Professional Sports
Why Mark Zuckerberg turned to Dana White to secure Maga's favor
White’s friendship with Trump dates back to 2001, when the UFC president was still trying to convince the world that MMA was more than a blood sport. As the UFC was struggling to find a home for its events, Trump took a chance and offered up his Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City for two […]

White’s friendship with Trump dates back to 2001, when the UFC president was still trying to convince the world that MMA was more than a blood sport. As the UFC was struggling to find a home for its events, Trump took a chance and offered up his Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City for two consecutive events.“We hire Conor [McGregor] next for after work sparring?,” one employee commented in a post reviewed by technology outlet 404 Media. McGregor was held liable for sexual assault in November 2024 and is currently appealing the decision.
Shortly after Trump’s victory in November, Zuckerberg traveled to Mar-a-Lago to dine with the president-elect and his transition team, even donating m to Trump’s inauguration fund. He has also culled Meta’s third party fact-checking program, lifting restrictions on topics like immigration and gender. And this week, Zuckerberg took his efforts to align with the incoming administration a step further by appointing Dana White – the CEO of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) and a close Trump ally – to Meta’s board of directors.Despite their blossoming friendship, White’s appointment to the board of directors of Zuckerberg’s organization drew criticism from Meta employees.While White even helped connect Trump with the podcast hosts and influencers such as Joe Rogan, Theo Von and the Nelk Boys, all of whom would play a significant role in helping Trump connect with a younger audience, he later admitted he wasn’t interested in entering the political arena himself. “I want nothing to do with this shit. It’s gross. It’s disgusting,” White told the New Yorker.In the press release, Zuckerberg noted how White, along with fellow new board members John Elkann and Charlie Songhurst, would help Meta “tackle the massive opportunities ahead with AI, wearables, and the future of human connection.” However, given that White – a fight promoter and seasoned hype man – has little experience in any of these areas, his appointment appears to be a calculated move by Zuckerberg to solidify ties with Trump through one of his closest and most influential allies.White has stumped for Trump at three Republican National Conventions and a slew of campaign rallies. He traveled with the president-elect on Air Force One and produced a UFC documentary on Trump entitled Combatant-in-Chief. White even spoke at Trump’s victory speech following the 2024 election. “This is what happens when the machine comes after you,” White said at the time. “This is karma, ladies and gentlemen. He deserves this.”Much like Trump, White is notoriously sensitive and thin-skinned when it comes to the media. In the lead-up to the UFC sale in 2016, he blacklisted journalist Ariel Helwani for stealing his thunder and breaking a UFC story before White had a chance to announce it himself. While Helwani’s ban was quickly lifted, numerous other journalists, myself included, have faced his wrath and received lifetime bans from covering the UFC. For example, I was banned for my critical coverage of the organization, including reporting on its ties to Chechen dictator Ramzan Kadyrov.In 2023, White attempted to broker a fight between Zuckerberg and Elon Musk, another tech billionaire and Trump ally. Musk eventually pulled out of the fight, citing a lingering injury, and blamed Zuckerberg for refusing to reschedule the bout.
