Tag Archives: hires

Millionaire hedge fund CEO says he mainly hires people with no background in finance and once hiked a worker’s pay so he could call him at 1 a.m. – Yahoo Finance

  1. Millionaire hedge fund CEO says he mainly hires people with no background in finance and once hiked a worker’s pay so he could call him at 1 a.m. Yahoo Finance
  2. Hedge fund titan Peter Brown has slept in his office 2,000 times—and offered an employee a pay rise for answering the phone in the middle of the night Fortune
  3. CEO of secretive hedge fund Renaissance Technologies says he has spent 2,000 nights sleeping in office in rare interview MarketWatch
  4. CEO spends 2000 nights in the office news.com.au
  5. Hedge fund CEO hires staff with no finance experience, offered pay rise at 1 a.m. Business Insider
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Angelina Jolie hires 15-year-old daughter Vivienne as assistant on Broadway production – Entertainment Weekly News

  1. Angelina Jolie hires 15-year-old daughter Vivienne as assistant on Broadway production Entertainment Weekly News
  2. Angelina Jolie’s 15-Year-Old Daughter Vivienne Is WORKING With Her Mom Entertainment Tonight
  3. Angelina Jolie’s Daughter Vivienne’s Latest Venture Proves She Gets It From Her Mama Yahoo Life
  4. A nepo baby is born! Angelina Jolie looks chic in all-black as she steps out with daughter Vivienne in NYC… Daily Mail
  5. Angelina Jolie involving daughter Vivienne in The Outsiders on Broadway is the opposite of nepotism LaineyGossip
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Rep. George Santos’s staff hires draw scrutiny on Capitol Hill

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Hiring season is winding down on Capitol Hill. The flurry of forwarded résumés is fading, staff positions in House and Senate offices are nearly filled, and the mostly serious business of governing is taking hold.

The biennial job carousel, a parlor game that plays out in the Capitol’s bustling hallways, hyperdrive text chains and chatty cafeteria lines, is always a closely watched exercise by staffers. Who’s up, who’s down? Who’s in, who’s out?

But perhaps no staff hirings this year are being more closely watched than those of Rep. George Santos, the New York Republican who since his election in November has been buried in an avalanche of revelations that point to him not being the person he once claimed to be. He did not, for instance, graduate from Baruch College (or play volleyball for its team). Nor did he work for Goldman Sachs or Citigroup. And his grandparents did not flee Jewish persecution in Ukraine.

There are also questions about where his money came from, how he funded his campaign, and his work for a Florida company that the SEC is suing and has alleged is a “classic Ponzi scheme.”

Even as he has had to answer — or not answer — those myriad questions, Santos has been assembling a staff for his Washington and district offices, the No. 1 priority for first-term representatives. That means interviewing job candidates, vetting résumés, running background checks and finding people willing to work for a member who appears allergic to truth-telling.

Taking a job for Santos could prove dicey for staffers. In conversations with more than a dozen former and current Republican and Democratic lawmakers and staff members, many wondered if those who go to work for Santos, particularly higher-level staffers, would ever be able to find another congressional office that would hire them.

See the evolution of lies in George Santos’s campaign biography

So far, there is public information available for just five positions that Santos has filled, including chief of staff and communications director, according to LegiStorm, which tracks and posts congressional hiring. The initial makeup of Santos’s staff seems to lack the deep Capitol Hill experience that new members typically seek to help them get off to an effective start and quickly adjust to the rhythms and demands of Congress.

Santos hired Charles Lovett as his chief of staff. Lovett served as Santos’s campaign manager and worked for six months as a field organizer for the Ohio Republican Party, according to LegiStorm. He also served as political director for Ohio Republican Josh Mandel’s unsuccessful primary bid for Senate. He has not worked on the Hill previously. Viswanag Burra, Santos’s operations director, spent less than a year as special operations director for Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) and recently worked as executive secretary for the New York Young Republican Club.

