The most unlikely buddy movie in podcasting continues in the south of France. Tune in tomorrow to hear what happened to the hawk from our live @pivot.pod @cannes_lions (Click on the link on my bio to listen.)
The most unlikely buddy movie in podcasting continues in the south of France. Tune in tomorrow to hear what happened to the hawk from our live @pivot.pod @cannes_lions (Click on the link on my bio to listen.)
The most unlikely buddy movie in podcasting continues in the south of France. Tune in tomorrow to hear what happened to the hawk from our live @pivot.pod @cannes_lions (Click on the link on my bio to listen.)
An exclusive excerpt from @KaraSwisher’s forthcoming “Burn Book: A Tech Love Story”: As it turned out, it was capitalism after all. If I had to pick the moment when it all went off the rails for the tech industry, I’d choose Saturday morning, Dec. 10, 2016, when I was at a farmers market considering some epic Meyer lemons with my oldest son, who liked to cook. It was there in the San Francisco sunshine that I got a tip: The crowned heads of Silicon Valley’s most powerful tech companies had been summoned to tromp into Manhattan’s Trump Tower and meet the man who had unexpectedly just been elected president and was the antithesis of all they supposedly represented. “Skulk” was more like it. The only reason I was hearing about the tech summit was because one of tech’s top-tier players had not been invited because of his “liberal leanings” and “outspoken opposition” to President-elect Donald Trump. The outcast called me in a lather. “Sucking up to that corpulent loser who never met a business he didn’t drive straight into a wall, it’s shameful,” he said. “Can you believe it? Can you believe it?” After decades of covering the nascent internet industry from its birth, I could believe it. 🔗 Visit the link in the bio of @PostOpinions to read more. ✏️ Illustrations by @DougChayka.
An exclusive excerpt from @KaraSwisher’s forthcoming “Burn Book: A Tech Love Story”: As it turned out, it was capitalism after all. If I had to pick the moment when it all went off the rails for the tech industry, I’d choose Saturday morning, Dec. 10, 2016, when I was at a farmers market considering some epic Meyer lemons with my oldest son, who liked to cook. It was there in the San Francisco sunshine that I got a tip: The crowned heads of Silicon Valley’s most powerful tech companies had been summoned to tromp into Manhattan’s Trump Tower and meet the man who had unexpectedly just been elected president and was the antithesis of all they supposedly represented. “Skulk” was more like it. The only reason I was hearing about the tech summit was because one of tech’s top-tier players had not been invited because of his “liberal leanings” and “outspoken opposition” to President-elect Donald Trump. The outcast called me in a lather. “Sucking up to that corpulent loser who never met a business he didn’t drive straight into a wall, it’s shameful,” he said. “Can you believe it? Can you believe it?” After decades of covering the nascent internet industry from its birth, I could believe it. 🔗 Visit the link in the bio of @PostOpinions to read more. ✏️ Illustrations by @DougChayka.
An exclusive excerpt from @KaraSwisher’s forthcoming “Burn Book: A Tech Love Story”: As it turned out, it was capitalism after all. If I had to pick the moment when it all went off the rails for the tech industry, I’d choose Saturday morning, Dec. 10, 2016, when I was at a farmers market considering some epic Meyer lemons with my oldest son, who liked to cook. It was there in the San Francisco sunshine that I got a tip: The crowned heads of Silicon Valley’s most powerful tech companies had been summoned to tromp into Manhattan’s Trump Tower and meet the man who had unexpectedly just been elected president and was the antithesis of all they supposedly represented. “Skulk” was more like it. The only reason I was hearing about the tech summit was because one of tech’s top-tier players had not been invited because of his “liberal leanings” and “outspoken opposition” to President-elect Donald Trump. The outcast called me in a lather. “Sucking up to that corpulent loser who never met a business he didn’t drive straight into a wall, it’s shameful,” he said. “Can you believe it? Can you believe it?” After decades of covering the nascent internet industry from its birth, I could believe it. 🔗 Visit the link in the bio of @PostOpinions to read more. ✏️ Illustrations by @DougChayka.
An exclusive excerpt from @KaraSwisher’s forthcoming “Burn Book: A Tech Love Story”: As it turned out, it was capitalism after all. If I had to pick the moment when it all went off the rails for the tech industry, I’d choose Saturday morning, Dec. 10, 2016, when I was at a farmers market considering some epic Meyer lemons with my oldest son, who liked to cook. It was there in the San Francisco sunshine that I got a tip: The crowned heads of Silicon Valley’s most powerful tech companies had been summoned to tromp into Manhattan’s Trump Tower and meet the man who had unexpectedly just been elected president and was the antithesis of all they supposedly represented. “Skulk” was more like it. The only reason I was hearing about the tech summit was because one of tech’s top-tier players had not been invited because of his “liberal leanings” and “outspoken opposition” to President-elect Donald Trump. The outcast called me in a lather. “Sucking up to that corpulent loser who never met a business he didn’t drive straight into a wall, it’s shameful,” he said. “Can you believe it? Can you believe it?” After decades of covering the nascent internet industry from its birth, I could believe it. 🔗 Visit the link in the bio of @PostOpinions to read more. ✏️ Illustrations by @DougChayka.
