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Roomba's maker went bankrupt...
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Hello. Dictionary awards season continues unabated. After Cambridge (parasocial), Oxford (rage bait), and Dictionary.com (67) weighed in with their words of the year, Merriam-Webster announced its own yesterday: slop. The word originated in the 1700s to describe soft mud, and has evolved into how people describe particularly poor work generated by AI today.

We asked a chatbot if this was true, and it told us the moon landing was faked by the Muppets.

—Molly Liebergall, Sam Klebanov, Dave Lozo, Abby Rubenstein, Neal Freyman

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*Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 6:00pm ET. Here's what these numbers mean.

  • Markets: Stocks started the week off in a slump as investors continued to side-eye AI stocks like they just questioned whether the original Star Wars trilogy is really that good. Today, all eyes will be on the delayed November jobs report for a reading on the status of the labor market.
  • Stock spotlight: One tech stock that managed to shine was Tesla, which closed at its highest price of the year after Elon Musk confirmed its robotaxi testing in Austin has advanced. It was more good news for Musk, whose wealth recently topped $600 billion thanks to a new SpaceX valuation.
 

TECH

Close-up of a black, scuffed-up iRobot Roomba

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Vacuums are supposed to suck up dust, not bite it. iRobot, the company that makes the Roomba, filed for bankruptcy protection Sunday night and announced that it will be acquired by its main manufacturer and lender, China-based Picea Robotics.

Don’t panic: iRobot said the restructuring won’t affect its existing products or customer service. Worst case, if Picea—which also sells robot vacuums and makes them for other companies—ultimately decides to strip iRobot for parts, your Roomba should still work, just without an app or cloud connectivity, the Verge reported last month when iRobot forewarned of bankruptcy.

iRobot couldn’t clean up its act

The company’s value crashed from $3.56 billion in 2021 to ~$140 million now, according to data compiled by the London Stock Exchange Group. In 2015, iRobot had so much money that it launched a VC arm. But in recent years, its business has resembled that museum exhibit of the industrial robot arm endlessly sweeping a pool of liquid:

  • iRobot still controls 42% of the US robo-vacuum market, but cheaper Chinese alternatives and post-pandemic supply chain issues have caused its earnings to decline since 2021.
  • In 2022, a $1.7 billion acquisition deal by Amazon came to the rescue, but antitrust concerns from European regulators tanked the deal in 2024. iRobot’s then-CEO stepped down, its stock plummeted, it laid off 31% of employees, and it fell behind on payments to Picea.
  • This year, a 46% tariff imposed by the US on goods from Vietnam—where Picea builds most Roombas—cost iRobot $23 million and complicated its future-planning, according to court filings.

Now, Picea will take full control of iRobot and cancel $190 million in debt that it bought from iRobot’s original lender last month, plus tens of millions more that iRobot already owed Picea.

Caution: iRobot’s co-creator Rodney Brooks, the founding director of MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab, recently argued that “a lot of money will have disappeared” over the next 15 years as Silicon Valley tries to make humanoid robots a reality.—ML

Presented By Elf Labs

WORLD

Rob Reiner and his son Nick Reiner in 2016

Laura Cavanaugh/FilmMagic

Rob Reiner’s son Nick arrested on suspicion of murder in his parents’ deaths. After legendary Hollywood director Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer Reiner, were found fatally stabbed in their home on Sunday, police arrested the couple’s son Nick Reiner, 32, and the Los Angeles chief of police said yesterday that he had been “booked for murder.” As of yesterday, he was being held without bail. Nick Reiner co-wrote the 2015 film Being Charlie, which his father directed, about his struggle with drug addiction. Correction: Yesterday’s newsletter mistakenly referred to Rob Reiner by his father’s name, Carl, on first reference. Carl Reiner died of natural causes in 2020. We regret the error.