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  • Anthony Pompliano Claims the Bitcoin Bull Market Has Begun – “The Sling Shot Effect Is Coming”

    Anthony Pompliano Claims the Bitcoin Bull Market Has Begun – “The Sling Shot Effect Is Coming”

    Renowned financial analyst Anthony Pompliano, in his latest analysis, claims that the Bitcoin bull market has already begun and issued an important warning to his followers.

    Noting that Bitcoin has experienced a pullback of approximately 40% from its peak of $126,000, Pompliano predicts that this decline will create a “slingshot effect” leading to new highs.

    Pompliano argues that Bitcoin has proven its worth to institutional investors. In seven consecutive financial crises since 2020, Bitcoin has outperformed stocks, gold, and cash, becoming the most profitable asset.

    From pandemics to wars, banking crises to high inflation, he argues that Bitcoin has become the “king of safe havens” in all kinds of chaos.

    Related News BREAKING: Cryptocurrency Exchange Coinbase Lists a Surprise Altcoin

    Citing a new report published by Bitwise, Pompliano argued that an investor who holds Bitcoin for at least three years has less than a 1% chance of losing money.

    The analyst argues that a historic period is underway not only for cryptocurrencies but also for stock markets. He added that the signal he calls the “3-3-3 rule” (the stock market rising by 3% or more for three consecutive weeks) has only occurred three times in the last 76 years.

    Referring to the impact of the upcoming US elections on the markets, Pompliano predicts that the current administration will do everything in its power to keep the economy afloat and boost asset prices before the election.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • The question isn’t whether privacy. It’s what sort of privacy

    Blockchains were built as public networks in the best tradition of open-source technology. But their future is private. And that future is arriving faster than most people realize.

    This month, Tempo — the Stripe-backed payment blockchain that raised $500 million at a $5 billion valuation, with Visa, Mastercard, Paradigm, and UBS among its backers — published a detailed architectural proposal for private enterprise stablecoin transactions. Tempo is not a scrappy privacy-native project. It is arguably the most institutionally credentialed blockchain launch in years, built by people who deeply understand what banks, payment processors, and enterprises actually need. When a network with that pedigree makes privacy a launch-week priority, it isn’t a signal. It’s a verdict.

    The question of whether or not institutional chains will be private has been settled. What remains is the harder one: what kind of privacy are we actually building?

    The problem with public chains

    Bitcoin solved a problem that had stumped computer scientists and bankers for decades: how to transfer value between strangers without a trusted intermediary. Ethereum took blockchains further, offering programmable value alongside value transfer — smart contracts that could encode agreements, automate settlement, and eliminate entire categories of middlemen. Then came stablecoins, which married programmability to the stability of the dollar, and from there, the migration of real-world assets to onchain protocols began.

    Each wave has brought added institutional interest, capital, and ambition. And now, as regulatory clarity emerges, institutions are ready to deploy resources onchain.

    But there’s one thing holding them back — a fundamental flaw that becomes more consequential the larger the numbers get.

    Everything is visible. Every wallet. Every balance. Every transaction, in real time, is readable by anyone with a browser. In financial markets, this is not a feature. It is an existential problem. Imagine if every hedge fund’s positions, every corporate treasury’s holdings, every pension fund’s rebalancing trade appeared on a public screen the moment it was executed. Sophisticated counterparties would front-run. Competitors would map your strategy. Criminals would identify targets. The financial system as it exists today would seize up overnight.

    Blockchains have been asking institutions to accept exactly that. Tempo’s announcement on April 16 is the clearest possible signal that institutions have finally said: no.

    Architecture is destiny

    Here is where the conversation gets more consequential — and more nuanced.

    Tempo’s solution is Zones: private parallel blockchains connected to the main network. Within a Zone, participants transact privately. The public sees only cryptographic proofs of validity, not underlying data. Compliance controls travel with the token automatically. Assets remain interoperable with Tempo Mainnet. For enterprises running payroll, treasury operations, or settlement workflows, it is a thoughtful and practical design.