His communications director, Naysa Woomer, appears to have the most Hill experience. She worked for three Republican members between 2014 and 2018 before moving to Massachusetts to be the communications director for the state Republican Party and then as a communications specialist for the state Department of Revenue.

Rafaello Carone, Santos’s senior legislative assistant, worked for three GOP members, but his stints were short in each office. He spent six months as social media manager for Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-N.C.), two months as deputy communications director for Rep. Greg Steube (R-Fla.) and a month as press secretary for Rep. Paul A. Gosar (R-Ariz.), according to LegiStorm. He also ran a consulting firm that mostly worked for long-shot Republican congressional candidates. Gabrielle Lipsky, who served as Santos’s campaign press secretary, will be his press secretary and office manager. She does not have Hill experience.

A Santos staff member familiar with the hiring process said that the LegiStorm site is not up to date and that the congressman’s D.C. and N.Y. offices are “fully staffed.” Each member of Congress is provided with 18 full-time staff positions to spread across their offices as they see fit.

‘I felt like we were in “Goodfellas’’’: How George Santos wooed investors for alleged Ponzi scheme

Woomer, Santos’s communications director, said Thursday that the congressman would not be available for an interview for this story. His staff, she said, “all took this on because we have interest in serving the constituents of the 3rd Congressional District.” Santos’s staff members did not respond to emails seeking comment.

Fully staffed or not, Santos’s offices are already having to respond to the onslaught of requests from constituents and others that typically fill the inboxes of Congress members.

Jimmy Keady, a Virginia-based GOP strategist whose career as a Hill staffer included stints in senior staff for congressional freshmen, said it’s “imperative” that a freshman member of Congress surround themselves with Hill veterans who know what they’re doing — otherwise, they may find themselves underwater pretty quick.

“Capitol Hill is not a place where you can just, you know, walk in and understand what to do,” Keady said. “There are a lot of rules, there’s a lot of regulations, and there’s a lot of pitfalls that a lot of these freshmen members make because they don’t have staff around them who are experienced.”

If a new member isn’t focused on constituent services right away, Keady said, the voters are going to feel it.

“If you have members deciding, ‘I’m going to gut my constituents services, and I’m not going to have a [legislative director] — I’m just going to have six people on comms staff,’ you know, that’s fine — that might get you on Fox News,” Keady said. “But that constituent that has been waiting for their veteran benefits for six months, they’re not going to get service, because that is also a job of a member of Congress.”

At the top of the to-do list for a new member is leasing a district office or offices — and outfitting them with everything including internet, phones, desks, chairs and paper clips. And from Day One, they need to start responding to the unceasing inquiries from constituents needing help with Social Security checks, veterans’ issues and passports. And that’s all while the new member gets acquainted with the politics of Washington and the rules, official and otherwise, of Congress.

Jeff Jackson, a freshman Democrat from North Carolina, has been documenting his first weeks in Congress on Instagram with posts on everything including how new representatives choose their office space and explainers about financial disclosures. He said hiring people with experience on the Hill and in his district was a priority.

“Having people come in who are well-versed in how to do this gives me a lot of comfort,” Jackson said in an interview. “I’ve only been here a few weeks, but what I’ve learned is that there is a tidal wave of work hitting our office every day and it takes a whole team to stay afloat. If you’re just one man on a surfboard, you’re going to get crushed.”

It’s hard enough to get offices up and running in normal circumstances, but Santos is under intense media scrutiny. And he’s facing calls to give up his seat not just from Democrats, but from Republicans as well, including six GOP representatives from New York.

This month, Rep. Anthony D’Esposito, a Republican freshman whose district borders Santos’s, said Santos told “outright lies” and called on him to resign. And Nassau County Republican Committee Chairman Joseph G. Cairo Jr. said Santos no longer had the support of Republicans in the 3rd Congressional District. “George Santos’s campaign last year was a campaign of deceit, lies and fabrication,” Cairo said during a Jan. 11 news conference. “He’s disgraced the House of Representatives, and we do not consider him one of our congresspeople.”

