Enron, a once profitable company in the 1990s, found itself at the center of controversy in the 2000s due to a wave of ...
But several news organizations noted yesterday that a new owner of the Enron trademark was a noted prankster behind the ...
If its return is comedic, some former employees who lost everything in Enron’s collapse aren’t laughing. “It’s a pretty sick ...
Enron is back, doing what it does best, playing practical jokes on people and tucking it up like they were goddamn Murr.
One of the guys behind the satirical "Birds Aren't Real" conspiracy theory appears to be involved in the Enron "relaunch." ...
A new Enron website appeared on Monday to proclaim its relaunch. It's been 23 years since the energy company went up in smoke ...
An organization called the College Company purchased the Enron trademark in 2020, according to federal documents. The company ...
The scandal ridden company is said to be mounting a comeback, but evidence points in the direction of a large practical joke.
The former Houston-based energy company has returned with a new website, Enron.com, which launched Dec. 2 on the 23rd ...
Yet, it’s unclear how far the influencer behind the name will take the joke. For the “Birds Aren’t Real” viral phenomenon, ...
USA Today reports that Arkansas-grown prankster Connor Gaydos is behind the Dec. 2 launch of enron.com, a masterful parody of ...