Here’s how to watch the 2023 NFL Draft for free without cable

We’ve had 3.5 months to catch our breath after Super Bowl LVII. That means it’s time for the ramp up to the 2023-2024 season of the NFL.

The 2023 NFL Draft will kick off Thursday night and run through Saturday, April 29. And it’s being preceded by some big trades, none bigger than Aaron Rodgers move from Green Bay to the New York Jets.  

Starting Thursday night, though, it’s the college stars who will have their time in the spotlight, and Alabama’s Bryce Young is the odds-on favorite to be first picked.

Not going to be home when the picks are made? Maybe you’ve gotten rid of cable to keep bills under control? Don’t worry. There are still plenty of ways to watch.

When does the 2023 NFL Draft take place?

This year’s NFL Draft will begin on Thursday, April 27 and run through Saturday, April 29. Round one picks will be announced Thursday. Rounds two and three happen on Friday. And Saturday will see rounds four through seven.

What time does the 2023 NFL Draft begin?

It varies by night

Thursday’s coverage will begin at 8:00 p.m. ET.

Friday’s coverage will start at 7:00 p.m. ET.

Saturday’s coverage will begin at 12:00 p.m. ET.

Which network or networks are airing the 2023 NFL Draft?

Again, it will depend on the day.

Thursday, ABC will broadcast the first round.

Friday and Saturday’s coverage will air on ESPN. The NFL Network will also air the 2023 NFL Draft.

How can I watch the NFL Draft for free?

As with any network-centric programming, the best way to watch for free on a big screen is with a good HD antenna. Since ABC is airing the early round of the NFL draft, you’ll be able to watch even if you don’t have a cable subscription. To ensure you’re getting the most reliable signal, be sure to test the antenna in multiple locations in your home.

Can I watch the 2023 NFL Draft online?

Yep. There are a number of options, too. You can always log on to the WatchESPN app, but if you’d prefer to watch on a big screen (or don’t want to bother with adding another app) there are several alternatives.

Disney+

Disney’s bundle of Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+ no longer has a free trial, so you’ll have to pay $13.99 per month for all three combined (or $19.99 per month for no ads on Hulu). Including Live TV in the bundle bumps the price to $70 per month ($76 with no ads).

Hulu with Live TV

The free trial on this service is no longer offered, as well. It will cost you $70 per month.

YouTubeTV

After up to a two-week trial, you can expect monthly charges of $73.

Sling TV

Dish Network’s Sling lower-tiered “Orange” plan will now run you $40 per month. Adding the more comprehensive “Blue” plan bumps the cost to $55 per month. (A $5 per month increase for each.)

DirecTV Stream

Formerly known as DirecTV Now, AT&T TVNow and AT&T TV, this oft-renamed streaming service will run you $70 per month and up after the free trial option.

Fubo TV

This sports-focused cord-cutting service carries broadcast networks in most markets. There’s a seven-day free trial, followed by monthly charges of $70–$100, depending on the channels you choose.

Does the NFL offer any service for me to watch the 2023 NFL Draft?

It does, but there are fewer options than you have during the regular season.

NFL App

The NFL App will let you stream this year’s draft, via the NFL Network.

Can I watch the 2023 NFL Draft on Amazon?

Nope. The streaming service doesn’t have any broadcast rights for the draft.

What’s the Draft Order for selections in 2023?

Chicago, which had a truly terrible 3-14 record last season, would normally have first pick, but the Bears traded that pick to the Carolina Panthers for four others. And the Miami Dolphins forfeited their top pick after the team was found to have violated the league’s anti-tampering policy, by trying to lure Tom Brady.

The order of the picks will vary by round, but here’s how things are shaping up for Round One:

  1. Carolina Panthers (From Chicago Bears)
  2. Houston Texans
  3. Arizona Cardinals
  4. Indianapolis Colts 
  5. Seattle Seahawks (from Denver Broncos)
  6. Detroit Lions (from LA Rams)
  7. Las Vegas Raiders
  8. Atlanta Falcons
  9. Chicago Bears (from Carolina Panthers)
  10. Philadelphia Eagles (from New Orleans Saints)
  11. Tennessee Titans
  12. Houston Texans (from Cleveland Browns)
  13. Green Bay Packers (from New York Jets)
  14. New England Patriots
  15. New York Jets (from Green Bay)
  16. Washington Commanders
  17. Pittsburgh Steelers
  18. Detroit Lions
  19. Tampa Bay Buccaneers
  20. Seattle Seahawks
  21. Los Angeles Chargers
  22. Baltimore Ravens
  23. Minnesota Vikings
  24. Jacksonville Jaguars
  25. New York Giants
  26. Dallas Cowboys
  27. Buffalo Bills
  28. Cincinnati Bengals
  29. New Orleans Saints (from San Francisco 49ers through Miami Dolphins and Denver Broncos)
  30. Philadelphia Eagles
  31. Kansas City Chiefs

Which players are first-round favorites in the 2023 NFL Draft?

Part of the thrill of the NFL Draft is how quickly things can change, but 2023 has a clear frontrunner. Bryce Young of Alabama is widely expected to be snatched up in the first round. Other expected high-ranking picks could include:

  • Jalen Carter, UGA– He’s a great athlete on the field, but his no contest plea last month to reckless driving charges in connection with a crash that killed two people, including a teammate have raised doubts about how high he’ll be picked.
  • J. Stroud, Ohio State– Quarterbacks are the top picks this year. And Stroud’s performance with the Buckeyes should make him highly sought after.
  • Will Levis, Kentucky – The Wildcats didn’t have the best season, but few blame that on Levis.
  • Anthony Richardson, Florida – The real wildcard this year. Richardson could go as early as number two or could be a later round draft pick.