“Honestly, I think they have come a long way, Meta, Facebook” Trump said.Karim Zidan writes a regular newsletter on the intersection of sports and authoritarian politics.White’s strong-arm approach to public relations, which includes abusive outbursts at media members, is part of the promotion’s strategy to control journalists, and by extension, the narratives surrounding a particular event. Due to the constant fear of having their press credentials rescinded, beat reporters in attendance are discouraged from asking difficult questions that would reflect poorly on the UFC. These include topics such as unionization, fighter pay, or the UFC’s affiliation with several authoritarian regimes around the world. This is the sort of experience that White brings to Meta.“I’ve never been interested in joining a board of directors until I got the offer to join Meta’s board. I am a huge believer that social media and AI are the future,” White said in Meta’s official press release. “I am very excited to join this incredible team and to learn more about this business from the inside. There is nothing I love more than building brands, and I look forward to helping take Meta to the next level.”In the four months since Donald Trump accused Mark Zuckerberg of conspiring against him during the 2020 presidential election and threatened him with life imprisonment, the Meta CEO has gone to great lengths to curry favor with the incoming president.Over the past few years, Trump frequently attended UFC events, basking in the admiration of the young, predominantly male crowd. He cultivated relationships with fighters, leveraging their support to portray himself as a symbolic strongman. He embraced the UFC’s culture of defiance, machismo and spectacle to help buttress his image as a rebel against liberal norms. It has also hastened the replacement of America’s conventional political culture with an abrasive new blend of entertainment and confrontational politics, perfectly embodied by both Trump and White.Shortly following Meta’s announcement, employees took to Workplace, Meta’s business communications platform, to share their thoughts. Some posed questions and criticisms, including why Meta was working with a man who slapped his wife in public and faced no consequences for his actions. Others made jokes asking whether performance reviews would now involve MMA fights.In response to the slew of criticism, Meta deleted several of the internal posts, citing violations in guidelines governing employee communications. For a company that claimed it was “time to get back to our roots around free expression” earlier that same day, the decision to censor some of the employee criticism was bitterly ironic. It also drew parallels with the White’s own approach to handling criticism at the UFC.Zuckerberg’s frantic efforts to appease Trump seem to have paid off. Earlier this week, the president-elect praised Meta for changing how it moderates political content, even speculating whether the policy shift was a direct response to the threats he directed at Zuckerberg.White has since credited Trump for helping the UFC during a difficult period in its history. And though the story is mere marketing lore, it helped establish a compelling narrative for the growing alliance between the two men and their respective brands.
- Nevertheless, White’s close relationship with Trump has helped elevate the cage-fighting impresario into a business executive with more political cache than most of Washington’s elites. His positioning at the intersection of sports, business, and fight culture also made him a conduit to brands looking to score points with conservative audiences. For example, when Bud Light faced a major right-wing backlash for featuring trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney in one of their promotional campaigns, the organization signed a deal with the UFC to become the organization’s official beer. White took it upon himself to defend Bud Light, arguing that “if you consider yourself a patriot, you should be drinking gallons of Bud Light.”
Professional Sports
TJ Dillashaw reveals why he was 'delusionally optimistic' in KO'ing UFC champ with …
TJ Dillashaw literally went out on a limb in his eighth UFC title fight. The former two-time UFC Bantamweight Champion is one of the greatest fighters ever at 135lbs, having beaten then-champion Renan Barao and Cody Garbrandt twice as well as #4-ranked contender Cory Sandhagen. Despite his resume, TJ Dillashaw had one of the most […]

