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Fire Help Center Releases Wildfire Preparedness Guide Specifically for Seniors and Caregivers as Early 2026 Fire Activity Signals Dangerous Season Ahead

By Media News
2 min read • Published May 12, 2026
By Media News
2 min read • Published May 12, 2026

New resource addresses the unique evacuation and health challenges facing older adults as wildfires burn across California and Colorado.

CHESTNUT HILL, MA / ACCESS Newswire / May 12, 2026 / With wildfires already burning across multiple states weeks before the traditional peak of fire season, Fire Help Center today announced the launch of a comprehensive wildfire preparedness guide tailored for seniors and their caregivers.

The release comes as communities across the country are confronting an early and active start to 2026 fire activity. In California, hundreds of wildfires have already burned thousands of acres this year, with the Springs Fire in Riverside County triggering widespread mandatory evacuations earlier this month.

In Colorado, firefighters responded to multiple wildfires near Boulder in a single week, while county officials in Summit County issued stark warnings that an intense fire season is now a matter of "when, not if."

With May designated as Wildfire Awareness Month in California, Fire Help Center urges families with elderly loved ones to review their preparedness plans now – before fire conditions worsen.

"When evacuation orders come down, older adults and their caregivers face obstacles that many families aren’t prepared for," said Ricky LeBlanc, managing attorney of Sokolove Law. "Mobility limitations, medical equipment, cognitive conditions, and medications all require advance planning. Families often don’t have the time to figure that out in the middle of a crisis."

Fire Help Center has created a preparedness guide for seniors and caregivers that covers:

  • Pre-season planning, including how to build personalized evacuation routes accounting for mobility and transportation needs

  • Medication and medical equipment continuity, including steps for securing emergency prescription refills and backup power for devices like oxygen concentrators and CPAP machines

  • Building a senior-specific go-bag with respiratory protection, medical documentation, and assistive devices

  • Wildfire smoke safety for older adults, who face an elevated risk of cardiovascular and respiratory complications from PM2.5 exposure

  • Caregiver responsibilities during an active evacuation, including guidance for seniors with dementia or other cognitive conditions

  • Safe return home after a wildfire, including structural and air quality hazards specific to older adults

Beyond preparedness, Fire Help Center also helps wildfire survivors understand their legal options. Families who have suffered property damage or personal injury due to a wildfire may be entitled to compensation and can request a free, no-obligation case review at firehelpcenter.com.

About Fire Help Center: Fire Help Center provides resources and support for wildfire victims across the United States, including educational guides, legal information, and free case reviews for those impacted by wildfires. For more information, call (866) 866-0753 or visit firehelpcenter.com.

Contact:

Fire Help Center
1330 Boylston St., Suite #400
Chestnut Hill, MA 02467
(866) 866-0753
https://www.firehelpcenter.com/
connect@firehelpcenter.com

SOURCE: Fire Help Center

View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

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media-news

Registration Now Open for The ASSEMBLY Show 2026, Co-Located With The Quality Show and SMTA International

By Media News
4 min read • Published May 12, 2026
By Media News
4 min read • Published May 12, 2026

Three Industry-Leading Events Return Oct. 27-29 in Rosemont, Bringing Together the Best in Manufacturing, Quality and Electronics Assembly

ROSEMONT, IL / ACCESS Newswire / May 12, 2026 / Registration is now open for The ASSEMBLY Show 2026, returning Oct. 27-29, 2026, to the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center in Rosemont, Illinois. For the 14th year, The ASSEMBLY Show will once again be co-located with The Quality Show and SMTA International, creating one of the industry’s most comprehensive events for manufacturing, quality, and electronics assembly professionals.

Produced by BNP Media, The ASSEMBLY Show is the premier event for manufacturing engineers, operations leaders, and production professionals seeking the latest technologies, equipment, and strategies to improve assembly processes, streamline operations, and enhance plant performance. By bringing together The ASSEMBLY Show, The Quality Show, and SMTA International under one roof, attendees gain access to a broader cross-section of manufacturing innovation spanning automation and robotics, quality testing, electronics production, and process improvement.

Together, the three co-located events offer unmatched opportunities to explore emerging technologies, gain practical insights, and connect with peers and suppliers across the full manufacturing ecosystem.

"The ASSEMBLY Show continues to be the go-to event for professionals focused on improving manufacturing efficiency, advancing automation, and solving real-world production challenges," said Bill DeYoe, Executive Director, Manufacturing Technologies, BNP Media. "By bringing together The ASSEMBLY Show, The Quality Show, and SMTA International under one roof, we are creating an even more valuable experience for attendees looking for ideas, technologies, and partnerships that can improve performance across every stage of production."

The combined event will feature hundreds of exhibitors showcasing the latest equipment, tools, and technologies in:

  • Assembly automation and robotics

  • Quality inspection and testing

  • Electronics manufacturing and SMT

  • Adhesives, dispensing, and fastening

  • Motion control and industrial software

  • AI, digital transformation, and smart manufacturing

  • Process improvement and plant optimization

In addition to a robust show floor, attendees will have access to multiple educational opportunities designed to deliver practical, actionable takeaways. The conference program will feature expert-led sessions, workshops, and case studies covering the latest trends in assembly, quality, automation, and electronics manufacturing. Topics will include workforce development, AI in manufacturing, advanced inspection systems, smart factory implementation, and continuous improvement strategies.

Located on the show floor, the Learning Theater will once again feature a full schedule of complimentary 30-minute presentations led by industry experts and exhibiting companies. New for 2026, attendees can also take part in concise, high-impact 15-minute educational sessions presented in two dedicated Learning HUBS focused on emerging technologies, automation, and process improvement. In addition, the exhibit hall will feature live equipment demonstrations, networking events, and opportunities to connect directly with engineers, plant managers, systems integrators, and suppliers from across the manufacturing sector. The ASSEMBLY Show 2026 is supported by Gold Sponsor Promess, Silver Sponsor Ujigami, and Bronze Sponsor Du-Pas Torq-Tec.

Call for speakers is now open for The ASSEMBLY Show and The Quality Show. Manufacturing engineers, designers, and technology experts are invited to submit proposals to share real-world insights, innovative applications, and practical strategies shaping the future of assembly and quality manufacturing. Speaker proposals are being accepted through May 21, 2026, at https://www.assemblymag.com/the-assembly-show/call-for-presentations?utm_campaign=EVTAS26&utm_medium=pr&utm_source=regopen.

Manufacturing executives and buyers can register before Sept. 11, 2026, for a $100 discount on the pre-conference education program, along with complimentary access to the exhibit hall to explore the newest equipment, technology, and solutions shaping the future of manufacturing. For more information or to register, visit The ASSEMBLY Show website. For information on exhibiting, visit https://www.assemblymag.com/the-assembly-show/become-exhibitor?utm_campaign=EVTAS26&utm_medium=pr&utm_source=regopen.

About The ASSEMBLY Show

The ASSEMBLY Show is the leading trade event and conference for assembly technology, equipment, and products in the United States. Produced by BNP Media, the event brings together suppliers, buyers, and industry experts to connect, learn, and explore the latest innovations in manufacturing assembly. The ASSEMBLY Show is sponsored by ASSEMBLY, the leading brand covering the processes, technologies, and strategies for assembling discrete parts into finished products.

About The Quality Show

Produced by Quality Magazine, The Quality Show connects manufacturing professionals with process improvement vendors and cutting-edge quality assurance solutions. The event focuses on metrology, inspection, compliance, and process control technologies that help manufacturers improve product quality and operational efficiency. ASQ will also have a dedicated presence on the show floor, offering a series of short, practical presentations throughout exhibit hall hours focused on standards, certification, and real-world process improvement strategies.

About SMTA International

SMTA International is a leading event for electronics manufacturing professionals focused on surface mount technology, advanced packaging, and electronics assembly. The event brings together engineers, technologists, and suppliers from across the global electronics manufacturing industry.

For Further Information, Contact:

Amy Riemer, Media Relations
978-502-4895 (cell)
amy@riemercommunications.com

SOURCE: The ASSEMBLY Show

View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

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media-news
media-news

Dolphin Launches Publishing Imprint in Partnership With Copper Books

By Media News
3 min read • Published May 12, 2026
By Media News
3 min read • Published May 12, 2026

New Imprint Gives Dolphin Clients a Direct Path from Idea to Bookshelf, and from Bookshelf to Screen, with Retail Distribution Through Simon & Schuster

MIAMI, FL / ACCESS Newswire / May 12, 2026 / Dolphin (Nasdaq:DLPN), a leading entertainment marketing and content production company, today announced the launch of a new publishing imprint created in partnership with Copper Books and exclusively available to Dolphin clients. Books published under this partnership will be distributed nationally through Simon & Schuster.

