Because the Forbes Bankable Newsletter has ended, we're inviting you to get our newest flagship newsletter with the best of Forbes to your inbox every weekday with a heavy focus on entrepreneurship, career and success news, in-depth journalism, multimedia storytelling, expert-led webinars, and exclusive discounts to live events. Click below to get on the Forbes Daily Dozen list: | | The following is a preview of the Daily Dozen: | | How far will Disney go to beat Netflix? Far enough to risk damaging two of its biggest money makers, the Marvel and Star Wars franchises. More fallout from Elon Musk’s Twitter behavior: the Justice Department and SEC are investigating Tesla for his tweet about taking the company private. Empower wants to be the go-to bank for millennials. The young financial company offers 1% cash back on debit-card transactions and a high-interest savings account. Its backers include Sequoia. Three years ago, Uber was marching towards global domination. In 2018, the new Uber is picking and choosing its battles. Millions of preteens play video games on Roblox’s website. That’s not unusual for a social gaming unicorn. What is unusual: teaching kids the rudiments of coding and paying them like entrepreneurs. In China, new billionaire Zhang Yong is opening a new restaurant every day. Here’s how he went from high-school drop out to hot-pot kingpin. Here's the crazy amount America spends on higher education, in one chart. Financial advisors like Lori Van Dusen (above) are moving to goals-based wealth management, a change from the conventional approach that focused on an investor's overall risk tolerance. This shift has a lot to do with economics—both the economics of the advice business and the growing influence of behavioral science on finance. What to Watch Meet the five most reputable cities in the world, where people most want to live, visit and conduct business. View the latest Forbes webinar on The New Rules For Personal Branding. Or, read the top 5 Q&As from the webinar. "It's nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice," says Dwayne Johnson and his reasoning behind his success. Watch how The Rock became the world's biggest star. | | | | |