TJ Dillashaw literally went out on a limb in his eighth UFC title fight.
The former two-time UFC Bantamweight Champion is one of the greatest fighters ever at 135lbs, having beaten then-champion Renan Barao and Cody Garbrandt twice as well as #4-ranked contender Cory Sandhagen.
Despite his resume, TJ Dillashaw had one of the most controversial final chapters in UFC history.
Following a two-year suspension for the performance-enhancing drug EPO, Dillashaw returned to the win column against Sandhagen in 2021 and was given a title fight a year later against Aljamain Sterling at UFC 280 in Oct. 2022.
Prior to the fight, Dillashaw failed to disclose a career-ending shoulder injury and refused to withdraw. On fight night, Dillashaw would lose in a lopsided second-round TKO after his shoulder popped out.
This would be Dillashaw’s last MMA fight. Years after his retirement, the former champion explains what made him so confident in beating Sterling even with the brutal handicap.

TJ Dillashaw thought he’d KO Aljamain Sterling with one arm: ‘His striking was garbage’
While on ‘The Jaxxon Podcast’, Quinton Jackson said he was at the gym the day Dillashaw’s shoulder popped out in training and told Dillashaw he wished he had pulled out of the Sterling fight.
Dillashaw explains why he didn’t.
“I was fighting a guy that I felt like I could still beat with the arm that I had,” Dillashaw said of Sterling.
“I felt like I could’ve knocked him out. Yeah, [with one arm].
MORE BLOODY ELBOW NEWS
“His striking is complete garbage,” Dillashaw added.
A wrestler at heart, Sterling dominated Dillashaw with his takedowns as Dillashaw grimaced in pain with his shoulder injury.
Dillashaw was heavily criticized for not withdrawing from the bantamweight title fight.
TJ Dillashaw says being ‘delusionally optimistic’ got him to the UFC title in the first place
The odds weren’t great for Dillashaw at UFC 280 but neither were his chances of fighting again after shoulder surgery. Dillashaw can’t raise his left arm too high nowadays because of the injury.
Still, Dillashaw pushed through and made it to his title fight against Sterling, where he attempted to become a three-time champion—a feat only Jon Jones and Randy Couture have been able to accomplish in the UFC.
“I know I’m gonna have to have shoulder surgery, so I’m gonna be out for another year and a half. I’m 36 years old. It’s kinda like, this might be my last f—— shot,” Dillashaw said.
“Ends up, yes, it was because my shoulder was so bad…
“So it’s like, why am I gonna pass up this opportunity? Might be my last shot ever to be a three time world champion [and] get my belt back.
“[The odds] were f—— awesome,” Dillashaw joked.
“I’m delusionally optimistic but I really believe that’s also what got me to the belt. I believed in myself so much that I was able to push through so much negativity and get to the top,” Dillashaw said.
Professional Sports
The Beatdown
The UFC is back in Vegas where welterweight prospect Michael Morales will get a real test in the main event against veteran Gilbert Burns. Our MMA team covers all 12 matchups on the slate with The Beatdown. The highest-quality fantasy football, basketball and prop betting content. We’ve created the best Daily Fantasy MMA product on […]

The UFC is back in Vegas where welterweight prospect Michael Morales will get a real test in the main event against veteran Gilbert Burns. Our MMA team covers all 12 matchups on the slate with The Beatdown.
We’ve created the best Daily Fantasy MMA product on the internet
ETR MMA is designed to prepare you with the highest-quality resources to help you compete on DraftKings.
Our team of analysts, led by Brett Appley, will bring you in-depth written and video content, projections, and more for each and every MMA slate.
If you aren’t satisfied with ETR MMA for any reason, just email us within 48 hours and we’ll provide a full refund.
Already a subscriber?
Log In
College Sports
Video
Posted May 15, 2025UNC Basketball is eyeing a game-changing recruit: Luka Bogavac. Could this Montenegrin be the Tar Heels’ replacement for Drake Powell? Host Isaac Schade and guest Bill Robinson, Milligan University’s head coach, explore Bogavac’s playing style, decision-making skills, and versatility. [embedded content] Related: Basketball, Basketball Recruiting, Videos & Podcasts Ranking The Top 2 […]

Posted May 15, 2025
UNC Basketball is eyeing a game-changing recruit: Luka Bogavac. Could this Montenegrin be the Tar Heels’ replacement for Drake Powell? Host Isaac Schade and guest Bill Robinson, Milligan University’s head coach, explore Bogavac’s playing style, decision-making skills, and versatility.
Related: Basketball, Basketball Recruiting, Videos & Podcasts
Ranking The Top 2 UNC Basketball Teams in Each Decade: 2010s
The players on North Carolina’s 2016-17 national championship basketball team embarked on their redemption tour seven months after losing at the buzzer in the national…
Thu May 15, 2025
UNC basketball’s Larry Miller, one of Dean Smith’s first star Tar Heels, dies
“Larry Miller was, really, our first major recruit that Duke wanted. They were going so great in the 60s with Vic Bubas in recruiting all…
Wed May 14, 2025
Drake Powell Announces Decision To Remain In NBA Draft
Drake Powell indeed will be one-and-done at North Carolina, announcing Wednesday that the “door’s closed” on his decision to stay in the NBA Draft. “All-in…
Wed May 14, 2025
Video: Locked On Tar Heels – Drake Powell, Boogie Fland, and More
Boogie Fland’s withdrawal from the NBA Draft could be huge for UNC if the Tar Heels decide to pursue him. Meanwhile, Drake Powell’s jaw-dropping NBA…
Wed May 14, 2025
Basketball Menu
College Sports
Athlete Lineup Announced for Swatch Nines in Waco – The Inertia
Photo: Swatch Nines Swatch Nines surf returns to Waco, Texas June 23-25 and the athlete lineup has been announced. Thirty-five surfers, skateboarders, and BMX stars will gather for the three-day progression session. Surfers include Zoë McDougall, Coco Ho, Milla Coco Brown, Macy Callaghan, Juliette Lacome, Dimity Stoyle, Mason Ho, Balaram Stack, Noah Beschen, Matt Meola, […]


