
A Chinese reality show will cast actors in Michael Bay's Transformers 4

The point of a draft is to help the worst teams get better, but the lottery pits the worst teams against the merely mediocre
Startup TrackingPoint sells a rifle with laser and computer technology that lets a novice hit moving targets 500 yards distant—then post the kill online

To extend Internet access throughout the world, Google may be working on balloon-based broadband transmitters

Helped by the Fed, it's very cheap to borrow money. This could end badly

Farmers reported their progress via Twitter and Instagram, using hashtags like #plant13

The film director has a site selling movie-themed T-shirts and memorabilia, as well as promoting a Bolivian liquor

The former Atlanta Falcons rusher enrolled in the Goizueta executive MBA program to gain credibility and confidence

The West's housing rebound is helping small companies while delinquency rates remain higher along the Eastern seaboard, says a new report
Munshi Ahmed/Bloomberg
Professor, University of California at Berkeley
U.S.
Tyson headed the Council of Economic Advisers under President Bill Clinton and served four years, from 2002 to 2006, as the first female dean of the London Business School. Now she's back at her old stomping grounds at U.C. Berkeley, where she's a professor at the Haas School of Business and sits on various corporate boards. In a Jan. 28 interview with Bloomberg TV, Tyson said she thinks new regulation of financial services needs to extend beyond banks.