For the first time, the artists, athletes, founders, creators, and cultural voices represented across Dolphin’s family of agencies have a direct, end-to-end path from idea to bookshelf, whether that story is a memoir, a novel, a thought leadership title, a cookbook, or a children’s book. Through the partnership with Copper Books, Dolphin can now offer clients a true publishing pathway: editorial development, design-forward production, and retail distribution through Simon & Schuster, all under one roof.

Publishing is not a new world for Dolphin. 42West, The Door, Shore Fire Media, Elle Communications, Special Projects, and The Digital Dept. have spent decades building book launches, managing author tours, and turning publication days into cultural moments. They represent and amplify many of today’s most prominent authors – from bestselling novelists and memoirists to thought leaders, journalists, chefs, and athletes whose books shape the cultural conversation. The same clients Dolphin champions at launch can now, when they choose, bring their book into being with Dolphin from the very first page.

"Our agencies have spent years being the team behind some of publishing’s most celebrated launches. What we’re excited by now is the ability to be there from page one. With this partnership, we can walk alongside our clients through the entire journey. From the seed of an idea to bookstore shelves nationwide, and, when the story is extraordinary enough, all the way to the screen through our production and development division," said Bill O’Dowd, CEO of Dolphin.

"At Copper, we built something for people who are ready to say something meaningful and build something that lasts. Dolphin’s clients are exactly the voices we created this for. With the full strength of Dolphin’s creative and PR infrastructure behind every launch, this partnership gives those authors the intimacy and craft of a boutique publisher and the reach of a major," said Allison Trowbridge, Founder & CEO of Copper Books.

The partnership was announced at the Copper Books Book Fair in Nashville, where Dolphin served as a presenting sponsor.

About Dolphin
Dolphin (NASDAQ:DLPN) is where cultural creation meets marketing execution. Founded in 1996 by Bill O’Dowd, Dolphin operates as both a venture studio developing and investing in breakthrough content, products, and experiences and a marketing consortium, featuring leading agencies across every communications discipline.

At its core, the venture studio creates, produces, finances, markets, and promotes new businesses and cultural ideas – ranging from acclaimed film, television, and digital content to consumer goods, live events and partnerships that define entertainment and lifestyle. Surrounding this entrepreneurial engine, Dolphin’s marketing prowess brings together best-in-class firms including 42West, The Door, Shore Fire Media, Elle Communications, Special Projects and The Digital Dept. Together, this collective delivers unmatched cross-marketing expertise and relationships across every vertical of pop culture – from film, television, music, influencers, sports, hospitality, and fashion to consumer brands and purpose-driven initiatives. Dolphin marketing has been the recipient of many accolades, including #1 Agency of the Year on the Observer PR Power List in 2025, The PR Net 100, and the PR News Elite 120.

Follow us on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/dolphinentertainmentco/.

About Copper Books
Copper Books is a publishing company built for thought leaders, creatives, and changemakers who are ready to turn their ideas into enduring books. Founded by author and entrepreneur Allison Trowbridge, Copper combines editorial excellence, design-forward production, and full-service author partnership with retail distribution through Simon & Schuster – bringing world-class publishing to a new generation of impact-driven authors. Copper also operates the Copper Books app, a social platform connecting authors and readers. Learn more at copperbooks.com.

Investor Contact
James Carbonara
HAYDEN IR
(646)-755-7412
james@haydenir.com

SOURCE: Dolphin Entertainment

View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

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media-news

Greg Laurie Returns to Angel Stadium to Lead Harvest Crusade on July 11

By Media News
2 min read • Published May 12, 2026
By Media News
2 min read • Published May 12, 2026

One-Night Evangelistic Event Returns to Angel Stadium and Features Phil Wickham, Michael W. Smith and More

ANAHEIM, CA / ACCESS Newswire / May 12, 2026 / Pastor and evangelist Greg Laurie returns to Angel Stadium with the Harvest Crusade on Saturday, July 11, 2026, presenting the gospel through a one-night evangelistic event featuring live worship from Phil Wickham, Michael W. Smith and Kari Jobe Carnes and Cody Carnes.

"We’ve been doing Harvest Crusades for 37 years now, but there’s nothing like the spiritual hunger we’ve seen recently in our nation, especially among young people," said Laurie. "This year’s crusade will include moments that honor our nation and recognize 250 years of America. The heart of the night remains the same – to proclaim the gospel and invite people to experience the hope only Jesus can give. We believe this is a message our country needs now more than ever."

This year’s Harvest Crusade will also feature partnerships with local churches and major media outlets. The livestream of the whole event will be available at harvest.org, YouTube, Facebook, and on the Harvest+ app, available on all app platforms, allowing viewers worldwide to participate in real time. In addition, translations into multiple languages will be available onsite and via the livestream.

Due to the overwhelming attendance in recent years, ticketing will be implemented in partnership with Angel Stadium to help ensure a safe, family-friendly and welcoming experience for all attendees. Tickets will be distributed through Angel Stadium’s ticketing platform, and admission will remain free. Attendees are encouraged to visit harvest.org for ticket information and updates.

Harvest Crusades are large-scale evangelistic events with a worldwide history spanning the United States, Canada, New Zealand and Australia. Since 1990, more than six million people have attended Harvest Crusades in person, and millions more have participated online. Cumulatively, more than 600,000 individuals have made professions of faith through the Harvest Crusades.

Learn more at harvest.org.

Event Details

  • Date: Saturday, July 11, 2026

  • Location: Angel Stadium, Anaheim, CA

  • Gates Open: 5 p.m.

  • Crusade Begins: 7 p.m.

  • Speaker: Greg Laurie

  • Special Guests: Phil Wickham, Michael W. Smith, Kari Jobe Carnes and Cody Carnes

  • Admission: Free Admission, Tickets Required

  • Livestream: Watch the event on harvest.org, Facebook, YouTube, and the Harvest+ app, available on all app platforms

  • Language Access: The Harvest Crusade will offer translations in multiple languages both onsite and via the livestream.

About Greg Laurie

Greg Laurie is the founder of the Harvest Crusades and senior pastor of Harvest Church, with campuses located in California and Hawaii. He is a renowned evangelist, bestselling author, and the inspiration behind the 2023 film "Jesus Revolution." He leads the Harvest Crusades, large-scale evangelistic events that share the gospel with thousands in stadiums and venues worldwide.

Media Contact

media@harvest.org
harvest.org/contact-us/

SOURCE: Harvest Ministries with Greg Laurie

View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

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media-news

AI/ML Innovations Inc. Announces Closing of Final Tranche of Private Placement to Raise $1,917,500

By Media News
5 min read • Published May 12, 2026
By Media News
5 min read • Published May 12, 2026

NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION TO U.S. NEWSWIRE SERVICES OR FOR DISSEMINATION IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

TORONTO, ON / ACCESS Newswire / May 11, 2026 / AI/ML Innovations Inc. ("AIML" or the "Company") (CSE:AIML)(OTCQB:AIMLF)(FSE:42FB) is pleased to announce that it has closed the second and final tranche of its previously announced non-brokered private placement (the "Offering") pursuant to which the Company has issued convertible debentures ("Debentures") in the aggregate principal amount of $1,917,500. Together with the first tranche closing, the Company has issued Debentures in the aggregate principal amount of $2,867,500.

The Debentures may be converted into units of the Company ("Units") at the option of the holder of the Debentures at any time at a conversion price of $0.05 per Unit, with each Unit being comprised of one common share of the Company (a "Common Share") and one Common Share purchase warrant (a "Warrant"). Subject to the anti-dilution provisions contained in the certificates governing the terms of the Warrants, each whole Warrant shall be exercisable to acquire one Common Share at a price of $0.15 for a period of 36 months from the date of issuance of the Warrants. The Debentures bear interest at a rate of 10% per annum that accrues and is payable on the earlier of maturity or conversion, with accrued/unpaid interest also being convertible into Units under the same terms. The Debentures mature on May 11, 2029. All securities issued and issuable pursuant to the first tranche of the Offering are subject to a statutory hold period expiring on September 12, 2026.

The Offering remains subject to the final approval of the Canadian Securities Exchange.

Insiders of the Company have purchased, directly or indirectly, Debentures in the aggregate principal amount of $340,000 pursuant to the Offering, as a result of which the Offering is a "related party transaction" under Multilateral Instrument 61-101 – Protection of Minority Security Holders in Special Transactions ("MI 61- 101"). The Company is exempt from the formal valuation and minority shareholder approval requirements of MI 61-101 pursuant to the exemptions contained in Sections 5.5(b) and 5.7(1)(a) of MI 61-101 on the basis that the Company is listed on the Canadian Securities Exchange and neither the fair market value (as determined under MI 61-101) of the subject matter of, nor the fair market value of the consideration for, the Offering, insofar as it involves the related parties, exceeded 25% of the Company’s market capitalization (as determined under MI 61-101).

