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The Billionaire Boys Club, or BBC, was an investing and social club organized by Joseph Henry Hunt (born Joseph Henry Gamsky) [1] in Southern California between 1983 and 1989. It was originally simply named "BBC", the initials of Bombay Bicycle Club , a restaurant Hunt had frequented as a young man in Chicago . [ 2 ]
Billionaire Boys Club debuted in Williams' 2003 "Frontin'" music video. In 2004, Ice Cream, originally a subsidiary of Billionaire Boys Club, unveiled its skate-centric footwear line, licensed by Reebok. [3] [4] Ice Cream graphics feature all-over print motifs of beepers, dollar signs and diamonds. A year later, Billionaire Boys Club branched ...
Billionaire Boys Club is a 2018 American biographical crime drama film directed by James Cox and co-written by Cox and Captain Mauzner. The film is about the social club and Ponzi scheme of the same name .
For his latest, “Billionaire Boys Club,” Cox enlists rising stars like Ansel Elgort, Emma Roberts and Taron Egerton as well as a veteran (Kevin Spacey) who up until recently could have served ...
Billionaire Boys Club is a two-part television film that aired on NBC in 1987. It told the story of the Billionaire Boys Club, and its founder, Joe Hunt, who was convicted in 1987 of murdering con-man Ron Levin.
The Billionaire Boys Club was a 1980s, Californian investment and social club run as a Ponzi scheme. Billionaire Boys Club may also refer to: Billionaire Boys Club, a 1987 TV movie about the club; Billionaire Boys Club, a 2018 film about the club; Billionaire Boys Club (clothing retailer), a fashion brand established in 2003
Pharrell Williams’ Billionaire Boys Club has joined forces with the New York Yankees for a special edition apparel collection. The unique collaboration between the streetwear brand and baseball ...
In 1986, Sullivan wrote an article for Esquire [4] detailing the corruption and criminal activities of the Billionaire Boys Club; the article “exposed the whole fascinating mess and briefly made Sullivan the brightest light in town [Los Angeles].” [1] Sullivan was paid $250,000 to write a book based on the article; and, according to Jeff Baker of The Oregonian, this was “at that time ...