Enron’s revival has been dismissed by many, including the New York Times, as little more than an elaborate joke or a quirky ...
Enron, or the satire-infused Frankenstein version of the long-deceased company, filed an application Tuesday to become Texas’ ...
Enron, a company that has had a satirical resurrection, unveiled the "Enron Egg," a parody product, on Monday.
A parody product launch for a “micro nuclear reactor” for home use using the name of collapsed energy firm Enron Corp. has ...
Something is stirring beneath the surface of a revived Enron, and it seems to be pushing a parody product of a stylish ...
Enron has announced the “Enron Egg”, a micro-nuclear reactor that the newly reformed company claims can power homes for a decade. The only catch is that the parody company’s “revolution in energy”, ...
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 ...
Connor Gaydos, 28, is best known as one of the creators ... Claiming to have “harnessed the power of the atom,” he introduced the Enron Egg, which he insisted could power a home for up to ...
CONNOR GAYDOS, speaking of the Enron Egg, a supposed micro nuclear reactor for residential suburban use — promoted on his satirical revival of the website for Enron, the energy company that collapsed ...
Connor Gaydos, the new CEO of the relaunched Enron, known for the "Birds Aren't Real" theory, was recently pied in the face. The incident, captured on video, has gone viral, drawing comparisons to ...
Not only was Connor Gaydos of "Birds Aren't Real" fame involved ... parody" for "entertainment purposes only." Meet The Enron Egg, the world’s first at-home nuclear reactor.
This product is gonna revolutionize all three,” Enron CEO Connor Gaydos claimed in a video presentation announcing the egg. Gaydos is also the co-founder of the satirical “Birds Aren't Real ...