promised to resolve the conflict on the first day of his second term, though he has since claimed he was joking or exaggerating.</p>

<p>The cabinet meeting, Trump's sixth since taking office, covered a broad range of topics, including the recent Texas floods, tariff negotiations, U.S. strikes on Iran, Hunter Biden's laptop and the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. He also launched into an extended screed about wind farms and a lengthy discussion about the artwork in the room.</p>

<p>Trump also discussed a recent meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whom he defended against his ongoing criminal trial. The two plan to meet again to focus on the Gaza conflict.</p>

<p>"He's coming over later and we're going to be talking about, I would say, almost exclusively, Gaza," Trump said. "It's a tragedy. And he wants to get it solved, and I want to get it solved, and I think the other side wants to get it solved."</p>

<p>The meeting highlighted the absence of Elon Musk, once a key adviser who drove an initiative to streamline government efficiency. Musk, who spent a quarter-billion dollars to help elect Trump in 2024, according to campaign finance reports, has since parted ways with the administration and threatened to launch a third political party, a move that could challenge Republican prospects.</p>

<p>Trump appeared unfazed, responding, "I think it'll help us."</p>

<p>"It'll probably— third parties have always been good for me, I don't know about Republicans, but for me," the president added.</p>

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Trump unloads on Putin after promising more military aid to Ukraine

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'America's Next Top Model' contestant says show 'was a cult' with strict rules, threats

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<p>Clare Mulroy, USA TODAY July 8, 2025 at 11:27 PM</p>

<p>One "America's Next Top Model" alum is taking the reality TV show's famous slogan to memoir, revealing what she says it was really like behind the smize.</p>

<p>Sarah Hartshorne, the only plus-size model in ANTM Cycle 9, is sharing her story in "You Wanna Be On Top," out now from Penguin Random House. Part memoir and part analysis, Hartshorne interviews fellow contestants and production crews to deep dive into what she calls an "iconic but deeply flawed" show.</p>

<p>In this excerpt provided to USA TODAY, Hartshorne recalls her first day in what she deems the "cult" of Tyra Banks' ANTM.</p>

<p>Exclusive excerpt from 'You Wanna Be on Top?' by Sarah Hartshorne</p>

<p>Sarah Hartshorne is a model and the author of "You Wanna Be On Top?: A Memoir of Makeovers, Manipulation, and Not Becoming America's Next Top Model."</p>

<p>Before boarding the cruise ship SS Adventure, the contract the show had sent me seemed huge. There were hundreds of pages of legalese that I barely understood. But by the time we docked in Saint Martin, it felt like an albatross.</p>

<p>A few days in, the shine had worn off a little, and the show started to feel like a cult, from the undisclosed filming locations in international waters to not being allowed to speak for days at a time. The language that they hammered into us over and over again urged us to be grateful for this opportunity. And the reality is ... it was a cult. I got suckered into a cult.</p>

<p>Negotiating never even occurred to me. But if it had, all the lawyers I interviewed for this book agreed: It's not an option. Either you sign or you don't. You're in or you're out. "You are not going to get control over how you are represented" under any circumstances, said one lawyer. And yet we all signed it. I didn't care how I was represented as long as I was represented on TV.</p>

<p>Early in the morning on our first full day aboard the cruise ship, we were led into some kind of conference room and told to wait for five minutes, which turned into hours. The room was hotel fancy: a lot of shiny fake wood paneling and inoffensive carpeting. It was a stark visual contrast to our tropical cruise wear: jean shorts, espadrilles, and spaghetti strap tank tops. We shivered in the harsh air-conditioning. There weren't enough chairs, so some of us sat on the ground. We started upright and alert, trying to blend into the professional-looking background, but as the minutes dragged on, we slowly drooped and slouched toward the ground like neglected houseplants. Finally, a team of mostly men and a few women barged through the door. Their suits and intense businesslike energy sliced through the air. They were like vaguely corporate alien invaders to our lush, listless planet.</p>

<p>They introduced themselves, but I couldn't pick any of them out of a lineup. They were just so … grown up, and I felt like a child sitting crisscross applesauce on the ground and staring up at them, patiently and nervously waiting. There were lawyers from the production company and executive producers. They were the top of the production pecking order; everyone else in the crew deferred to them.</p>

