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Activist Artists Management promotes Anna Kolander to Partner


Activist Artists Management has promoted Anna Kolander to Partner.

Kolander, who is based in Nashville, has spent 13 years at the company, having joined as an assistant in 2013.

She previously served as Senior Manager / Head of A&R at Activist, and is the day-to-day manager for The Lumineers.

In that role, she supports all aspects of the band’s global touring and recording activity, according to the company.

The promotion was announced on Thursday (May 21).

“Anna is a thoughtful and strategic leader,” said Activist founding partner Bernie Cahill.

“We’re proud to welcome her into the Activist partnership.”

Bernie Cahill

Added Cahill: “She brings a rare combination of creative instinct, operational rigor, and deep care for the people she works with.

“We’re proud to welcome her into the Activist partnership.”

Kolander said: “To step into this role after beginning my career alongside the leadership of Activist is incredibly meaningful.

“I’m grateful for the opportunity to have learned from such an incredible team and proud of all we’ve accomplished together.

“I look forward to continuing to support our artists and partners in impactful and innovative ways in the years ahead.”

“To step into this role after beginning my career alongside the leadership of Activist is incredibly meaningful.”

Anna Kolander

Kolander will continue to operate out of Activist‘s Nashville office while taking on an expanded leadership role across the broader business.

She was named Senior Director of A&R/Creative at Activist in 2020, having started at the company as an assistant in the Nashville office.

Activist’s clients include The Lumineers, Bobby Weir, Dwight Yoakam, the Grateful Dead, Dead & Company (co-managed with Azoff/Moir), Leif Vollebekk, The Pretty Reckless, Young the Giant, and Orville Peck, as well as actors Ken Watanabe and David Alan Grier, screenwriter Terry Rossio (co-managed with Lumify Entertainment), known for Pirates of the Caribbean, Godzilla vs. Kong, and Oscar-winning media company Lion Forge Entertainment.

Elsewhere at Activist, Caitlin Stone was promoted to Partner in 2021, and Kristina ‘Red’ Tanner was promoted to Partner in 2022.

The firm, which describes itself as “a full-service management firm founded on the belief that artists, actors, and brands can create positive change in the world,” has offices in Los AngelesNew YorkNashville, and Atlanta.Music Business Worldwide

The 1 AI Stock I’m Buying Every Single Time It Dips Below $10


Most promising artificial intelligence (AI) stocks are already priced at a premium. So while growth rates are high, so are the valuations.

There’s one AI stock, however, that remains a bargain. That’s because most investors don’t yet classify the company as an artificial intelligence business. That’s the case even though the company’s closest competitor is arguably one of the biggest AI stocks on the planet.

If this emerging AI stock falls below $10, I’m going all in for the long haul.

Image source: Rivian.

This Tesla competitor is my favorite AI stock in 2026

Most analysts have come to appreciate the AI potential of Tesla (TSLA +1.95%). Autonomous driving technologies increasingly rely on AI, leading to rapid advancements that could make self-driving cars a reality within the next few years.

Tesla has made direct AI investments, including its $2 billion investment in xAI, Elon Musk’s AI start-up. But it’s really the robotaxi market that is driving Tesla’s $1.3 trillion valuation. Major Tesla investor Cathie Wood, CEO of Ark Invest, believes robotaxis could be Tesla’s biggest growth opportunity in its history.

“We think US$8 [trillion] to US$10 trillion for the entire autonomous taxi opportunity throughout the world, from almost nothing,” Wood told investors last year. “That’s how quickly AI is going to cause these things to happen.” Five years from now, Wood thinks that robotaxis will account for 90% of Tesla’s valuation.

Rivian Automotive Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(0.49%) $0.07

Current Price

$14.22

But Tesla isn’t the only EV stock betting big on AI and autonomous driving. Rivian (RIVN +0.49%) is also going all in on AI and autonomy, so much so that it recently pushed out its profit timeline to invest more aggressively. And here’s the thing: Rivian’s market cap is just $17 billion — 98.7% smaller than Tesla’s market cap.

Rivian does have some structural disadvantages versus the likes of Tesla. The company’s smaller size limits its ability to fund large-scale research and development in AI and autonomy.

It’s also taking a different approach to robotaxis. While Tesla is both building its own vehicles and operating its own robotaxi service, Rivian seems content to be an industry supplier. In March, the company announced a deal with Uber Technologies to supply 50,000 Rivian vehicles to power that company’s robotaxi arm.

It will take years until the robotaxi market begins to mature. But investors are clearly bought into Tesla’s vision. Rivian has a similar vision, yet its stock garners a much smaller valuation both in terms of market cap and key valuation metrics like price-to-sales ratio.

Rivian stock doesn’t break below the $10 mark often. But if a market correction brings shares sharply lower, I’m prepared to load up on Rivian stock for the long haul.

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