Know your pedovores #26544b33
Barry Diller & 'wife' Diane von Furstenberg
Started FOX & USA network
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barry_Diller
>Diller is responsible for what the media dubs "The Killer Dillers" – people whom Diller mentored and who later became big-time media executives in their own right. Examples include Michael Eisner (who was President of Paramount Pictures while Diller was its Chairman & CEO, and went on to become Chairman & CEO of The Walt Disney Company), Dara Khosrowshahi (CEO of Uber), Dawn Steel (future head of Columbia Pictures and one of the first women to run a major movie studio, who worked under Diller at Paramount), Jeffrey Katzenberg (head of DreamWorks Animation, principal of DreamWorks SKG, former head of Walt Disney Studios, and a head of production of Paramount under Diller), Garth Ancier, President of BBC America, and Don Simpson, who was President of Production at Paramount under Diller and Eisner and later went on to run a production company based on the Disney lot with Jerry Bruckheimer.
Diller was good friends with the late Malcolm Forbes. Forbes son Steve said, "Forbes men all go crazy around 40. My father started chasing little boys, I ran for president."
Malcolm Forbes 70'th birthday was a spectacular gather in Morocco:
"On the weekend of his birthday, August 19, 1989, from the 18th to the 20th, Forbes gave himself a 70th birthday party in Tangier, Morocco where he owned a palace, the Palais Mendoub. 800 guests were flown in on a chartered Boeing 747, a DC-8 and a Concorde, which included friends and associates from the world’s rich and famous, from the US and Europe, as well as half a dozen US governors, scores of CEOs of mulinational corporations and the highest of the mucky mucks like Gianni Agnelli, Henry Kissinger, Barbara Walters, Robert Maxwell, and the birthday boy’s “date” for the event: Elizabeth Taylor."
Dig it.
The party entertainment was on a grand scale, including 600 drummers, acrobats and dancers and a fantasia — a cavalry charge which ends with the firing of muskets into the air — by 300 Berber horsemen. The cost of the whole affair was estimated at more than $2.5 million.