This news release does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy nor shall there be any sale of any of the securities in any jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful, including any of the securities in the United States of America. The securities described herein have not been and will not be registered under the United States Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "1933 Act") or any state securities laws and may not be offered or sold within the United States or to, or for account or benefit of, U.S. Persons (as defined in Regulation S under the 1933 Act) unless registered under the 1933 Act and applicable state securities laws, or an exemption from such registration requirements is available.

About AI/ML Innovations Inc.

AIML Innovations Inc. is a global technology company pioneering the use of artificial intelligence and neural networks to transform digital health. Our proprietary platforms leverage advanced signal processing and deep learning to convert complex biometric data into actionable clinical insights – supporting earlier diagnosis, personalized treatment, and more effective care. AIML’s shares trade on the Canadian Securities Exchange (CSE:AIML), the OTCQB Venture Market (AIMLF), and the Frankfurt Stock Exchange (42FB).

For detailed information please see AIML’s website or the Company’s filed documents at www.sedarplus.ca.

For further information, please contact:

Paul Duffy, Executive Chairman and CEO
416-941-8900

Disclaimer for Forward-Looking Information

This news release includes certain statements and information that constitute forward-looking information within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities laws. All statements in this news release, other than statements of historical facts are forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking statements and forward-looking information specifically include, but are not limited to, statements that relate to the proposed completion of any further tranches of the Offering, and the receipt of all applicable regulatory consents in connection therewith.

Statements contained in this release that are not historical facts are forward-looking statements that involve various risks and uncertainty affecting the business of the Company. Such statements can generally, but not always, be identified by words such as "expects", "plans", "anticipates", "intends", "estimates", "forecasts", "schedules", "prepares", "potential" and similar expressions, or that events or conditions "will", "would", "may", "could" or "should" occur. All statements that describe the Company’s plans relating to operations and potential strategic opportunities are forward-looking statements under applicable securities laws. These statements address future events and conditions and are reliant on assumptions made by the Company’s management, and so involve inherent risks and uncertainties, as disclosed in the Company’s periodic filings with Canadian securities regulators. As a result of these risks and uncertainties, and the assumptions underlying the forward-looking information, actual results could materially differ from those currently projected, and there is no representation by the Company that the actual results realized in the future will be the same in whole or in part as those presented herein. The Company disclaims any intent or obligation to update forward-looking statements or information except as required by law. Readers are referred to the additional information regarding the Company’s business contained in the Company’s reports filed with the securities regulatory authorities in Canada. Although the Company has attempted to identify important factors that could cause actual actions, events, or results to differ materially from those described in forward-looking statements, there may be other factors that could cause actions, events or results not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended. For more information on the Company and the risks and challenges of its business, investors should review the Company’s filings that are available at www.sedar.com.

The Company provides no assurance that forward-looking statements and information will prove to be accurate, as actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in such statements or information. Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements or information. The Company does not undertake to update any for-ward looking statements, other than as required by law.

SOURCE: AIML Innovations Inc.

View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

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media-news
Weekly Drop Media Newsletter

Mediabistro Week Drop: Trend Cycle Edition

From Devil Wears Prada 2's $433M Box Office to AI Replacing Photographers: Five Stories Reshaping Careers at the Fashion-Media Intersection

mediabistro weekly drop media newsletter
Miles icon
By Matt Charney
@mattcharney
Matt Charney is a talent acquisition analyst, journalist, and marketing leader with nearly two decades of experience at the intersection of recruiting, HR technology, and media. He has held editorial and content leadership roles at ERE Media, Recruiting Daily, and Recruiter.com, and served as Chief Content Officer at Allegis Global Solutions. As Principal Analyst at Kyle & Co, he covers HR tech funding, M&A, and market strategy. Matt currently serves as Executive Editor at Mediabistro, where he leads editorial, partnerships, and multimedia content for the creative professionals who power the media industry. He holds a degree in Writing for Screen and Television from the University of Southern California.
15 min read • Originally published May 11, 2026 / Updated May 11, 2026
Miles icon
By Matt Charney
@mattcharney
Matt Charney is a talent acquisition analyst, journalist, and marketing leader with nearly two decades of experience at the intersection of recruiting, HR technology, and media. He has held editorial and content leadership roles at ERE Media, Recruiting Daily, and Recruiter.com, and served as Chief Content Officer at Allegis Global Solutions. As Principal Analyst at Kyle & Co, he covers HR tech funding, M&A, and market strategy. Matt currently serves as Executive Editor at Mediabistro, where he leads editorial, partnerships, and multimedia content for the creative professionals who power the media industry. He holds a degree in Writing for Screen and Television from the University of Southern California.
15 min read • Originally published May 11, 2026 / Updated May 11, 2026

I’ve been told by experienced fashion professionals (or, more accurately, a Sex and the City voiceover) that if you work in the industry long enough, you stop seeing the clothes. Not in any poetic, above-it-all sense (more like how someone who lives in LA stops noticing the Hollywood sign, except maybe if it’s a landmark for how long it’s going to take you to get home while you’re stuck in traffic).

At some point, apparently, the product – which, unlike so many media and entertainment disciplines, is both tangible and tactile – becomes essentially invisible.

What’s left, instead, is simply the infrastructure that’s as responsible for designer clothing as the fabric or the stitching: cutthroat competition and brutal corporate politics; the relentless pressure to innovate really basic, boring stuff like work slacks or casual shirts – even though, ultimately, every idea is pretty much slightly different silhouettes and a handful of ideas that get recycled every “season.”

That’s definitely not a criticism (it might be self awareness, since I pretty much only rock hoodies, jeans and baseball hats because I haven’t evolved much since middle school). It’s pretty much how every creative industry actually works – which is why fashion and the media are so inextricably intertwined.

Each recognizes some uncomfortable, but familiar, approach to peddling completely discretionary, often exorbitantly priced items and doing so in such a self-important way you’d think that walking the runway was in clinical trials as a potential cancer cure. It’s like when creatives conflate advertising with auteurship. You don’t need to be Fellini to make a decent regional fast food campaign, after all.

We are, however, in a moment that’s sort of unprecedented – where fashion, and the media, are no longer just concentric, loosely adjacent industries trading talent, aesthetic sensibilities and really good coke, but instead, are facing similarly acute, existential crises.

Consumers, particularly the Gen Z demo and, well, anyone who doesn’t have a trust fund or has to buy gas these days, are increasingly skimping on luxury goods (or getting them secondhand via myriad ecomm sites and apps).

Similarly, the spiraling cost of movie tickets and concessions might be driven by a desire to create an upscale “experience,” but in doing so, have largely limited theatrical audiences to the privileged few, while the rest of us are forced to wait for streaming (assuming we can still spare whatever ridiculous monthly fee Netflix is charging these days).

But, in Dickensian fashion, the worst of times in both industries has somehow also delivered the best of times these past few weeks. With no apparent sense of irony whatsoever, the biggest box office hit in years not involving comic book or video game outlicensing centers on a woman trying to survive inside, well, a collapsing fashion magazine.

The Devil Wears Prada 2 made a staggering $433 million dollar worldwide argument that people are deeply nostalgic for an era when the fashion business was brutal, hierarchical and somehow, still at the center of a zeitgeist that’s long since shifted from supermodels to social media influencers (Meryl, however, is timeless, as we already knew).

The week after its record-setting debut and during its second consecutive week of box office dominance, the Met Gala, meanwhile, reminded us how the other 1% live, and how we live vicariously through them, even when they look absurd. And this year’s “Costume Art” theme more or less proved that high fashion is, indeed, a museum piece – which is definitely a deeply self-reflexive theme, even if the Costume Institute’s curatorial team didn’t intend it that way.

Underneath both of these cultural touchstones, the actual fashion industry – and the film industry celebrating it – are two businesses long struggling with some very tangible turbulence: both are consolidating, contracting and automating themselves into something that increasingly rely on technology instead of talent. That “left on the cutting room floor” metaphor works in both industries, after all.

If you’ve spent any portion of your career inside the fashion industry – or as media covering said industry – then you know that despite fashion’s recent pop culture resurgence, there’s not a lot of positive news coverage (or popular sentiment) at the moment.

Off the (News) Rack: 5 Fashion Stories That Every Media Pro Should Know

So, this week’s drop might be a little depressing, but if you work in this business, you’re already acutely aware that style comes and goes with the seasons, and tastes are temporary – for an industry built on ephemera, unfortunately, these lessons are now becoming too acute for anyone attempting to tailor a career path within the fashion industry.

Still, we wanted to take a look at what’s really happening at the intersection of media, entertainment and haute couture – if only to provide some insights, and some clarity, around the current state – and future outlook – within the global fashion industry.

