Yvette Kantrow, the executive editor of The Deal, writes Sunday about how the business media are taking bankers to task for strategies that just a few years ago they lauded.
“The story was a rare, if strange, attempt to humanize bankers (at least those like Walter) and garner sympathy for the Street’s hoi polloi. ‘Not everybody on Wall Street is a millionaire, and as the turmoil in the markets spreads, it is as much a pandemic of the everyman as it is of the Hamptons set,’ it begins. ‘For every Porsche-driving trader, two to three people at these companies answer the phones, keep the computers running and shine the floors.’
“Apparently, these ‘everymen’ like the high life as much as their bosses do. The first one we meet tells of being so ‘mesmerized’ by ‘a juicy steak dinner on the corporate account and a Town Car to drive him home’ that he quit college to join Bear’s tech support staff. Now his job will end on Oct. 31. ‘I couldn’t understand: How come me?’ he asks. ‘I was just this average Joe, but I became captivated by Wall Street.'”
Read more here.
Rahat Kapur of Campaign looks at the evolution The Wall Street Journal. Kapur writes, "The transformation…
This position will be Hybrid in the office/market 3 days per week, and those days…
The Fund for American Studies presented James Bennet of The Economist with the Kenneth Y. Tomlinson Award…
The Wall Street Journal is experimenting with AI-generated article summaries that appear at the top…
Zach Cohen is joining Bloomberg Tax to cover the fiscal cliff and tax issues on…
Larry Avila has been named interim editor for Automotive Dive, an Industry Dive publication. He…