Paris Hilton News
-
It’s after sunset in Hollywood, and a gang of teenagers is burgling Paris Hilton’s villa using keys found right under her doormat.
-
For decades, made-in-Asia luxury has been shorthand for “fake.” Now, companies from South Korean bag maker Couronne to Malaysian dressmaker Farah Khan are making a case for homegrown chic.
-
Paris Hilton, the 29-year-old socialite, flew home on a private jet after being denied entry to Japan, according to Kazuo Kashihara, a spokesman at Narita International Airport’s immigration office.
-
A shareholder of Parlux Fragrances Inc. sued the company’s board of directors, claiming they are selling the maker of Paris Hilton’s perfume too cheaply.
-
Experian Plc, Equifax Inc. and TransUnion Corp., the three biggest U.S. credit-reporting companies, said they uncovered cases where hackers gained illegal, unauthorized access to users’ information.
-
One late afternoon in March 2007, Sanjay Wadhwa sat at his desk transfixed by the data on his computer screen. Wadhwa was then a low-level supervisor in the Wall Street office of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission investigating a supposedly routine case of “cherry- picking.” The SEC had gotten a complaint that Rengan Rajaratnam, the founder of Sedna Capital Management LLC, a small hedge fund, was doling out a disproportionate share of his best trades to the beneficiaries of a “friends and family” account. It was Wadhwa’s job to figure out what was going on, Bloomberg Businessweek reports in its April 23 issue.
-
A takeover to secure the rights to sell Paris Hilton’s scent in a bottle is giving traders a chance to triple their money betting on the industry’s most expensive acquisition.
-
Stuart Lawley has Hustler magazine and the distributor of Paris Hilton ’s sex tape up in arms.
-
Ksenia Sobchak, a TV personality often portrayed as Russia's Paris Hilton, had a rocky start as a leader of the country's opposition movement. At one point, demonstrators tried to boo her off a stage.
-
Ford Motor Co. and a WPP Plc unit apologized over unauthorized ads for the Figo in India, including a version depicting former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi tying up and gagging three young women.
|
|
Most Popular on Bloomberg
|
| |