Here are five stories we took off the (news) rack that every media and entertainment pro needs to know in this week’s drop:

1. Nuclear Wintour: The Devil Wears Prada 2 Makes $433 Million (And It’s Kinda Depressing)

The sequel hit theaters on May 1st and immediately became one of the more economically instructive events of the year, for reasons that have nothing to do with whether Anne Hathaway still has it (she does) or whether the sequel captures what made the original work (the reviews were mixed).

According to Variety, it’s already earned $433 million globally after just two weekends, clearing the entire lifetime gross of the 2006 original in under 14 days. That’s the kind of performance that makes studio executives feel justified about almost every decision they’ve made for the past decade, except for maybe making a Joker movie as a Lady Gaga musical.

Thing is, that just might be the problem. Some industry analysts frame the film’s success less as a triumph than as a data point in a much grimmer story: IP maximization is now the operating logic of an industry that’s consolidated into a handful of debt-laden conglomerates and essentially stopped developing new material because it’s too expensive and too risky.

What DWP2 (which would also be a killer name for a hip hop collective) proves isn’t that nostalgia works – everyone already knew that. It’s that nostalgia is currently one of the only things working, which is a very narrow runway for an industry that can only make so many sequels to beloved 20-year-old comedies before it runs out of beloved 20-year-old comedies.

The film also outgrossed the original’s entire run, making it Meryl Streep’s highest-grossing film as a headliner, according to Boxoffice Pro. Mama mia, here we go again…

So, for those of you following along at home, the sequel to a film about a collapsing fashion magazine is itself a monument to the IP strategy that, in slow motion, is collapsing the film industry.

And somewhere, there’s a screenwriter with a glib look on his face appreciating that someone else got the intentional irony, because the symmetry here is way too good to have happened by accident.

Read more: The Devil Wears Prada 2 Broke The Box Office. It May Also Be The Last Great Victory for Hollywood’s IP Machine (Fortune)

Why This Matters for Your Career

If you work in entertainment or media and you’ve been watching studios double down on existing franchises while cutting development, this is confirmation, not news.

The practical read is less about the film itself and more about what the IP-maximization model means for the types of roles that survive inside it. Development executives, original content strategists, and acquisitions people are working in a shrinking part of the business; producers, marketing professionals, and talent who can take existing brands and find new audiences for them are working in the growing part.

If your background is in fashion media specifically, there’s a narrower and more immediate application. The people who built the original Prada IP (other than, you know, the ateliers in Milan) into something culturally durable enough to support a sequel two decades later were editors, stylists, and publicists who understood how to give a product an identity that outlasts its original moment.

That skill set translates directly into brand strategy, entertainment marketing, and IP development roles that the studios are actually hiring for right now. As they say, the devil’s in the details.

2. Fashion Is Art: Inaccessible, Unaffordable and A Little Too Pretentious

In case you were too busy spring cleaning at your vacation home in the Hamptons or attending a Sotheby’s auction to notice, the 2026 Met Gala went down last week, bringing together the top end of the tax bracket for an annual philanthropy that’s really just the rich people version of Halloween, from all appearances.

This year, the theme was “Costume Art,” with the dress code reminding attendees that “Fashion is Art,” which is one of those circular logic propositions that sounds profound until you stop and think about it – and it turns out, it’s as vapid as your average September Issue.

As CBS News reported, the theme accompanied the opening of the new Condé Nast Galleries at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, with nearly 400 objects included in an exhibition designed to make the case that fashion belongs in art history (sadly, Tom Wolfe’s seersucker suit and Christopher Hutchins’ ren faire hats didn’t make the display).

That’s either a genuinely interesting curatorial argument or an extremely expensive way to launder the reputation of an industry that’s had a rough few years, depending on your cynicism level. We’ll likely need a Proust Questionnaire to get to the bottom of this.

What’s more relevant for working professionals is what the institutionalization of fashion as art actually implies for careers. When an industry moves from commercial practice into cultural heritage, it tends to generate museum and archival roles, academic and curatorial positions, and a much smaller number of people making much more expensive things for much wealthier clients.

The middle-market, workaday fashion jobs (staff photographer, in-house stylist, editorial assistant, trend researcher) don’t benefit much from the haute couture-goes-to-the-museum narrative.

Read More: The Met Gala Dress Code Is “Fashion Is Art.” Is It? (The Conversation)

Why This Matters for Your Career

The Met exhibit’s reframing of fashion as art history is, unintentionally, a map of where some of the industry’s more durable career opportunities actually live.

Museum and cultural institution roles in fashion curation, archival management, and educational programming are growing, not shrinking. The opening of new dedicated galleries signals institutional investment that tends to generate hiring over multi-year timelines, which isn’t something you can say about a lot of places right now.

If your background includes any combination of fashion, media, art history, or content (and most people who’ve worked in fashion or fashion media generally understand each discipline), curatorial assistant, collections manager, and exhibition coordinator roles at major cultural institutions are worth considering.

The salaries are generally modest, but at least the sector’s relatively stable – which means that even at a lower comp, you’ll still have plenty of runway. Boom.

3. Vanity Foul: The Conde Nast Clearance Sale Raises Proustian Questions

Condé Nast has been running its own grim version of a clearance sale for about 18 months now, and it accelerated considerably in recent weeks.

Recent reports suggest that CEO Roger Lynch has quietly announced the shuttering of SELF as a standalone digital publication, along with the wind-down of Glamour’s operations in Germany, Spain, and Mexico, and the closure of WIRED Italy (Bending Spoons will no doubt acquire those distressed assets, at least).

The consolidation was framed, in glorious corporate doublespeak, as “remaining disciplined about where we invest our time and resources.” In other words, we need to save our cash instead of localizing glossy fashion spreads for the Madrid, Munich and Monterrey markets.

This follows the merging of Teen Vogue into Vogue.com in November, which Variety covered in considerable detail, including the subsequent firing of four staffers who tried to ask the head of HR what was going on. That’s one way to handle voluntary buyouts.

The Condé United union called it illegal (much like wearing white shoes before Memorial Day). The company called it employee misconduct, pointing to their 400 word, glossy employee handbook with a cover story on HSA and group health options featuring Andre Leon Talley and his cape.

Most observers, however, recognized it as exactly the kind of situation you get when a company decides the PR cost of firing people is lower than the PR cost of answering tough questions – or the potential profits realized by turning those tough questions into a feature story by Vanessa Grigoriadis accompanied by an 8 page Annie Liebowitz photo shoot.

Read More: Conde Nast Layoffs Draw Union Response: Concerns Grow Over Editorial Integrity and Diversity (Oui Speak Fashion)

Why This Matters for Your Career

Fashion media consolidation is following the same playbook as every other media consolidation, which means the skills that survive it are also the same: digital audience development, commerce-integrated content, platform strategy, and the ability to generate revenue-adjacent editorial rather than editorial that exists purely on its own terms.

The specific Condé Nast situation also illustrates something worth internalizing if you’re currently inside a similar organization: the brands being protected are the ones with the strongest commercial identity and the most direct relationship with the reader’s wallet.

Pure editorial prestige, detached from measurable audience action, isn’t a sustainable position inside any of these companies anymore.

If your role doesn’t have a clear line to either audience growth or revenue, it’s worth thinking about how to draw that line yourself before someone else decides AI can easily draw it for you.

4. Eff Stop: AI Replacing Creatives With Autofocus

Zara’s parent company Inditex has been relatively open about the fact that it’s using AI to photograph its products without booking full shoots, dressing digital models in new garments and generating campaign images before the exec team can even get back from their daily siesta.

A detailed breakdown of the numbers tells the story pretty directly: production times cut from eleven days to under 48 hours, a 35% drop in shoot costs, and an 18% lift in click-through rates on new arrivals. H&M has created AI clones of models. Zalando’s doing the same. At this point it looks less like a test and more like a new baseline.

The CEO of the Association of Photographers, Isabelle Doran, has been clear about what this means: fewer shoots equals fewer bookings for photographers, stylists, set designers, and crew, and the math gets worse the more brands adopt the same approach.

Model Alliance’s preliminary research found that an overwhelming majority of models and influencers anticipated AI would negatively affect their careers, and roughly one in five have already been asked to submit to body scans. Apparently, the digital twin is the evil one.

Why This Matters for Your Career

The transition happening in fashion photography and production is the same one that happened to stock photography, travel writing, and entry-level graphic design, and it moves faster than most people expect once it starts.

The roles that survive aren’t the ones doing work AI can replicate at scale. They’re the ones directing, evaluating, and adding context to what AI generates.

If you’re a photographer, stylist, or creative director with an existing body of work and established client relationships, the near-term opportunity is in AI direction: understanding how to prompt, refine, and art-direct AI-generated imagery at a level that justifies the budget. It’s a different skill, but it’s not an unlearnable one.

