Media tech/science stories are basically advertisement for Jewish startups
| wonderful pocket flask | 09/07/15 | | excitant costumed halford stage | 11/26/16 | | Hyperventilating toaster | 12/25/17 | | aphrodisiac death wish | 06/26/18 | | Beady-eyed thirsty step-uncle's house national security agency | 09/07/15 | | adventurous black shrine | 09/07/15 | | Chocolate Foreskin Stage | 09/07/15 | | wonderful pocket flask | 09/07/15 | | Swashbuckling Dingle Berry | 09/07/15 | | Razzmatazz Home | 10/22/15 | | Boyish Frisky Parlour | 12/14/15 | | Flatulent Bearded Partner Station | 01/19/20 | | wonderful pocket flask | 09/07/15 | | wonderful pocket flask | 09/08/15 | | wonderful pocket flask | 09/09/15 | | wonderful pocket flask | 10/22/15 | | Orchid alpha | 10/22/15 | | Fragrant startled codepig | 10/22/15 | | frozen jap | 10/22/15 | | Orchid alpha | 10/22/15 | | wonderful pocket flask | 10/22/15 | | Boyish Frisky Parlour | 10/22/15 | | vivacious grizzly lay quadroon | 10/22/15 | | wonderful pocket flask | 10/31/15 | | Orchid alpha | 10/31/15 | | razzle-dazzle space hissy fit | 10/31/15 | | Federal plaza | 12/14/15 | | rose voyeur | 01/05/16 | | Dull becky | 01/05/16 | | Smoky Flirting Orchestra Pit Doctorate | 11/26/16 | | Aggressive university | 06/26/18 | | Blue magical philosopher-king | 08/19/21 | | Bossy pearl heaven hunting ground | 03/05/18 | | Offensive Cheese-eating Public Bath | 10/06/19 | | Mustard heady patrolman | 10/06/19 | | Hyperventilating toaster | 11/21/20 | | Maize haunting location main people | 10/31/15 | | wonderful pocket flask | 12/14/15 | | provocative legal warrant | 12/14/15 | | wonderful pocket flask | 12/30/15 | | Vermilion House | 12/30/15 | | Wild Pale Church Building Volcanic Crater | 12/30/15 | | wonderful pocket flask | 12/30/15 | | Fragrant startled codepig | 12/30/15 | | Violent business firm police squad | 12/30/15 | | excitant costumed halford stage | 04/27/16 | | painfully honest concupiscible menage | 12/30/15 | | painfully honest concupiscible menage | 12/30/15 | | Wild Pale Church Building Volcanic Crater | 12/30/15 | | Buff hairraiser hall friendly grandma | 10/26/20 | | painfully honest concupiscible menage | 01/05/16 | | painfully honest concupiscible menage | 01/26/16 | | wonderful pocket flask | 03/21/16 | | painfully honest concupiscible menage | 04/13/16 | | wonderful pocket flask | 04/27/16 | | wonderful pocket flask | 05/10/16 | | arousing angry locus new version | 05/10/16 | | opaque liquid oxygen persian | 05/10/16 | | frozen jap | 05/11/16 | | Boyish Frisky Parlour | 07/17/16 | | Orchid alpha | 05/27/22 | | wonderful pocket flask | 05/21/16 | | Clear spot ladyboy | 05/21/16 | | comical disrespectful set laser beams | 05/21/16 | | provocative legal warrant | 11/17/17 | | provocative legal warrant | 05/21/16 | | Chest-beating ceo | 05/24/16 | | 180 point | 05/26/16 | | ebony sadistic bawdyhouse prole | 03/21/18 | | arousing angry locus new version | 05/24/16 | | provocative legal warrant | 05/26/16 | | wonderful pocket flask | 06/03/16 | | Wine Electric Gaping | 11/24/19 | | wonderful pocket flask | 07/15/16 | | painfully honest concupiscible menage | 07/17/16 | | wonderful pocket flask | 11/26/16 | | beta mewling selfie | 11/26/16 | | Orchid alpha | 02/01/17 | | Crawly area stain | 02/01/17 | | thriller circlehead | 03/21/18 | | painfully honest concupiscible menage | 06/26/18 | | well-lubricated fat ankles | 12/06/18 | | Puce motley clown | 06/18/19 | | Purple school idiot | 09/23/19 | | Hyperventilating toaster | 11/25/19 | | Jet-lagged Galvanic Marketing Idea | 11/25/19 | | Very tactful light address giraffe | 08/19/21 | | Jet-lagged Galvanic Marketing Idea | 08/19/21 | | claret cruise ship background story | 02/01/17 | | wonderful pocket flask | 11/17/17 | | frozen jap | 03/03/18 | | Pea-brained fortuitous meteor | 03/03/18 | | navy office | 03/03/18 | | painfully honest