<p>They began a group presentation that was clearly well rehearsed. One would speak and then seamlessly cede the floor to another. After all, we were Cycle 9. They'd had eight other audiences to hone these performances with and really find the best way to sell it. It felt repetitive to the point of tedium to me, but they never wavered.</p>

<p>"America's Next Top Model is sitting inside this room," they said. "Really think about that. Look around. This is your competition. You are the select few. Does anyone know how many girls tried out for this show?"</p>

<p>We all shook our heads. They all smiled.</p>

<p>"A lot. Thousands upon thousands. Ten thousand tried out in Boston alone."</p>

<p>I looked at the few other girls whom I recognized from the Boston tryouts with wide eyes.</p>

<p>"And it wasn't just the auditions. Thousands upon thousands sent in audition tapes from all over the country. Every single state. We had casting scouts all over looking for candidates. And you guys are the ones who made it. You're here. And it's not just your looks. You all know that being a top model is more than that. It's who you are. And one of you … is America's Next Top Model. This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity."</p>

<p>They kept going. And going. I was uncomfortable with this level of flattery. In "Cultish: The Language of Fanaticism," Amanda Montell describes this tactic used by cult leaders: "When you convince someone that they're above everyone else, it helps you both distance them from outsiders and also abuse them, because you can paint anything from physical assault to unpaid labor to verbal attacks as 'special treatment' reserved only for them."</p>

<p>"You Wanna Be On Top?" by Sarah Hartshorne</p>

<p>On the one hand, I desperately wanted to feel special. I was one of the select few! On the other hand, this whole process had felt so random, it had never once felt like I was actually doing anything particularly special.</p>

<p>"This experience can only be what you make of it," they said, for the first time of many.</p>

<p>Suddenly their tones and demeanor shifted. They had been serious and kind, and now there was something else in the air. One of them stepped out from the line they'd been in.</p>

<p>"That information is worth more than you know. If you do anything to put that information at risk, we will sue you for five million dollars." He paused for effect. The NDA section of the contract carried, famously, a fine of five million dollars if violated, as Janice Dickinson once bemoaned in a red-carpet interview.</p>

<p>A gorgeous, long-limbed bartender from Boston with a lazy eye and an accent so thick I wanted to cut into it like it was a rib eye broke the silence. "Yeah, but, like … I don't have five million dollahs."</p>

<p>"We know you don't. We know all about all of your financial information. None of you have five million dollars. None of your families have five million dollars either."</p>

<p>We looked around at one another as we all realized that, yes, of course, that was true. We'd given them detailed accounts of our personal financial information as well as our families' before we'd even received our plane tickets.</p>

<p>"What you need to understand is we won't just sue you. We'll sue your entire family. And I don't just mean your parents. We'll sue your kids..."</p>

<p>Boston opened her mouth to say something, presumably that she didn't have any kids, that none of us did.</p>

<p>"... by which I mean your future kids. We'll sue your children, we'll sue your children's children, we'll sue your children's children's children."</p>

<p>I swallowed the lump in my throat. How would that even work? I wondered.</p>

<p>"Sorry, but ... how would that even work?" a girl asked, and I was so relieved.</p>

<p>"Great question," said the producer sincerely. "Here's how it would work: we would sue you and win. And the judge will decide how much we get to dock your pay for the rest of your life. For the rest of your life, every dollar you earn, we will get a cut. We will garnishee your wages for the rest of your life. And after you die, we'll get a percentage of every dollar your children earn, and their children, and on and on, until we get five million dollars plus interest. If you say anything to anyone, you will be paying us back long after you are dead. You will never achieve any level of success without us taking a huge chunk of it. Buying a house, putting your kids through college, finishing college yourself – all of that will be impossible."</p>

<p>Kids and a house felt impossibly out of reach already. And the meeting just kept going: hours of them hammering the same point over and over. I desperately wanted them to know that I would be one of the "good ones" who would do what she was told and wouldn't cause them any trouble. But I knew that there was no way to make them see that. There was no way to make them see me at all. They weren't performing for us; they were performing for the contract and for the money that it guaranteed them. They were performing for the promise of good TV. And unlike my hypothetical kids and house, it wasn't out of reach. They knew what they wanted and exactly how to get it.</p>

<p>"There's a million girls that would happily take your place," they kept saying. "And we have their phone numbers. They're ready and willing to meet us on the next island."</p>

