Episodios

  • Friendster: How They Blew It
    Apr 8 2026

    I just love this story - it has everything - Jonathan Abrams, a young, smart coder from Canada, moved to California because he wanted to be at the very heart of the internet boom. And on nothing more than an intuition, a feeling of how things should be online, he comes up with the framework for a social media platform, the very same model that MySpace, Facebook and all the others then learnt from or copied. But Abrams and Friendster were first, and for a brief moment, they were the hottest property in Silicon Valley - Google tried to buy them. VCs were desperate to invest with them - and within just a few months, it all fell apart, leaving the door wide open for MySpace and then Facebook. It’s a fascinating story, enjoy


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    30 m
  • Kerry Packer: The Billionaire Who Played the Biggest Hands
    Apr 1 2026

    I’ve wanted to dig into Packers life for a long time now, because one thing I’ve come to know from over 35 years of reading business stories is that when it comes to big characters with the most drama- the media tycoons always win hands down. And so it is with Packer we’re talking getting into an actual brawl with heavies hired by Rupert Murdoch, transforming televised sport, having his name dragged into rumours about drug trafficking and even murder, winning and losing tens of millions in casinos in London and Las Vegas. Packer was without doubt one of the larger than life figures ever in business and it’s a cracking story, enjoy.


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    32 m
  • BCCI: The Most Corrupt Bank in the World
    Mar 25 2026

    This is the remarkable story of how Agha Abedi built BCCI, a global bank founded in Pakistan that was revered by its ordinary customers and employees. Abedi was seen as more than just a banker- a visionary and philanthropist. But there was a second bank within the bank called the Dark Network, and this secret side of the bank provided special services for corrupt politicians, funded wars, washed Pablo Escobar’s drug money, facilitated the murky dealings of MI6, the CIA among others and then it all came crashing down from an undercover operation straight out of the movies . It’s a fascinating story- enjoy.


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    30 m
  • The Gold Ring Scandal of 1869
    Mar 18 2026

    This, I promise you, is one of the most audacious and just jaw dropping financial schemes that I’ve ever come across. Two young outsiders initially taking on and beating Cornelius Vanderbilt, the richest man in America and then on the back of their success, they attempt to corner the gold market. It's got everything, political corruption, backroom deals in Albany, a siege in New Jersey, back stabbing and betrayal, and the first Black Friday ever 1869, when the markets crashed and Wall Street descended into chaos.

    It's a cracking story — enjoy.


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    27 m
  • Michael Rubin of Fanatics: The Man Who Never Stops Selling
    Mar 11 2026

    This guy is non stop business- even when he’s partying, it’s business. Here’s guy who owned 5 retail stores while still in high school, was making millions by the time he was 18, was CEO of a public company at just 23 and over the last 10 years he has transformed the whole sports licensing and sports fan business through fanatics, a $25 billion company that’s still private. Rubin is just 100% non stop hustling, and I would say he’s the most relentless business person I’ve covered up until now and he makes for a fascinating story- enjoy.


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    29 m
  • Ingvar Kamprad of IKEA: Frugal, Focused, Flawed and Fascinating
    Mar 4 2026

    I know what you’re thinking- the Swedish guy who built IKEA- kind of boring - right. But as regular listeners will know by now, I love business, not just the scandals or the high tension battles, but I love finding out how these huge businesses were built, because I know behind every big business is a fascinating entrepreneur, even if they appear outwardly boring- and that’s exactly how it is with Kamprad- this guy is was at one time the richest person in the world, yet at the very same time used teabags twice to save money, and and the way he built his business by not just focusing on cost- which was his obsession, but by watching everything, observing his customers, talking to his staff- it’s fascinating, and of course like every billionaire he had his controversies- it makes for a cracking story - enjoy


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    33 m
  • Yahoo- 1994-March 2000
    Feb 25 2026

    Regular listeners will know that I have a special grá as we’d say in Ireland or a love for the whole internet bubble era- it’s when I first got into business and it was such a wild time, and the yahoo story encapsulates this so brilliantly- 2 guys working on a hobby and within just 4 years their hobby is worth $100 billion, helped in no small way by an unheard of $100 million investment from Masayoshi Son of SoftBank, they turn down the opportunity to buy Google for just $1 million but do buy lots of other companies at crazy valuations- it’s a cracking story- enjoy.


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    29 m
  • George Soros: Big Bets and Big Backlash
    Feb 18 2026

    Soros’s life is extraordinary. A Jewish teenager who survived the Nazi occupation, fled communist Hungary with almost nothing, and went on to build one of the most remarkable investing careers in modern history.

    We’re talking about some of the boldest trades ever made. In his most famous bet — the one that led to the label “the man who broke the Bank of England” — Soros personally made around $650 million.

    But the money is only part of the story. He also gave away roughly $32 billion, becoming one of the most polarising figures in finance and politics.

    And while we’ll touch on that controversy, this episode is really about the trades — how he thought, how he positioned, and why they were so extraordinary. I love this story

    Enjoy.


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    32 m