Available on Netflix. Again, holy sh*t - how are people still conned by bright, idealistic, but completely full of sh*t, Steve Jobs wannabes? I crapped all over We Work (which was valued at nearly five times Theranos) for basically wanting to change the world by being landlords who offered beer on tap and a coffee bar, so at least with Theranos there is 'the thing' - 'the thing' is what is unique about your business that is a game changer. Offering beer and coffee in a communal working space is not new or ingenious - it's Regus + Bar + Coffee. That is not worth $49 billion dollars. Theranos, on the other hand, wanted to change the way we think about and access our own health care. The idea is simple - change the way blood is drawn and analyzed and make it so anyone at anytime can check their blood for potential disease/infection so if caught early enough, medical treatment would be more effective. No more waiting a year for bloodwork at the request of a doctor and no more outrageous cost - Theranos will put a machine in your home that will do all the work of a lab with much less cost and at your convenience. Great idea - but, difficult/near impossible to pull of with available technology. Still, she managed to surround herself with some powerful, wealthy, influential folks who bought into her idea (without ever seeing proof the machine could do what she said) and not only funded her, but protected her (with the biggest legal machine in the US) as needed. The lesson here folks is if the company isn't public, they aren't obligated to show anything - this is how We Work was able to con so many people for so long, and the same is true here. 'Just give us money - trust me, the machine works.' LOL. Unfortunately for Holmes and Theranos, they actually deployed machines to Walgreens in Arizona and people were getting wild results for their labs. So, it's not a victimless crime anymore and that is why she's on trial this week. Will be interesting to see what happens here - I give her credit for the idea, but she started to believe her own lies and at some point you're not able to keep 'faking it until you make it.' Especially when customers/patients are involved and life and death is on the line.
I mean - if anyone in a start-up is wearing a turtleneck 'uniform' every single day, steer clear.
Next on my docu-list is the two Fyre Festival disasters. I started the one on Netflix and the guy responsible for 'island/party logistics' is a self taught pilot (via Microsoft Pilot) who has to convince people spending millions on this event that the island they bought isn't able to hold the 10,000 people they sold tickets to (and can only support about 10% of that number). Oh, and they also got Kendall Jenner (and lots of other beautiful top models) to make an Instagram post promoting the festival - she is unique because for ONE post, she received $250,000.00. Wow.
I mean - if anyone in a start-up is wearing a turtleneck 'uniform' every single day, steer clear.
Next on my docu-list is the two Fyre Festival disasters. I started the one on Netflix and the guy responsible for 'island/party logistics' is a self taught pilot (via Microsoft Pilot) who has to convince people spending millions on this event that the island they bought isn't able to hold the 10,000 people they sold tickets to (and can only support about 10% of that number). Oh, and they also got Kendall Jenner (and lots of other beautiful top models) to make an Instagram post promoting the festival - she is unique because for ONE post, she received $250,000.00. Wow.