If you’re earlier in your career, the faster pivot is toward the tech side: visual AI product management, creative technology roles at fashion brands, and the growing number of positions that exist specifically to bridge the gap between what the AI can produce and what a brand actually needs (and it’s probably not more AI slop, fwiw).

Read more: It’s Time for Fashion to Get Real About AI’s Impact on Jobs (Business of Fashion)

5. Empire Waste: A Closer Look at New York’s Model Legislation

In case you missed it (and unless you work for Ford Models or the Wilhelmina Group, it’s likely), New York’s recently passed Fashion Workers Act went into effect at the end of last year, with registration requirements for modeling agencies and managers kicking in at the beginning of the year.

This legislation, enforced by the New York State Department of Labor, is the first U.S. law to impose fiduciary duties on model management companies and require explicit written consent before using a model’s likeness in AI-generated content.

It also mandates contract transparency, minimum pay standards, and anti-harassment protections for workers who are, in most cases, classified as independent contractors and therefore historically unprotected by standard labor law (California could likely balance its budget with fines from WME alone were they to pass similar legislation).

Legal analysts note that the AI consent provisions are particularly significant: a model management company that uses or authorizes the use of a model’s digital likeness without separate, explicit written consent is now in violation of New York law, with fines up to $5,000 per subsequent violation. This is surely a deterrent for an industry who famously won’t get out of bed for less than a hundred grand.

Model Alliance, which is in fact not a mid-90s Fox primetime drama, spent years organizing for the legislation, and has signaled it expects similar laws to follow in other fashion industry hubs (Paris and Milan, notably, already offer similar protections under EU privacy law).

In effect, New York has set a regulatory standard for a business that’s long played by its own rules (or no rules). It’s the epitome of model legislation. Another boom.

Read more: Fashion Workers Act New York: New Protections for Models and Agencies (Rehkatsch)

Why This Matters for Your Career

The Fashion Workers Act has a few specific implications that extend well past modeling.

First, it’s the regulatory template that’s likely to influence similar legislation covering other gig-classified creative workers (photographers, freelance stylists, editorial contributors). If you’re navigating a career made up of project-based engagements rather than staff positions, these protections are becoming increasingly relevant – and important.

Second, the AI consent provisions signal a broader regulatory direction: the ability to use a worker’s image, likeness, or creative output to train or generate AI content without compensation and consent is going to become progressively harder to do legally. This is good news if you’re a creator, actor or just a mid-tier D1 athlete.

If your work involves contracts with brands, agencies, or platforms, adding explicit AI usage language to your standard agreements isn’t complicated, and it’s rapidly becoming a baseline professional expectation rather than a negotiating point.

Fashion Weak: Toile, Trouble and Decorative Closure

Fashion, as an industry, has always been in the business of making the mundane seem new and exciting (see: menswear, hosiery, footwear). It’s currently doing the same thing to its workforce, only with more fear than flair, and a bunch more RIF-related paperwork and COBRA policies.

The consolidation of fashion media, the automation of fashion photography, and the nostalgia for the golden age of glossies effectively drove DWP2 to $433 million in box office receipts (and counting).

These audience drivers are also manifestations of an underlying dynamic that’s been reshaping the industry for over a decade: the choice of scale and familiarity over the bespoke and avant garde (RIP, Gianni).

The increase in minimum order quantity and widespread adoption of circular fashion is evidence that the industry, like everywhere else in media and entertainment, is pivoting towards a workforce model that requires fewer people doing more work with less resources – but also, AI.

The careers that should have the most staying power in the fashion industry share one common characteristic: each sits at the intersection of creative and operational execution.

Just like brand strategy roles at entertainment companies must develop lasting and lucrative IP, creative technology positions at fashion brands are replacing human production with AI-generated assets.

The workers who survive, and thrive, in this rapidly evolving landscape are equally adept at both sides of the business – which is why there’s been such a massive influx of fashion industry talent towards cultural institutions like museums and archives, which seem to be institutionalizing industry best practices like curation, visual merchandising and mise-en-scène while the business of fashion is busy rewriting those rules.

Look, no one goes into fashion wanting to do museum work; everyone wants to be a designer, a model or a stylist. But those jobs are disappearing, and if you’ve built your career at the intersection of how fashion and media effectively narrate popular culture, taste and style, then there’s likely a fit out there for you – no matter what trend cycle you’re tracking.

Eventually, you may even have to ask yourself, “What’s Gucci?”

Thanks for reading this week’s drop. The drip don’t quit – and neither do we.

Matt Charney
Executive Editor, Mediabistro

Topics:

Weekly Drop Media Newsletter
Careers & Education

Furlough vs. layoff vs. termination: What's the difference?

Furlough vs. layoff vs. termination: What's the difference?
By Maurie Backman for Freedom Debt Relief
14 min read • Published May 11, 2026
By Maurie Backman for Freedom Debt Relief
14 min read • Published May 11, 2026

An office worker packing personal office items to a box.

Media_Photos // Shutterstock

Furlough vs. layoff vs. termination: What’s the difference?

If you’re worried about losing your job, you’re not alone. Today’s economy is tricky. Costs are still rising because of tariffs, and many people are worried that companies will reduce their headcounts to reduce costs or as they transition to AI.

The loss of a job, no matter how it comes about, could make it difficult to keep up with your bills, resulting in debt and necessitating debt relief. But the way you lose a job could have an impact on the benefits you’re entitled to afterward. That’s why it’s important to understand the difference between furlough, layoff, and termination.

In a nutshell, the difference between furlough, layoff, and termination is as follows:

  • Furlough is a temporary, unpaid leave from work.
  • Layoff is a permanent loss of a job, not due to an employee’s actions.
  • Termination is a permanent end to a job, often (though not always) for a specific reason.

It’s important to know what rights you have if any of these things happen to you, so Freedom Debt Relief took a closer look at each one.

Key Takeaways:

  • Employers sometimes cut labor costs with furloughs, layoffs, or terminations.
  • A furlough is an unpaid, temporary interruption in work, but you keep your job and benefits.
  • Layoffs and terminations are permanent. Layoffs are usually no-fault, and terminations (firings) are typically for a reason.

Understanding the Legal and Financial Implications of Losing Your Job

Furlough, layoff, and termination all result in the loss of your paycheck. But the difference between layoff and termination, for example, could influence whether you’re entitled to collect unemployment benefits.

Generally speaking, if you’re furloughed or laid off from your job, you’re entitled to unemployment benefits. If you’re terminated for cause, you can’t collect unemployment. Your state will ask you why you’re no longer working.

What makes things tricky is that there’s such a thing as a “no-fault” termination. From an unemployment standpoint, a layoff and a no-fault termination are virtually the same, in that you should be able to collect benefits as long as you meet your state’s requirements.

There’s also a difference between voluntary and involuntary termination. Voluntary termination is when you decide to leave your job, whether it’s to take a new one, to retire, or for another reason. Involuntary termination is when your employer decides to eliminate your job.

With a voluntary termination, you’re not entitled to unemployment benefits. With involuntary termination, you may be eligible for unemployment benefits if it’s considered a no-fault termination.

Most U.S. companies operate on an at-will employment basis. This means your employer can terminate your job at any time, as long as it’s for a legal reason. (It’s illegal for an employer to terminate your job based on race, religion, sexual orientation, age, or gender, for example.)

The difference between layoff and termination could also be a factor when you’re looking for a new job. A layoff may not make it harder to find work again, as you can simply explain in interviews that your job was eliminated through no fault of your own.

Being terminated for cause, on the other hand, could make it harder to get hired again. If you’re terminated for cause, be prepared to explain what steps you’re taking to avoid ending up in a repeat situation.

What You Need to Know About a Furlough

A furlough, or mandatory suspension from work without pay, is as brief or as long as your employer needs it to be, provided they follow certain rules. If you’re furloughed, it’s generally because your employer doesn’t want to lay you off but also can’t keep paying your wages in the near term. While there’s no standard time period for a furlough, they’re usually short.

Here are some things to know about being furloughed.

You shouldn’t work without pay

As a furloughed employee, you shouldn’t do any work for your employer. According to the Department of Labor, if you answer work-related phone calls or emails or engage in any other work-related tasks, your employer must pay you for the time you worked. This holds true whether you’re a salaried or an hourly employee.

You get to keep your benefits

If your employer gives you benefits in addition to your salary, you typically keep them while you’re furloughed. So if you depend on your employer for health insurance, retirement accounts, life insurance, or other benefits, you probably won’t lose them during this time. However, you might still be required to contribute toward things like health insurance premiums, despite not getting a paycheck.

It’s also common for employers to offer matching contributions to employee retirement plans. You generally won’t get those matching contributions while you’re furloughed, though, because you’re not getting paid, and therefore aren’t contributing to your retirement plan yourself.

