The new Enron has been dismissed by many as a joke or a publicity stunt, but recent filings and a newly-revealed executive ...
And, while that's not exactly what happened with Enron CEO Connor Gaydos when he was pied in the face, it certainly made people stop and pause. But what happened exactly and why did someone hit ...
Enron, a company that has had a satirical resurrection, unveiled the "Enron Egg," a parody product, on Monday.
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.
In an exclusive interview with the Houston Chronicle, Gaydos asked that people look past the limitations — be they in the form of regulations or physics — and embrace the impossible.
Connor Gaydos, the new CEO of the relaunched Enron, known for the "Birds Aren't Real" theory, was recently pied in the face. The incident, captured on video, has gone viral, drawing comparisons to ...
Connor Gaydos, a man connected to an apparent parody project to relaunch the energy company Enron and become its new CEO, was hit in the face with a pie this week as he was entering a building in ...
Enron has announced the “Enron Egg”, a micro-nuclear reactor that the newly reformed company claims can power homes for a decade. The only catch is that the parody company’s “revolution in energy”, ...
In a LinkedIn message, Forero confirmed to the Houston Business Journal that he will run the retail power operations arm of ...
Enron collapsed in a spectacular scandal in 2001 and its name was purchased for just $275 by Connor Gaydos, an online figure who pulls off public stunts to mock misinformation and conspiracy theories.
Not only was Connor Gaydos of "Birds Aren't Real" fame involved, but the company's own terms and conditions say the website is "protected parody" for "entertainment purposes only." Meet The Enron ...