The growing GOP calls for George Santos to resign, by the numbers

Santos has said he will not resign his seat. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), who needs Santos’s vote as he clings to a narrow majority in the House, has also rejected calls for Santos to resign and said this month that Santos was legally elected and seated without objection. House Republicans have assigned Santos to the House Small Business and the Science, Space and Technology committees.

Freshman Rep. Chuck Edwards (R-N.C.) is all too familiar with what can happen if members allow constituent services to be neglected: He is cleaning up the mess left behind by his predecessor, Madison Cawthorn.

Cawthorn, who took office in 2021 at age 25 and exited in scandal, prioritized publicity as a lawmaker. “I have built my staff around comms rather than legislation,” he wrote in an email to Republican colleagues published by Time magazine in 2021.

After losing in a GOP primary to Edwards, Cawthorn largely went MIA in some of his duties as a congressman. By October, calls to his district office were met by a voice mail noting that he was winding down the office and not accepting any new casework — even though outgoing members of Congress typically keep the office open and transfer all the files to the incoming member so that there is no interruption of service to residents in their district.

Instead, Edwards said Cawthorn did not leave him anything — “no files, no data, no anything.”

“We had to start from scratch,” he said.

He tried to get a head start while serving out the remainder of his term in the North Carolina Senate, encouraging constituents who had met with silence from Cawthorn to contact his state office. He recently heard from students who thought Cawthorn was going to nominate them to military academies and were getting anxious as the deadline approached.

In the state Senate, he said, “our office mantra was first in constituent services. We’ve already made that the office mantra of this congressional office.”

Former surgeon general faces his wife’s cancer — and the ‘Trump Effect’

For staffers who have opted to work for Santos, a future on Capitol Hill could prove difficult to negotiate, said George McElwee, who served as chief of staff for former GOP congressman Charlie Dent from Pennsylvania and was also president of the House Chiefs of Staff Association.

“Particularly for staff in those senior roles, people are going to wonder why they’re there. Why are they continuing on?” said McElwee, who is now a lobbyist at a bipartisan firm he co-founded in Washington. “And it’s probably going to hurt them at some point in their job prospects.”

McElwee doesn’t expect Santos to be able to hang on to staffers who hope to have careers on the Hill.

“A lot of the folks in his office probably have an eye to the door and they’re trying to find the route to get out,” he said. “They know it’s not a stable environment for them in their political future.”

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Auburn hires Hugh Freeze as coach: Ex-Liberty, Ole Miss boss gets second chance in return to SEC

Auburn has hired Hugh Freeze to become the Tigers’ next head football coach, the university announced Monday following the end of its 2022 season. Freeze, 53, last coached at Liberty having led the Flames to a 34-15 record since 2019.

Conversations between the parties began weeks ago and continued through the weekend after Auburn’s 49-27 loss to No. 7 Alabama in the Iron Bowl on Saturday, sources told CBS Sports’ Dennis Dodd. Freeze signed a memorandum of understanding with Auburn on Monday, per the Associated Press. His contract will pay him $39 million over six years, an average of $6.5 million per season, according to ESPN. 

“First, I want to acknowledge Cadillac Williams for the incredible job he did as interim head coach. The impact he made is immeasurable and cannot be overstated,” said Freeze in a statement. “Secondly, Auburn is one of the preeminent programs in college football and I’m very appreciative of President Roberts and John Cohen for this opportunity at Auburn. I’ve been fortunate to witness first-hand how special Auburn is during my time as a head coach in the SEC and while visiting my daughter Jordan who attended Auburn and currently lives in the community. I can’t wait to work with our student-athletes and the Auburn family to bring championships back to the Plains.”

The former Ole Miss coach, who led the Rebels to a 10-3 season and second-place SEC West finish in 2015, addressed the rumors about becoming the frontrunner to replace Bryan Harsin on the Plains following Liberty’s 49-14 upset loss to New Mexico State on Saturday. He was surprisingly upfront in his response. 