Photo: Swatch Nines

Swatch Nines surf returns to Waco, Texas June 23-25 and the athlete lineup has been announced. Thirty-five surfers, skateboarders, and BMX stars will gather for the three-day progression session.
Surfers include Zoë McDougall, Coco Ho, Milla Coco Brown, Macy Callaghan, Juliette Lacome, Dimity Stoyle, Mason Ho, Balaram Stack, Noah Beschen, Matt Meola, Jacob Szekely, Blair Conklin, Chippa Wilson, Dylan Graves, Josh Sleigh, and Lyon Farrell.
The lineup of skateboarders will include Andy Anderson, Val LaForge, Gustavo Ribeiro, Gabriel Ribeiro, Greyson Fletcher, Clay Kreiner, and the five BMX athletes in Waco will feature Sam Pilgrim, Kevin Peraza, Matthias Dandois, Erik Fedko, and Dennis Enarson.
The Swatch Nines promotional webpage hasn’t released many other details aside from the new athlete lineup and new promo video, but then again, what else is there to reveal? Just show up and let ‘er rip.
“For nearly two decades, Swatch Nines has carved out a unique place in the world of action sports,” they wrote on YouTube. “With 17 years of innovative events across snow, skate, and surf, the concept is simple but powerful: bring together elite athletes, visionary designers, and partners to create a space that’s not about competing — it’s about pushing boundaries, capturing magic, and having fun.”
Professional Sports
Power players come to Doha for Qatar Economic Forum
Global finance, innovation and leadership take center stage in Doha this week as the Qatar Economic Forum, powered by Bloomberg, returns for its fifth edition from May 20-22 at the Fairmont Doha. Under the theme “The Road to 2030: Transforming the Global Economy,” the forum underscores Qatar’s growing role as a hub for international dialogue […]


Global finance, innovation and leadership take center stage in Doha this week as the Qatar Economic Forum, powered by Bloomberg, returns for its fifth edition from May 20-22 at the Fairmont Doha. Under the theme “The Road to 2030: Transforming the Global Economy,” the forum underscores Qatar’s growing role as a hub for international dialogue and economic transformation.
More than 1,500 global leaders — including CEOs, investors, policymakers and cultural figures — will convene to explore five editorial pillars: geopolitics and trade, business outlook, energy and security, sports and entertainment, and technology and AI. This year’s lineup includes Michael R. Bloomberg, Mary Callahan Erdoes (JP Morgan), Tony Elumelu (Heirs Holdings) and Tan Su Shan (DBS Bank), offering high-level insights into the forces reshaping global capital, policy and industry.
Hosted by Media City Qatar in collaboration with Bloomberg, the forum aligns with Qatar National Vision 2030, emphasizing innovation, sustainability and economic resilience. With registration now closed, audiences can tune in to the live broadcast and follow key moments via social media.
Location: Fairmont Hotel, Doha
Dates: May 20-22
More details here.
Professional Sports
BYU's Egor Demin dream of being an NBA player is about to begin
CHICAGO — Egor Demin won’t be returning to BYU, but that doesn’t mean that he’s done with Utah. Though he only spent one year in Utah under the tutelage of Cougars head coach Kevin Young, it turned into the perfect home away from home for the 2025 NBA draft prospect. So much so that the […]

