Adam Neumann, Trying Stand-Up Comedy On for Size, Is Attempting to Buy Back WeWork
Want to hear a joke? Guy started a companyâletâs call it WeWorkâand raised an insane amount of money, valuing it a colossal $47 billion. While running the company, he reportedly did things like:
Smoked so much pot on the corporate jet that the crew had to put on oxygen masks in order to breatheThrew company retreats called âSummer Campâ where, on at least one occasion, he took âpsychedelic mushrooms on the first night of campâ and carried around âa water gun filled with vodkaâLaid off employees to cut costs and then immediately had a member of Run-DMC enter the room to entertain the remaining staff, who were treated to tequila shots and toastsEmpowered his wife to fire people within minutes of meeting them because she âdidnât like their energyâTrademarked the word We, and made the company pay him $5.9 million to license it*Borrowed money from the company as it paid him rentTold people that, while he once had ambitions to become the prime minister of Israel, his new plan was to be president of the world, as well as the worldâs first trillionaireOversaw massive lossesWas in charge when the company was forced to delay its IPO after facing âintense scrutiny of its finances and leadership,â including âconcerns about its path to profitability and its leaderâWatched its valuation go from $47 billion to $8 billionWas paid $1.7 billion to go away, after near-destroying the companyThen, five years later, after the company files for bankruptcy, he attempts to buy it back on the cheap. Pretty funny, right? Except, itâs not actually a joke, itâs what WeWork cofounder Adam Neumann is literally trying to do.
Per Dealbook:
Adam Neumann shot to fame by turning WeWork into a cultural and business phenomenon, before being ousted from the work space operator in dramatic fashion. But for the past several months, he has been trying to buy the now bankrupt businessâwith the help of the hedge fund mogul Dan Loeb, DealBook is the first to report. Neumannâs new real estate company Flow Global is pushing WeWork to consider its takeover approach, according to a letter his lawyers sent to WeWorkâs advisers on Monday.
Flow, which has already raised $350 million from the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, disclosed in the letter that Loebâs Third Point would help finance a transaction. Flow has sought to buy WeWork or its assets, as well as provide bankruptcy financing to keep it afloat.
Perhaps not surprisingly, WeWork appears to want nothing to do with Neumann, which heâs apparently not happy about:
Flowâs lawyers accused WeWork of stonewalling for months. âWe write to express our dismay with WeWorkâs lack of engagement even to provide information to my clients in what is intended to be a value-maximizing transaction for all stakeholders,â wrote the lawyers led by Alex Spiro of Quinn Emanuel, who also represents Elon Musk and Jay-Z.
According to Dealbook, Neumann has âsought to invest in WeWork for years,â offering to arrange up to $1 billion in financing in October 2022, but the then CEO âshut down that process without explanation.â (Though one could probably read between the lines!) Will he be successful this time around? Stay tuned!
*He returned the money after being publicly shamed.
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