Insider Trading’s Odd Couple: The Goldman Banker and the NFL Linebacker
Damilare Sonoiki and Mychal Kendricks made a very bad team.
Damilare Sonoiki and Mychal Kendricks made a very bad team.
Max Abelson, Felix Gillette Bloomberg Businessweek Sep 2018 10min Permalink
How the 130-year-old game company bounced back with the Switch.
Felix Gillette Bloomberg Business Jun 2018 15min Permalink
“It’s not smoking. It’s platform-agnostic nicotine delivery solutions.”
Felix Gillette, Jennifer Kaplan, Sam Chambers Bloomberg Business Mar 2017 15min Permalink
Established media companies used to sue YouTube. Now they’re betting on it.
Felix Gillette Businesweek Aug 2014 15min Permalink
How A+E’s CEO is navigating the new TV environment with hit shows like “Duck Dynasty.”
Felix Gillette Businessweek Jun 2013 15min Permalink
What it’s like to be Enzyte’s “Smiling Bob,” and other tales of acting as a product’s public face.
Felix Gillette Businessweek Sep 2012 15min Permalink
The story of Christopher and Jeffrey George, the twin proprietors of a pain clinic empire.
Felix Gillette Businessweek Jun 2012 15min Permalink
How the website mastered “Social Publishing”:
To understand some of the principles underlying BuzzFeed’s strategy, he recommends reading The Individual in a Social World, a 1977 book by Stanley Milgram, who is known, among other things, for his experiments leading to the six degrees of separation theory. “When some cute kitten video goes viral,” says [Jonah] Peretti, “you know a Stanley Milgram experiment is happening thousands of times a day.”
Felix Gillette Businessweek Mar 2012 15min Permalink
Before the market crashed and home prices tumbled, before federal investigators showed up and hauled away the community records, before her property managers pled guilty for conspiring to rig neighborhood elections, and before her real estate lawyer allegedly tried to commit suicide by overdosing on drugs and setting fire to her home, Wanda Murray thought that buying a condominium in Las Vegas was a pretty good idea.
Felix Gillette Businessweek Dec 2011 20min Permalink
On the TechCrunch founder’s venture capital fund, and a new breed of startup investor.
As Twitter-loving VC investors have become brand names themselves (Fred Wilson, Marc Andreessen, Chris Sacca), what one might call the auteur theory of venture capitalism has emerged—the idea that startup companies bear the unique creative signature of those who invested in them. To study a venture capitalist’s portfolio is to study his oeuvre.
Felix Gillette Businessweek Nov 2011 10min Permalink
How what was once one of the most popular websites on Earth—with ambitions to redefine music, dating, and pop culture—became a graveyard of terrible design and failed corporate initiatives:
In retrospect, DeWolfe says, the imperative to monetize the site stunted its evolution: "When we did the Google deal, we basically doubled the ads on our site," making it more cluttered. The size, quality, and placement of ads became another source of tension with News Corp., according to DeWolfe and another executive. "Remember the rotten teeth ad?" DeWolfe says. "And the weight-loss ads that would show a stomach bulging over a pair of pants?"
Felix Gillette Businessweek Jun 2011 Permalink
How slot machines snuck into the mall, along with money laundering, bribery, shootouts, and billions in profits.
Felix Gillette Businessweek Apr 2011 Permalink