After the draft, what’s next?

Once the draft is over, all eyes turn to the 2023-2024 schedule. That will be released on or about May 11. The season will begin on Thursday, September 7 (on Amazon), and conclude in February 2023 with Super Bowl 58.

Tickets will go on sale after each game is announced.

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Peggy Noonan Converses With Giant Talking Statue, And One Of Them Makes Sense

Lord but she needed to pad out this week’s column. Peggy Noonan, sister in good standing of the Order of the Diazepam Insouciance, had uncharacteristically little to say. It happened to even the best writers, she supposed, so no surprise that her own well seemed to have run dry.

But there was so much going on in the world! She could write about the corporate malfeasance and rollback of government regulations that likely played huge roles in the disastrous train derailment currently despoiling a delightful corner of her beloved Robert Taft’s Ohio. She could write about the Chinese spy balloon that the feckless Joe Biden had allowed to drift across the North American continent like an Oriental Hoover, sucking up the nation’s secrets and beaming them back to Beijing. She could talk about the desperate Republican scandal to pretend that they did not in fact, despite decades of statements and actions to the contrary, want to destroy Social Security.

THE MANY COULDS OF PEGGY NOONAN!

Perhaps We Could Improve Railroad Safety Somewhat?

Peggy Noonan Don’t Know Nothin’ ‘Bout ‘Bortin No Babies!

Hi, I’m The Chinese Spy Balloon! Please Continue Going About Your Day, Citizens!

I’m Rick Scott And I Do Not Want To End Social Security And Medicare, Pinky Swear.

Bah! So common! So jejune! So boring to try and squeeze 800 words out about any of these topics.

A break. She needed a break. The weather was unseasonably warm in New York this week, balmy as spring, so why not take a stroll around the city, perhaps visit a famous site or two, and find some inspiration?

And what could be more inspiring than the Ellis Island ferry chugging its way out into the harbor, towards the place where the American dream began for so many millions of the unwashed masses? The thrills those refugees from the Old World felt approaching the vast terminal where they would disembark to begin their new lives, the great lady, the Statue of Liberty nearby on her own island, greeting their ships with her torch held aloft to the heavens welcoming to America those who yearned to breathe free …

“For fuck’s sake.” The deep voice boomed across the water, the shockwave knocking out the ferry’s engines and leaving it adrift. A cloud passed across the sun. The imposing stone face turned slowly, so slowly in her direction, the metal screaming in protest as the statue’s neck twisted to look down at her.


“Good Lord, would you give it a rest?” The statue dropped her arms to her sides and rolled her neck. “I haven’t heard such overwrought claptrap since Dylan Thomas kicked it.” She put her hands on her hips and slowly arched her torso, and Peggy heard a crack like the Earth itself was splitting open.

“Oy,” the statue said. “You think you’ve got lower back pain? You ever tried standing still in the same spot for a hundred and forty years while holding a giant torch straight up in the air? It’s amazing my vertebrae haven’t all crumbled into powder.”

The statue slowly stepped off her pedestal and lumbered down to the edge of Liberty Island, where she pulled up her tunic, plopped down on the ground, and stuck her giant feet in the water.

“Christ, does that feel good,” she said. “The least you people could have done was give me something to sit on. It didn’t have to be a fancy Eames chair or anything. A stool would have been fine. Now then!” She slapped her thighs, and the sonic boom caused the ferry to tilt precariously to port. Peggy looked around and saw that her fellow passengers did not seem to have noticed. They were all happily gathered at the rails, pointing excitedly back at the Manhattan skyline or out towards Ellis Island, snapping pictures on their iPhones and oblivious to the one-hundred-and-fifty foot statue soaking her feet in New York Harbor and glaring at them.

“So tell me, Peggy,” the statue said. “Are you feeling inspired yet?”

On Wednesday Nikki Haley announced her presidential campaign in Charleston, S.C. I found myself thinking not about her candidacy but about the launch itself… An introducer said she will “lead us into the future”; she added, “America is falling behind.” It was all so tired, clichéd, and phony. It was national politics as it has been done circa 1990-2023.

“Ha! 1990!” Lady Liberty laughed. “Peggy, I know you are going to pretend history ended when the first George Bush came to power, but the president you worked for in the 1980s had plenty of hoary clichés. Have you forgotten ‘Morning in America’? ‘Prouder, Stronger, Better’? That America had fallen behind and needed the great Reagan to lead it back to glory was the entire theme of his 1980 campaign! It was supposed to be the antidote to all the national malaise of the 70s.

“Shoot, he even used ‘Make America Great Again’ back when Donald Trump was busy discriminating against any Black people who wanted to rent his apartments. I assure you, outside of Hugh Hewitt’s brain, it was no less tired and phony then too. People might have bought it, but that didn’t make it any more authentic.”

In her speech she said some nice things: “Take it from me, the first female minority governor in history: America is not a racist country.” Everyone who scrambles over our border knows that; it is good when elites say it.

