— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Oct 13, 2025
Day: October 13, 2025
Client Challenge
Uzbek weightlifter Akbar Juraev delivered one of the standout performances of the 2025 World Weightlifting Championships by claiming three gold medals in the men’s 110 kg class, breaking world records and asserting his dominance in the sport.
The championships, held October 2–11 in Førde, Norway, drew nearly 500 athletes from 87 countries to compete under the auspices of the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF). On Day 9, the 110 kg division was one of the marquee finals, especially as two Uzbek Olympic champions – Juraev and Ruslan Nuridinov – faced off in the same category.
Juraev, 25, came in with a formidable résumé: already a world champion in 2021 and 2023, and an Olympic gold medalist from Tokyo 2020. After a near-miss at the 2024 Paris Games, where he took silver in the 102 kg class, Juraev said he was “back at my right weight” and hungry for redemption.
In Norway, Juraev delivered a flawless sequence. On his third snatch attempt he lifted 196 kg, setting a new world record in the snatch. He followed that with a 232 kg clean and jerk, reaching a combined total of 428 kg, also a world record. He even attempted 245 kg in the clean and jerk, later joking that he was “just messing around.”
After the victory, Juraev said, “I am back at my right weight. I can eat properly, train properly. I feel good, very happy.” He added that last year’s Olympic disappointment still drives him: “That’s why I have silver and not gold.”
Juraev’s sweep of snatch, clean & jerk, and total golds made him a three-time world champion.
Meanwhile, his compatriot Nuridinov, the 33-year-old veteran and Rio 2016 Olympic champion, also shone in Førde. He lifted 186 kg in the snatch and 228 kg in the clean and jerk, earning two bronzes (in clean & jerk and total) with a combined 414 kg. His performance underscored not only his own resilience but also Uzbekistan’s continuing dominance in the world of weightlifting.
Yasara Gunawardena for BI
Tiffany Ng, a 24-year-old tech and culture writer based in New York, was too attached to her iPhone, so she did what humans do when trying to tame an unruly beast.
She chained it to a wall.
Ng felt she was spending too much time staring at her little screen and wanted an escape. Turns out she’s in good company. Over 40% of American adults — and 62% of those under 30 — say they are on their phones “almost constantly,” according to a Pew Research survey conducted in late 2023. Most Americans, including 81% of adults under 30, believe they use their phone too much, a 2022 Gallup survey found.
Ng’s desire to turn the supercomputer in her pocket into a makeshift landline is also one that’s shared by other zoomers and millennials. Some Americans are going full Luddite, giving up smartphones altogether in favor of so-called dumb phones, while some parents are easing their kids into technology by opting for classic landlines instead of iPhones.
There are also plenty of people who want a break from their screens but aren’t quite ready or able to ditch the conveniences of modern technology altogether. So instead of giving up their smartphones, some young people are creating setups that mimic landlines — by chaining their phone to the wall or creating a wall mount to “hang up the phone” rather than carry it with them all the time.
Amanda Lopez for BI
Yalda Uhls, a research psychologist and the founding CEO of the Center for Scholars and Storytellers at UCLA, said studies have shown that creating physical distance between yourself and your phone can make a big difference.
One study measured how participants completed tasks when they had their phones face down on their desk, in their pocket or a nearby bag, or in another room. The people who had their phones in another room performed the best.
“If you can see your phone, if you can grab it and walk around with it, you’re going to want to do that,” she told Business Insider. “If it’s separate from you, that’s the only time people stop really thinking about their phone.”
Business Insider talked to three young adults who said creating a physical boundary around their phone has drastically improved their screen time and their quality of life.
Bring back hanging up the phone
Maddie DeVico, a 31-year-old who works in sales for a software company in Denver, said she was feeling overwhelmed by her reliance on technology and trapped by the constant need to respond to messages quickly.
She romanticized the landline she had during her childhood in New Jersey and became obsessed with the idea of getting back to “hanging up the phone” — turning her device into something that she set down at the end of the workday rather than carry with her constantly.
So she took some leftover clay and made her own phone docking station. She hung it on her wall near her kitchen and started setting her phone there at the end of the workday. Initially, she noticed she would go back to it and pick it up to scroll, but after a brief transition period, she found herself setting it down and not picking it up the rest of the night.
