http://www.ted.com Media big shot FelixDennis roars his fiery, funny, sometimes racy original poetry, revisiting haunting memories and hard-won battle scars from a madcap -- yet not too repentant -- life. Best enjoyed with a glass of wine.
Media big shot FelixDennis roars his fiery, funny, sometimes racy original poetry, revisiting haunting memories and hard-won battle scars from a madcap -- yet not too repentant -- life. Best enjoyed with a glass of wine. (Recorded at TED2004,...
FelixDennis' publishing house is taking its online-only, digital-edition lads mag Monkey in to Scandinavia. Danish e-edition company NetPublications International will publish local-language versions of the page-turner - along with Dennis' iMotors and iGizmodo e-editions - in Denmark, Sweden and Norway under licence by the end of the year, as PG reports . It's a big step for...
The group consists of a number of operating companies in both the UK and USA. Although the companies have experienced explosive growth over the past five years, success hasn't diminished our frontier spirit. As a privately held group of companies, the Dennis Group is dedicated to delivering what customers and advertisers want, rather than concentrating on the somewhat narrower goals of stockholders
... nerds like myself — was Computer Shopper. As I understand things, back in the late 1980s FelixDennis had seen a copy of the American Computer Shopper mag while on a business trip, and had been impressed by its ability to sell advertising column-inches. So he grabbed the name in the UK and bankrolled a bunch of old school computer journalists (notably Graeme Kidd and Jeremy Spencer,...
In 2001 the society went through financial difficulties and Pelling bought the magazine for just £1. Three years later she sold it on to the publisher FelixDennis, who moved it to Surrey. It was sold again but by this time Pelling and her writers had gone and the magazine had changed from an erotic literary journal to a lads' magazine, and circulation had dropped to a few hundred. It...
Those are the last three words that FelixDennis utters sotto voce in this performance of his poems . I don't quite know whether to applaud or hiss at his life's work. Perhaps the tension is the thing that makes it interesting.
Beefing up The Week 's online presence, Bill Falk views aggregation as an art form and says owner FelixDennis wants the mag to be his "legacy." So What Do You Do, Bill Falk, Editor-in-Chief of The Week ? RELATED: So What Do You Do, Sewell Chan, New York Times City Room Bureau Chief?