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letsdothis3 ago

Another director- Tim Armstrong https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Armstrong_(executive)

He is the Founder and CEO of the dtx company[3], focusing on creating experiences, platforms and investing in the direct-to-consumer space. He was formerly the CEO of Oath Inc., a subsidiary of Verizon Communications that serves as the umbrella company of its digital content subdivisions, including AOL and Yahoo!. Previously, he was the CEO [4] of AOL Inc. from 2009 until its purchase by Verizon in 2015. A Connecticut College graduate in economics and sociology, Armstrong began his career in journalism. He became known for his online advertising sales in the 1990s, and was appointed as a marketing director for Seattle-based online entertainment-and-news portal Starwave, which was acquired by Disney in 1998. He was vice-president of sales at the New York-based news-and-gaming company Snowball in 2000. He became U.S. sales chief for Google, and then became President of Google America's operation for some number of years. He replaced the outgoing Randy Falco as CEO of AOL on March 12, 2009.

Armstrong has been involved as an angel investor in numerous projects. He is personal investor in the New York-based Tequila Avion,[33] and with AOL invests in Betaworks.[34] He serves on boards such as The Priceline Group, Inc. (appointed as director in 2013[10]), the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB), the Advertising Research Foundation, the Paley Center for Media, the New York regional board of Teach for America, the Waterside School in Stamford, Connecticut and is Chairman Emeritus for the Advertising Council, who bestowed upon him their 60th Annual Public Service Award in 2013.[8][7] He is the chairman of the IAB Education Foundation, described by AOL as a "a new non-profit working to improve diversity and close the skills gap across the digital media and advertising landscape", and serves as an advisor to the consulting firm McChrystal Group

voat related post: Proof the Bad Guys are Losing and they know they are Losing

https://voat.co/v/theawakening/2716958/13801716

So take a step back. Look at all that's been accomplished in the past year--even the past week! Did you see all the key corporate resignations? Another half dozen--Leslie Moonves at CBS, but also "60 Minutes" top executive producer and sex freak Jeff Fagler; Jack Ma of Alibaba; Tim Armstrong of Oath/HuffPo/AOL (back in the day).

Armstrong may have resigned from one company but he's still very active, including online internet companies. So, let that be a lesson to us to keep an eye on where executives go when they resign from one company. Smoke and mirrors, folks.