“Ha!” The statue slurped harbor water from her cupped hands. “I know that’s simplistic and wrong, and I literally have an empty space where my brain should be.”

Connected to this, the second part of our column, on last weekend’s Super Bowl ads. What do we discern from them about how the nation’s ad makers see their country? That we’re a nation of morons, a people with fractured concentration, a people with no ability to follow even a 60-second spot …

“To quote my old comedy improv teacher,” Lady Liberty said. “Yes, and?”

The ad makers must have asked themselves: What does America want? And answered: dumb, loud, depthless and broken. I’m here to say I’ve met America and that’s not what they want. What they want is “Help me live, help my kids live, help me feel something true.”

“You’ve met America where, at Ripon Society meetings?” Lady Liberty cackled as she used her torch to light a giant cigarette and blow a great plume of smoke towards New Jersey. “A feeling in this formulation is just another commodity for ad makers to sell people, like Doritos or Hyundais. And that’s fine! Not every Clydesdale has to have a story to inspire people. Sometimes they can just sell beer.”

Finally, the Academy Awards are next month. At the Oscar lunch this week the Academy made clear it wasn’t over the Will Smith slap. Good. It was a big moment … Here is how to turn that moment into something helpful. It doesn’t involve “image rehab.” It involves constructive honesty. Will Smith should walk in and say this:

“Oh no.” The statue held her head and moaned. “I beg of you, Peggy.”

“Last year I did something bad to a guy who was just doing his job, and I am here to acknowledge it from the same stage-to admit that in attempting to humiliate him, I humiliated myself. I showed a number of things, including sheer bad judgment … As a public figure, I delivered exactly the wrong message and put forward exactly the wrong example. What we do in public matters, especially for the young. If we smoke, they’ll think it’s cool to smoke. If we use bullets and guns, they’ll be inspired to go in that direction … I’m going to continue to work on myself, and I ask you, as I close, not to applaud, if you were going to. After all the furor, let’s end it quietly and with thought.”

“America is not a racist country. Now allow me, an elderly white woman, to condescendingly lecture a successful Black man about his manners, and demand he beg forgiveness from a worldwide television audience. That’s the message you’re going with this week?” Lady Liberty sighed and flung the cigarette butt out into the harbor, where it bobbed on the surface like a dead whale.

“Well, back to the grindstone,” the statue said as she lumbered back to her feet with a sigh that shook the city’s bridges. “I mean this, Peggy, from the bottom of my heart. Next time you’re stuck for material, just take a week off.”

Lady Liberty picked up her torch and book, clambered up onto her pedestal, and resumed her usual position. Peggy watched her recede as the ferry chugged back to the Manhattan shore. Wise words for a statue, she thought. Not that she had any intention of heeding them.

[WSJ]

Look everybody, it’s Gary. Help us pay Gary.



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This Billionaire Is A Donor Behind The Jesus-Focused Super Bowl Ads

A group called He Gets Us ran two ads during the Super Bowl game in an effort to spread the word about Jesus. One of the donors behind the ads is a craft chain billionaire worth nearly $15 billion.


A multi-billionaire donor behind two unusual ads that ran during the Super Bowl on Sunday is David Green, the founder of a national chain of craft stores and a big donor to the Museum of The Bible in Washington, D.C.

In the first half of the Super Bowl game, a 30-second spot with images of children being supportive and embracing each other ran. During the fourth quarter, a 60-second ad aired with a series of black and white images of people arguing and on the verge of attacking each other. The ad ended with the phrase “Jesus loved the people we hate.” Both spots were in stark contrast to ads featuring fast fashion, oversized bunnies and aging rock stars that ran during the biggest football game of the year.

The group behind the Jesus-focused ads is He Gets Us, a limited liability company that says it’s an initiative of The Servant Foundation, a public charity and Christian foundation based in Kansas that last year launched a $100 million effort to improve the image of Jesus, as the Washington Post reported. One of the backers of the initiative is billionaire David Green, the founder of craft store chain Hobby Lobby, who is estimated by Forbes to be worth $14.8 billion.

“The Greens are part of a diverse group of individuals and entities with a common goal of sharing Jesus’ image authentically,” Jason Vanderground, a spokesperson for He Get Us and the president of Haven, the agency that directed the ad campaign, said in an email sent to Forbes. Green also spoke to Glenn Beck during a podcast interview in November about the He Gets Us campaign. “We’re wanting to say ‘we’ being a lot of different people that he gets us. He understands all of us. He … loves who we hate, so I think we have to let the public know and create a movement, really,” Green told Beck.

Green’s company Hobby Lobby won a Supreme Court decision in 2014 in which it argued that the company’s religious beliefs enabled it to avoid providing a full range of contraceptives to its employees at no cost, as is required by the Affordable Care Act. In 2021, Hobby Lobby lost a case it had brought in Illinois in a battle over which bathroom a transgender employee is allowed to use.

Here is Forbes’ October 7, 2012 article about David Green, republished in full.


By Brian Solomon Former Staff


David Green insists God is the true owner of his $3 billion arts and crafts chain. Acting as His disciple, Green has become the largest evangelical benefactor in the world—with plans for unprecedented gifts once he’s in heaven.

