Word: crowning
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...BROWSER. Its lofty 80% market share back in heady '95 turned out to be a high-water mark for Navigator, the software jewel in Netscape's crown. Then Microsoft stuck its competing Web browser, Explorer, on millions of Windows desktops and grabbed roughly half the market with uncanny speed (the Justice Department is still trying to figure out exactly how that happened). Under AOL's wing, Navigator could once again take the lead--if Case decides to switch AOL's built-in browser from Explorer to Navigator. The problem is that if Case drops Explorer, AOL could lose its happy...
Opened in the teeth of the Depression as a mighty symbol of rebirth, the 102-floor building got off to a wobbly start financially. Built by General Motors executive John Raskob, the building reigned for 42 years as the world's tallest. Its Art Deco crown, intended as a mooring mast for blimps, served as a handy perch in King Kong. A few skyscrapers have since soared higher, but none has surpassed its limestone majesty...
...tend to overlook (in sizing him up) Gates' basic decency. He has repeatedly been offered a starring role in the circus freak show of American Celebrity, Julius Caesar being offered the Emperor's crown by clamorous sycophants. He has turned it down. He does not make a habit of going on TV to pontificate, free-associate or share his feelings. His wife and young child are largely invisible to the public, which represents a deliberate decision on the part...
...becoming CEO, earned the label "Neutron Jack" for closing plants and laying off workers. He's a prince compared to "Chainsaw" Al Dunlap. A West Point graduate and former paratrooper, Dunlap struck like Sherman and crowed about it. At Lily Tulip he fired 50% of the corporate office; at Crown-Zellerbach, 20% of the work force; at Scott Paper, 11,000 employees. After firing 6,000 at Sunbeam, Chainsaw himself got axed by a pair of fire-breathing shareholders: Ronald Perelman, never mistaken for Mr. Congeniality, and Michael Price, a.k.a. the "scariest s.o.b. on Wall Street"--at least to CEOs...
Garth Brooks is the king of excess--he just wears a cowboy hat instead of a crown. Everything he does seems to come accompanied by exclamation marks. His new album isn't just one CD but two! His new live version of Friends in Low Places stretches on for almost nine minutes! And, to push Double Live, he's planning one of the most ambitious promotional campaigns of the year! Says Joe Kvidera, general manager of Tower Records in Chicago's Lincoln Park: "He's just so relentless promoting his stuff. It's kind of scary...