concupiscible menage | 03/05/18 | | wonderful pocket flask | 12/06/18 | | Cracking brindle regret | 06/18/19 | | marvelous gaming laptop center | 06/18/19 | | Purple school idiot | 09/23/19 | | comical disrespectful set laser beams | 09/23/19 | | Offensive Cheese-eating Public Bath | 10/06/19 | | mildly autistic state | 12/30/20 | | mildly autistic state | 12/04/21 | | wonderful pocket flask | 09/23/19 | | lilac fiercely-loyal factory reset button trailer park | 10/06/19 | | wonderful pocket flask | 10/06/19 | | wonderful pocket flask | 09/29/19 | | Orchid alpha | 10/06/19 | | wonderful pocket flask | 10/06/19 | | frozen jap | 10/06/19 | | Offensive Cheese-eating Public Bath | 10/06/19 | | Orchid alpha | 10/06/19 | | Alcoholic Cordovan Dog Poop | 11/24/19 | | Purple school idiot | 11/24/19 | | Hyperventilating toaster | 11/25/19 | | Jet-lagged Galvanic Marketing Idea | 03/24/20 | | Trip Godawful Piazza Masturbator | 10/26/20 | | Very tactful light address giraffe | 08/19/21 | | Irradiated know-it-all church | 10/06/19 | | dashing principal's office | 10/06/19 | | wonderful pocket flask | 10/26/19 | | Cream National | 10/27/19 | | stimulating old irish cottage | 10/28/19 | | Hyperventilating toaster | 11/25/19 | | Hyperventilating toaster | 11/25/19 | | wonderful pocket flask | 11/26/19 | | ebony sadistic bawdyhouse prole | 12/04/19 | | Orchid alpha | 01/01/20 | | Pea-brained fortuitous meteor | 01/08/20 | | wonderful pocket flask | 01/21/20 | | Orchid alpha | 01/25/20 | | wonderful pocket flask | 01/25/20 | | Very tactful light address giraffe | 08/20/21 | | ebony sadistic bawdyhouse prole | 03/24/20 | | curious sapphire macaca | 10/27/20 | | ruddy wagecucks | 11/21/20 | | Odious Stag Film | 12/30/20 | | Very tactful light address giraffe | 08/19/21 | | Orchid alpha | 12/04/21 | | painfully honest concupiscible menage | 12/04/21 | | vibrant parlor tank | 08/19/21 | | Orchid alpha | 08/24/21 | | painfully honest concupiscible menage | 12/04/21 | | Very tactful light address giraffe | 01/12/22 | | emerald zombie-like faggotry garrison | 02/12/22 | | irate dilemma | 03/17/22 | | Orchid alpha | 05/20/22 | | turquoise roommate | 07/22/22 | | Orchid alpha | 11/23/22 | | Soul-stirring jade ticket booth wrinkle | 03/21/23 | | Soul-stirring jade ticket booth wrinkle | 08/09/23 | | Orchid alpha | 01/05/24 | | frozen jap | 01/05/24 |
Poast new message in this thread
Date: September 7th, 2015 7:23 PM Author: wonderful pocket flask
It is really amazing the access that Jewish startup execs get. You might be reading an article on the bohemian food culture that is transpiring in Denver or wherever and bam hidden in there is some whiny Goldberg or Cohen talking about KikeKuisine, his new food delivery app.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2983551&forum_id=2#28707926)
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Date: September 7th, 2015 7:25 PM Author: Chocolate Foreskin Stage
everything is fraud&lies.
everything.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2983551&forum_id=2#28707941) |
Date: January 5th, 2016 10:07 AM Author: painfully honest concupiscible menage
A lot of these 30 under 30 or whatever are as well
What's with this pimping?
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2983551&forum_id=2#29524935) |
Date: May 21st, 2016 4:38 PM Author: Clear spot ladyboy
my little shit town has zero Jews yet there was a profile in the media about this Jew run restaurant
they're not even trying anymore
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2983551&forum_id=2#30527424) |
Date: February 1st, 2017 11:20 AM Author: Crawly area stain
This is endemic in all Hollywood films and NYC television and not at all limited to startups. Jewish "product placements" artificially place Jews and anything Jewish systematically in embarrassingly sweet lights and roles. The US is simply embarrassing, Trump or no Trump.
