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奈飞前CEO离职后投资度假村

LILA MACLELLAN
2023-04-20

黑斯廷斯最近成为犹他州陷入困境的粉山滑雪度假村的老板之一。

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奈飞董事长兼联合创始人里德·黑斯廷斯成为犹他州粉山滑雪度假村的老板之一。摄影:ERNESTO S. RUSCIO —— 奈飞/盖蒂图片社

三个月前,里德·黑斯廷斯宣布辞去奈飞(Netflix)CEO职务。三个月后,他开启了一个新项目:黑斯廷斯最近成为犹他州陷入困境的粉山滑雪度假村(Powder Mountain)的老板之一。《财富》杂志最近曾报道,该度假村曾号称要打造一座生态环保的乌托邦,服务有社会意识的公司创始人、明星和超级富有的滑雪爱好者。

黑斯廷斯的个人财富预计高达31亿美元。八年前,他和妻子帕蒂·奎琳在粉山山腰买了一块地,建了一座现代风格的木制圆柱形住宅。夫妻二人是资深滑雪和滑雪板爱好者,他们的季节性邻居包括市场营销巨头WPP的创始人苏铭天和PayPal联合创始人肯·豪威尔。一个高端系列峰会的年轻创始人们首先提出了建造一座高山香格里拉的愿景,这得到了许多商界精英的认可。

周一的新闻报道称,如今,黑斯廷斯收购了这些创始人的股份,将在未来粉山度假村的决策中扮演核心角色。奈飞联合创始人兼执行董事长黑斯廷斯在新闻稿中表示,他“期待为实现粉山的未来出一份力”,并且希望“保护这个地方的特殊之处”。黑斯廷斯并未回复周一晚上的置评请求。

梦想终结

2013年,正在日渐衰败的粉山滑雪度假村,被四名二十多岁的年轻人收购。他们是“顶峰精英会”(Summit Series)的创始人,顶峰精英会实行邀请制,追求快乐至上,主要面向创业者、风险投资者和名人。顶峰精英会活动的知名度,源于杰夫·贝佐斯和比尔·克林顿等人的讲话,The Roots乐队等明星的表演,华丽的舞蹈派对和名厨烹饪的美食,以及在梦幻或魔幻的蘑菇屋里召开的沉浸式的研讨会等。

顶峰精英会的创始人埃利奥特·比斯诺、布雷特·莱夫、杰夫·罗森塔尔和杰里米·施瓦茨,在10年前通过包含各界成功人士的人脉网络融资4,000万美元买下了粉山,引起了媒体关注。他们与风险投资者格雷戈·莫罗和他的合伙人罗伯·哈特成立了一家集体企业,提出为参加顶峰精英会的企业建立一座全年运营的基地,并为认同他们的观念“不做小计划”的人们打造一座优雅的小镇。正如《财富》杂志报道,在这里“将诞生宏大的、改变世界的慈善理念”。

该项目占地近9,000英亩,计划修建500栋可以直接滑雪出入的独栋住宅,以及一座占地四英亩的度假村,包含联合办公空间、餐厅和高档酒店等设施。他们计划修建一座实行蒙台梭利教育法的学校,一座另类大学,高科技温室和废水回收系统,使山顶社区可以实现自给自足。

虽然该项目吸引了数以百计的投资者和购房人,包括公司高管、体育明星和创始人,但它的大部分承诺并未实现。粉山被买下十年后,山上仅建成了不到50套独栋住宅,与承诺的500套相去甚远,而度假村只存在于建筑师的设计图当中,没有餐厅、酒店或商铺。外地开发商在推销计划时,向当地官员承诺的创造就业和经济发展也没有实现。

到底出了什么问题?该项目海拔9,000英尺,只有一条当地最陡峭的公路可以通行,要在这个地方建设一个社区并不容易,而新冠疫情和供应链问题更加剧了该项目的建设难度。更糟糕的是,度假村的开发者与当地人发生了冲突,主要是犹他州伊登镇的摩门教徒社区。但有多位消息人士告诉《财富》杂志,项目延误的主要原因是比斯诺和莫罗之间的权力之争。(两人均否认了不合传闻,称虽然两人之间偶有摩擦,但这在如此复杂的项目中并不新鲜。两人并未回复周一晚上的置评请求。)

冲动收购?