An exclusive excerpt from @KaraSwisher’s forthcoming “Burn Book: A Tech Love Story”: As it turned out, it was capitalism after all. If I had to pick the moment when it all went off the rails for the tech industry, I’d choose Saturday morning, Dec. 10, 2016, when I was at a farmers market considering some epic Meyer lemons with my oldest son, who liked to cook. It was there in the San Francisco sunshine that I got a tip: The crowned heads of Silicon Valley’s most powerful tech companies had been summoned to tromp into Manhattan’s Trump Tower and meet the man who had unexpectedly just been elected president and was the antithesis of all they supposedly represented. “Skulk” was more like it. The only reason I was hearing about the tech summit was because one of tech’s top-tier players had not been invited because of his “liberal leanings” and “outspoken opposition” to President-elect Donald Trump. The outcast called me in a lather. “Sucking up to that corpulent loser who never met a business he didn’t drive straight into a wall, it’s shameful,” he said. “Can you believe it? Can you believe it?” After decades of covering the nascent internet industry from its birth, I could believe it. 🔗 Visit the link in the bio of @PostOpinions to read more. ✏️ Illustrations by @DougChayka.
An exclusive excerpt from @KaraSwisher’s forthcoming “Burn Book: A Tech Love Story”: As it turned out, it was capitalism after all. If I had to pick the moment when it all went off the rails for the tech industry, I’d choose Saturday morning, Dec. 10, 2016, when I was at a farmers market considering some epic Meyer lemons with my oldest son, who liked to cook. It was there in the San Francisco sunshine that I got a tip: The crowned heads of Silicon Valley’s most powerful tech companies had been summoned to tromp into Manhattan’s Trump Tower and meet the man who had unexpectedly just been elected president and was the antithesis of all they supposedly represented. “Skulk” was more like it. The only reason I was hearing about the tech summit was because one of tech’s top-tier players had not been invited because of his “liberal leanings” and “outspoken opposition” to President-elect Donald Trump. The outcast called me in a lather. “Sucking up to that corpulent loser who never met a business he didn’t drive straight into a wall, it’s shameful,” he said. “Can you believe it? Can you believe it?” After decades of covering the nascent internet industry from its birth, I could believe it. 🔗 Visit the link in the bio of @PostOpinions to read more. ✏️ Illustrations by @DougChayka.
Today on the On With Kara Swisher pod, this lady @MarthaStewart and I chit-chatting away about dashed K-Marth dreams, MarthAI, prison, media, that Sports Illustrated cover and her consistent entrepreneurial ability to reinvent herself. (Click on the link in my bio to listen.)
Today on the On With Kara Swisher pod, this lady @MarthaStewart and I chit-chatting away about dashed K-Marth dreams, MarthAI, prison, media, that Sports Illustrated cover and her consistent entrepreneurial ability to reinvent herself. (Click on the link in my bio to listen.)
@karaswisher on musk meltdown
@karaswisher on musk meltdown
Here’s our @pivot.pod, live from @cannes_lions this week. Hawk report and more. (Click on the link on my bio to listen.)
Amazing day visits today to Vence and Mougins. The Matisse Chapel — “just a flower” — was particularly moving.
Amazing day visits today to Vence and Mougins. The Matisse Chapel — “just a flower” — was particularly moving.
Amazing day visits today to Vence and Mougins. The Matisse Chapel — “just a flower” — was particularly moving.
Amazing day visits today to Vence and Mougins. The Matisse Chapel — “just a flower” — was particularly moving.
Amazing day visits today to Vence and Mougins. The Matisse Chapel — “just a flower” — was particularly moving.
Me and @katzish were blown away by @auliicravalho, whose talent is already vast and headed to even great heights, at the @snapchat women’s lunch @cannes_lions. Clara was in awe that we met her too.
Amazing and intimate museum of pottery done by Picasso and others in Vallauris above Cannes is just so stunning that you should not miss it, including the “War and Peace” mural. Note the book burning under the hoof of the horse on the war side. Little changes, though art endures.
Amazing and intimate museum of pottery done by Picasso and others in Vallauris above Cannes is just so stunning that you should not miss it, including the “War and Peace” mural. Note the book burning under the hoof of the horse on the war side. Little changes, though art endures.
Amazing and intimate museum of pottery done by Picasso and others in Vallauris above Cannes is just so stunning that you should not miss it, including the “War and Peace” mural. Note the book burning under the hoof of the horse on the war side. Little changes, though art endures.
Amazing and intimate museum of pottery done by Picasso and others in Vallauris above Cannes is just so stunning that you should not miss it, including the “War and Peace” mural. Note the book burning under the hoof of the horse on the war side. Little changes, though art endures.