The very unserious company that took over the defunct Enron brand on Monday unveiled its supposedly "groundbreaking" product: the Enron Egg. But the Enron Egg is no normal egg, company ...
The satirical masterminds behind the "Birds Aren't Real" conspiracy theory have launched a parody product called the "Enron Egg". The Enron Egg is marketed as a fictional at-home nuclear reactor ...
Enron has unveiled a new product a month after the infamous and defunct company was resurrected − apparently for fun − by one of the guys behind the satirical "Birds Aren't Real" conspiracy ...
The Enron Power Summit, an event hosted by the company that recently acquired the defunct Enron brand, is scheduled for Monday, and so far, the company has not shared any concrete information ...
Enron wants to sell you a nuclear reactor for your home — no, of course not really. The pranksters behind the Birds Aren't Real nonsense "revived" the defunct, famously fraudulent company in ...
Enron was a Houston-based energy and utility company that collapsed for committing one of the largest accounting frauds in history. As reported by CNBC, Enron's bankruptcy on December 2, 2001, marked ...
Enron, the scandalous energy company that went bust in 2001, has just announced the creation of its at-home nuclear reactor, or did it? The egg-shaped reactor is said to cut the costs of traditional ...
The impact of the Enron bankruptcy has been both predictable and at the same time somewhat surprising for the marketplace. Short-term energy and commodity prices have seemingly been unaffected by the ...