该项目的原始开发者希望为有社会意识和有影响力的人们,打造一处热闹的滑雪度假村,但黑斯廷斯似乎并不认同这种乌托邦式的目标。1月,他对《财富》杂志表示,他和妻子喜欢粉山与世隔绝的地理位置和“开拓者”的氛围。他认为粉山现在是一处传统房地产项目,“不再自诩要实现顶峰精英会那种‘我们将通过互动改变世界’的理想”。

最近完成收购后,黑斯廷斯在接受《盐湖城论坛报》采访时表示:“人们一度以‘拯救世界’的心态开发该项目。现在我的观点是:这是一座出色的滑雪场,人烟稀少,可以在这里连续畅玩数日。”

《盐湖城论坛报》报道称,比斯诺两周前才联系到黑斯廷斯,商谈收购顶峰精英会创始人股份的事宜。黑斯廷斯回忆比斯诺告诉他:“你热爱这座山,欣赏它的实际价值,所以我们认为,你是最理想的所有者。”

黑斯廷斯将在董事会的五个席位中占据一席,负责监督山上的管理和运营。新闻稿称,莫罗依旧是联合所有人。粉山并未披露黑斯廷斯为此支付的价格。据美国证券交易委员会的申报文件显示,奈飞在2022年向黑斯廷斯支付了3,500万美元。黑斯廷斯辞去CEO职务之后,奈飞将他2023年的薪酬修改为500,000美元,以及250万美元股票期权。

黑斯廷斯在新闻稿中表示:“埃利奥特·比斯诺和其他团队成员有一个大梦想,并且已经部分实现。我和格雷戈很激动能进一步完善粉山项目。”(财富中文网)

译者:刘进龙

审校:汪皓

三个月前,里德·黑斯廷斯宣布辞去奈飞(Netflix)CEO职务。三个月后,他开启了一个新项目:黑斯廷斯最近成为犹他州陷入困境的粉山滑雪度假村(Powder Mountain)的老板之一。《财富》杂志最近曾报道,该度假村曾号称要打造一座生态环保的乌托邦,服务有社会意识的公司创始人、明星和超级富有的滑雪爱好者。

黑斯廷斯的个人财富预计高达31亿美元。八年前,他和妻子帕蒂·奎琳在粉山山腰买了一块地,建了一座现代风格的木制圆柱形住宅。夫妻二人是资深滑雪和滑雪板爱好者,他们的季节性邻居包括市场营销巨头WPP的创始人苏铭天和PayPal联合创始人肯·豪威尔。一个高端系列峰会的年轻创始人们首先提出了建造一座高山香格里拉的愿景,这得到了许多商界精英的认可。

周一的新闻报道称,如今,黑斯廷斯收购了这些创始人的股份,将在未来粉山度假村的决策中扮演核心角色。奈飞联合创始人兼执行董事长黑斯廷斯在新闻稿中表示,他“期待为实现粉山的未来出一份力”,并且希望“保护这个地方的特殊之处”。黑斯廷斯并未回复周一晚上的置评请求。

梦想终结

2013年,正在日渐衰败的粉山滑雪度假村,被四名二十多岁的年轻人收购。他们是“顶峰精英会”(Summit Series)的创始人,顶峰精英会实行邀请制,追求快乐至上,主要面向创业者、风险投资者和名人。顶峰精英会活动的知名度,源于杰夫·贝佐斯和比尔·克林顿等人的讲话,The Roots乐队等明星的表演,华丽的舞蹈派对和名厨烹饪的美食,以及在梦幻或魔幻的蘑菇屋里召开的沉浸式的研讨会等。

顶峰精英会的创始人埃利奥特·比斯诺、布雷特·莱夫、杰夫·罗森塔尔和杰里米·施瓦茨,在10年前通过包含各界成功人士的人脉网络融资4,000万美元买下了粉山,引起了媒体关注。他们与风险投资者格雷戈·莫罗和他的合伙人罗伯·哈特成立了一家集体企业,提出为参加顶峰精英会的企业建立一座全年运营的基地,并为认同他们的观念“不做小计划”的人们打造一座优雅的小镇。正如《财富》杂志报道,在这里“将诞生宏大的、改变世界的慈善理念”。