The US should be full of research and PhDs on the mafia that manically runs it. Instead there is nothing. Total silence. Total embarrassment. Total mob rule.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2983551&forum_id=2#32517751) |
Date: September 23rd, 2019 12:11 PM Author: wonderful pocket flask
"How did this even begin? The earliest shareholders including a gentleman called Mortimer Zuckerman were not just their landlords AND seed investors. They also happened to own Fast Company and NY Post which were instrumental in propping up WeWork in the press before anybody knew who they were. The headlines they spun about WeWork’s valuation and ‘meteoric’ rise was basically the shareholders advertising their investments. Even Wikipedia’s page (throughout 2015 and 2016) introduced WeWork as the ‘most innovative company of 2015’, citing a Fast Company article."
https://medium.com/@henry.hawksberry/is-we-work-a-fraud-5b78987d3e61
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2983551&forum_id=2#38872979) |
Date: September 29th, 2019 8:43 PM Author: wonderful pocket flask
The BBC's weekly The Boss series profiles different business leaders from around the world. This week we speak to Kara Goldin, founder of US flavoured water company Hint.
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-49811129
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2983551&forum_id=2#38905923) |
Date: October 26th, 2019 7:43 PM Author: wonderful pocket flask
Title: Americans now use one-third of their budget to pay off debt. ‘Money disorders’ may be to blame
Inside: Brad Klontz, author of “Mind Over Money” and co-founder of the Financial Psychology Institute, says that money disorders is an umbrella term for recurring and self-defeating issues that people have with money.
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/26/money-disorders-and-debt-can-come-from-anxiety-depression-or-trauma.html
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2983551&forum_id=2#39031348) |
Date: January 1st, 2020 2:19 PM Author: Orchid alpha
Smashing the Finance Patriarchy With Memes
Wall Street wants you to stay ignorant. @MrsDowJones is here to teach us financial literacy.
Haley Sacks, a.k.a. @MrsDowJones, has built a personal brand by creating memes and videos about investment banking and wealth generation.Credit...Celeste Sloman for The New York Times
By Taylor Lorenz
Dec. 24, 2019
Haley Sacks, 28, doesn’t just want women to save; she wants them to invest. Not only that: She wants them to understand the culture of investment banking.
To teach them, she posts memes on Instagram. Her account, @MrsDowJones, has compared Deutsche Bank’s trajectory since 2007 to Rob Kardashian; likened the hype ahead of the Uber I.P.O. to that surrounding the newest royal baby; and used Andy Cohen as a proxy for interest rates. Much like The Skimm, a newsletter and media brand that breaks down the day’s top headlines for a predominantly young, female audience, Ms. Sacks sees pop cultural reference points as a way to make stocks and bonds intelligible to a new generation of potential investors, particularly those often excluded from the language of finance.
Finance memes are still niche on Instagram; @MrsDowJones has yet to break 100,000 followers, but along with accounts like @Litquidity and @finance_god, it’s helping define the “finfluencer” (that’s financial influencer) category. Most of those accounts are anonymous, and according to Institutional Investor magazine, many of them are run by people who work in the business. For them, memes are a way to commiserate with fellow bankers, especially those contending with the long hours of summer internships and first-year analyst positions.
Ms. Sacks, on the other hand, has never worked in finance. In fact, despite growing up in an environment where she might have learned, until two years ago, she didn’t even know the difference between a traditional retirement account and a Roth.
She grew up on the Upper East Side of Manhattan; her father worked at Goldman Sachs. But wealth management, as she saw it, was the domain of men. “I’ve always been creative and had a big sense of humor,” she said in a recent phone interview, “and those aren’t qualities you think of when you think of an ideal worker at an investment bank.”
After graduating from Wesleyan in 2013, Ms. Sacks worked as a page for the “Late Show,” worked the front desk at the fitness studio SLT and nannied. She was living month to month with nearly no savings.
Then, in 2017, she was accepted to a residency at Above Average Productions, the digital content arm of Lorne Michaels’s production company. The job would pay her an annual salary of $43,000 plus benefits, like a 401(k).
