First came the news that Enron was back. Yes, Enron — the energy company whose profits were built on long-term fraud and ...
Enron, a company that has had a satirical resurrection, unveiled the "Enron Egg," a parody product, on Monday.
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 ...
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 ...
Enron wants to sell you a nuclear reactor for your home — no, of course not really. The pranksters behind the Birds Aren't Real nonsense "revived" the defunct, famously fraudulent company in ...
In 2001, Mani witnessed the ENRON debacle. ENRON had entered into an agreement loaded in its favour with the Maharashtra State Electricity Board (MSEB), until then one of India’s best-performing ...
Unlike the company whose storied fall it chronicles, Enron clearly telegraphs its intention to defraud the consumer: 'When we tell you [this] story, you should know it could never be exactly what ...
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 ...
HOUSTON — An elaborate parody appears to be behind an effort to resurrect Enron, the Houston-based energy company that exemplified the worst in American corporate fraud and greed after it went ...
In a viral video circulating on X (formerly Twitter) and other social media platforms, Enron CEO Connor Gaydos can be seen exiting a black vehicle with members of his security team when a ...