He has gone through a transformation and has become a cool looking dude with the gold necklace and [affinity for] the UFC. It’s the new Zuckerberg,” Ben Mezrich, whose book “The
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg surprised many this month when he moved to add UFC founder Dana White to the company’s board of directors. Given that his business experience was limited solely to managing MMA fighters and working as a fight promoter before building UFC into a sports and entertainment giant,
Facebook creator Mark Zuckerberg proudly adopted the motto “Move fast and break things”. More than a decade on, the billionaire tech entrepreneur is now breaking liberal hearts as he cements an extraordinary transformation from an apparent Democrat ally to a Donald Trump-supporting,
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has expressed his desire for more "masculine energy" in corporate culture, suggesting that environments that embrace aggression can have positive effects. In a candid interview with podcaster Joe Rogan,
UFC legend Joe Rogan recently had MMA fanatic Mark Zuckerberg on his uber-popular podcast. Naturally, the long-time fight commentator took an interest in his guest’s new career in combat sports, which has previously seen Zuckerberg claim gold in a BJJ competition.
Mark Zuckerberg's recent transformation has been jarring for some, and Joe Rogan believes he knows why the Meta CEO has changed so much. In the past few
The founder and CEO of Meta issued an update on his proposed MMA career when speaking with the UFC commentator
Zuckerberg trains grappling with esteemed coach Dave Camarillo, and has trained alongside UFC greats like Max Holloway and Israel Adesanya. ‘Zuck’ was slated to fight Elon Musk in a billionaire showdown in 2024, and Dana White revealed he was in legitimate negotiations to host Musk-Zuckerberg at the Rome Colosseum.
Kyle Whitmire, a columnist for AL.com, has penned a scathing takedown of Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg for his sudden transformation into red-pilled Trump supporter ahead of the president-elect's second term.
American tech giant, Meta, has issued an apology for Mark Zuckerberg's error on his recent Joe Rogan Experience (JRE) podcast appearance.
Stanford law professor Mark Lemley represented Meta in a 2023 copyright case in which the company used a data set containing copyrighted e-books to train its