Anonymous ID: ce22c4 Jan. 27, 2019, 7:51 a.m. No.4928061   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>4927893

Valeria and Agustin Huneeus…

https://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/19/business/worldbusiness/19iht-wbspot20.1.7957774.html

 

That may go a long way to explaining why after nearly five decades, Huneeus, 73, is still in the game. The Chilean native has turned around troubled wineries in Chile (Concha y Toro) and California (Franciscan Vineyards, now owned by Constellation Brands) and restructured the multibillion-dollar wine division of Seagram.

….

When Huneeus gave up the winery in 1971, it was not for profit but politics: Salvador Allende, a Socialist, had been elected president of Chile. Huneeus handed the winery over to the state and left for a job in Argentina working for Seagram, taking his young family with him.

Anonymous ID: ce22c4 Jan. 27, 2019, 7:53 a.m. No.4928080   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>4927893

https://archive.org/stream/worldviewineindu00hunerich/worldviewineindu00hunerich_djvu.txt

 

Hicke: I wanted to ask you about working with Sam Bronfman; have you

worked very closely with him when you were with Seagram?

 

Huneeus: No, I worked with Edgar Bronfman. I reported to Edgar senior.

Sam was not in the company at that time.

 

Hicke: Okay. What about other people in the company that you

particularly worked with?

 

Huneeus: I was very close to people such as Ab Simon, who was the head of

Chateau and Estates, and Harold Fieldsteel, who was the executive

vice-president at that time. I was hired by Jack Yogman, who was

the president when I was hired, and we were together for quite a

few years, and then all of a sudden he was taken out of his job.

I ended up reporting to Edgar, and that was it. I had reported

first to Jack Yogman and then to Edgar Bronfman, nobody else.