    But Tempo’s privacy model is operator-visible. The Zone operator — an enterprise or infrastructure provider — sees all transactions within its Zone. The public sees nothing. The operator sees everything. For many regulated institutions, this is acceptable, and may even be required. But it means privacy is contingent on trusting an intermediary. You have moved the visibility problem; you have not eliminated it.

    This is not a criticism of Tempo. It is a description of a genuine architectural choice — one with real consequences for anyone thinking carefully about risk.

    Zero-knowledge cryptography offers a different path. ZK proofs allow a party to prove that a transaction is valid without revealing the underlying data. A new generation of ZK-native blockchains builds this privacy-preserving functionality into the execution layer itself. Accounts execute transactions locally, with the chain storing only a cryptographic commitment. Nothing sensitive ever touches a public ledger. Transaction history is not browsable. And crucially, no operator has a god’s-eye view — privacy is enforced at the base layer, not delegated to an intermediary.

    If Bitcoin gave us trustless transfer and Ethereum gave us programmable trust, ZK-native blockchains offer verifiable privacy: the ability to prove that everything happened correctly without revealing what actually happened.

    Compliance without full transparency

    The obvious objection is regulatory. Privacy and compliance have long been framed as incompatible — oil and water. That framing is becoming obsolete.

    Regulatory compliance does not require that everyone can see your transactions. It requires that the right parties, under the right conditions, can verify that your transactions were legitimate. That is a meaningful distinction, and it is one that ZK cryptography is uniquely positioned to enforce. Selective, programmable disclosure — revealing what regulators need to see, nothing more — is not a workaround. It is a more precise implementation of what compliance actually demands.

    Tempo’s model handles this at the operator level. ZK-native approaches handle it at the cryptographic level. Both satisfy the compliance requirement. But they distribute trust very differently.

    The question that matters

    The financial industry knows it needs to move onchain. It now knows — Tempo’s announcement makes this undeniable — that it cannot do so on fully public infrastructure. The era of public-by-default blockchains as the assumed standard for institutional finance is ending.

    What comes next depends on a choice the industry is only beginning to make clearly: privacy through trusted operators, or privacy through cryptographic guarantees that require no trust at all.

    Both are legitimate answers. But they are not equivalent. The privacy model you choose determines your risk surface, your compliance posture, and your exposure to the failure modes of the intermediaries you depend on. Architecture is not a technical detail to be resolved later. It is the decision that determines everything else.

    The question for the industry is not whether privacy. That debate is over.

    The question is what sort of privacy — and who, if anyone, you are willing to trust with the view.

  • Iran says ‘fully prepared’ for football team’s World Cup participation

    Iran says ‘fully prepared’ for football team’s World Cup participation

    Tehran says all necessary arrangements has been made for participation in the tournament cohosted by the US.

    Iran says that the country’s institutions are fully prepared for its national football team’s participation in the 2026 FIFA World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico.

    In a statement made to state broadcaster IRIB, government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani said on Wednesday that the Ministry of Youth and Sports ensured all necessary arrangements for the team’s effective participation in the tournament.

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    She also said the preparations were made under the directive of the sport minister, with a focus on providing the required facilities for a successful performance.

    FIFA President Gianni Infantino said on April 16 that Iran is expected to participate in the upcoming World Cup, taking place from June 11 to July 19, noting that the team has qualified and expressed its willingness to compete despite the ongoing US-Israeli war on Iran.

    “But Iran has to come, they represent their people, they have qualified, the players want to play,” he said of the Iranian team’s upcoming matches scheduled in the United States in June.

    “Sports should be outside of politics,” Infantino said.

    Group matches in the US

    US President Donald Trump said in March that while Iran’s team would be welcome at the tournament, he questioned whether it would be appropriate for them to attend, citing concerns over their “life and safety”.

    Iran is scheduled to play its three Group G matches in the United States – two in Los Angeles, one in Seattle – with their base for the tournament in Tucson, Arizona.

    Iran’s participation in the global tournament being cohosted by the three North American countries had been thrown into doubt by the conflict launched by the United States and Israel on February 28.

    Iran raised the prospect of a “boycott” of the competition before asking FIFA to move its matches from the United States to Mexico, a request the world governing body rejected.