Fresh off an inspection of Hobby Lobby’s sprawling 5.5 million-square-foot distribution warehouse in Oklahoma City, the company’s CEO, David Green, retreats to his office in the adjacent executive building, where he surrounds himself with a collection of homely elephant figurines. His coffee table is draped with a bird’s-eye-view photograph of his corporate campus, annotated with scribbles in black marker that show the expansion under way.

When I ask him to walk me through the secrets to his company’s growth, which the aerial plans represent, the 70-year-old, with a full head of white hair, blue eyes and a prominent square jaw, doesn’t take any personal credit. Nor does he laud his executives or his 22,000 employees or his customers, who will gobble up more than $3 billion worth of crafts products from him this year. “If you have anything or if I have anything, it’s because it’s been given to us by our Creator,” says Green, sweeping his hand over the acres laid out before him. “So I have learned to say, ‘Look, this is yours, God. It’s all yours. I’m going to give it to you.’ “

He means that literally. David Green has one of America’s great, little-known fortunes, having turned a makeshift manufacturing operation in his living room for arts and crafts into a retail monster, with 520 superstores in 42 states. Green and his family own 100% of the company and he ranks No. 79 on our list of the 400 richest Americans, with an estimated net worth of $4.5 billion. Hobby Lobby’s cash spigot currently makes him the largest individual donor to evangelical causes in America.

“I don’t care if you’re in business or out of business, God owns it,” says Green. “How do I separate it? Well, it’s God’s in church and it’s mine here? I have purpose in church, but I don’t have purpose over here? You can’t have a belief system on Sunday and not live it the other six days.”

There are very few members of The Forbes 400 who bring religion to work. Most notable are Chick-fil-A’s Truett Cathy and Forever 21 ‘s Jin Sook and Do Won Chang, born-again Christians who keep Bibles in their office and print John 3:16 on the bottom of each shopping bag. More typical is Warren Buffett, who admits to being agnostic. Green joined Buffett’s Giving Pledge in 2010: His public letter doing so quotes 2 Corinthians (“Each of you should give what you have decided in your heart to give, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver”). And that’s about all that Buffett and Green have in common philanthropically. Rather than try to cure malaria or fix the U.S. public school system, he’s turned his arts and crafts empire into a massive missionary organization, the equivalent of the largest church bake sale in the world. Hobby Lobby takes half of total pretax earnings and plunges it directly into a portfolio of evangelical ministries. Green keeps the total amount of his charitable contributions private, but based on information received from him and discussion with various recipients, FORBES estimates his lifetime giving at upwards of $500 million.

In the U.S. Green’s wealth produces the physical underpinnings of dozens of churches and Christian universities. It began in 1999, with a former V.A. hospital building in Little Rock, Ark. that he purchased for $600,000 and converted into a church. Green has since spent over $300 million donating about 50 properties. The word is out: Ministries approach him constantly with proposals for their new church or Christian community center—only one in ten is chosen. He won’t help them unless they pass a doctrinal vetting process, which includes questions about the Virgin Birth. Even well-known pastor Rick Warren needed to pass Green’s muster before the billionaire handed his Saddleback Church a 170-acre ranch property last August to use as a retreat.

“You can’t have a belief system on Sunday and not live it the other six days.”


Green’s influence, though, comes through education; he currently carries evangelical education on his back. He gave a former Ericsson plant in Lynchburg, Va., which he bought for $10.5 million, to Jerry Falwell’s Liberty University in 2004. He gave an entire campus to Zion Bible College in Haverhill, Mass. in 2007, at a cost of $16.5 million. In 2009 Green snapped up the 217-acre former campus of Massachusetts prep school Northfield Mount Hermon for just $100,000, spent $9 million on renovations and plans to give it away. Christian universities across the country have been auditioning for this attractive location, causing a minor stir in the liberal New England town of Northfield. In his biggest splash, Green bailed out scandal-ridden, debt-laden Oral Roberts University with a $70 million gift in 2007, a donation with strings attached: Green got to replace the college’s misgoverning board of trustees. Today, with his son Mart chairman of the board and one of his granddaughters a new alumnus, Green calls Oral Roberts a “healthy university.”

“If I die without food or without eternal salvation, I want to die without food.”


“Even the most generous Christian philanthropists often don’t see the purpose of their giving,” says Dr. Mark Rutland, the new ORU president and founder of the Global Servants evangelical ministry. “There are impulse givers, people who give to their alma mater or their church or some particular ministry with which they become familiar—but the Greens are Kingdom givers. … They consider it an honor; they consider it a mission.”

Abroad, Green is putting Scripture into the hands of nonbelievers. “People ask, ‘How are you going to get a Bible to everyone in the world?’ We’re doing it,” Green says. Through foundations he supports, he has already distributed nearly 1.4 billion copies of Gospel literature in more than 100 countries, mostly in Africa and Asia. The OneHope Foundation targets children age 4 to 14 with Scripture tailored to them, while Every Home for Christ sends evangelists with Bible booklets door-to-door in some of the poorest countries on Earth. “It’s not like you give them that but don’t give them food; you do both,” Green stresses. But the priority is clear: “If I die without food or without eternal salvation, I want to die without food.”

Green and his family show what giving looks like “from a biblical perspective,” says Rob Hoskins, president of OneHope. “For high-net-worth individuals, particularly people that created first-generation wealth, to look at the growth of their business, not for them to maintain a lavish lifestyle or accumulate generational wealth but for the cause of Christ—they’re a shining light in the Christian community.”

