Anonymous
8/18/2025, 2:23:41 AM
No.103613654
>>103613092
>kson will have steamy sex with mamanya
She can't keep getting away with it.
>>103613242
>I think the 11 mil got into their heads and they were thinking they would get more investments.
That seems plausible. They modeled their finances like a high-growth tech company instead of a medium-growth talent agency, and reality caught up to them. Most tech VCs expect you to triple your valuation on an 18 or 24 month timeline in order to be on track for their goals (your goals be damned). And it's hard to get new investors to believe in you when you haven't met the goals of your current investors.
>OR they were about to file for bankruptcy and Mouse hit it big in 2023 and kept them afloat in hope of better days.
It isn't uncommon for companies of this small-to-medium size to be nearly insolvent, but then (in other industries for example) get some new big client that allows them to survive for a while longer. It gives leadership the hope that they can turn things around, if they can really "ride the momentum" or "capitalize on the new partnership", if they suddenly got five more big clients like that one.
But then they don't, and they just delayed death by a few quarters.
>>103613517
I agree. I assume that is why they have not made any further statements, and I assume they won't. Nothing the execs say can make their position better, only have a chance of making it worse.
>kson will have steamy sex with mamanya
She can't keep getting away with it.
>>103613242
>I think the 11 mil got into their heads and they were thinking they would get more investments.
That seems plausible. They modeled their finances like a high-growth tech company instead of a medium-growth talent agency, and reality caught up to them. Most tech VCs expect you to triple your valuation on an 18 or 24 month timeline in order to be on track for their goals (your goals be damned). And it's hard to get new investors to believe in you when you haven't met the goals of your current investors.
>OR they were about to file for bankruptcy and Mouse hit it big in 2023 and kept them afloat in hope of better days.
It isn't uncommon for companies of this small-to-medium size to be nearly insolvent, but then (in other industries for example) get some new big client that allows them to survive for a while longer. It gives leadership the hope that they can turn things around, if they can really "ride the momentum" or "capitalize on the new partnership", if they suddenly got five more big clients like that one.
But then they don't, and they just delayed death by a few quarters.
>>103613517
I agree. I assume that is why they have not made any further statements, and I assume they won't. Nothing the execs say can make their position better, only have a chance of making it worse.