    After several weeks of air strikes on Iran and Iranian reprisals against Israel and other countries in the region, a fragile truce came into effect on April 8.

    The announcement of the two-week ceasefire was followed by rare direct talks in Islamabad on April 11–12, which ended without an agreement. The ceasefire was later extended by the US as diplomatic efforts continue.

    The World Cup, the first to feature 48 teams, starts on June 11.

  • Aspirin Doesn’t Prevent Colorectal Cancer, Review Says. Here’s What Helps Instead

    Aspirin and a glass of waterShare on Pinterest
    A new study demonstrates limited protective benefits for daily aspirin use and colorectal cancer risk. Viktoriya Skorikova/Getty Images
    • Research suggests that daily low dose aspirin doesn’t appear to reduce a person’s risk of colorectal cancer.
    • Frequent aspirin use may increase a person’s risk of bleeding in and around the brain.
    • Experts say you can lower your colorectal cancer risk with lifestyle habits such as eating a plant-based diet, limiting alcohol consumption, and exercising daily.

    A daily regimen of low dose aspirin probably does not significantly reduce the risk of colorectal cancer but may increase the risk of bleeding in the brain area, according to a large-scale analysis of previous research.

    Researchers reported that daily aspirin probably does not help in preventing colorectal cancer in the first 15 years of use, although it might have some preventive benefits in the longer term.

    However, the researchers stated that they are “not confident” in the long-term assessment.

    They also reported that daily aspirin use may increase deaths from colorectal cancer in the short term but may help reduce deaths after 15 years.

    Again, the researchers noted they are “not confident” in these conclusions.

    They did report that daily aspirin use may increase the risk of bleeding outside the skull as well as bleeding in and around the brain.

    “It is not possible to draw definitive conclusions or outline specific implications for the routine use of aspirin for [colorectal cancer] primary prevention based on the current evidence,” the researchers wrote. “Our findings reveal complex, time‐dependent preventive effects and concerns about potential harms for clinicians and patients to consider.”

    Ketan Thanki, MD, a colorectal surgeon who specializes in benign and malignant disease of the colon, rectum, and anus at the MemorialCare Todd Cancer Institute at Long Beach Medical Center in California, said this latest report provides cautionary advice for anyone considering an aspirin regimen.

    “This study demonstrates limited (if any) protective benefit from aspirin on risk of developing colorectal cancer in the general population,” Thanki told Healthline. “With the known potential complications of long-term aspirin use, I would recommend that people don’t take daily aspirin solely with the intent of reducing your risk of developing colorectal cancer.”

    To reach their findings, the researchers analyzed data from 10 randomized controlled clinical trials.

    They compared aspirin and other nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) with either no treatment or a different treatment for preventing colorectal cancer or colorectal adenoma in the general population.

    The studies included more than 120,000 participants. Most of the research was conducted in North America and Europe. Low‐dose aspirin (75-100 mg per day) was typically used, although three studies evaluated higher doses.

    The researchers said they found that daily aspirin “probably results in little to no difference” in reducing colorectal cancer risks after 5 to 15 years of use. They added that aspirin might slightly reduce colorectal cancer risk after 15 years of use.

    “I would advise that you only consider daily aspirin for this purpose, either if you have a genetic syndrome that predisposes you to cancer (specifically Lynch Syndrome) or have had adenomatous polyps removed during a prior colonoscopy,” Thanki said.

    “In those populations, there is good evidence that it may decrease risk of cancer and may decrease risk of adenoma recurrence, respectively. Those patients should speak with their doctors.”

    The researchers also reported that daily aspirin “may increase mortality” from colorectal cancer between 5 and 10 years of use, as well as producing “little to no difference in mortality” between 10 and 15 years, and a possible reduction in mortality after 15 years.

    They added that aspirin “may result in little to no difference” in colorectal adenoma between 5 and 10 years, but “the evidence is very uncertain.”

    The researchers also noted that daily aspirin use produced “little to no difference’ in overall serious adverse events, but they said “aspirin does increase the risk of serious extracranial hemorrhage” and “probably increases the risk of hemorrhagic stroke.”

    The researchers said their findings should raise concerns for medical professionals and patients alike.