该项目占地近9,000英亩,计划修建500栋可以直接滑雪出入的独栋住宅,以及一座占地四英亩的度假村,包含联合办公空间、餐厅和高档酒店等设施。他们计划修建一座实行蒙台梭利教育法的学校,一座另类大学,高科技温室和废水回收系统,使山顶社区可以实现自给自足。

虽然该项目吸引了数以百计的投资者和购房人,包括公司高管、体育明星和创始人,但它的大部分承诺并未实现。粉山被买下十年后,山上仅建成了不到50套独栋住宅,与承诺的500套相去甚远,而度假村只存在于建筑师的设计图当中,没有餐厅、酒店或商铺。外地开发商在推销计划时,向当地官员承诺的创造就业和经济发展也没有实现。

到底出了什么问题?该项目海拔9,000英尺,只有一条当地最陡峭的公路可以通行,要在这个地方建设一个社区并不容易,而新冠疫情和供应链问题更加剧了该项目的建设难度。更糟糕的是,度假村的开发者与当地人发生了冲突,主要是犹他州伊登镇的摩门教徒社区。但有多位消息人士告诉《财富》杂志,项目延误的主要原因是比斯诺和莫罗之间的权力之争。(两人均否认了不合传闻,称虽然两人之间偶有摩擦,但这在如此复杂的项目中并不新鲜。两人并未回复周一晚上的置评请求。)

冲动收购?

该项目的原始开发者希望为有社会意识和有影响力的人们,打造一处热闹的滑雪度假村,但黑斯廷斯似乎并不认同这种乌托邦式的目标。1月,他对《财富》杂志表示,他和妻子喜欢粉山与世隔绝的地理位置和“开拓者”的氛围。他认为粉山现在是一处传统房地产项目,“不再自诩要实现顶峰精英会那种‘我们将通过互动改变世界’的理想”。

最近完成收购后,黑斯廷斯在接受《盐湖城论坛报》采访时表示:“人们一度以‘拯救世界’的心态开发该项目。现在我的观点是:这是一座出色的滑雪场,人烟稀少,可以在这里连续畅玩数日。”

《盐湖城论坛报》报道称,比斯诺两周前才联系到黑斯廷斯,商谈收购顶峰精英会创始人股份的事宜。黑斯廷斯回忆比斯诺告诉他:“你热爱这座山,欣赏它的实际价值,所以我们认为,你是最理想的所有者。”

黑斯廷斯将在董事会的五个席位中占据一席,负责监督山上的管理和运营。新闻稿称,莫罗依旧是联合所有人。粉山并未披露黑斯廷斯为此支付的价格。据美国证券交易委员会的申报文件显示,奈飞在2022年向黑斯廷斯支付了3,500万美元。黑斯廷斯辞去CEO职务之后,奈飞将他2023年的薪酬修改为500,000美元,以及250万美元股票期权。

黑斯廷斯在新闻稿中表示:“埃利奥特·比斯诺和其他团队成员有一个大梦想,并且已经部分实现。我和格雷戈很激动能进一步完善粉山项目。”(财富中文网)

译者:刘进龙

审校:汪皓

Three months after announcing that he’d step down as CEO of Netflix, Reed Hastings has found his next project: He just became a co-owner of Powder Mountain, a troubled Utah ski resort that, as Fortune recently reported, was once touted as an eco-friendly utopia-in-the-making for socially conscious founders, stars, and ultrawealthy ski enthusiasts.

Hastings, who is worth an estimated $3.1 billion, and his wife, Patty Quillin, bought a plot on the mountainside and built a modernist wooden cylindrical home there eight years ago. Avid skiers and snowboarders, the couple became seasonal neighbors to Martin Sorrell, founder of marketing behemoth WPP, and Ken Howery, a cofounder of PayPal. They were among a long list of prominent business figures drawn to the vision for an alpine Shangri-la laid out by the young founders of a glitzy conference series.