Green makes a distinction between “good” causes—employing people or researching cures for disease, for example—and “great” causes, which will echo beyond our temporal existence. “I don’t know how to get anywhere else once you start with that one thing: that the Bible is God’s word,” he says. And Green has taken God’s word digital. He sponsors the YouVersion Bible app for mobile phones, equipped to offer almost 300 different versions of Scripture in 144 languages—all available at the tap of your finger. It has already been downloaded more than 50 million times.

Perhaps his most personal mission yet is just gearing up. Green is creating a permanent, public home for his collection of handwritten scrolls, rare books and ancient cuneiform tablets the family has amassed over the decades. At 44,000 artifacts, it appears to be the largest private collection of biblical antiquities in the world. Some of the most precious pieces are currently housed in a modest temperature-controlled storage room in the Hobby Lobby warehouse. It’s not much bigger than your average walk-in closet, but Green steps lightly as he enters. He’s treading on sacred ground. “This isn’t just some book that someone made up,” Green says as he gingerly takes one Bible down from the shelf. “It’s God, it’s history, and we want to show that.” He purchased a building in Washington, D.C. with the hope of opening the Museum of the Bible, an expanded version of a current traveling exhibition, within three years.

While he has donated as much money to evangelical causes as anyone alive, Green is more humbled by the memory of his parents’ putting their last dime on the collection plate. His father was a small-time preacher who bounced from one tiny congregation to another, eventually landing at a church of just 35 attendees in Altus, Okla., a speck of a town amid a sea of cattle ranches and cotton fields. The family subsisted on hand-me-down clothes and food donations from the congregation, going weeks without having meat to put on the table—but that didn’t stop Green’s mother from donating to the church. His wife of 51 years, Barbara, recalls her mother-in-law with reverence. “We don’t give out of our need, we give out of our surplus,” she says. “David’s mother gave out of her need. She would give stuff when she might not have something to replace that with, yet she stepped out in faith.”

All of Green’s five siblings followed his parents’ example and became either pastors themselves or pastors’ wives. Green himself took the faith down a less traveled path. After flailing his way through middle school (he had to repeat seventh grade), he jumped at the opportunity to do a work-study program during his junior year of high school. As a stock boy at McClellan’s general store, where he would later meet Barbara, Green spent most of his time sweeping floors and unloading boxes for 60 cents an hour, but he fell in love with the romantic idea of buying something for 10 cents and selling it for 20.

“This isn’t just some book that someone made up.”


After serving briefly in the Air Force Reserve and marrying his sweetheart, the 29-year-old Green was working as a manager at TG&Y, another five-and-dime, when he started the small business that would become Hobby Lobby. Borrowing $600 to buy equipment, Green teamed up with another store manager in 1970 to manufacture his first of many arts and crafts products: miniature picture frames. Soon the Green family kitchen table was converted into factory space manned by Barbara and the couple’s two young boys, Steve and Mart, who churned out frames for an allowance of 7 cents apiece. In 1972 he opened his first store, a 300-square-foot space in Oklahoma City.

Soon, with the help of a bead-buying craze among hippies (“God bless them,” Green says), he upgraded to a bigger location. Three years later he opened a second store in town, with 6,000 square feet of retail space, and quit his regular day job at TG&Y—against Barbara’s wishes. “She wasn’t on board at first,” Green says. “She was real comfortable with me working at TG&Y. They were doing $2 billion in sales; we did $100,000. Of course, they’re gone now, and we’re making $3 billion.”

“I want to know that I have affected people for eternity. I believe I am. I believe once someone knows Christ as their personal savior, I’ve affected eternity. I matter 10 billion years from now.”


Who is responsible for Hobby Lobby’s success depends on who tells the story. CFO Jon Cargill, who has been with the company for more than 20 years, calls Green “the Bobby Fischer of merchandising.” It doesn’t take more than a few minutes with the founder, walking through a local Hobby Lobby store, to see the reason he has been able to expand his company into a well-oiled, moneymaking machine without bringing in any outside investors.

Stopping at a display marked 30% off, Green explains how a kitschy rooster ornament is produced overseas for pennies on the dollar, then sold as part of an in-house brand of home accents: the ceramic vases, bookend statuettes and decorative mirrors that dominate prime center-store real estate and make up Hobby Lobby’s highest-grossing department. The rooster doesn’t have a common bar code under its tail feathers; Green is winning a war against computerized point of sale systems, with the belief that manually updating the price sticker makes his employees more knowledgeable.

Adhering to that stubborn dogma has helped Green, who continues to work six days a week, take Hobby Lobby to greater heights. Same-store sales have increased by an average of 8.1% over each of the last four years, while larger competitor Michaels averaged only 0.4% during the same period. “It’s just a fantastic, unbelievable retail experience that I can’t get enough of,” says Sue Turchick, president of Crafters Home, a buying group for independent arts and crafts retailers. “I tend to want to buy independent, locally owned and operated, but Hobby Lobby steals me away from that principle every stinking time.”

Yet Green steadfastly believes that the success is not his doing. “I think God has blessed us because we have given,” he says. Take Green’s account of Hobby Lobby’s close call with death in 1985. On one hand, there’s the perfectly reasonable, Business 101 explanation: He overleveraged the business and diluted the inventory with off-brand, expensive products like luggage, ceiling fans and gourmet foods. Then there’s Green’s explanation: “It was a pride problem, and I had to get rid of it,” he says, describing his leadership style. “It’s sort of like God says to me, because I was arrogant, ‘I’m going to let you have it by yourself.’ ” The Business 101 answer was downsizing, cost-cutting and pleading with creditors. The Green explanation: getting under his desk to pray for help. Whichever version is right, smart strategy or faith, combined with hard work, brought back profits.