Amanda Lopez for BI
“Once I started doing that, putting my phone away, I just stopped reaching for it all the time,” DeVico said. “And I just noticed this mental freeness that came with disconnecting. It was kind of a crazy shift.”
She said her screen time went down by three hours each day. Her friends learned that they were no longer going to get an immediate text back from her, and she even started leaving the phone in its dock when she left the house. She suddenly had more time to do other things, like cooking and crafting. She started spending more time in her garden just looking at bugs.
“I was so shocked with the amount of stress that left my body. It was life-changing in a way because I ran a little anxious before I started this habit,” she said.
When her friends come over for dinner, she also has them keep their phones away from the table, and as a result, she said they’re having more meaningful discussions about personal topics. After she posted about the phone dock on TikTok, she racked up nearly a million views and heard from hundreds of others about how they, too, are trying to bring back hanging up the phone.
“I think we’re just really genuinely trying to go back to living simpler without the chaos and without all the distractions,” she said.
A thirst for old-school tech and ‘simpler times’
Uhls, the UCLA researcher who often works with members of Gen Z and Gen Alpha, said young people are acutely aware of how much time they spend on their phones, and often make efforts to spend less time on them. She said even though they spend a lot of time on social media, they recognize that it’s not particularly deep or fulfilling.
“They’re craving connections and craving more meaningful experiences,” she said.
Some Gen Zers are so desperate for connection that they’ve embraced the Luddite movement. At an anti-technology rally in New York City last month, dozens of young people put Apple on a mock trial and smashed iPhones. Others are embracing “appstinence,” a term coined by a 24-year-old grad student at Harvard.
Chaining her phone to a wall was one of several experiments Ng has done as part of her newsletter, Cyber Celibate, which she uses to explore our relationship with technology. She’s also printed out her TikTok “For You” page to read like a newspaper and sent carrier pigeons instead of texts.
Tiffany Ng
For the chain to the wall experiment, Ng gave her phone a full charge, unplugged it, and then put it on its leash by making creative use of a chain link belt. She was committed to leaving it there, even when she left the house, and not giving it another charge for a full week. She put a bench in front of it, where she could sit when she needed to use her phone, but that wasn’t comfy enough to make an endless scroll session appealing.
The first couple of days, Ng said she would look forward to going home and being able to scroll on her phone. But when she finally opened her special media feed, that excitement was met with the “very anti-climactic experience of looking at pictures of Alix Earle,” an influencer.
“The almost religious experience of being on your phone kind of loses its aura,” she said. “It’s very alluring, but it’s not satisfying at all.”
One of the most surprising things she found was how “out of sight, out of mind” her phone really was. When she met up with friends in the park, worked from a coffee shop, or even just during her commute, she didn’t find herself reaching for her phone the way she expected to. Instead, she started to notice her surroundings — like the buildings around the train station she frequents or how people act differently on the L train versus the 2.
“I don’t want to sound overdramatic, but toward the end, it really felt like I was reentering real life in a way,” Ng said.
Ng said she thinks Gen Z is pining for simpler technology and simpler times (she recently was delighted to learn what dial-up internet was). While the experiment lasted a week, she still continues to actively leave her phone in another room, or even leave it behind when she gets out of the house, somewhere close by.
Best of both worlds
Not everyone romanticizing the days of the landline is against modern technology.
Catherine Goetze is the creator of CatGPT, an online media brand focused on AI education. The millennial content creator worked in tech before amassing hundreds of thousands of followers with helpful videos intended to make AI more accessible.
But Goetze also had a desire to be reachable without being tethered to her smartphone. So a couple of years ago, she bought an old rotary phone and some special parts and turned it into a Bluetooth device connected to her cellphone.
When someone called her cellphone, her “landline” rang, so she could be alerted to incoming calls without also having to be open to every other potential phone notification. She could also make calls by simply picking up the phone and dialing. She even made it so that when she dialed star, it would activate Siri, and she could direct it to call contacts by name, eliminating the need to memorize or look up a number.
Yasara Gunawardena for BI
This summer, when she posted a video showing off the landline phone she’d been using for years, her comments were full of people saying they needed one too. That’s how Goetze decided to start Physical Phones, which makes and sells Bluetooth phones like the one she herself uses.
