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Christopher Rodriguez-Marquette joins Reacher season 4, replacing Jay Baruchel
Christopher Rodriguez-Marquette joins Reacher season 4, replacing Jay Baruchel

Time of India

time14 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

Christopher Rodriguez-Marquette joins Reacher season 4, replacing Jay Baruchel

Reacher season 4 has had a significant casting switch-up, with Christopher Rodriguez-Marquette replacing Jay Baruchel in the role of Jacob Merrick, a small town policeman. This recasting was done on short notice, as Jay Baruchel ended up leaving Reacher only a couple of weeks after joining, having to walk away from the series to attend to a personal matter. Christopher Rodriguez-Marquette's casting ended up happening at a remarkably quick pace, with him being hired the same day the role's breakdown was sent out. He was subsequently flown to the set in a matter of days. Reacher is Amazon Prime's adaptation of Lee Child's Jack Reacher novels that first premiered on February 4, 2022. Before the Amazon Prime series, the Jack Reacher novels had been adapted into a duology starring Tom Cruise. Barry's Christopher Rodriguez-Marquette has joined Reacher season 4 Christopher Rodriguez-Marquette is known for his role as Chris Lucado in Barry, who's a former Marine logistics officer and one of the few friends Barry Berkman has. He began his career as a child actor, appearing on 1991's Barney and the Backyard gang. Since then, Chris Marquette has starred in a number of films and shows from a variety of genres, including comedies such as 2009's Fanboys where he co-starred with Jay Baruchel. More recently, Chris Marquette has starred in the Gala Film original series RZR alongside David Bianchi, Mena Suvari, Danny Trejo and Mimi Davila. Amazon Prime's Reacher adapts Lee Child's long-running series Prime Video's Reacher series is an adaptation of Lee Child's long-running novel series that debuted with 1997's The Killing Floor. By the time of the Reacher series debut, there had already been 27 novels published. As of writing, there have been a total of 29 novels released. The Jack Reacher series follows the titular character, who's a United States military veteran, as he travels across the country and makes use of his talents as a private investigator and troubleshooter. The first season of the Amazon Prime series adapted The Killing Floor, the first novel that was published. The upcoming fourth season is set to adapt 2009's Gone Tomorrow, the thirteenth novel in the series.

