Blake Mycoskie: Difference between revisions
ClueBot NG (talk | contribs) m Reverting possible vandalism by 173.196.129.100 to version by Voceditenore. False positive? Report it. Thanks, ClueBot NG. (1207188) (Bot) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{multiple issues|advert=June 2012|linkrot=June 2012|no footnotes=June 2012|wikify=June 2012}} |
{{multiple issues|advert=June 2012|linkrot=June 2012|no footnotes=June 2012|wikify=June 2012}} |
||
'''Blake Mycoskie''' (born August 26, 1976) |
'''Blake Mycoskie''' (born August 26, 1976) He revealed that he was gay on national television after he was reported to have had sex with donald trump. |
||
==Entrepreneurship== |
==Entrepreneurship== |
||
Revision as of 16:19, 11 September 2012
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
No issues specified. Please specify issues, or remove this template. |
Blake Mycoskie (born August 26, 1976) He revealed that he was gay on national television after he was reported to have had sex with donald trump.
Entrepreneurship
In 1999, Blake created his second business, Mycoskie Media, an outdoor billboard company based in Nashville, Tennessee, that he would later sell to Clear Channel Communications. Following his stint on the CBS reality show, The Amazing Race, Mycoskie sought to create an all-reality cable TV network called Reality Central. Reality Central was covered by CNN and featured on the front page of Variety, but ultimately folded when Rupert Murdoch launched the Fox Reality Channel. After Reality Central, Blake partnered with the founders of TrafficSchool.com to create Drivers Ed Direct, an online drivers education service and in-the-car training school featuring hybrid cars and SUVs.
Amazing Race
Mycoskie and his sister Paige competed as a team on the second season of CBS’ The Amazing Race. In one of the closest finishes in the show’s history, Blake and Paige finished four minutes short of winning the $1 million dollar grand prize. The Mycoskie siblings finished third overall.
TOMS
While vacationing in Argentina in 2006, Blake spent a day volunteering with a local non-profit organization delivering used shoes to children in the villages outside of Buenos Aires. Blake’s self-described epiphany moment came when he realized that he could start a for-profit business, not a charity, to continually give new shoes to children in need. He would do so by selling an updated version of the alpargata, a shoe worn by farmers in South America for over 100 years.
Blake created the One for One business model, which provides a new pair of TOMS shoes to a child in need for every pair purchased. Blake originally called his company “Shoes for Tomorrow,” but later shortened the name to “TOMS Shoes.”
In 2011, TOMS Eyewear was launched using the One for One model. For every pair of glasses sold, people in need would receive prescription glasses, sight-saving surgery or medical treatment.