“It is not realistic to throw your smartphone into a river,” Goetze said, adding, “The Physical Phone says, ‘Look, keep your iPhone. But there are still ways that you can regain some level of balance and intentionality about achieving that balance.”
The phones are currently available for presale and expected to start shipping in November or December, but early signs are encouraging. Goetze said when they first launched, they generated $118,000 in pre-sales in 72 hours.
She said she thinks the orders are from a mix of millennials who are nostalgic for the landlines of their past, and zoomers who don’t remember having a landline but are just as nostalgic and apt to romanticize that time, as evidenced by the resurgence in shows like “Friends” and Y2K fashion.
Goetze said she doesn’t think most people want to live in a world without modern technology, but rather one where they are using that technology mindfully, rather than being used by it.

As U.S. President Donald Trump flew to Israel on Monday, his plane passed over the words “THANK YOU” written on the beach in Tel Aviv. Aboard Air Force One, Trump declared to reporters that “the war is over,” referring to the more than two-year conflict in Gaza between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas.
[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]
As part of a new cease-fire the U.S. helped to broker last week, seven Israeli hostages were set free just before Trump touched down, and the other 13 remaining living hostages were handed over to the Red Cross, while over 1,700 Palestinians detained by Israel were prepared for release to Gaza and 250 to the West Bank, Jerusalem, and other countries later Monday in exchange.
When Trump arrived, he was greeted by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israeli President Isaac Herzog. Trump reportedly told Netanyahu, “It’s a great day. Maybe your best day,” to which Netanyahu responded, “This is history.”
Trump was received like a hero in Israel—in Jerusalem, a billboard said “You are our winner,” with an image of him on a medal, just days after Trump did not win the Nobel Peace Prize that Netanyahu had nominated him for.
Herzog, for his part, said he intends to award Trump with Israel’s Presidential Medal of Honor, the nation’s highest honor for a civilian. “From his unwavering support for the State of Israel, to the advent of the Abraham Accords which expanded the circle of peace in our region, from the two historic agreements that brought our dear hostages home and saved countless lives, to the decisive strike on Iran’s nuclear program, President Trump’s voice has always been one of courage and leadership, and of steadfast commitment to the pursuit of peace and humanity,” Herzog’s office said in a statement.
Still, not everyone wants—or is able—to celebrate.
The swapping of hostages is only one part of the two-phase cease-fire deal. A second phase remains tenuous and is still up for negotiation, given how aspects of it—like the scope of the Israel Defense Forces’ withdrawal from Gaza and future deployments, as well as who governs Gaza after the war—may be difficult to reach an agreement on. Israel has also been less willing than Trump to characterize the war as over, especially as Hamas has said it will not disarm unless a sovereign Palestinian state is established, which Israel opposes.
From the airport, Trump proceeded to the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, to address Israeli lawmakers. Former President George W. Bush was the last U.S. President to speak before the Knesset, in 2008.
Knesset staff reportedly distributed red “MAGA-style” caps that read, “TRUMP THE PEACE PRESIDENT,” to those in the audience.
“After so many years of unceasing war and endless danger, today the skies are calm, the guns are silent, the sirens are still, and the sun rises on a holy land that is finally at peace,” Trump said to the Israeli lawmakers, as he entered the Knesset plenum hall about two hours behind schedule, after meeting with the families of some hostages, and took the microphone after Speaker Amir Ohana, Netanyahu, and Leader of the Opposition Yair Lapid—all of whom showered praise on the U.S. President and said he deserved the Nobel Peace Prize.
“This is not only the end of a war. This is the end of a age of terror and death and the beginning of the age of faith and hope and of god. It’s the start of a grand concord and lasting harmony for Israel and all the nations of what will soon be a truly magnificent region,” Trump continued. “This is the historic dawn of a new Middle East.”
Trump was briefly interrupted by a protester who was quickly ushered out of the hall while he was thanking and praising his negotiating team—including U.S. Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff, Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, and Marco Rubio, whom Trump said would “go down as the greatest Secretary of State in the history of the United States.” Trump also thanked Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, and he praised his own “peace through strength” doctrine.
After Trump’s speech, he will fly next to Egypt, where he is expected to join a Middle East summit, which gathers some 20 international leaders, including Mahmoud Abbas, the President of the Palestinian Authority, though Netanyahu will not attend.