47 Shocking Secrets People Had Casually Revealed To Them
47 Shocking Secrets People Had Casually Revealed To Them

Buzz Feed

time19 hours ago

  • Buzz Feed

47 Shocking Secrets People Had Casually Revealed To Them

Recently, Reddit user MainDifficult2641 asked, "What's the most fucked-up thing someone has confessed to you in confidence?" and some of these answers were seriously disturbing. Here's what people had to say. "I worked for a medium-sized company, and one wintery Saturday morning, the boss came in with his coffee cup and sat next to my drafting table. It was only him and me in this big old building. He told me he had been a young Marine in WWII and was part of a two-person bazooka team. They got caught in a skirmish where they didn't have a clear line of fire, but they loaded and fired anyway. As he fired, one of his buddies raised his head, and he accidentally killed him at close range. This happened 33 years before, and as a young man, I was, of course, speechless." "Years ago, when I was working as a server, my co-worker's boyfriend died in what was ruled a self-inflicted gunshot wound. She was there and witnessed this happen. She and I were particularly close. About a week after his death, she pulled me aside after work and strongly insinuated that she had pulled the trigger. She then proceeded to show me the blood that was still under her fingernails. I didn't feel there was much I could do about the situation. I had never considered that she could be dangerous like that. She stopped showing up to work shortly thereafter and was fired (big relief)." "I had a friend once tell me he hated his father. One day, his father was having a heart attack while struggling to get some aspirin open. My friend happened upon him as his dad fell over. He grasped his heart, looking up at his son. My friend sat down in the chair near him and watched him. He said his dad struggled a bit and then just stopped moving. He waited a few minutes, got up, and then called his mother. Saying, 'I just came home, and I found Dad on the ground.' His mother was in panic and told him to call an ambulance and to check his breathing to help him. The mother called an ambulance, and they showed up a while later, but the dad was dead." "My dad told me that he gave the neighbor's daughter 50 bucks and she blew him. She is my age and was 22 at the time, and he was 42. She was addicted and needed money for her methadone prescriptions." "I was in my early 20s, sitting at a bus station in Portland, Oregon, when a woman next to me, out of nowhere, mid-cigarette, turned and asked, 'Do you know what brains smell like?' I just about shit my pants. I was too young and too polite to get up and walk away, so I stayed frozen while she calmly told me how she got beaten by her boyfriend and apparently took a pipe to his head, spilling 'his brains all over the floor.' Then she looked surprised and said, 'Don't tell anybody.' Yeah… that one's etched in my brain forever." "I ended up with my perfect partner, she was the one, or so I thought at the time. One night, after some drinks, she confessed to me that she had a mutual sexual relationship with her brother, and on the night he killed himself, he refused her; she emotionally battered him into feeling guilty over the whole thing. She said that I reminded her of him. We broke up shortly after." "My ex used to spike his friend's drinks with Ecstasy, claiming, 'I just want them to be happy and have fun.'" "My grandmother confessed to having killed a man who tried to SA her when she was a teenager. She pushed him back, and he fell badly." "I used to have a friend, 'Lyra', who told me the messed-up reason why she got breast implants. She had a crush on her husband's ex-girlfriend's fiancé (I know, complicated), whom she worked with. She had been flirting with him and texting him a lot to get close to him. He confided in her that his fiancé was getting a double mastectomy because she had breast cancer. She went out and got implants in order to 'give him what his fiancé couldn't': breasts. As soon as she healed, she was sending nude photos, and when his fiancé was out of town, she took over wine, got him drunk, and tried to get pregnant with him that night (she already has two baby traps from high school)." "There was a missing young woman in my local area. A guy who wanted to date me told me he'd dreamt about kidnapping her and killing her. He told me in some detail what had occurred. However, he believed that it had not really been a dream, and he had actually killed the woman. He was scared the police would get him. I moved away soon after this." "Someone told me they killed someone in the '80s, but it was all good now. Apparently it wasn't, because they just cold-cased him and sent him to prison at 79 years old." "I worked at Tim Hortons when I was 15, and one day on a particularly nice fall afternoon, an older customer told me unprompted that on nice days like this, she thinks about hanging herself in