“I’m not one to tell them [the players] something that’s not true,” Freeze said. “Is the job everyone is talking about one that I would have an interest in talking with? Sure. That doesn’t mean they have offered me a job.”

The attraction to Freeze stems from his success at Ole Miss from 2012-16. He was 39-25 (including vacated wins) during his tenure and beat both Alabama and Nick Saban in back-to-back seasons (2014-15). Freeze led the Rebels to a 10-win season, a berth in the Sugar Bowl and a No. 9 final ranking in 2015, a campaign that did not include any of those 27 vacated wins. 

Freeze came under fire at Ole Miss prior to the 2017 season after it was discovered that he made inappropriate calls from his school-issued mobile phone that were connected to a phone number for an escort service. Ole Miss accepted Freeze’s resignation on July 20, 2017, for what it called a “pattern of personal misconduct.”

Additionally, an NCAA investigation uncovered a lack of institutional control and fostered an unconstrained culture of booster involvement in football recruiting. That investigation uncovered 15 Level I violations that included unauthorized cash payments, use of automobiles, unauthorized lodging and unapproved meals that valued approximately $37,000.

His success with the Rebels became stained as a result of the two separate scandals. Ole Miss was penalized with a two-year bowl ban and a two-game conference suspension if he was hired by an SEC school prior to Nov. 30, 2018. Freeze was out of coaching for two years as a result of the NCAA and personal issues.

Saban attempted to hire Freeze as a co-offensive coordinator in 2018, months after he was released from Ole Miss, per AL.com. However, SEC commissioner Greg Sankey ultimately pressured Alabama not to hire Freeze as the Rebels faced NCAA penalties for violations committed under Freeze’s watch. Saban later hired Josh Gattis for the role. LSU and Missouri also looked into Freeze as an offensive coordinator candidate, but the pushback from the SEC convinced them not to explore it further. 

SEC bylaws require schools to consult with the SEC commissioner before hiring a coach “who has engaged in unethical conduct as defined under NCAA Bylaws or who has participated in activity that resulted, or may result, in a Level I, Level II or major infraction.”

With the window for that suspension closed and numerous changes coming to the college football landscape that will likely benefit Freeze in recruiting at the Power Five level (NIL rights, transfer portal), his return to a major program became only matter of time.

Freeze hired by Liberty in 2019 after his two-year hiatus. He has never finished with fewer than eight wins while leading the Flames, who made the jump from FCS to an independent school in the FBS prior to the 2018 season. He has led Liberty to three straight bowl games, including a 10-1 record and a No. 17 overall ranking in 2020. Freeze also developed quarterback Malik Willis, who coincidentally transferred from Auburn, into a third-round draft pick in the 2022 NFL Draft. 

Proven developer of QB talent

Auburn failed to help Bo Nix reach his full potential, and now he has blossomed into a Heisman Trophy contender for Oregon after transferring to the Ducks for his senior season. The Auburn quarterback situation in 2022 is a mess with TJ Finley and Robby Ashford both starting games without providing much of a threat in downfield passing attack. Freeze can fix that. 

Chad Kelly threw for 4,042 yards and 31 touchdowns in 2015 and Bo Wallace topped the 3,000-yard mark in 2013 and 2014. Did those former Ole Miss stars turn into breakout sensations at the NFL level? No, but that’s not the point. They were ultra-successful in college, and that’s what matters most as new athletic director John Cohen efforts to turn around this program. 

Watch out, Nick Saban

Former Auburn coach Gus Malzahn was fired after the 2020 season for his inability to sustain success on the Plains. However, he went 3-5 against arch-rival Alabama, which is the most wins over the Tide among active coaches. 

Freeze solved that riddle in back-to-back seasons, including in 2015 when the Crimson Tide went on to win the College Football Playoff. That is a big plus for an Auburn program that craves success on a national scale regardless of what’s going on in Tuscaloosa.

