GameStop’s faceplant, Wells Fargo’s comeback
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Narrated by:
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Written by:
Takeaways
- Media visibility can amplify confidence, but it cannot replace strategic coherence.
- Ryan Cohen’s CNBC interview exposed unresolved questions about GameStop’s proposed eBay acquisition.
- Wells Fargo’s regulatory closure does not automatically mean reputational closure.
GameStop, Ryan Cohen, eBay acquisition bid, CNBC Squawk Box, media training, meme stocks, institutional credibility, virality, investor confidence, deal financing, strategic coherence, Wells Fargo, fake accounts scandal, regulatory remediation, consent orders, asset cap, corporate rehabilitation, reputational recovery, stakeholder trust, post-remediation drift, operational substantiation, governance, growth expectations
Companies Mentioned
GameStop, eBay, Amazon, TD Bank, CNBC, The Wall Street Journal, Wells Fargo
Episode Hashtags
#GameStop #eBay #Amazon #TDBank #CNBC #WallStreetJournal #WellsFargo #RyanCohen #CharlieScharf #CorporateReputation #PublicRelations #CorporateCommunications #CrisisCommunication #MediaTraining #InvestorRelations #ReputationManagement #StakeholderTrust #Governance #LeadershipCommunication #StrategicCommunications #MemeStocks #ShawnPNeal #AdvoCast #OCRNetwork
Communication Breakdown is a production of the Observatory on Corporate Reputation.
Hosted by Craig Carroll and Steve Dowling.
Produced in partnership with Advocast and Shawn P Neal.
For questions, feedback, or episode suggestions, reach out at podcasts@ocrnetwork.com
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