the woods. I didn't really know what to do with that, so I offered her a free donut." "I was 14/15 when my dad told me a story about him and his friends gang raping a drunk girl when they were teenagers. He laughed about it. The wild thing is, I would have easily believed he made it up as a weird ego stroke, but if it were true, I also wouldn't be surprised. Dad also told me weird, ominous, and vague stories of having killed/tortured people. Looking back, he was a compulsive liar, would go in and out of psychosis but also did some violent shit. So it's almost impossible to know what's true or not. Interestingly, he was a prime suspect for a string of serial killings." "I don't consider it fucked up, but others would. They told me about killing someone. A relative was bed-bound and near the end, but probably a few weeks from going into hospice care. They had the professional pharmacological knowledge so they mixed up drugs and injected it into the IV to help the person pass because they knew the person would be miserable if they were aware. I fully believe we should be allowed to choose euthanasia as humans." "A guy friend told me he was sneaking into his ex-girlfriend's apartment and going through her computer and her bedroom garbage can to get clues about her dating life. He had thought she was the one for him because they both had a history of cheating on partners and somehow thought things would be different if they dated someone who was also a cheater. Then she cheated on him and left him for another guy." "I was at a friend's house, and a woman came over. My friend had a bit of a fucked up way about him and asked her what was the worst thing she ever did. She then told us the story of how she had a teacher who was close to some of the girls in her school and made some of the parents uncomfortable. He had never made her uncomfortable or made any inappropriate statements or moves toward her, and she'd never seen anything of the sort. She got called into the principal's office, and there were a bunch of people from the school board there, and they asked her about any interactions she'd had with the teacher. She proceeded to 'tell them what she thought they wanted to hear' and made up a series of heinous actions that she knew would get him arrested and prosecuted — and that's exactly what happened." "I was involved in a volunteer organization and befriended one of the new members. During the course of our friendship, he confessed that he'd had sex with his adult daughter. It was one of those horrible situations where they'd been on a talk show that promised her they would find her estranged bio-father and told him he was going to be connected to an 'old friend' he'd lost contact with. Their resulting relationship turned sexual nearly immediately due to misplaced feelings, his addiction issues, her mental health issues, etc." "I was working at a nursing home and became close to this one lady on hospice in her eighties. She was mostly with it during the day, but became slightly confused at night. One day, I was setting up her before-dinner meds, and she started talking to me about her life and the regrets she had: just your standard 'don't take things for granted' and 'take chances when you can' type of talk. Then she got more serious and looked at me and said there was one thing I should make sure never to do. So I was idly listening as I prepped her meds and dinner, and she hit me with, 'whatever you do, do not kill anybody.'" "A college ex and I had a rocky start. When trying to convince me to stay with him, he decided to tell me some 'secrets' of his to prove I could trust him. Things he never told anybody else, which were...1) A kid his age had died by suicide a couple of years earlier in a town where my ex's parents owned a vacation home. My ex faked a deep depression over it for sympathy and told his high school crush and their friends' circles that he had been best friends with that person. They'd never even met, but he kept the newspaper article about it hanging in his room and milked their sympathy for years. I know he actually did this because I heard some of those friends mention their 'relationship' a few times and how tragic it all was." "Someone confessed to me that they were the sole witness to a rape that happened at night but he was too shy to take the witness stand so the guy got away with it." "I helped this man who was seemingly drunk walking in the middle of the street at night. After I got back into my van, he walked up to the passenger window and told me this: 'Do you remember that one time, when you and I were at Matt's house, we took Shelia and then burned her?' The way he said it in a whisper and after looking around to see if anyone else could hear always creeped me out. Btw, I had no idea who any of these people were." "He let himself into his ex's house (he knew she never locked it), went through all of her stuff, pleasured himself onto her bed, and remade the sheets so it looked like