    “The uncertain and delayed potential for benefit must be weighed against a definite harm,” they wrote.

    “In light of the mixed evidence, clinical practice should continue to center on an individualized assessment and a shared decision‐making process, carefully balancing a patient’s established cardiovascular risk profile against their risk of bleeding,” the researchers wrote.

    There has been conflicting research in recent years over the benefits and the risks of daily aspirin use as a cancer prevention tool.

    The new research contradicts an August 2024 study that reported that regular aspirin use can lower the risk of colorectal cancer, especially in people who have obesity or have unhealthy lifestyle habits such as smoking.

    An April 2024 study also concluded that daily aspirin may have some protective benefits against colorectal cancer, perhaps by enhancing the body’s ability to detect cancer cells.

    However, a January 2026 study reported that daily aspirin did not appear to reduce cancer in older adults but stated it might increase the risk of cancer-related mortality in older population groups.

    The contrast in research has prompted at least one government agency to revise its recommendations.

    However, the task force withdrew its recommendation in 2022, citing a lack of evidence showing that daily aspirin reduces a person’s chance of developing or dying from colorectal cancer.

    Experts concur that people should consult with their doctor about whether daily aspirin is beneficial for them.

    “It may decrease the risk of… preeclampsia in high risk pregnancies, and, as we discussed, polyps and tumors in the colon. It is important to know that this is highly nuanced and you should always talk with your doctor to see if daily aspirin use is right for you,” he explained.

    Katherine Van Loon, MD, a specialist in gastrointestinal cancers at the University of California San Francisco, said the January 2026 study indicates that a patient’s age can be a determining factor in whether daily aspirin use should be initiated.

    “Age of aspirin initiation also seems to play a role and younger patients may benefit more,” she told Healthline in an earlier interview. “For now, I think we can say that we shouldn’t initiate aspirin therapy in an older adult for the sole purpose of cancer prevention.”

    • eating more plant-based foods
    • consuming less red meat and processed meat
    • limiting alcohol consumption
    • quitting smoking
    • maintaining a healthy weight
    • exercising daily

    “A lifestyle of moderation is most important in reducing your risk of colorectal cancer,” he said. “Diet and exercise are the best and easiest ways you can decrease your cancer risk.”

    Daily exercise and weight reduction are also key. Try avoiding tobacco use,” he added. “Lastly, get your screening tests done. Colonoscopy is the best way to prevent and detect cancer, but other modalities like Cologuard are also now available.”

    Van Loon shared a similar philosophy.

  • Vampire Survivors developer Poncle is opening more studios and has over 15 games in the works

    Vampire Survivors developer Poncle has big plans for the future, according to an interview The Game Business conducted with the company’s chief strategy officer Matteo Sapio. It’s opening two new studios in Japan and Italy and has over 15 games in active development. That’s a lot of action for a company primarily known for one franchise.

    Sapio says the company is developing three basic types of games. There are spinoffs to Vampire Survivors, like this week’s deckbuilder Vampire Crawlers. Poncle is also making original IPs and says there are two games set in new universes coming down the pike.

    Finally, it’s working on some roguelites with similar mechanics to Vampire Survivors, but using other IPs. We already know about one of these, a roguelite set in the Warhammer 40K universe called Warhammer Survivors. It’s set to land on Steam sometime this year. To assist with these plans, Poncle has developed an engine that can turn pre-existing IPs into games that play like Vampire Survivors.

    If you’re wondering if there are enough fans for multiple top-down roguelites with simple controls and bullet hell mechanics, let me point you to Halls of Torment, Deep Rock Galactic: Survivor and Soulstone Survivors, among many others. This has become a popular genre in recent years, likely due to the continued success of Vampire Survivors. To that end, the original game has surpassed 27 million players.

    Poncle has, however, paused all of its third-party publishing plans after releasing a couple of games last year. “It was a learning experience,” Sapio said. “But we found that we weren’t able to give the right support.” The company could revisit third-party publishing in the future.

    This is great news for Poncle and fans of the Vampire Survivors franchise, but there’s always risk when a company tries to grow like this. Remember Embracer Group? It went on a massive buying spree beginning in 2019, before having to sell off and close a number of studios.