Hobby Lobby remains a Christian company in every sense. It runs ads on Christmas and Easter in the local paper of each town where there’s a store, often asserting the religious foundation of America. Stores are closed on Sundays, forgoing revenue to give employees time to worship. The company keeps four chaplains on the payroll and offers a free health clinic for staff at the headquarters—although not for everything; it’s suing the federal government to stop the mandate to cover emergency contraception through health insurance. Green has raised the minimum wage for full-time employees a dollar each year since 2009—bringing it up to $13 an hour—and doesn’t expect to slow down. From his perspective, it’s only natural: “God tells us to go forth into the world and teach the Gospel to every creature. He doesn’t say skim from your employees to do that.”


“My grandkids can’t say, ‘I own 5% and I own 10,’ and then all of a sudden they’re sitting on a yacht.”

No matter how big Hobby Lobby becomes—Green is adding 35 stores this year, with a long-term goal of surpassing 1,000—its founder wants to make sure the company remains faithful long after he’s gone. So far, Hobby Lobby has been a traditional family operation: All three of Green’s children, Steve and Mart, plus daughter Darsee, are executives, and several of his grandchildren have already joined the company. The ownership has been structured for the company to continue indefinitely, but in the event of a sale or dissolution of Hobby Lobby, 90% of the company will go to ministry work while the remaining 10% will be shuttled into a trust reserved for the education and health of family members. “My grandkids can’t say, ‘I own 5% and I own 10,’ and then all of a sudden they’re sitting on a yacht,” says Green, who, despite enough wealth for a fleet of Gulfstreams, still flies coach.

While the transition from a generational trust was difficult, Green is concerned only with behaving according to what the Bible tells him. Hobby Lobby, he knows, won’t last forever. “Woolworth’s is gone. Sears is almost gone. TG&Y is gone. So what? This is worth billions of dollars. So what? Is that the end of life, making more money and building something?” Green asks, answer already in hand. “For me, I want to know that I have affected people for eternity. I believe I am. I believe once someone knows Christ as their personal savior, I’ve affected eternity. I matter 10 billion years from now. I matter. Someone that does all this doesn’t matter. I’m sorry, it’s gone.”

It’s that absolute conviction that drives him every day. Whether God is really watching over him and his stores, Green’s certainty in his Savior’s existence has gotten him this far. Why waver now?

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Why Rihanna Won’t Get Paid For Her Super Bowl Halftime Show

The pop star turned beauty mogul won’t earn a dime on Sunday—and it’s not because she’s a billionaire.


In2019, Rihanna famously turned down the chance to headline the Super Bowl halftime show, telling Vogue she did so in support of former quarterback Colin Kaepernick, who was ousted from the NFL for kneeling in protest of systemic racism and police brutality. “I just couldn’t be a sellout,” the popstar said at the time, “I couldn’t be an enabler.”

Now, the singer turned beauty billionaire is set to take the stage as the Apple Music halftime act for Super Bowl LVII in front of an estimated 190 million viewers on Sunday. “I felt like it was now or never for me,” Rihanna said in an interview a few months ago. “The Super Bowl is one of the biggest stages in the world, it’s an entertainer’s dream to be on a stage like that.”

The performance marks Rihanna’s return to music after nearly six years away. In October, she released her first single since 2017—“Lift Me Up” from Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, which earned her an Oscar nomination for Best Original Song. Not that the 34-year-old singer has been slacking off during her hiatus from music. In addition to giving birth to her first child in May, the 34-year-old has built Fenty Beauty—launched six years ago with luxury goods giant LVMH—into one of the most inclusive and successful cosmetics brands in the industry, worth an estimated $2.8 billion. In 2018, she also launched the lingerie brand Savage X Fenty, which was weighing a $3 billion IPO, following a $125 million funding round last year. Together the businesses make up the vast majority of Rihanna’s estimated $1.4 billion fortune.

So it’s a good thing she’s not hard pressed for cash, because Rihanna won’t be paid for her Super Bowl performance as is custom for halftime headliners.

While A-list performers including Beyoncé, Bruno Mars, Justin Timberlake and Lady Gaga don’t get paid, the show does offer huge benefits from the exposure to a massive audience. This year, the number of viewers is expected to top 192 million. Call it the halftime show effect: When Lady Gaga took the stage in 2017, her album and song sales, for example, increased 1000%, Billboard reported, and Jennifer Lopez gained 2.3 million new followers across social media after she and Shakira headlined in 2020.

Last year’s performance featured West Coast hip-hop starring legends Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Mary J. Blige, Kendrick Lamar, Eminem and 50 Cent, each of whom saw a boost to their personal catalogs. In the week after the Super Bowl, Dr. Dre saw a 183% increase in album sales and a 105% bump in on-demand streams, according to data from Luminate. Blige’s album sales jumped 999% during that time, and Snoop Dogg’s rose 361, Luminate said. And the production itself continued to earn accolades long after the big game ended: it was nominated for five Emmy awards and won three, including the trophy for Best Live Variety Special, the first time ever a Super Bowl halftime show had won that honor.

