By diehard Go To Postplease tell me that's just engagement bait
The words of someone who doesn't have at least 7 start-ups on the go at any one time.
By Pac-2 Go To PostIt's like I told my nephew, you need to get up, get out, cut that bullshit out
You said that to Chauncey?
By FortuneFaded Go To PostNick Goober
The money chasers always seem miserable.
By Laboured Go To PostYou said that to Chauncey?
I don't give a fuck what I said
On one hand you get to live comfortably and don’t have to waste 2+ hours commuting each day to and from work
On the other hand, you’ll never know the satisfaction of owning your own company and paying from poor Filipinos $1/day
On the other hand, you’ll never know the satisfaction of owning your own company and paying from poor Filipinos $1/day
I’ve pretty much moved away entirely from Nike sneakers. The quality of my recent Blazer Low 77s were a disgrace.
i have barely been working since coming back from vacation a month ago. thinking about quitting all day just not giving a fuck anymore putting in minimal effort.
got called into bosses office thinking they finally got me.
"i just wanted to say how much we value you and we wouldn't know what to do with out you".
wat.
failing upwards is great.
got called into bosses office thinking they finally got me.
"i just wanted to say how much we value you and we wouldn't know what to do with out you".
wat.
failing upwards is great.
David Zaslav, the chief executive of Warner Bros. Discovery, received $49.7 million in compensation last year, a 26 percent increase from the previous year, according to a proxy statement filed on Friday with the Securities and Exchange Commission.#ShareholderValue?
It is common for chief executives in media to receive lavish pay packages. Mr. Zaslav’s compensation for 2023 is notable, however, because Warner Bros. Discovery is not exactly a portrait of health. Losses totaled $3 billion in 2023, which was actually an improvement from $7 billion in losses the year before.
Meta on Wednesday reported a 27 percent increase in revenue and profit that more than doubled in the first quarter, as the company said it planned to spend billions of dollars more than expected on infrastructure to support its artificial intelligence efforts.
Revenue for the company, which owns Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Messenger, was $36.5 billion in the first quarter, up from $28.6 billion a year ago and slightly above Wall Street estimates of $36.1 billion, according to data compiled by FactSet. Profit was $12.4 billion, up from $5.7 billion a year earlier.
Stock down 15% after hours, more layoffs on the way!