    However, this isn’t a AAA game development studio. Poncle makes indie titles and the new studios will be lean operations, with “little teams of people.” Sapio said this organizational structure will help keep the company “agile and flexible.”

    I personally have high hopes for this endeavor. This is because the just-released spinoff Vampire Crawlers is so very good, which proves to me that Poncle isn’t a one-trick pony. It plays like a mix of Slay the Spire with a first-person dungeon crawler like Etrian Odyssey, all while successfully capturing the vibe of Vampire Survivors. If Poncle can keep up this level of quality, gamers could be in for a long-term treat.

  • New Binance US CEO Assesses Bitcoin’s Future: “It Will Be a Golden Age”

    New Binance US CEO Assesses Bitcoin’s Future: “It Will Be a Golden Age”

    Stephen Gregory, the experienced legal and compliance professional who took over the leadership of Binance US, gave optimistic messages about the future of the US cryptocurrency market.

    Gregory stated that Binance US has moved beyond past regulatory pressures and entered a fully growth-focused phase.

    Gregory acknowledged that the past few years have been challenging for crypto companies in the US, but said the current situation is rapidly changing. According to the CEO, the US is no longer just a market; it’s a hub for liquidity, innovation, and the developments that will trigger the next bull cycle.

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    In the interview, Gregory addressed one of the most frequently asked questions regarding his relationship with Binance Global, stating clearly that the two companies have completely separate operational processes and control mechanisms. Gregory said, “Although we share a common end-benefactor (UBO), Binance US and Global parted ways years ago and operate under different regulations.”

    Gregory predicts that while the recent rally was largely driven by institutional Bitcoin purchases, the next wave will be driven by genuine individual investor influx. According to the CEO, this period will be a “golden age” for crypto, where real-world use cases will emerge, translating it from mere speculation.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • Bitwise CIO makes the case for new AVAX ETF launch

    Bitwise CIO makes the case for new AVAX ETF launch

    Bitwise says Avalanche deserves a place alongside larger blockchain networks, arguing that its model offers differentiated exposure to the long term growth of tokenized assets, stablecoins, and onchain finance just after launching its Avalanche fund on April 15.

    In his latest CIO memo, Matt Hougan said Avalanche is attractive not because it already dominates the Layer 1 market, but because it approaches blockchain design differently from Ethereum and Solana. Rather than operating as a single shared chain, Avalanche lets firms and institutions launch their own customizable blockchains with their own rules, validators, and access controls.

    Hougan framed that model as especially relevant for banks, governments, gaming firms, and other regulated entities that may want blockchain infrastructure without fully adopting the operating model of a public chain.

    He tied that thesis to growing institutional activity on Avalanche, noting that tokenized real world assets on the network have climbed sharply and that the ecosystem has drawn partners including BlackRock, Apollo, Toyota, the State of Wyoming, and FIFA. Hougan argued that this gives Avalanche a credible shot at capturing part of a much larger market if hundreds of trillions of dollars in assets eventually move onchain.

    Hougan also used the memo to make a broader portfolio point. In an early and fast moving Layer 1 market, he said the most sensible approach is not pretending to know the final winner, but focusing on the networks with the clearest structural differences and the most realistic path to long term relevance. In his view, that group starts with Ethereum, Solana, and XRP, and extends to Avalanche.

  • Michael Jackson’s Relative Calls Out Media as Biopic Opens: “You Don’t Get to Control the Narrative Anymore”

    Michael Jackson’s Relative Calls Out Media as Biopic Opens: “You Don’t Get to Control the Narrative Anymore”

    A member of Michael Jackson’s family is taking aim at the media in the lead-up to Lionsgate‘s biopic launching this weekend.

    Michael hits theaters and Imax on Friday and stars Jackson’s nephew Jaafar Jackson in his feature debut as the pop music icon. Colman Domingo portrays the singer’s father, Joe Jackson, while Nia Long plays his mother, Katherine. Miles Teller, Laura Harrier, Kat Graham, Larenz Tate and Derek Luke round out the cast for director Antoine Fuqua‘s movie that tells the story of Michael Jackson‘s upbringing and rise to fame, with the film’s narrative ending in the 1980s.