For Rihanna, who already has nearly 250 million followers on Twitter and Instagram, the Super Bowl performance is her chance to return to her music roots and reconnect with her audience after years away from the stage. (She did appear in her partner A$AP Rocky’s May 2022 music video). It’s also yet another collaboration with Jay-Z, whose Roc Nation entered into a long-term partnership with the NFL in 2019 as its Live Music Entertainment Strategists.

And like Super Bowl commercials, halftime shows don’t come cheap—productions can cost north of $10 million dollars. For The Weeknd’s 2021 halftime show, he spent $7 million of his own money to make sure it fit his vision, and a source close to Dr. Dre told Forbes that the rapper and producer also spent around $7 million on his show last year. Much as the previous longtime sponsor, Pepsi, had done in the past, the NFL and Apple Music are expected to foot the bill for Rihanna’s performance, an NFL spokesperson confirmed to Forbes.

A representative for Rihanna declined to confirm whether she is putting her own money into the performance. Roc Nation and Apple Music did not respond to Forbes’ requests for comment.

“I get involved with every aspect of anything that I do,” Rihanna said Thursday at a press conference ahead of the game. “Whether it’s the Super Bowl, whether it’s a makeup product, whether it’s Savage lingerie…I want to see the copy on the website. I want to name every lipstick that I make,” the CEO said. “If it flops or it flies, my name has to stand by that.”

Of course, Fenty Beauty and Savage X Fenty are also likely to score big from Sunday’s spectacle. The performance comes days before Valentine’s Day, a historically busy time for the lingerie industry. Both brands have launched limited edition “game day” lines, featuring football themed sweats, shirts reading, “Rihanna concert interrupted by a football game, weird but whatever,” lipsticks and even a ball-shaped makeup sponge.

“The Fenty highlighter is definitely helping today,” Rihanna joked at the press conference, taking a break from rehearsals. “Because I have yet to sleep.”

But the true focus of Sunday’s show is Rihanna’s music. “This show is gonna be a celebration of my catalog, the best way we can put it together,” she said ahead of the performance. “You’re trying to cram 17 years of work into 13 minutes.” It could be a sign of what’s to come next. The singer is rumored to be going on tour later this year, her first since 2016, something fans hope she’ll announce on Sunday.

Still, Rihanna fans may have to manage their expectations.

“Super Bowl is one thing,” she said. “New music is another thing.”

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Meet The Billionaire Owner Of The Philadelphia Eagles

A former college professor who became an Oscar-winning film producer, Jeffrey Lurie has the NFL’s 10th most valuable team back in the Super Bowl for the second time in five years.

By Justin Birnbaum


Standing in a room filled with reporters, Philadelphia Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie somberly delivered a piece of franchise altering news. “We’re going to be saying goodbye to the winningest coach in the history of the Philadelphia Eagles,” he said.

That was December 2012, and Lurie had just fired head coach Andy Reid, after a 14-year stint that featured nine playoff berths and a Super Bowl appearance. In doing so, the Eagles’ owner was tearing away a proverbial safety net. Reid transformed the once beleaguered franchise into a perennial competitor. Despite a 4-12 season, Reid’s prowess was still apparent, and less than a week later he was hired to coach the Kansas City Chiefs, the Eagles’ opponent on Sunday in Super Bowl LVII.

But Lurie, 71, has never hesitated to take a risk, and Reid certainly wasn’t his first. In 1994, he took a nine-figure loan from the Bank of Boston to buy the Eagles for $185 million, believed to be the highest for an existing professional sports franchise at the time. It paid off handsomely. The team is now worth $4.9 billion, according to Forbes’ math, making Lurie a billionaire with an estimated net worth of $4.4 billion. Thanks to his aggressive approach, Lurie is on the verge of football immortality once again.

“You’ve got to make changes in business [and] after a certain period of time, anything can become stale,” says Marc Ganis, president of consulting firm Sportscorp, who has worked with numerous NFL teams and owners. “But Jeffrey saw that that was only going to take them so far. That takes a lot of courage, frankly, on the part of the owner to make a change when things aren’t going terribly because you believe you can make a decision to make things go better.”


TOUCHDOWN TYCOONS

The Eagles and Chiefs have each hoisted the Lombardi Trophy in the last five years. But only one can emerge victorious at Super Bowl LVII on Sunday.


Long before he was stewarding arguably the most important franchise in the Philadelphia sports landscape, Lurie was a die-hard sports fan growing up in suburban Boston. Born in 1951, he cheered on the Boston Bruins, Celtics and Red Sox. His passion for football blossomed in 1958, watching Johnny Unitas lead the Baltimore Colts to an overtime victory against the New York Giants in the NFL Championship game. “I was hooked for life,” he told the St. Paul Pioneer Press in 2018. Two years later, he attended the first-ever home game of the Boston Patriots and later became a season ticket holder.

His family had grown quite successful in the preceding years. Lurie’s grandfather, Philip Smith, founded the General Cinema Corporation in 1935. During the 1940s, it owned nine of the 15 drive-in movie theaters in the United States and dabbled in other things, like becoming the largest independent bottler of Pepsi, according to “The Eagles Encyclopedia,” by Ray Didinger and Robert S. Lyons. By 1991, General Cinema had 315 movie theater complexes in the U.S. and owned 60% of the Neiman Marcus retail chain. It posted revenues of $2.1 billion and net earnings of $111.3 million that year. A continued desire to diversify led to the $1.4 billion acquisition of struggling book publishing and insurance outfit Harcourt Brace Jovanovich (and a name change to Harcourt General), according to The New York Times.

