Is this actually a strategy that is more common now? Trump is famous for this - he does outrageous things and then throws someone under the bus. That person leaves, they take all the reputational damage, Trump continues. Maybe Bezos and other billionaires are looking at Trump and thinking “Maybe I should go that far as well”?
Hatchet man for Bezos. Now someone slightly more affable, maybe even an insider, will get the job but all the damage is done.
It's the former Tumblr CEO. Technically a promotion from within but he was a recent hire as CFO.
There's a litany of such characters over the years; Al Dunlap comes to mind and his tenure at Consolidated Press Holdings.
Is this actually a strategy that is more common now? Trump is famous for this - he does outrageous things and then throws someone under the bus. That person leaves, they take all the reputational damage, Trump continues. Maybe Bezos and other billionaires are looking at Trump and thinking “Maybe I should go that far as well”?
Yes if there’s anything Trump has been known for since the 80s it’s his sterling positive reputation and putting others in the spotlight.
C’mon… there’s no reason to hallucinate information like ChatGPT circa 2022.
> there’s no reason to hallucinate information like ChatGPT circa 2022
It still does that today, unfortunately. A smart man does not trust an LLM further than he can throw it.