Saban, 71, is presumably nearing the end of his run as head coach of the Tide, though he is locked in his contract through the 2030 season. Saban will be 79 years old when that contract comes to an end, however. He has the same energy and acumen that he had 20 years ago, but he will be getting up there in age if he does coach through the entire deal.

Freeze understands Auburn’s politics

Auburn is widely known to have too many chefs in the kitchen. Whether it’s boosters, alumni, former players or administrators, the sphere of influence is quite large and something that Cohen has to either rein in, or at least, organize behind Freeze. They have to let him run the program in the way that he sees fit.

That might seem like a pipe dream based on how Auburn has typically operated; remember they tried to form a coup to overthrow Harsin in February and tried to hire Bobby Petrino from Louisville in 2003 while Tommy Tuberville was still Tigers coach. The thing with Auburn is that while its methods seem dysfunctional on the surface, it has actually worked. The Tigers went undefeated in 2004, won a national title in 2010, came within 13 seconds of repeating the feat in 2013 and won the SEC West in 2017 despite Alabama going on to win the national title that season. The method has proven successful, even if, in reality, it has been in spite of those efforts rather than because of them. 

Will that work in this day and age? Probably not. There are too many moving parts that are above and beyond anything that boosters have had to deal with in the past. When Saban got the job at Alabama in 2007, he took control of every aspect of the program. Freeze has to have the autonomy to do the same. He has done it before in what was a fairly significant pressure-cooker at Ole Miss in its fierce rivalry with Mississippi State, which was led by Dan Mullen at the time. It remains to be seen if he can do it again.

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Arizona State hires Kenny Dillingham: Oregon offensive coordinator becomes youngest coach in Power Five

Arizona State has hired Oregon offensive coordinator Kenny Dillingham as its next football coach, the school announced on Sunday. Dillingham, an Arizona State alum, has overseen a Ducks offense that has fielded one of the most productive units in the country this season, averaging 511.2 yards per game (No. 3 in the FBS), 7.07 yards per play (No. 5 in the FBS) and 40.2 points per game (No. 4 in the FBS). 

Dillingham takes over the program after Arizona State fired Herm Edwards earlier this season amid a 1-2 start and ongoing NCAA investigation into illegal recruiting practices during the COVID-19 dead period. 

“It is an honor and a privilege to be named the head coach at Arizona State University,” Dillingham said. “This is a special place to myself and my wife who is also a graduate. I truly believe the team we will build here is one that the state of Arizona and all Sun Devils can rally behind and be proud of as it will take everyone in the valley to help this program achieve the level of success it is due. I am excited to get to work and promise no one will work harder than the staff we will put together.”

Though just 32 years old, Dillingham is a Scottsdale native and has risen through the coaching ranks quickly thanks to getting started in the Arizona high school ranks at a young age. He graduated from Arizona State in 2012, and was hired by then-offensive coordinator Mike Norvell to be an offensive staffer for the Sun Devils in 2014. The Norvell relationship continued with assistant stints at Memphis (2016-18) and Florida State (2020-21) with a one-year stop at Auburn in between. 

When Oregon coach Dan Lanning arrived as Ducks coach in December 2021, he moved quickly to bring Dillingham on board, knowing his expertise as a former co-worker from their time together at Memphis. The same reasons that Dillingham was such an attractive candidate for the Ducks to pull back out to the Pac-12 as an offensive coordinator also apply to the Sun Devils, who will now turn their program over to a native son in the midst of a much-needed reboot.  

“We are proud to announce Kenny Dillingham as our new head football coach,” athletic director Ray Anderson said. “He brings the energy, knowledge and appreciation of our state and university that is valued by all of us,” Anderson said.  “His knowledge of the current college football landscape, learned by coaching across the nation, is needed and wanted at ASU. He will care at the highest level about our state, our alumni, our former players and every single group that is important to help us win. We look forward to working with him and all Sun Devils in making his staff successful and helping our program reach our goals.”

Youth movement in Tempe 

Dillingham becomes the youngest active Power Five coach. Interestingly enough, he’s taking that title from Lanning, who was the youngest power conference coach in 2022 at the age of 36. But beyond the notability of his youth, Dillingham’s age also represents a departure in the recent hires by Arizona State for its football program. 