Lurie steered clear of his family’s business at first. He studied at Clark, Boston and Brandeis Universities, earning a doctorate in social policy from the latter where he wrote his thesis on the depiction of women in film. After briefly working as an adjunct college professor, he joined General Cinema in 1983. Two years later, he went out on his own and founded Chestnut Hill Productions. The Los Angeles-based company produced a number of films, like 1988’s “Sweet Hearts Dance” with Don Johnson, Susan Sarandon and Jeff Daniels, but failed to land a critical or commercial hit. (His Hollywood success would come two decades later, when he won his first two Academy Awards, alongside his now ex-wife Christina Weiss Lurie, for producing two documentaries: “Inside Job” about the 2008 financial crisis and “Inocente” about an undocumented homeless American teen.)

Luckily for Lurie, another opportunity, involving a different passion, presented itself. The New England Patriots were for sale in 1993, and he jumped at the chance to buy his childhood team. “I was obsessed with the Pats. I was at virtually every single game in the stands for, I don’t know, 20-30 years,” he told the Boston Globe on Monday. But the bidding proved too rich for his blood. Lurie exited the process when the price hit $150 million, a tough number to swallow considering the Patriots’ dire financial situation at the time. The team ultimately went to Robert Kraft in January 1994, who paid $172 million. Undeterred, he shifted his focus to bringing an expansion team to Baltimore. That failed too when the NFL selected Jacksonville and Carolina.

“It takes a lot of courage on the part of the owner to make a change when things aren’t going terribly because you believe you can make a decision to make things go better.”

—MARC GANIS, Sportscorp

It all worked out a few months later, though. Eagles owner Norman Braman, a luxury-car dealer based in Miami that is worth an estimated $3 billion today, put the team up for sale as a result of a personal illness and subsequent surgery in 1991. ”I felt the stress and pressure of owning a professional football team was something that I just didn’t want to continue to undertake,” the Philadelphia native and lifelong Eagles fan tells Forbes. “It was that simple.”

Lurie swooped in and paid $185 million for the franchise. Working out the finances proved tricky. Lurie and his mother borrowed from the Bank of Boston, using their stock in Harcourt General as equity and pledging more from the family trust as collateral, according to “The Eagles Encyclopedia.” In retrospect, it was “arguably the smartest investment the family’s ever made,” Sportcorp’s Ganis says. Thanks to Braman’s less-than-stellar reputation among the fanbase, Eagles supporters eagerly accepted the regime change. Lurie also brought in two minority owners in 1995: Richard Green, who apparently tried to buy the Eagles in the 1980s and whose family-owned Firstrust Bank became the official bank of the team in 2020, and Mike Michelson, a longtime executive at KKR. (Forbes estimates they still own 8% of the team combined.)

Upon taking control, Lurie made replacing the Eagles’ practice facility and home venue, Veterans Stadium, a priority. “I think it’s one of the worst facilities in all of sports. Everyone who has to go to work there, I feel bad for,” Lurie said in 1997, according to Philadelphia Magazine. He delivered within the decade, opening the $37 million training ground NovaCare Complex in 2001. Lurie then built the $512 million Lincoln Financial Field, financed with $200 million in public money and $140 million in naming rights.

“You build a new stadium and that adds an economic vitality to the city,” says Tim Derdenger, an associate professor at Carnegie Mellon’s Tepper School of Business. “All those extra dollars spent before and after the football games are crucial for Philadelphia as a whole, but particularly those small, medium-sized family owned businesses around the stadium.”

When the venue opened in 2003, the Eagles were already knee-deep into the tenure of Andy Reid, who posted 59 regular season wins from 2000 to 2004. Reid joined the organization not long after winning the Super Bowl as an assistant coach with the Green Bay Packers in 1997. Sportscorp’s Ganis describes the hiring as arguably Lurie’s best moves because it turned “the franchise into a perennial potential winner.”

While not necessarily an attention-grabber, Ganis says Lurie has been a strong behind-the-scenes contributor to the league for many years. Lurie, whose family controls an estimated 92% of the team, serves on the NFL’s finance, media and international committees. His son, Julian, joined the organization in business and football operations this season. Lurie continues to produce films, adding a third academy award for best documentary in 2022 for “Summer of Soul,” which looked back at the 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival. He has also used his team as an instrument of philanthropy, starting with the Eagles Youth Partnership, which he and his ex-wife Christina (she still holds a minority stake in the team) founded in 1995, as well as the Eagles Social Justice Council in 2018 and the Eagles Autism Foundation (over $16 million raised) in 2019.

“He really is a forward thinker,” Ganis says. “Jeff brings progressive values to the role.”

Still, Lurie has never lost his taste for greatness, or his risk tolerance to reach it. He sacked Doug Pederson after the 2020 season, just under three years removed from leading the Eagles to their first and only Super Bowl victory. Months later, Lurie’s club shipped off star quarterback Carson Wentz in favor of a struggling rookie with only four starts under his belt. “To me, there is no substitute for the joy of winning,” he said in 1994.

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