it was untouched because she was dating someone else. There was quite a lot of stuff, but that was the absolute worst. He still doesn't understand why I stopped hanging out or talking to him." "My ex was drunk one time, and we had fought. Now, he was known by almost everyone as the good ol' helpful happy dude. Couldn't do any wrong; he'd give you the shirt off his back. I was fed up with him being so emotionally stunted and closed off. He ended up confessing that his entire personality was manufactured and fake. A facade. He wanted people to see him as that person. But he actually didn't care and hated being nice to people. He said that every single nice gesture he did was fake and had zero meaning behind it. Even the baseline of treating people humanely was exhausting for him. He didn't actually care about anyone; he just knew he had to put on a show so people saw him the way he wanted to." "I was doing shrooms one time with a coworker of mine, ex-cops. He confessed to me that he had once voluntarily thrown down some stairs a pregnant lady because she was resisting arrest and, in his own words, was 'drunk enough to not remember a thing anyway.'" "My dad used to have monthly drinking sessions with his six to eight friends when I was 10 years old. One night, he told me one of them had killed their own daughter, who was 16, just because she refused to take their dog for a walk." "She told me that she hated one of my friends, so she slept with my friend's boyfriend to pass her herpes to her. She thought it was a funny story to tell me in a bathroom at a party because we had hit it off, and she didn't realize we were friends. I no longer felt like we were hitting it off." "A female coworker (I'm a woman) told me how her bulimia is incorporated into her sex life with her husband. ... What she told me is the most WTF moment I ever had with a coworker." "I had a 90-year-old woman tell me she had thrown herself down a flight of stairs, hoping to cause a miscarriage because she couldn't bear the thought of having another child with her abusive husband with alcoholism." "I met a woman who told me that as a child, she was abused and her dissociation created a split personality, and said that she doesn't remember much of her childhood. She said that one time she was driving on the highway and her ex was in the car yelling at her. She claims that she was so stressed out, she reverted back to her child personality but since she 'was a child' she didn't know how to drive and crashed into the side wall. The saddest part about all of this was that she said, 'I'm thankful I have good friends who I can open myself up to,' even though I had only met her earlier that day." "I was 15. My friend was 14. We were walking home from a school basketball game. She told me she and her boyfriend had been 'trying' for a baby. She told me her bf caught her poking holes in the condoms, and they agreed to start trying. I was absolutely shocked. She was successful. She got pregnant not even a year later." "A girl I met online and had sex/phone sex with for a few years when we were like 18-20 with admitted to me she wanted to fuck her uncle — like her actual father's brother. I played it off as a roleplay thing the first few times, but then she wanted to start showing me pictures of him, and I realized she meant it. To her credit, she recognized the impossibility of it and said she would never act on it (I confirmed that a lot), but yeah…We still continued our virtual fling for a year or two after because I was young, dumb, and horny and she was hot and willing to talk to me. I hope she's still fighting those demons, wherever she is now." "When she was drunk, my mom admitted to me that she had manipulated my family into turning against me, 'because that's what she watched her mother do' and that I didn't deserve a good childhood because she didn't have that. She also admitted she knew about my aunt continuously sexually abusing me pretty much my whole childhood, but didn't want to 'tear the family apart' Later, when I was in high school, I was on suicide watch, and my therapist told her I was being abused, and she pulled me out of therapy. Not an ounce of remorse in that, and somehow it's still all my fault in her mind." "An ex-boyfriend was emotionally talking about the girl he was with before me, and confessed that she was 15 when they were together. He was 28 and told me he still had feelings for her. We broke up very shortly afterwards." "My grandfather, as a teenager, castrated a man in his hometown with some other locals after the man sexually assaulted a girl. He doesn't feel bad about it, and the man survived and never reported it to the police. It was a different time, and they used piano wire, apparently..." "I'm a librarian, so I've had a couple of unsettling conversations over the years. The one that sticks out the most was the man who began to describe to me how difficult it is to secure a job when you have a record. Somehow, this led to