All of a sudden, Ms. Sacks said, “I was being faced with the financial decisions of a full-time employee,” like how much federal income tax she’d like to have withheld from her paycheck and whether she would be interested in putting some of her money in a growth account.
“I didn’t know the answer to any of the questions,” she said. “So, I went home and did what any self-respecting millennial did: I went on YouTube.”
Ms. Sacks wanted to learn about wealth creation, but “the only videos that were available to me to learn about these subjects were these 12-minute-long, unedited disasters of men with no charisma and no point of view,” she said. “They were literally writing on whiteboards with their back to the camera. It was so bad and so boring. And it was all men.”
“All the women were giving personal finance advice, and the Wall Street lingo was left to the guys,” she said. “The girls were the ones telling you to buy a crockpot and itemize your checks.”
Six months after joining Above Average, she said, Ms. Sacks was laid off. At that point, she also had a baseline understanding of investments, thanks to Google. She decided to create a digital brand of her own, based on her research, which she thought could be a more stable source of income than the patchwork of jobs she’d had in her early 20s.
“When I got dumped by Above Average, I never wanted to put my financial well-being into anyone else’s hands again,” Ms. Sacks said. “I didn’t want to have to rely on companies, or a brand that could cut the cord on me.”
She uses her family’s background as a teaching tool as well. She thinks it’s this outsider’s view on the inside that helps give her an edge. In a recent video, she details “rules only rich people know” about money.
“My goal is to create inclusivity,” she said. “If I grew up so close to this world and still felt marginalized, think how much worse it is for everyone else.”
So she registered the handle @MrsDowJones and began racking up followers with posts written not in jargon, but “in the language I spoke,” she said. That meant a lot of humor and Kardashian references.
In the two years since she introduced her brand, Ms. Sacks has founded a successful finance-related book club, newsletter where she shares finance tips and news, and merchandise line, where she peddles merchandise such as J.P. Sonja Morgan hats and “I miss Janet Yellen” pullovers. She monetizes her social channels through branded content deals. This year, Ms. Sacks also began hosting monthly sponsored events for her followers where finance figures like Sallie Krawcheck, a former executive at Bank of America, and Bradley Tusk, a venture capitalist, spoke about their books and financial careers.
Ms. Sacks said it’s not just women she wants to help, but everyone who has been shut out of careers in finance and conversations about wealth creation. Though she has made a name for herself by eschewing personal finance, talking to some of her fans has convinced her to incorporate more basic money management tips into her posts. Many of her followers struggle with student debt and, like many Americans, don’t have the disposable income to play in the stock market.
“What I realized is that I was talking so much about investing, but you can’t talk about investing until people have money saved,” Ms. Sacks said. “So, I had to take a few steps back and be like, ‘O.K. let me get my audience out of debt real quick, then we’ll hop back into things after they have a savings.’” In 2020, she plans to release a curriculum covering the basics of personal finance.
That doesn’t mean she’s abandoning her brand’s roots.
“I’m not here to defend Wall Street,” she said, “but I’m here to bridge the gap so people don’t feel excluded. Wall Street makes people feel like outsiders. They have their own uniform, they have their own language they speak, they have specific places they hang out, publications they read. They’ve created a world for themselves that feels exclusive. We can get into the nitty-gritty of, ‘they’re evil, they hurt us,’ but I think no matter what, let’s give you the skills and the confidence to play in their field.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/24/style/finance-memes.html
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2983551&forum_id=2#39360024) |
Date: January 21st, 2020 10:21 AM Author: wonderful pocket flask
“There’s just a lot of uncertainty in my future,” said Travis Margoni, 39, who owes around $80,000. A quarter of people with education debt say they couldn’t come up with $2,000 in the next month, according to government survey research analyzed by Mark Kantrowitz, the publisher of SavingforCollege.com.
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/01/20/3-people-with-student-debt-open-up-about-their-budgets.html
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2983551&forum_id=2#39464719) |
Date: January 5th, 2024 2:44 AM Author: Orchid alpha
Our review of Pvolve — the online fitness platform best for beginners
https://nypost.com/article/pvolve-review/
“Pvolve is on a mission to change the conversation around fitness. For so long, women have been taught a pain equals gain mentality, and that looking good comes at the expense of feeling good. I started Pvolve to help teach women at all stages of their life that this isn’t the case, and that they can get the physical results they’ve dreamed of and feel good too. “
Rachel Katzman, founder of P.volve
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2983551&forum_id=2#47251474) |
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