Now Hastings has bought out those founders’ stake and will play a central role in deciding what comes next for Powder, according to a news release on Monday. He is “looking forward to being a part of Powder Mountain’s future” and wants to “safeguard what makes this place special,” the Netflix cofounder and executive chair said in the release. Hastings did not respond to requests for further comment Monday evening.

The end of a dream

Powder Mountain was a fading ski resort in 2013 when it was purchased by the four twentysomething founders of Summit Series, a hedonistic invitation-only conference for entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, and celebrities. Summit Series events are known for talks by the likes of Jeff Bezos and Bill Clinton; performances by The Roots and other stars; epic dance parties and celebrity-chef prepared meals; and immersive seminars on lucid dreaming or psychedelic mushrooms.

The Summit Series founders—Elliott Bisnow, Brett Leve, Jeff Rosenthal, and Jeremy Schwartz—inspired breathless media attention when they raised $40 million from their high-flying network to buy Powder Mountain 10 years ago. They formed a collective with a venture capitalist named Greg Mauro and his partner Rob Hutter, and laid out a vision for a year-round home base for the Summit Series conference business and an elegant town for people who shared their ethos: “Make no small plans.” As Fortune reported, Summit “was to be a place where big, world-changing, philanthropic ideas would be hatched.”

On the parcel of nearly 9,000 acres, the group planned for 500 ski-in, ski-out single-family homes and a four-acre village with coworking spaces, restaurants, and upscale hotels. There was talk of building a Montessori school, an alternative university, high-tech greenhouses, and wastewater-recycling systems that would allow the mountain community to be self-sufficient.

Although the project attracted hundreds of investors and buyers, including business executives, sports stars, and founders, most of what was promised has not materialized. A decade after the mountain purchase, fewer than 50 of the promised 500 single-residence homes on the mountain have been constructed, and the village exists only in architects’ renderings: There are no restaurants, hotels, or shops. The jobs and economic development that the out-of-town developers promised county officials when pitching their plan also didn’t pan out.

What went wrong? Building a community at 9,000 feet accessible only by one of the steepest roads in the country is no easy feat, and the COVID pandemic and supply-chain problems didn’t help. To make matters worse, the resort developers clashed with some in the local largely Mormon community in Eden, Utah. But several sources told Fortune that bitter power struggles between Bisnow and Mauro explained most of the delays. (Both men denied that there was bad blood, claiming they may have had ups and downs, but no more so than in any such complex project. Neither responded to requests for comment Monday evening.)

An impulse buy?

Hastings doesn’t seem to share the original developers’ utopian ambitions for a bustling ski resort for socially conscious movers and shakers. In January, he told Fortune that he and his wife love the mountain’s isolation and “pioneer” vibe, and that he sees Powder now as a traditional real estate project “without pretensions to Summit’s ‘We’re going to change the world with our interactions’” ethos.

“At some point, it was save-the-world stuff,” Hastings told the Salt Lake Tribune in a conversation following his recent splurge. “And I think now it’s: Have an incredible ski mountain that’s uncrowded where you can get multiday powder.”

The Tribune reports that Bisnow approached Hastings about buying the Summit Series founders’ stake only two weeks ago. “‘You’d be the perfect owner from our point of view in terms of loving the mountain and appreciating it for what it is,’” Hastings said Bisnow told him.

Hastings will assume one of the five seats on the board, where he will help oversee the mountain’s management and operations. Mauro remains a co-owner, according to the news release. Powder Mountain did not disclose how much Hastings paid for his piece of the ski hill. Netflix paid Hastings $35 million in 2022, according to SEC filings. Following his resignation from the CEO role, the company changed his salary for 2023 to $500,000, with a $2.5 million stock option.

“Elliott Bisnow and crew had a big dream that partially came true,” Hastings said in the news release. “Greg and I are excited to improve Powder Mountain further.”

财富中文网所刊载内容之知识产权为财富媒体知识产权有限公司及/或相关权利人专属所有或持有。未经许可,禁止进行转载、摘编、复制及建立镜像等任何使用。
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