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The company, led by a “Birds Aren’t Real” cofounder, held a mostly ridiculous quarterly earnings call Thursday but gave real ...
Connor Gaydos, co-creator of the viral "Birds Aren't Real" movement and now the CEO of Enron, joins ‘Gen C’ to discuss his surprising acquisition and the relaunch of one of America's most ...
Enron’s new CEO, 28-year-old Connor Gaydos, gained fame as an internet troll by co-authoring the satirical book “Birds Aren’t Real,” which made the tongue-in-cheek claim all birds are ...
The new Enron website declared itself a "First Amendment protected parody" connected to Birds Aren't Real co-creator Connor Gaydos, with Ars Technica noting hints of a future crypto coin.
Connor Gaydos, co-creator of the viral "Birds Aren't Real" movement and now the CEO of Enron, joins "Gen C" to discuss his surprising acquisition and the relaunch of one of America's most ...
Known internet prankster Connor Gaydos, best known for the “ Birds Aren’t Real ” faux conspiracy theory, is now the CEO of Enron.
Connor Gaydos, the 28-year-old CEO of Enron and a key figure behind the gag conspiracy movement “Birds Aren’t Real,” seen here in this courtesy photo at the product reveal of the Enron Egg ...
First came the news that Enron was back. Yes, Enron — the energy company whose profits were built on long-term fraud and which ended up filing what was, in 2001, the largest bankruptcy in history.
Connor Gaydos with his “100 percent real” product, the Enron Egg. Enron As you may have guessed, the answer is no.
In 2020, the Enron domain was purchased by Connor Gaydos and his company, The College Company, for $275. A video on X had already notched up over 1 million views by Wednesday.
Enron, a company that has had a satirical resurrection, unveiled the "Enron Egg," a parody product, on Monday.
Enron CEO Connor Gaydos poses for a photo holding the Enron Egg. The Egg, a ‘micro-nuclear reactor,’ is a parody, but the launch had social media users questioning its legitimacy (Enron) ...