You can seek new employment

If you’ve been furloughed and are technically still someone’s employee, you can still look for a new job. Many furloughed employees take temporary jobs during their furlough period so they can bring in some income. If your goal is to return to your job, you may want to turn to the gig economy for flexible work in the meantime. Earning at least some money could help you avoid the need for debt solutions.

You can collect unemployment benefits

You can usually collect unemployment benefits as a furloughed employee. The amount you’re eligible to receive depends on your wages, as well as your state—each state has a maximum weekly unemployment benefit. If you return to work, your unemployment benefits end.

In some cases, when you’re furloughed, your hours and paycheck are reduced, as opposed to being paused completely. In this situation, you may be eligible for partial unemployment benefits. Most states use a formula to reduce unemployment benefits based on how much money you’re earning while furloughed and working part-time.

Your employer should communicate with you regularly

Because a furlough is not permanent, your employer should keep you updated on when you may be able to return to work. When your company is ready for you to come back, you usually receive a formal recall notice with a return date.

At that point, you have the right to not return to work (such as if you’ve found a new job). But if you don’t go back to work, you generally stop being eligible for unemployment benefits, since the situation becomes a voluntary termination.

It’s important to manage your finances carefully

Although a furlough may only be temporary, you may end up going weeks or months without a paycheck. It’s important to avoid debt as much as you can during that time.

Aim to reduce your expenses, and if you have an emergency fund, now’s the time to tap it before charging expenses on a credit card. Furthermore, if you’ve been furloughed and have an installment loan you’re paying off, like a mortgage or personal loan, you may want to see if your lender will let you pause your payments temporarily. You may also be eligible for credit card forbearance.

What You Need to Know About a Layoff

In a layoff, you’re let go from your job due to no fault of your own. It could be that your company’s needs have changed, and they’re downsizing their staff. Or that money is tight, and your employer needs to cut its headcount. It’s possible to be rehired after a layoff, but it’s not something to bank on. Here are some things to know about layoffs.

You should seek unemployment benefits

If you’ve been laid off, file an unemployment claim as soon as possible in the state where you worked. If you receive severance pay from your employer, you might not be eligible for unemployment benefits right away, but it’s still a good idea to file your claim so it gets processed. In some states, no benefits are paid for the first couple of weeks after you file, so get that waiting period started.

You may need to apply for new health insurance

Typically, when you’re laid off, you lose your workplace benefits right away, including health insurance. You could sign up for COBRA, a program that continues your health insurance while you’re furloughed or laid off. But typically, you have to pay the portion of your insurance that used to be covered by your employer. That could be quite expensive.

You may be better off finding a more affordable alternative through the Affordable Care Act marketplace (healthcare.gov). Medicaid may also be an option if you qualify based on income. Or you may be able to secure health coverage from a spouse’s job.

You need to understand your severance package

Your employer may offer you a severance package when they lay you off. It may be a one-time payment or several payments spaced out over time. Your severance may be based on the length of your employment.

To get paid, you may also have to sign a severance agreement in which you give up certain rights. It could pay to review that agreement with an employment lawyer before you sign it. Your severance package and agreement may be negotiable, so you could end up with better terms.

Even if you’re not entitled to severance, it’s important to get the details of your layoff in writing in case your unemployment claim is denied. It’s also important to understand what benefits you’re entitled to (if any) as part of your layoff, such as being paid for accrued vacation or sick days.

You should know what rights you have

Layoffs often come out of the blue. But depending on the size of your company, your employer may be required to give notice of a layoff.

The Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act generally requires companies with 100 or more full-time employees to give proper notice (usually 60 days), particularly for mass layoffs. If your company violates this rule, you may want to speak to an employment attorney.

You should try to leave on good terms

It can be difficult not to take a layoff personally, even when it’s clear that you aren’t being fired for cause. But one thing you generally don’t want to do is express anger toward your employer. You never know when your employer’s situation might change and when a job may open up for you, whether it’s the one you’re losing or a new opportunity. So it’s worthwhile to leave on good terms and maintain a professional relationship with your employer even after you’re collecting a paycheck. You also might need to ask your employer to be a reference for a future job.

What You Need to Know About Termination

When you’re terminated from a job, it typically means you’re being let go for cause. However, that’s not always the case. Some companies offer voluntary termination, meaning an employee resigns, usually in exchange for some type of payment. And it’s also possible to have a no-fault termination, which is similar to a layoff.

Keep in mind that even though most U.S. employment is at-will, you may have grounds for wrongful termination if you’re let go for an illegal reason. That includes:

  • Discrimination based on your race, nationality, gender, religion, or age.
  • Retaliation for reporting a safety violation or harassment in the workplace.
  • Letting you go because you took leave you were entitled to, or filed a workers’ compensation claim.

Here are some additional things to know about termination.

Don’t expect unemployment benefits

Unemployment benefits are generally available to workers who lose their jobs through no fault of their own. If you’re terminated for cause, whether because of issues with your performance or for violating your employer’s rules, you usually can’t claim unemployment benefits. If you file a claim, your employer will likely contest it and say that you’re not entitled.

However, you may be able to argue that you’re eligible for unemployment due to “constructive dismissal.” Constructive dismissal is when an employee feels compelled to leave their job because their workplace environment is intolerable. This concept may apply if your workplace or manager was hostile, if your working conditions were unsafe, or if your office was unsanitary.

You may or may not be entitled to severance

If you’ve been terminated from your job, your employer may still offer you severance benefits. If not, you may be entitled to payment for accrued but unused sick or vacation time. Talk to your human resources representative to learn more.

Whether you’re eligible for severance or not, it’s important to request documentation detailing the terms of your termination. That includes:

  • Your employment end date.
  • The status of your final paycheck.
  • The reason for your termination in writing. 

Prepare to lose your benefits

When you’re terminated, you typically lose your workplace benefits. As is the case with being laid off, you may need to find a new source of health insurance. However, you may also be eligible to get coverage under COBRA for a period of time (though the cost means it’s often better to consider other options, such as the Affordable Care Act marketplace).

If you have a workplace retirement plan, it’s important to understand your options. You may be allowed to keep your money in your existing plan. But even if that’s the case, rolling it into a new retirement plan could be a better option.

Start your job hunt as soon as possible

If you’ve been terminated, you probably can’t get unemployment benefits. That could make it difficult to pay your bills and lead to credit card debt. You might also blow through your emergency savings quickly without a job.

Look for work as soon as possible. Here are a few job search tips that could help you out.

  • Network online. Join professional groups on Facebook and LinkedIn, and make it known that you’re in the market for a job in your industry.
  • Bolster your skills. The more skills you learn and develop, the more options you may have. You can also consider free courses and certification programs.
  • Prepare for interviews. If you were at your most recent job for a while, your interview skills may, understandably, be rusty. Practice in front of a mirror to boost your confidence, or find a friend or family member to do mock interviews with you so you get more comfortable.

How Employers Handle Furloughs, Layoffs, and Terminations

When you’re furloughed, laid off, or terminated, you’re often called into a meeting with your manager and a representative from your company’s human resources department. If it’s a mass layoff, you may simply be notified by email.

Your employer should provide you with information that includes:

  • The details of a furlough, such as whether your hours are being reduced versus cut completely.
  • The nature of your termination, such as whether you’re being let go for cause.
  • Your final employment date.
  • Your final paycheck date.
  • What benefits to expect, if any.
  • The terms of your severance agreement.
  • How to return company property, such as a laptop or cell phone, you use for your job.

If you’re being terminated for cause, you may be asked to leave immediately. In that case, you may be escorted by a human resources representative to collect your belongings from your workspace. This may also happen if you’re being laid off through no fault of your own and your job is ending right away.

Furlough vs Layoff vs Termination: Key Differences at a Glance

There are a number of key differences between a layoff and a termination, and being furloughed. Here’s a summary for easy reference.

A table showing the differences of furlough, layoff, and termination.

Courtesy of Freedom Debt Relief

It’s important to have a clear understanding of the nature of your job loss, as it could impact your eligibility for benefits, among other things.

Protecting Your Finances After Furlough, Layoff, or Termination

Losing your job, no matter how it happens, could impact your personal finances. If you find yourself out of a job, take these steps.

Assess your emergency fund

See how many weeks or months of bills you can pay out of your savings. If your essential bills come to $2,400 a month and you have $6,000 in savings, you could cover 2.5 months of bills without resorting to debt. And that doesn’t include any money you might get from severance or unemployment benefits.

Review your budget

There may be expenses you can cut back on while your job situation is in flux. Comb through your budget carefully, and try to pinpoint a few bills to reduce. Make sure to prioritize your essential bills like rent, car payment, and food. Consider canceling extras like streaming services temporarily, then resubscribe once your financial situation improves.