him telling me about said record, which was for sexual assault. I remember him saying, 'I stopped when she started to cry, I'm not a monster.' A few months later, he told me about his ex-girlfriend who dumped him and moved to another state. He wanted to try to find her so he could drive to where she was and convince her to stay with him." "'I just started a weird drug name I can't remember because I'm a compulsive masturbater. Now I'm like, what do other people do all day?' This was two days after I met them." "A guy I work with told me he had killed people before, but that he was a changed man, and it was a long time ago. The dude dodged any of my questions I had after he told me this. The disturbing part about it was that he waited until we were up in a forklift together (that he was driving) to tell me this. I was uneasy about the whole thing and was so relieved to be down from that forklift when we were done working." "I overheard a woman loudly speaking on her cellphone as I was walking my dog. The snippet I heard was: 'She's taking the child support her baby-daddy is giving her and giving it to her boyfriend so he could pay child support to his ex-girlfriend.' I.e.: some guy is sending money to a woman so that HIS child can have food and clothes, but instead of using it to support the baby, she's giving it to her new boyfriend so that he can support HIS baby with the first guy's money." "While his wife was pregnant, he got her sister pregnant. He talked his wife into giving her $500 for an abortion. His wife started to demand repayment from her sister. He had to hide the fact that he was working a second job and giving the money to the sister to repay the $500." "They admitted to faking a positive pregnancy test to trap their ex. It still haunts me." "My best friend at the time confessed she turned off the cameras at her house so she could sneak her ex into the house she shared with her husband. Her husband eventually found out but didn't divorce her. She then confessed to me later that she didn't regret having the affair because she liked the attention her husband was heaping on her. Her husband was a nice guy; he didn't deserve that." "A friend was having an affair with his wife's best friend while opening/starting a business with her husband. As you can imagine, neither marriage nor the business survived. I hated that I knew for as long as I did, and didn't know if I should bring it up or tell anyone. I lost sleep, had bad anxiety over it, and so much indecision. Friends were in both camps — tell her immediately! Stay out of it! In the end, the wife caught them because they were dumb." "My dad confessed he was cheating on my mom with her brother's girlfriend of over five years. I was 16." "I live in a small town in Italy that has a very popular family-owned Gelateria that has been there for almost 40 years. I have been having their ice cream for my whole life. ... On a bright summer day several years ago, I went to this gelateria for a treat like I often did. I was the only customer, and it was a slow day, so the old owner, a man in his 70s, sat with me and we had some small talk while I was having my gelato. Out of the blue, he remembered that many decades ago, in the '80s, on a day exactly like this, a beautiful German woman came for gelato. She was alone and the only customer. He gave her the ice cream and sat with her, and 'one thing led to another,' and he 'convinced her' to have sex with him. His wife and kids were away, so he closed the bar for an hour and had sex with her behind the counter." "This guy who I thought was a close friend called me and admitted to sexually assaulting his sister-in-law. I told him what he did was wrong and to turn himself in, get therapy, and never speak to me again. He didn't think she would press charges. She did. He went to jail. Fuck that guy." "Someone once told me they sabotaged their best friend's relationship out of jealousy, and the friend never found out. They felt guilty, but also admitted they'd do it again. It still sits weird with me." And finally..."I met a girl on Tinder in Dubai. She arrived in a brand new Prado. I was kinda surprised, given that she was working as a flight attendant for Emirates. Long story short, turned out she was participating in one of those freak shows, but on her own terms. Basically, once or twice a month, she and other girls would be driven to one of the places in the desert with tents built in a way that some of them had glass floors. They couldn't see who was sitting below the glass down there. According to her, they'd have to slowly dance, eventually squat down and defecate on the floor. The longer the better. And for these days, they had to eat only salad to make the texture 'less vulgar.' That's it. Dance, undress, shit on the floor, take your money and leave." Were you casually told a shocking or horrifying secret? Let us know in the comments or via this anonymous form. Submissions have been edited for length/clarity.

