Follow up of the day

  • Started 11 years ago
  • Last post 11 years ago
  • 5 Responses
  • georgesIII

    Am I the only one wondering what happened to internet "celebrities",

    can we put our power together to find out what happened to those people.

    post people or stories you wonder about and I'll try to find what is up with them.

    my selection is:
    tattooed glasses guy:

    Obama B girl:

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    "Am I the only one wondering what happened to internet "celebrities","

    Yes

    • <uan
    • why do you always pretend not to care but always the first one to bump my thread? is it love or is it hate?georgesIII
    • He works for People magazine and hates himself.
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    • my guess: boredomuan
    • <
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    • Georges, it's sheer impartialness.
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    • So fucking impartial I'm livid
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    • ok, set, it's now time to stop writing,georgesIII
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    What about some more interesting people that disappeared?:

    Lou Pai is a former Enron executive who cashed out $270 million in stock and left the company right before it collapsed, divorced his wife, married an exotic dancer, bought an enormous piece of Colorado, sold it and then disappeared into obscurity.
    http://www.npr.org/templates/sto…

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  • georgesIII0

    I always liked John Titor's tale, but it's still in the conspiracy lore.

    http://www.strangerdimensions.co…
    http://www.strangerdimensions.co…

  • georgesIII0

    @ freedom,

    from Lou pai's wiki (I guess it's a happy ending)

    Post-Enron[edit]
    Pai is the founder and chairman of Element Markets, a renewable-energy consulting firm that has hired several former Enron senior employees.[17] Through Element, Pai has invested in pollution emissions credits.[18]

    On July 30, 2008, Pai agreed to resolve civil insider trading charges against him with an out-of-court settlement of $31.5 million, including $1.5 million in civil fines and $30 million in restitution, to be deposited into a fund for shareholders harmed by Enron's bankruptcy.[6] He continues to neither admit nor deny the Securities and Exchange Commission claims that he sold millions of shares of Enron stock based on non-public information about the company's financial problems. It is one of the largest settlements in the history of the SEC's enforcement program dealing with an individual for alleged insider trading.[6] As part of the settlement, Pai is also barred from serving as an officer or director of a public company for five years.[19] [20]

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lou…