Get relief from your debt

It can be hard to pay a mortgage or make minimum payments on your credit cards when you’re out of work. Contact your lenders and credit card issuers to see what options you have. You may be able to pause some of your payments or negotiate the terms of a loan to lower your monthly payments. You can also find out how debt relief works if you feel your debts are no longer manageable.

Unfortunately, the loss of a job could lead to more debt, since you may need to rely on credit cards or loans if you’re not getting a paycheck. But you may be eligible for debt settlement.

Figure out your most affordable path to health insurance

Losing a job often means losing your health coverage. Going without insurance could result in catastrophic bills if you need surgery or emergency care, so it’s important to research your options. Depending on your situation, you may be able to join a spouse’s insurance plan at a cost, or you may qualify for subsidies that make an ACA plan more manageable for a time.

Find out if you qualify for government assistance

Depending on your financial situation, you may qualify for government assistance beyond unemployment benefits. You may be eligible for:

  • SNAP, which provides food benefits
  • Housing assistance
  • Medicaid
  • Utility bill assistance

Eligibility for these programs generally varies by state.

Losing a job can be a harsh blow, whether it’s temporary or permanent, and whether you did something wrong or not. Don’t hesitate to turn to family and friends for support as you figure out your next steps.

This story was produced by Freedom Debt Relief and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

Topics:

Careers & Education
media-news

Dolphin to Host First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call on May 12, 2026

By Media News
3 min read • Published May 11, 2026
By Media News
3 min read • Published May 11, 2026

MIAMI BEACH, FL / ACCESS Newswire / May 11, 2026 / Dolphin (NASDAQ:DLPN), a leading entertainment marketing and content production company, announced today it will host a conference call to discuss financial results for its first quarter ended March 31, 2026 on May 12, 2026, at 4:30pm ET.

Conference Call Information

To participate in this event, dial in approximately 5 to 10 minutes before the beginning of the call.

Date: May 12, 2026
Time: 4:30pm ET
Toll Free: 888-506-0062 International: 973-528-0011 Participant Access Code: 364505
Webcast: https://www.webcaster5.com/Webcast/Page/2225/53967

Replay

Toll Free: 877-481-4010 International: 919-882-2331 Replay Passcode: 53967
Webcast Replay: https://www.webcaster5.com/Webcast/Page/2225/53967

ABOUT DOLPHIN:

Dolphin (NASDAQ:DLPN) is where cultural creation meets marketing execution. Founded in 1996 by Bill O’Dowd, Dolphin operates as both a venture studio-developing and investing in breakthrough content, products, and experiences-and a marketing consortium, featuring leading agencies across every communications discipline.

At its core, the venture studio creates, produces, finances, markets, and promotes new businesses and cultural ideas – ranging from acclaimed film, television, and digital content to consumer goods, live events and partnerships that define entertainment and lifestyle. Surrounding this entrepreneurial engine, Dolphin’s marketing prowess brings together best-in-class firms including 42West, The Door, Shore Fire Media, Elle Communications, Special Projects and The Digital Dept. Together, this collective delivers unmatched cross-marketing expertise and relationships across every vertical of pop culture – from film, television, music, influencers, sports, hospitality, and fashion to consumer brands and purpose-driven initiatives. Dolphin marketing has been the recipient of many accolades, including #1 Agency of the Year on the Observer PR Power List in 2025, The PR Net 100, and the PR News Elite 120.

Follow us on Instagram here.

This press release contains ‘forward-looking statements’ within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act. These forward-looking statements may address, among other things, Dolphin Entertainment Inc.’s offering of common stock as well as expected financial and operational results and the related assumptions underlying its expected results. These forward-looking statements are distinguished by the use of words such as "will," "would," "anticipate," "expect," "believe," "designed," "plan," or "intend," the negative of these terms, and similar references to future periods. These views involve risks and uncertainties that are difficult to predict and, accordingly, Dolphin Entertainment’s actual results may differ materially from the results discussed in its forward-looking statements. Dolphin Entertainment’s forward-looking statements contained herein speak only as of the date of this press release. Factors or events Dolphin Entertainment cannot predict, including those described in the risk factors contained in its filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, may cause its actual results to differ from those expressed in forward-looking statements. Although Dolphin Entertainment believes the expectations reflected in such forward-looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions, it can give no assurance that its expectations will be achieved, and Dolphin Entertainment undertakes no obligation to update publicly any forward-looking statements as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise, except as required by applicable law.

Contact:

James Carbonara
HAYDEN IR
(646)-755-7412
james@haydenir.com

SOURCE: Dolphin Entertainment

View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

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Hot Jobs

Mission-Driven Media Jobs Hiring Now in Marketing and Publishing

mediabistro hot jobs
Mediabistro icon
By Mediabistro
The Mediabistro editorial team draws on 25 years of media industry expertise to cover jobs, careers, and trends shaping the industry.
4 min read • Published May 11, 2026
Mediabistro icon
By Mediabistro
The Mediabistro editorial team draws on 25 years of media industry expertise to cover jobs, careers, and trends shaping the industry.
4 min read • Published May 11, 2026

The Mission Economy Wants Your Marketing Chops

Organizations with a cause are staffing up their marketing departments, and they’re looking for serious commercial talent to do it. Today’s most compelling openings share a common thread: they sit at the intersection of purpose and performance, asking candidates to bring the same rigor you’d find at a top agency or brand, then apply it to work that actually matters to people.

Common Sense Media alone has three open marketing roles in San Francisco right now, building out what looks like an entirely refreshed brand team. That kind of coordinated hiring signals a strategic pivot, likely around their expanding AI safety and digital literacy initiatives. Meanwhile, W.W. Norton continues to quietly recruit across its independent publishing operation, and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation needs someone to help run its Washington bureau.

If you’ve spent years in commercial marketing and feel the pull toward something with more weight behind it, this is the candidate market to watch. These organizations aren’t looking for volunteers. They’re hiring seasoned professionals and compensating accordingly.

Today’s Hot Jobs

Senior Director, Brand Marketing at Common Sense Media

Why this one matters: Common Sense Media reaches over 150 million users globally and has become the trusted voice on kids and technology. This senior director role reports directly to the CMO and carries a listed salary range of $140,000 to $166,250. You’d own the translation of brand strategy into integrated campaigns across digital, social, and broadcast channels, with a specific mandate around reaching a new generation of parents navigating AI and screen time. The scope here resembles a VP-level role at many for-profit companies.

The core requirements:

  • Proven background in brand marketing strategy with experience leading campaign development at scale
  • Ability to blend creative marketing with mission-driven storytelling for diverse audiences
  • Strong data orientation with a track record of measurable campaign results
  • Experience managing a brand strategy team and coordinating cross-channel initiatives

Apply for the Senior Director, Brand Marketing role at Common Sense Media

Marketing Programs Manager at Common Sense Media

What makes this role interesting: If the Senior Director above sets the vision, this person makes sure every campaign, partner deliverable, and grant requirement actually ships on time. The salary range runs $85,600 to $101,650 for what is essentially a creative operations hub role, sitting between brand, growth, membership, educator marketing, and events teams. Anyone who has managed complex creative production workflows at an agency knows how critical and undervalued this function is. Common Sense is treating it as a standalone hire, which suggests they understand the role’s strategic importance.

You’ll need to bring:

  • Deep experience managing creative and marketing production workflows across multiple simultaneous campaigns
  • Ability to serve as liaison for partnership and grant-related deliverables with external stakeholders
  • Strong intake process management and cross-functional coordination skills
  • Comfort working across brand, growth, and membership marketing functions simultaneously

Apply for the Marketing Programs Manager position at Common Sense Media

Email and Funnel Marketing Manager at W.W. Norton

The standout detail: Norton’s professional books imprint is hiring a fully remote direct-response marketer with a very specific niche requirement: at least five years of experience in mental health marketing. That level of specialization tells you this isn’t a generic email role. You’d write high-converting long-form sales pages and design funnel campaigns for Norton’s continuing education products, thinking in terms of conversion rates, average order value, and list engagement. For direct-response marketers with healthcare or mental health backgrounds, independent publishing rarely offers this kind of focus. If you’re exploring how to build your professional brand around a specialized skill set, this is the type of role that rewards deep expertise over breadth.

Key qualifications:

  • Minimum five years of experience in mental health marketing specifically
  • Proven ability to write high-converting short- and long-form direct-response copy
  • Full-funnel thinking with command of email lifecycle, launch sequences, and evergreen campaigns
  • Entrepreneurial mindset with comfort presenting and defending copy strategy to cross-functional teams

Apply for the Email and Funnel Marketing Manager role at W.W. Norton

Office and Production Assistant at Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Why it caught our eye: The ABC’s Washington bureau is a genuine international newsroom covering American politics for Australian audiences, and this hybrid role blends editorial support with bureau operations management. You’d assist producers with breaking news coverage and assignment logistics while also managing the bureau’s finances, vendor contracts, and HR administration.