Bid to smuggle fuel foiled, three boats detained
Bid to smuggle fuel foiled, three boats detained

Daily Express

timea day ago

  • Daily Express

Bid to smuggle fuel foiled, three boats detained

Published on: Friday, June 27, 2025 Published on: Fri, Jun 27, 2025 By: Azmie Lim Text Size: Among the items seized during the operation. SEMPORNA: Marine Police foiled an attempt by three speed boats to smuggle out petrol at the waters of Kampung Batu at 7.14pm on Wednesday. Sabah Region Four Marine Commander, ACP Mohd Nazri Ibrahim, said inspection of the boats led to the discovery of 416 gallons containing petrol. But he said no arrest had been made as the Marine believed that the boats' operators managed to sniff out the presence of the enforcement team. 'All the seizures are estimated worth RM265,638,' he said, adding that investigation would be carried out under the Control of Supply Act 1961. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available. Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia

Iran-Israel war could pull in the United States, offering no good choices
Iran-Israel war could pull in the United States, offering no good choices

Miami Herald

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • Miami Herald

Iran-Israel war could pull in the United States, offering no good choices

Editor's note: Welcome to Double Take, a regular conversation from opinion writers Melinda Henneberger and David Mastio tackling news with differing perspectives and respectful debate. DAVID: If Donald Trump has a superpower it is in being a disrupter. With two keystrokes, — 'W E' — on Tuesday, he sent the whole foreign policy establishment into a tizzy. 'We now have complete and total control of the skies over Iran. Iran had good sky trackers and other defensive equipment, and plenty of it, but it doesn't compare to American made, conceived, and manufactured 'stuff.' Nobody does it better than the good ol' USA,' Trump said on his social platform, Truth Social. I thought it was Israel that was controlling the skies over Iran and bombing the country back into the pre-nuclear age, but apparently it is 'U S,' that stands for us and United States, I guess. I had been enjoying the irony of our proxy, Israel, taking the war to Iran's terror-supporting government after their years of supporting terrorist proxies in Lebanon (Hezbollah), Gaza (Hamas) and Yemen (Houthis) who threaten U.S. interests while Iran can proclaim it doesn't know anything about it. Remember when the embryonic Hezbollah carried out the 1983 Marine barracks bombing in Beirut that killed more than a dozen American Marines? MELINDA: Sure I do. You are right about Iran's horrible history and bad intentions. DAVID: If Trump has been consistent in one thing so far in his presidency it is that he is going to keep us out of foreign 'forever' wars, especially ones that smell like the one in Iraq, right next door to Iran. Is that all in the rearview mirror? I hope not. MELINDA: I have a big job on my hands here, because I'm going to have to argue with not only you, but also with myself, since I don't know the right answer. I do know a few things: Iranians have been putting up with repressive and rapacious leaders longer than I've been alive. Trump should never have backed us out of the Iran nuclear deal that was working; we used to have inspectors with eyes on at least some sites. Trump also said no new wars would start on his watch. And wasn't one of his biggest selling points that he and Bibi Netanyahu were so tight that Israel would do whatever he said? Yet here we are and off we go. What's that saying again? Fool me 1000 times, and I guess it's because we wanted to be fooled? I think the only time I have supported a military intervention was to end ethnic cleansing in Bosnia, and of course what we did not do in Rwanda was shameful. Like you, I very definitely do not want us in another war. Yet even I, who barely even believe in bombs and certainly do not believe in this president or his team, have to admit that I am a little bit torn over whether a man with the impulse control of a squirrel should do the world a favor and drop some bunker-busters on the Fordow plant. Why? Because no one wants Iran to have a nuclear weapon. DAVID: I, too, am tempted by the idea that Trump could drop a few of those 30,000-pound bombs from a flight of B-2 Spirits on that cave full of uranium centrifuges. Maybe in a few hours we could wash our hands of the whole thing. MELINDA: The counterargument is that we have no idea where that one act would end. Remember how quick Iraq was going to be? We have 40,000 troops in the region, and I do wish Trump hadn't run off so many capable diplomats. Last Sunday, I attended Mass at Our Lady and St. Rose in KCK, and in his terrific homily, Monsignor Stuart Swetland, the pastor and president of Donnelly College, who is a Navy vet, noted that the doomsday clock now stands at 89 seconds to midnight. Tick, tick, tick. First the parade, then the war? Again, like you, I really hope not. DAVID: I sure understand where the Israelis are coming from. For far longer than a quarter-century, Iranian leaders have been saying they want to 'wipe Israel off the map.' And that's not even really what they say because they hate Israel so much they can't even say Israel. State media in Iran calls it the 'Zionist regime.' And with the murderous baby-killing, teen-raping ways of Iran's proxies like Hamas, the Israelis have no reason not to take Iran literally. A nuclear bomb is the last step to the Final Solution. But do we always have to join Israel in the fight? Isn't it enough that while the rest of the world has turned their backs, we have given Israel everything it needs to defeat those who threaten it? The more I think about it, the more I think we do, whatever Trump's campaign promises. I don't want to be viewed in history like the generation of Americans who turned away Jews fleeing the Holocaust. Do I want Pete Hegseth and Donald Trump and Tulsi Gabbard to lead this affair? Do I trust them to make the right choices to minimize our involvement and to not start another generational occupation of a broken nation? No, I do not, but I don't think we have a choice. MELINDA: We always have a choice, and I trust neither Trump and Co. nor Bibi. But oh, God, you know I will never get over some of our World War II-era decisions. In 1941, the U.S. made it even harder for those trying to flee the Nazis to make it to America. FDR did so much good, yet I will never understand how he could have turned away the German ocean liner St. Louis in 1939, and refused to save those 937 Jewish refugees on that boat who were close enough to safety to see the lights of Miami. On this, the 100th anniversary of 'The Great Gatsby,' I admit that the last couple of times I have reread what to me is the Great American Novel, I couldn't help thinking at some moments of those aboard the St. Louis looking with true yearning at those Miami lights and feeling, oh boohoo you, Jay Gatsby, staring at that green light at the end of Daisy's dock and searching for the impossible American dream of reconnecting two people who, even within the world created by Fitzgerald, really only ever existed in your own mind. Our government said little to nothing about the Nazi concentration camps well after we knew about them, and why did we not go in sooner to save more Jews imprisoned there? So are you banging on a bruise here in saying we need to stand with Israel? Yes. The more I think about it, though, the more I think the risks of a wider war are too great. I'm still not sure that I know the right answer, but Iran is so weak right now, and I hope that diplomatic efforts work. 'We're strong, we're prepared, we're defensive and present,' said our historically underprepared but always defensive defense secretary, Pete Hegseth. I don't know if that scared Iran, but it did worry me.