He is the fifth head coaching hire since 2001 for the Sun Devils, and in both age and experience, he’s an outlier compared to the previous four. Dennis Erickson (2007-11) and Edwards (2018-22) brought extensive coaching track records and also years of experience. Though both Dirk Koetter (2001-06) and Todd Graham (2012-17) were only in their 40s when they arrived, the resume had a few more references. 

But where Dillingham makes up ground for that apparent lack of experience is in the support he carries within the ASU community. Coaching high school football in Scottsdale for more than a half decade has given Dillingham connections that have helped secure this opportunity, and Sun Devils fans are hoping that it will provide a spark to help power the program forward. 

NCAA investigation lingering 

The NCAA is still investigating the Arizona State football program for alleged violations that occurred during the 2020 offseason. Even before Edwards’ dismissal, the program saw multiple assistants either fired or resign as a result of the program’s illegal recruiting practices during the COVID-19 dead period. The ongoing investigation has been a cloud over the program’s future, and Dillingham and his staff may have to weather some of the fallout. 

By investing in someone like Dillingham, who is taking their first job but also has extensive experience in the area, Arizona State would be playing the long game and hoping a native son can lead the program out of the storm to a brighter future. 

Opportunity to move up in the Pac-12 

With USC and UCLA departing for the Big Ten, the Pac-12 is about to see a shakeup in the supposed pecking order within the conference. These kind of realignment moves can provide an opportunity for programs to jump up and obtain a new status within the conference hierarchy, and though divisions will be gone, it’s very possible that Arizona State can become the strongest presence in the south. 

The demographics of Arizona and the Sun Devils’ recruiting base has seen the state’s high school football improve, and Dillingham’s experience from that circuit should allow the program to win some of those battles even against their new Big Ten-based competition. While Oregon and Washington are fighting for supremacy in the Northwest, the door is open for Arizona State, a program with only three Pac-12 championships to its name, to become one of the regular contenders in the conference. 

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Trump hires new defense lawyer for criminal investigation

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Former President Trump has hired former Florida Solicitor General Chris Kise to join his legal team for his defense against a criminal investigation of documents the FBI seized from his Mar-a-Lago home, Fox News has learned from two sources.

A source confirmed that Kise started working for Trump on Tuesday and is expected to be at a Thursday hearing in West Palm Beach federal court. 

Kise, a graduate of Florida State University College of Law, most recently worked for the law firm Foley & Lardner. As solicitor general, he successfully represented Florida when arguing cases before the Supreme Court.

The hearing will be focused on Trump’s request for a court-appointed special master to review the documents, which may contain materials protected by attorney-client privilege. The Justice Department revealed in a Monday court filing, however, that their own privilege review team already went through the documents and found a “limited set” of documents they believe to be privileged.

SEARCH WARRANT AFFIDAVIT FOR TRUMP’S MAR-A-LAGO ESTATE: FIVE THINGS TO KNOW

Those documents would be set aside and kept away from the DOJ’s prosecution team. The documents not deemed privileged would then be turned over to that team unless U.S. District Court Judge Aileen M. Cannon sets up a different arrangement with a special master, who would be an independent court appointee.

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Over the weekend, Cannon declared that it was her intention to have a special master. The judge also ordered the Justice Department to provide, under seal, a “more detailed Receipt for Property specifying all property seized pursuant to the search warrant executed on August 8, 2022

Fox News’ Brooke Singman contributed to this report.

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PlatinumGames Hires Nintendo Veteran, Signalling ‘Significant Change’

Image: Nintendo

PlatinumGames, known for its work on the likes of Bayonetta, The Wonderful 101, and Astral Chain, has hired Nintendo veteran Takao Yamane in a move that is said to bring “significant change” to the company going forwards. Yamane will join PlatinumGames as its Vice President and Chief Business Officer.