What they’re after:

  • Suitable working rights in the USA
  • Experience supporting editorial teams with planning, logistics, and breaking news operations
  • Financial administration skills including bank reconciliation and vendor payment management
  • Willingness to be available outside normal working hours for urgent bureau needs

Apply for the Office and Production Assistant role at ABC News Washington

Professional Takeaways

The clearest signal in today’s listings: mission-driven organizations are hiring for commercial marketing skills, and they’re posting transparent salary ranges to compete for that talent. Common Sense Media’s coordinated three-role build-out is worth watching even if you don’t apply today, because it indicates how nonprofits with serious reach are structuring modern marketing teams. If you’ve been building expertise in direct response, brand strategy, or creative operations inside agencies or brands, your skill set translates directly to organizations tackling AI safety, digital literacy, and education. The mission sector is paying real money for real experience. Bring your portfolio and your metrics.

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media-news

AIML Appoints Dr. Martin Green to Medical Advisory Board and Issue Options

By Media News
6 min read • Published May 11, 2026
By Media News
6 min read • Published May 11, 2026

Founding Architect of Canadian Cardiac Electrophysiology and 45-Year Authority on Electrocardiography Joins AIML’s Medical Advisory Board

TORONTO, ON / ACCESS Newswire / May 11, 2026 / AI/ML Innovations Inc. ("AIML" or the "Company") (CSE:AIML)(OTCQB:AIMLF)(FWB:42FB) is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Martin Stephen Green, MD, FRCPC, Professor Emeritus at the University of Ottawa, to the Company’s Medical Advisory Board (the "MAB"), effective April 27, 2026.

Dr. Green joins the MAB at the invitation of Dr. Paul Dorian, MD, MSc., the Company’s Medical Innovation Architect and Chair of the Medical Advisory Board. The two physicians have collaborated for more than three decades across the Canadian Registry of Atrial Fibrillation (CARAF), the Canadian Cardiovascular Society guideline process, and a series of peer-reviewed publications.

Dr. Green is a founding figure of Canadian cardiac electrophysiology. He established the Arrhythmia Service at the University of Ottawa Heart Institute (UOHI) in 1983 as its sole electrophysiologist and built it into a national referral centre. He served as Director of the EP Fellowship Program (1983-2017), Director of the ECG Department (1983-2018), and Director of the Inherited Arrhythmia Clinic (2013-2022). He trained under Professor Hein J.J. Wellens at the University of Limburg in Maastricht and is a co-author of the 1984 Circulation paper on programmed ventricular stimulation that helped establish the field.

Dr. Green’s appointment strengthens the clinical depth of AIML’s Medical Advisory Board as the Company advances its product portfolio through clinical validation, regulatory engagement, and commercial deployment.

Dr. Paul Dorian, Chair of the AIML Medical Advisory Board, commented:

"Martin Green is one of the people who built modern cardiac electrophysiology in Canada. He has spent forty-five years reading electrocardiograms and Holter recordings at a level very few physicians anywhere have matched, and he has trained much of the next generation. Inviting him to join our Medical Advisory Board is one of the most consequential clinical additions AIML can make at this stage of its growth."

Dr. Martin Green commented:

"AIML is approaching ECG signal processing with the rigor that the underlying physiology requires. I am excited for the opportunity to help the company alongside Paul Dorian and the AIML team. I am honoured to accept the invitation to join the Medical Advisory Board."

Paul Duffy, Executive Chairman and CEO of AIML, commented:

"Dr. Green’s arrival on the Medical Advisory Board, at Dr. Dorian’s invitation, is a significant moment for AIML. He brings depth in electrocardiography and Canadian electrophysiology training, an extensive clinical research record, and direct experience with the limitations of the ECG platforms in clinical use today. With Dr. Green joined alongside Dr. Dorian, Dr. Rabinowitz, Dr. Connelly, Dr. Heilbron, and Dr. Deyell, AIML’s Medical Advisory Board has strong clinical support to assist with the Company’s regulatory, scientific, and commercial programs at the highest standard."

AIML established its Medical Advisory Board in May 2025 to guide clinical studies, regulatory strategy, and real-world deployment of the Company’s AI-driven ECG signal-processing platforms. Dr. Dorian was appointed Medical Innovation Architect and Head of the Medical Advisory Board in January 2026. With the addition of Dr. Green, AIML’s MAB now extends across three of Canada’s principal cardiac centres – St. Michael’s Hospital (Toronto), St. Paul’s Hospital (Vancouver), and the University of Ottawa Heart Institute (Ottawa) – providing national clinical coverage in support of the Company’s continued growth.

About Dr. Martin Green

Dr. Martin Stephen Green, MD, FRCPC, is Professor Emeritus, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, and the recently retired Cardiologist and Cardiac Electrophysiologist at the University of Ottawa Heart Institute (UOHI).

Dr. Green received his medical degree from the University of Toronto in 1975, where he was awarded the K.J.R. Wightman Prize in Internal Medicine and the Cody Silver Medal. He completed Internal Medicine and Cardiology training at the University of Ottawa, obtaining his FRCPC (Medicine and Cardiology) in 1981, and subsequently undertook a Research Fellowship in Cardiac Electrophysiology under Professor Hein J.J. Wellens at the University of Limburg, Maastricht, the Netherlands (1981-1983), funded by the Medical Research Council of Canada.

Returning to Ottawa in 1983, Dr. Green founded the UOHI Arrhythmia Service. He served as Director of the Arrhythmia Service and Electrophysiology Laboratory (1983-2002 and 2007-2010), Director of the EP Fellowship Program (1983-2017), Director of the ECG Department (1983-2018), and Director of the Inherited Arrhythmia Clinic (2013-2022). He chaired the Board of Governors of the UOHI Academic Medical Organization from 2003 to 2016 and served on the executive of the Canadian Heart Rhythm Society (CHRS), including a decade-long tenure as Chair of its Education Committee.

Dr. Green is the recipient of the 2010 Canadian Cardiovascular Society Distinguished Teacher Award and the 2022 Canadian Heart Rhythm Society Career Achievement Award. He has authored or co-authored more than 230 peer-reviewed publications, including the 1984 Circulation paper "Significance of ventricular arrhythmias initiated by programmed ventricular stimulation" (Brugada P, Green M, Abdollah H, Wellens HJJ) – a foundational paper in sudden-death risk stratification. He is a long-standing investigator in the Canadian Registry of Atrial Fibrillation (CARAF I and II) and serves as Chair of the Events Committee of the COAST-AF randomized controlled trial and Chair of the Data Safety & Monitoring Committee of VIRTUES-CIED (CANet).

Dr. Green is co-editor, with Andrew Krahn (UBC) and Wael Alqarawi (UOHI / King Saud University), of the Springer textbook Electrocardiography of Inherited Arrhythmias and Cardiomyopathies: From Basic Science to Clinical Practice (Springer Nature, 2020). He has held editorial roles at the Canadian Journal of Cardiology, Heart Rhythm, the Journal of Electrocardiology, and the Indian Pacing and Electrophysiology Journal, and has served as visiting faculty at meetings of the Indian Society of Electrocardiology and other international cardiology societies. He is a co-author of the 2024 Canadian Journal of Cardiology paper "Interpreting Wide-Complex Tachycardia With the Use of Artificial Intelligence."

Stock Option Grant

The Company also announces that it has granted an aggregate of 4,000,000 stock options to certain employees of the Company, each exercisable to acquire one common share of the Company at $0.10 for a period of five years.

About AI/ML Innovations Inc.

AIML Innovations Inc. is a global technology company pioneering the use of artificial intelligence and neural networks to transform digital health. Our proprietary platforms leverage advanced signal processing and deep learning to convert complex biometric data into actionable clinical insights – supporting earlier diagnosis, personalized treatment, and more effective care.

AIML’s shares trade on the Canadian Securities Exchange (CSE:AIML), the OTCQB Venture Market (AIMLF), and the Frankfurt Stock Exchange (42FB).

For detailed information please see AIML’s website at https://www.aiml.health or the Company’s filed documents at www.sedarplus.ca.

AIML Contact:

Paul Duffy, Executive Chairman and CEO
416-941-8900

Neither the CSE nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the CSE) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

Forward Looking Statements – Certain information set forth in this news release may contain forward-looking statements that involve substantial known and unknown risks and uncertainties, including risks associated with the implementation of the Company’s products and services as currently proposed or at all. These forward-looking statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties, certain of which are beyond the control of the Company, including with respect to the nature and timing of future operations and the receipt of all applicable regulatory approvals. Readers are cautioned that the assumptions used in the preparation of such information, although considered reasonable at the time of preparation, may prove to be imprecise and, as such, undue reliance should not be placed on forward-looking statements.

SOURCE: AI/ML Innovations Inc.

View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

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