CHICAGO — Egor Demin won’t be returning to BYU, but that doesn’t mean that he’s done with Utah.
Though he only spent one year in Utah under the tutelage of Cougars head coach Kevin Young, it turned into the perfect home away from home for the 2025 NBA draft prospect. So much so that the 19-year-old already has grand plans to eventually buy a house and retire in the Beehive State once his playing career is over.
“I love Utah. I see myself when I retire from my basketball career, going back to Utah, having a house over there, somewhere next to Travis Hansen in the mountains. I see myself living there after my career.”
— Egor Demin
“I love Utah,” he said. “I see myself when I retire from my basketball career, going back to Utah, having a house over there, somewhere next to Travis Hansen in the mountains. I see myself living there after my career.”
It’s not just about the picturesque nature of Utah, but the deep connections that Demin made while at BYU. He wanted to end up in a place where he could not only find comfort and peace, but also where he would thrive on and off the court while preparing for the next stage of life — the NBA.
With Young having just taken over at BYU after years spent in the NBA coaching ranks, Demin feels like he is more prepared for the pre-draft process than he would have been had he decided to elsewhere.
“More than anybody could imagine, he prepared me for this moment,” Demin said. “More than I was expecting. Obviously I wasn’t underestimating him, I was expecting him to teach me and I was ready to learn as much as I can and be a sponge. But, yeah, I got so much from him.”
And the moment is here. This week, in Chicago, at the NBA combine, Demin has been ready and determined to prove himself in front of NBA scouts, front office executives and coaches.
In the early days of last season at BYU, Demin projected as a potential top-10 pick. But a minor injury and some major slippage in his shooting numbers had many worried that he could drop out of the lottery.
Despite that, recent mock drafts still have him projected as a lottery (top-14) pick and his shooting performance as well as his interviews with teams at the combine helped to relieve some of the worries.
In the the 3-point drills at the combine, Demin went 14-of-30 on off-the-dribble shots, 17-of-25 on spot-up shots, 14-of-25 in the 3-point star drill and 17-of-28 in the 3-point side drill and also hit 80% at the free-throw line.
Demin has already had interviews with the Atlanta Hawks, Sacramento Kings, Washington Wizards, Brooklyn Nets and Oklahoma City Thunder, he’ll have more interviews with teams as the week progresses and then a whole slate of in-person workouts after the combine is over.
In interviews, Demin wants teams to know how dedicated he is to working on his game and improving. He also wants NBA decision makers to know that he’s paid detailed and close attention to feedback regarding his shot and worked closely with Young to understand things that NBA teams will expect of him.
“The details of understanding what is a good shot and what is a bad shot, which is not always dependent on the defense,” Demin said. “A wide open shot can be a bad shot, speaking about the time of possession, the score — starting from there, and ending with your footwork, your rhythm, getting to the shot, your legs and energy.”
In the past, Demin might have considered every open shot a good one, but now he’s trying to think through the offense on an even deeper level. That’s often something that NBA coaches work on developing in young prospects throughout their first couple of seasons, so on that front, Demin is ahead of the game.
Those developments can only help to boost what teams think about Demin, but really, it’s his vision and passing that makes him a desirable prospect and that hasn’t changed. His ability to make passes, at the right time, on target and seeing the game multiple actions in advance has earned him comparisons to players like Luka Doncic, but Demin will tell you that it’s not his job to try to copy anyone else.
“Luka is pretty obvious — the big guards, passing — but obviously Luka is Luka and Egor is Egor, in a good way. I’m not trying to be like somebody else, I’m just trying to get pieces from different players and different personalities to build my own kind of project of where I’m seeing myself in the future.”
In the near future, Demin sees himself living out his dreams as an NBA player and helping a team to win. In the extended future he sees himself returning to where this process started, and hopefully staying close to those who helped him.
“I had a lot of fun being in Utah and I was going there to play basketball, and I found that, I found basketball over there,” Demin said. “But I also found a lot of good people and my new lifetime friends and mentors.”

-
College Sports2 weeks ago
Duke basketball's Isaiah Evans on 2025 NBA Draft early entry list
-
Fashion2 weeks ago
How to watch Avalanche vs. Stars Game 7 FREE stream today
-
High School Sports1 week ago
Web exclusive
-
Sports1 week ago
Princeton University
-
Sports7 days ago
2025 NCAA softball bracket: Women’s College World Series scores, schedule
-
Motorsports1 week ago
Bowman Gray is the site of NASCAR’S “Advance Auto Parts Night at the Races” this Saturday
-
NIL1 week ago
2025 Big Ten Softball Tournament Bracket: Updated matchups, scores, schedule
-
NIL3 weeks ago
How much money will Quinn Ewers make in NFL? Salary, contract details
-
Motorsports1 week ago
MOTORSPORTS: Three local track set to open this week | Sports
-
Sports3 weeks ago
Italian woman, 91, breaks running record — what makes her body different, according to doctors