The news comes via Famitsu (thanks, SiliconEra), confirming that more information will be shared in an upcoming interview. Prior to joining PlatinumGames, Takao Yamane enjoyed a 27-year career at Nintendo, during which he held numerous high-level positions, including Vice President of Nintendo France and Managing Director of Sales at Nintendo of Europe.

As teased by Famitsu, PlatinumGames is hoping that Yaname will assist current President Atsushi Inaba and Vice President Hideki Kamiya in helping the company achieve its lofty ambitions. Indeed, although it boasts a number of critically acclaimed games, it has also put out commercial and critical disappointments like Babylon’s Fall and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutants in Manhattan.

Just recently, PlatinumGames and Nintendo confirmed the release date of Bayonetta 3, with the game launching exclusively on Switch on October 28th. In addition, the game will feature a “Naive Angel Mode” to block out the more “raunchy” aspects of the visuals, presumably to reduce embarrassment in a family setting and make streaming online an easier endeavour.

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What do you make of this announcement from PlatinumGames? Share your thoughts in the comments below!



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Longtime NFL defensive coordinator Gregg Williams heads XFL’s first batch of assistant coach hires

Former NFL head coach and longtime defensive coordinator Gregg Williams heads the XFL’s first batch of assistant coach hires, the league announced Wednesday.

Williams will serve as the defensive coordinator for head coach Reggie Barlow’s team. Williams, a former head coach of the Buffalo Bills and Cleveland Browns who served a one-year suspension in 2012 for his role in the New Orleans Saints’ Bountygate scandal, last coached with the New York Jets in 2020.

The XFL has not yet announced team names as it continues to work through negotiations with local markets. It has hired seven defensive coordinators and seven offensive coordinators, with two hires left to make for its eight teams. Two of the offensive coordinators — June Jones and Jonathan Hayes — served as XFL head coaches during the 2020 season. Other notable names among the coaching staffs include former college head coach and NFL assistant Ron Zook, former NFL quarterback Bruce Gradkowski, longtime NFL defensive coordinator Brian Stewart and Hayes’ brother, Jay.

Also included in Wednesday’s announcement were directors of player personnel for each team. Under the XFL structure, those directors will collaborate with head coaches on final team personnel decisions. Coaches will have the final say on game-day rosters.

Four of the directors worked with the XFL in 2020: Randy Mueller, Joey Clinkscales, Dave Boller and Will Lewis. The XFL will begin hosting player showcases this summer. Its regular season will open Feb. 18, 2023, as part of its exclusive broadcast agreement with ESPN and Disney.

Here are the full team organizations announced Wednesday:

Head coach: Reggie Barlow

Personnel: Von Hutchins

OC / RB: Fred Kaiss

DC: Gregg Williams

Head coach: Anthony Becht

Personnel: Dave Boller

OC: Bruce Gradkowski

DC: Nathaniel “Donnie” Abraham

Head coach: Terrell Buckley

Personnel: Larry Lee

OC: Robert Ford

DC: Tony Carter

Head coach: Jim Haslett

Personnel: Randy Mueller

OC: June Jones

DC: Ron Zook

Head coach: Wade Phillips

Personnel: Marc Lillibridge

OC: AJ Smith

DC: Brian Stewart

Head coach: Bob Stoops

Personnel: Rick Mueller

OC: Jonathan Hayes

DC: Jay Hayes

Head coach: Hines Ward

Personnel: Will Lewis

OC: Jaime Elizondo

DC: Jim Herrmann

Head coach: Rod Woodson

Personnel: Joey Clinkscales

OC: TBA

DC: TBA

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Blizzard Hires Its First VP of Culture to Make the Company ‘More Diverse, Equitable, and Inclusive’

Blizzard Entertainment has hired Jessica Martinez as its first Vice President, Head of Culture as part of its “ongoing initiative to create a more diverse, equitable, and inclusive workplace culture where people at every level can learn, grow, and bring their most creative selves to their work.”