    Taj Jackson, a musician and producer whose father is Michael Jackson’s brother Tito Jackson, took to social media Tuesday to chide the media over its coverage of the late music superstar. Michael Jackson’s Grammy-winning career included not only 1982’s Thriller, which remains the best-selling album of all time, and such enduring hits as “Billie Jean” and “Beat It,” but also a number of scandals and legal issues.

    “Sorry media, u don’t get to control the narrative anymore of who Michael Jackson truly was,” Taj Jackson wrote on X. “The public gets to watch this movie…they will decide for themselves. And you can’t handle that.”

    In a follow-up post, he added, “Can’t wait till some critics have to eat crow. And yes I will be that petty.”

    Michael is set to make plenty of noise at the box office as it heads for a domestic opening that is likely to surpass $65 million. The critical response has been more muted, as the film currently holds a 36 percent approval rating from reviewers on Rotten Tomatoes. In his Michael review for The Hollywood Reporter, chief film critic David Rooney called the feature “surprisingly affecting” and also noted, “The film leaves itself open to accusations of making Michael a saint, which will not sit well with the cancel crowd.”

    THR previously reported that an initial, longer version of the movie was set to feature scenes showing the star dealing with child sexual abuse allegations. The third act included a portrayal of an accuser whose past settlement with the performer’s estate stipulated that he would never be dramatized, leading the film to be retooled. A second movie focusing on the latter portion of Jackson’s life prior to his 2009 death has been in development from Lionsgate.

    Taj Jackson has been a vocal defender of his uncle’s legacy and previously spoke out about the 2019 documentary Leaving Neverland, which centered on two individuals who had accused Michael Jackson of abusing them as children. At that time, Taj Jackson called the allegations false and defamatory.

  • American Bitcoin Shares Spike After Trump-Backed Firm Activates 11K BTC Miners

    American Bitcoin Shares Spike After Trump-Backed Firm Activates 11K BTC Miners

    In brief

    • American Bitcoin Corp. completed activation of approximately 11,298 Bitcoin miners at its Drumheller facility in Alberta, Canada.
    • The deployment added 3.05 EH/s of hash rate, bringing total owned capacity to 28.1 EH/s.
    • American Bitcoin shares soared Wednesday morning following the announcement.

    American Bitcoin Corp. (ABTC) said Wednesday that it activated 11,298 Bitcoin miners at its Drumheller facility in Alberta, Canada, expanding the company’s total owned hashrate to 28.1 EH/s across 89,242 machines. And the Trump-backed firm’s shares are soaring following the announcement.

    The deployment fulfills expansion plans the company first announced on March 3. With the Drumheller activation complete, American Bitcoin’s owned fleet operates at an average efficiency of 16.0 J/TH.

    “Scaling hash rate is one of the ways we strengthen our position in Bitcoin,” said Eric Trump, co-founder and Chief Strategy Officer at American Bitcoin, in a statement. “Bringing these miners online at Drumheller reflects exactly how we intend to lead: moving quickly, allocating capital with discipline, and growing our Bitcoin exposure efficiently at institutional scale.”

    ABTC shares have jumped more than 13% since markets opened Wednesday, recently trading at $1.41. Shares have surged 49% over the last month, rising after hitting a low of $0.77 on March 30.

    The Drumheller expansion advances American Bitcoin’s core strategy of accumulating Bitcoin through self-mining at below-market costs. The company said it mined Bitcoin at a 53% discount to spot prices in the fourth quarter of 2025. This mining-focused approach has built American Bitcoin’s treasury to over 7,000 BTC, valued at approximately $552 million.

    “This deployment reflects our operating model in practice, turning execution and efficiency gains into lower-cost Bitcoin accumulation for shareholders,” said American Bitcoin President Matt Prusak, in a statement.

    American Bitcoin Corp., a majority-owned subsidiary of Hut 8 Corp., operates as a Bitcoin accumulation platform building what it calls America’s Bitcoin infrastructure through scaled self-mining.

    The deployment coincides with renewed legislative support for domestic Bitcoin mining. Senators recently unveiled a “Mined in America” bill aimed at boosting the sector.

