JCPenney Sells Out with Joel Kim Booster and Scott Seiss | 39

JCPenney Sells Out with Joel Kim Booster and ...

Up next

Scooter Braun vs. Taylor Swift: Inside the $300M Music Feud with Corey O'Brien and Alex Falcone | 104

From club promoter to music mogul, Scooter Braun's Midas touch turned Justin Bieber into pop royalty and made him millions. But when he bought Taylor Swift's masters, he learned the hard way that hell hath no fury like a pop princess scorned. In our final episode, we're going ...

  Show more

Hooters Goes Bust with Jimmy Pardo and Courtney Revolution | 103

What happens when six guys with zero restaurant experience open a bar just so they'll always have somewhere to drink? You get Hooters – a wing joint that grew from Florida novelty to international phenomenon. But between failed airline ventures, bikini contests, and changing s ...

  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Ben & Jerry's vs Häagen-Dazs | Briser la glace | 6
Guerres de Business

Nous sommes en l’an 2000 et Ben & Jerry’s a désormais un nouveau propriétaire. Mais le nouvel actionnaire ne semble pas partager les valeurs qui avaient été celles des créateurs de l’entreprise. A tel point que les employés se demandent si la marque pourra survivre à de tels chan ...  Show more

Amazon vs Walmart - The Big Bang Theory of E-Commerce | 1
Business Wars

Ninety-six percent of Americans now shop online, snapping up everything from rare coins to industrial-sized barrels of hand sanitizer. Almost half of those purchases take place on one website: Amazon. 

But before sales were a click away, Walmart was the top dog, dec ...

  Show more

Jack Black Skin Care: Curran and Jeff Dandurand
How I Built This with Guy Raz

In 1998, Curran Dandurand and a colleague from Mary Kay Cosmetics came up with an unorthodox idea: a premium skincare brand for men. Despite the prevailing wisdom that American men would never want to moisturize and exfoliate - and a total lack of interest from investors ...

  Show more

Kenneth Cole: Kenneth Cole
How I Built This with Guy Raz

Kenneth Cole launched his shoe business out of a forty-foot truck in midtown Manhattan and quickly became known as an up-and-coming designer with an eye for street fashion. In 1986, he made a bold move by associating his nascent brand with a controversial issue at the time: the A ...  Show more