<p>That night at dinner, I sat pushing the food around on my plate, still stunned into silence. As a kid, I was painfully shy. Every report card I brought home from elementary school said that I was smart and capable but never spoke up in class. I had one friend, which I thought was more than enough. After years of badgering me to invite people to my birthday parties, my mom finally asked me what I really wanted to do. I told her I wanted to spend the night at a hotel. So she got us a room at the local Motel 6 for the night. I swam in the pool for hours; we ate cake in bed and watched all the late-night talk shows. I loved seeing the comedians do stand-up. It was my favorite birthday ever.</p>

<p>In fifth grade, I discovered that I could do more than just watch comedy on late-night shows: I could use it to overcome my crippling social anxiety. I slowly came out of my shell. Making people laugh was the only way I really knew how to connect with people, but after the lecture that day, I didn't feel very funny. So I reverted to my childhood self: Shy. Silent.</p>

<p>That's why Ebony and I were perfect cruise ship roommates: we were both introverts who could fake it when we had to. When I met Ebony, my first thought was: She's going to win. In a group of the most beautiful girls I'd ever seen, she stood out head and shoulders above the rest. Literally: she was over six feet tall and wore her hair in a big, messy bun on top of her head that made her even taller. When we first got to our room, she seemed shy, sweet, guarded, and deeply insecure. Then we went to dinner, and I watched her become a different person for the camera.</p>

<p>"I didn't come here to make friends," she said in the van. "I'll start remembering y'all's names when we make it to the house."</p>

<p>But in our room, she was different.</p>

<p>"I want to be smart about this. I'm trying to be, like, the b---- or whatever, but it's harder than I thought," she told me.</p>

<p>Oftentimes, we wouldn't talk much in the room: we both needed quiet and space (at least as much quiet and space as possible in a forty-eight-square-foot room). That night, we said even less than usual.</p>

<p>"That was ... pretty crazy," I said.</p>

<p>"Dinner?" she asked.</p>

<p>"No, the talk about the contract," I answered.</p>

<p>"(Expletive), yeah! That was crazy! I didn't know how to act at dinner after all that."</p>

<p>"Oh my god, me too!" I said, relieved again. "I didn't even know how to be a normal person!"</p>

<p>We agreed that it was wild and way too long and we were glad it was over. None of us were going to be forgetting any of that anytime soon—surely that was the end of it.</p>

<p>The Very Scary Producers and Lawyers gave us the Talk AGAIN in which we were threatened with defamation, disembowelment, and death if we breathed a peep of anything to anyone. They are, let me say, not at all (expletive) around, and I (expletive) GET IT, I wrote in my journal several long, repetitive days later.</p>

<p>Over and over, we heard that "America's Next Top Model is in this room," "this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity," "this experience is only what you make of it," and "we will garnishee your wages for the rest of your life." These phrases started rattling around in my mind, like a song that gets stuck in your head.</p>

<p>Of course, it wasn't just our contracts that we were dealing with; there was also the deal between the cruise line and the network, and, on that front, there was some tension. Specifically, between the show and the passengers, who hated us. One day, we were divided into three groups and led to a part of the ship we'd never been to before. One group was taken to the climbing wall, one to the skating rink, and my group was brought to the hot tub. A production assistant arranged us around the hot tub, some girls sitting with just their feet in the water, and a few of us, including me, sitting in the water. I was in the middle, submerged almost to my neck.</p>

<p>"I hope we can go in the pool after this," I said, slowly cooking in the water.</p>

<p>"No talking yet," said one of the cameramen.</p>

<p>"Sorry," I said. "Oh, and sorry for saying sorry. (Expletive)."</p>

<p>Eventually, they got the angles and lighting right and called action, and we were allowed to talk. Allowed to talk and contractually obligated to look like we were having the time of our lives.</p>

<p>From the book "You Wanna Be On Top?: A Memoir of Makeovers, Manipulation, and Not Becoming America's Next Top Model" by Sarah Hartshorne. Copyright © 2025 by Sarah Hartshorne. Published in the United States by Crown, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC.</p>

<p>This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: 'America's Next Top Model' was 'a cult,' former contestant says</p>

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'America's Next Top Model' contestant says show 'was a cult' with strict rules, threats

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