Mr. Bruni is a contributing Opinion writer. Ms. McLean is a contributing editor at Business Insider and an author of “The Smartest Guys in the Room,” a book about the collapse of Enron. Mr. Silver is ...
A parody product launch for a “micro nuclear reactor” for home use using the name of collapsed energy firm Enron Corp. has ...
The new Enron has been dismissed by many as a joke or a publicity stunt, but recent filings and a newly-revealed executive ...
Something is stirring beneath the surface of a revived Enron, and it seems to be pushing a parody product of a stylish ...
A post on X claims that Enron has returned with a product called the “Enron Egg,” a product meant to power an entire home for ...
CONNOR GAYDOS, speaking of the Enron Egg, a supposed micro nuclear reactor for residential suburban use — promoted on his satirical revival of the website for Enron, the energy company that collapsed ...
The brand was tarnished after Arthur Andersen became embroiled in the Enron scandal over 20 years ago. Now the Andersen Consulting name is being revived.
Executives at Enron, one of the largest energy providers ... The fallout led to Arthur Andersen's collapse in 2002, reducing the "Big Five" global accounting firms to four. It is one of the ...
But the higher ups at JP Morgan disagreed — or "freaked the f*** out," in Riley's phrasing — and threw tens of millions of dollars at Enron anyway. A year later, the entire company collapsed.
Enron was a Houston, Texas-based energy, commodities, and services company. In 2001, Enron collapsed in a market-shaking bankruptcy amid revelations that the company had grossly overstated its ...
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.