Former Marine Turns Health Scare Into B2B Wellness Media Startup
Former Marine Turns Health Scare Into B2B Wellness Media Startup

Entrepreneur

timea day ago

  • Business
  • Entrepreneur

Former Marine Turns Health Scare Into B2B Wellness Media Startup

Anthony Vennare built Fitt Insider—a B2B platform that focuses on the business of health and wellness. Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. Anthony Vennare tried to live a healthy lifestyle. As a former Marine and founder of multiple gyms, he meticulously tracked his workouts, supplements, and health data. "I was insanely fit, using every wearable, taking supplements, tracking food down to the ounce," he says. "But I still got cancer." Vennare was diagnosed with a brain tumor at age 30. He underwent treatment during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, isolated and uncertain about his future. A few years later, the cancer returned, forcing him to confront his mortality all over again. Vennare had watched multiple family members, including his father and grandmother, die from brain tumors. When he got his diagnosis, it felt like a death sentence. But despite the tragic news, Vennare did something unexpected. He ditched the supplement hype and performance-obsessed culture and poured his energy into building Fitt Insider, a media platform that shares industry news and insights. Vennare shared his courageous story in the latest episode of One Day with Jon Bier. Built on facts, not fluff Fitt Insider was never about profit. Vennare started it with his brother as a newsletter to make sense of a trillion-dollar industry—and share that info with business leaders in the space. "It wasn't meant to be a business at all," said Vennare. "I wanted data. I wanted news. I wanted a filter and a curation lens that gave me trust and the things I need to know about." But the insights were so valuable that they gained more readers organically. By 2020, the audience had exploded. It turned out that there was a huge audience hungry for trustworthy, well-curated analysis. From its humble beginnings, Fitt Insider has evolved into a hub for health and wellness operators, including a job board, recruiting firm, podcast, consulting services, investment fund, and a B2B event series. "We reach hundreds of thousands of people every week. No nonsense. No fluff." Related: 4 Things Every B2B Brand Should Be Doing to Earn Trust in 2025 Sticking to the basics Vennare says the lack of regulation in the health and supplement industry allows bad actors to profit from misinformation and ineffective products. "There's just so much nonsense and so much being sold to the consumer from every creator," explains Vennare. "There was a study that came out that said that a large percentage of supplements on Amazon have no traces of the actual ingredient that they're selling." He believes much of the wellness industry is hype. Most people don't need tech-forward solutions or diagnostics with one hundred biomarkers. They simply need to make some free and easy lifestyle changes. "A majority of the people, especially in the United States, need to walk, eat healthier, be active, be off their phones, and be a little bit more social." After two serious health scares, Vennare no longer believes in biohacking or "doing everything right" as the answer. He stripped his routine down to the essentials. Related: The Supplement Business Has a Trust Problem. This Tech Startup Wants to Fix That. Relying on integrity Fitt Insider maintains a level of editorial integrity that's rare in B2B media. It's that grounded perspective that drives Vennare's work today. He's no longer interested in chasing flashy exits or jumping on wellness fads. Now in recovery, Vennare is focused on living simply, staying active, and building something lasting. "I'm not chasing optimization anymore," Vennare said. "I just want to feel good, look good, and be active." Related: 70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

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