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  • How EcoSet Keeps Production Materials Out of the Landfill, While Letting Non-Profits Shop Its Warehouse for Free

    How EcoSet Keeps Production Materials Out of the Landfill, While Letting Non-Profits Shop Its Warehouse for Free

    It’s been 15 years since the Producers Guild introduced its Green Production Guide, and yet convincing film and television productions to think about the life cycle of their sets and props remains a work in progress.

    “A lot of these productions don’t have a plan in place,” says Reese Medefesser, the reuse coordinator at EcoSet in Northeast L.A.’s Glassell Park neighborhood. “They need to be off the stages. So what’s the easiest thing to do? They just get the dumpster,” he says, and everything goes into the landfill.

    The PGA’s sustainability guidelines encourage producers to “build in time at the end of production for a sustainable wrap” and warn “the landfill should be the last option.” But it’s still a battle to convince productions why money should be spent to eliminate waste.

    That’s where EcoSet comes in. The Glassell Park warehouse isn’t the only place where sets and props get recycled in Los Angeles, but since 2009, it’s been a key resource for film, TV, music videos, commercial productions and live events that want to divert waste away from landfills. Even better, EcoSet’s Materials Oasis provides a wide array of supplies free of charge to non-profits like schools and other organizations that can make use of cast-off sets, furniture, art supplies and assorted props.

    EcoSet’s mission is to get productions to consider what will happen to their materials when the show is wrapped – since everything that needs to be disposed of comes with an environmental and financial cost.

    “We’re an alternative dumpster. Just like you have to pay the dump to throw things away, that’s all that we are — an alternative stream for the stuff productions are trying to get rid of,” says Medefesser.

    On the day Variety visits, a woman is pushing a shopping cart filled with assorted decor materials. She designs haunted houses, she says, and backdrops for photo booths at horror conventions. Since she’s not part of a non-profit, customers like her pay $30 to grab whatever they can within an hour of shopping time.

    When materials arrive at the warehouse, “We’ll go through an assessment to find out which items have the most reuse value. We want to make sure that the nonprofits, the schools, the public sector get first dibs on it,” Medefesser explains.

    While a tour of the warehouse uncovers a few fun items like a giant inflatable pizza slice, a huge arrow sign and a section of jail bars, the bulk of the inventory is less eye-catching – lots of wood flats, walls, doors, windows and other construction materials. But it could all potentially help set builders, event designers and artists save money and reduce waste.

    “When you look at this junk, you’re looking at thousands upon thousands of dollars of walls and stuff,” Medefesser explains.

    Drop-offs are the most cost-effective way to unload used items, he says, though pickups are also available. And just like there would be a fee to drop waste off at the dump, there’s a fee to leave materials at EcoSet – starting at $350 for a vanload, up to $2200 or more for a large scenic trailer’s-worth.

    EcoSet was founded in 2009 by Shannon Bart, who was working on commercial production with now-executive director Kris Barberg, and wanted to find a more sustainable way forward for the chronically-wasteful industry. The company also consults on zero-waste practices for sets such as recyclable craft services items, and helps divert leftover craft services meals to Every Day Action, which distributes food to organizations in need.

    Also headquartered at the warehouse is Expendables Upcycler, which recovers everything from unused gaffer’s tape to camera equipment and batteries. Production crews can both buy and sell gently used or new expendables to cut down on both cost and trash on their sets.

    Though fluctuations in production affect the amount of items coming in, there are more customers looking to shop at the Materials Oasis than ever. Much of this is due to a few recent TikToks that promoted the warehouse as a treasure chest for devoted thrifters. But Medefesser warns that you’ll never know what you will find or what the value of it might be — and non-profits will get priority.

    “You are seeing a changing attitude now, a lot of the younger people are getting more in tune,” Medefesser says. But ultimately, he just wants everyone to think about how they’re going to dispose of everything they’re using, and whether it can be reused, stored or recycled.

    “The more communication, the more coordination, the more logistics that we’re able to work out, the more that I can help you guys out,” Medefesser tells productions. “Our whole motto here — it says it on our website — is ‘with a game plan in place, it’s not waste.’”