Enron, a company that has had a satirical resurrection, unveiled the "Enron Egg," a parody product, on Monday.
Enron has unveiled a new product a month after the infamous and defunct company was resurrected − apparently for fun − by one of the guys behind the satirical "Birds Aren't Real" conspiracy ...
Connor Gaydos, a man connected to an apparent parody project to relaunch the energy company Enron and become its new ... on social media Thursday. The clip shows Gaydos exiting an SUV shortly ...
The clip shows Gaydos exiting an SUV shortly before an older man slams the pie into his face as two bodyguards intervene. The bizarre incident mirrored one from more than two decades earlier, when a ...
The clip went viral for the reason such things so ... see, for instance, the Enron scandal of 2001, or more recently, much of entire history of cryptocurrencies. Our society is so heavily ...
One of the pranksters behind “Birds Aren’t Real” is back to revive a company synonymous with corporate malfeasance — it has ...
Monday, the company that took over the defunct Enron brand made unveiled its much-awaited "groundbreaking" product: the Enron ...
The very unserious company that took over the defunct Enron brand on Monday unveiled its supposedly "groundbreaking" product: the Enron Egg. But the Enron Egg is no normal egg, company ...
The website describes the Enron relaunch as "performance art." The Enron website calls Enron Egg a "compact nuclear reactor that uses Uranium-Zirconium Hydride (U-ZrH) fuel rods to generate heat ...
"The information on the website about Enron is First Amendment protected parody, represents performance art, and is for entertainment purposes only." Enron aims to 'solve global energy crisis ...