Blizzard shared the news in a blogpost, saying that Jessica and other members of the leadership team will be in charge of “implementing our culture strategy, ensuring alignment across all teams and functions, and revamping learning and talent development programs.”

Image Credit: Blizzard Entertainment

“When you create a people-first environment where teams feel safe, valued, and work together toward a shared purpose, everyone thrives–the employees, the players, and the business,” Martinez said. “Making the values of our connections show up in what we do is how we bring humanity back to business.”

Jessica comes to Blizzard with more than 14 years of experience at The Walt Disney Company, where she was a leader in strategy, communications, operations, and employee experience. She served as Chief of Staff and was a key strategic advisor to both the Chief Security Office and the Chief Technology & Digital Officer for Disney Parks & Resorts.

She was also an integral part of Disney’s 21st Century Fox acquisition, and was a champion of “creating a values-driven culture that connected global teams and celebrated diversity.”

Activision Blizzard Lawsuit Timeline: The Story So Far

Martinez joins Blizzard as it is undergoing not only its planned acquisition by Microsoft, but also as the company and the larger Activision Blizzard deals with the fallout of a lawsuit filed by the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing that alleged the company fostered a “frat boy” culture in which female employees were subjected to sexual harasssment, unequal pay, and much more.

Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to newstips@ign.com.

Adam Bankhurst is a news writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @AdamBankhurst and on Twitch.



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Vice Media hires financial advisors to seek buyer, may sell itself in pieces

Shane Smith, co-founder of Vice.

CNBC

Vice Media, the digital media company once valued at $5.7 billion, has hired bankers to seek a sale, according to people familiar with the matter.

Several buyers have expressed preliminary interest in acquiring Vice outright, people familiar with the matter said. While finding a single buyer would be a simpler solution for Vice, given potential issues around valuation and the company’s outstanding debt, Vice is also exploring options to sell the company in parts, the people said.

The Information reported Friday Vice is shopping its content studio business and named PJT Partners and LionTree as banks helping the company with that transaction.

Vice’s most desirable assets are likely to be its content studio and its creative advertising agency, Virtue, said the people. The studio business includes Pulse Films, which Vice announced in March it had acquired after previously only owning a controlling stake. Pulse has made a number of popular music documentaries, including Beyonce’s “Lemonade” and the “Beastie Boys Story.” The documentary film market is particularly hot right now for sales and consolidation, one of the people said.

Vice attempted to go public via special purpose acquisition company last year, reaching an agreement with 7GC & Co Holdings. Plans to go public stalled after the market cooled and investors weren’t sold on Vice’s prospects as a standalone public company, CNBC reported last year.

Valuation concerns

Vice was an early darling of the digital media industry, peaking in 2017 with a $450 million investment from private equity firm TPG that valued the company at nearly $6 billion. Vice targeted a valuation of about $3 billion including debt when it attempted to go public last year. If Vice agrees to a deal to sell the entire company, it’s likely to garner a price significantly lower than that, two of the people said. The Wall Street Journal reported last year Vice has estimated it will hit $1 billion in revenue by the end of 2023.

Vice is considering a sale as it seeks liquidity for investors and to help pay back about $1 billion in debt. Disney already wrote off its $400 million investment in 2019 with the expectation it will be worthless.

Discussions with potential buyers are ongoing, the people said. No deal is assured or imminent, they said. TPG isn’t interested in acquiring all of Vice and instead is looking to monetize some of its investment, one of the people said.

“The market is very active in the studio space right now and we have built a scaled, global world-class studio business that’s generating inquiries – when there’s that kind of interest, we have to consider it for our investors,” said a Vice spokesperson. “Beyond that there’s nothing to comment on.”

A TPG spokesperson declined to comment.

Vice also owns a news site and other digital media assets, including Refinery29, which it acquired in 2019 for $400 million. Digital media companies such as BuzzFeed and Vox Media have consolidated assets in recent years and could be potential buyers for those assets, one of the people said.

WATCH: Vice Media CEO Nancy Dubac speaks to the future of the company

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