Ari Emanuel
Ariel Zev Emanuel (born 1961) is an American businessman and the CEO of Endeavor, an entertainment and media agency that owns the UFC and WWE.[3] He was a founding partner of the Endeavor Talent Agency and was instrumental in shaping its June 2009 merger with the William Morris Agency.[4] Early lifeBorn to a Jewish family,[5] Emanuel was raised in suburban Wilmette, Illinois. Emanuel is the brother of former mayor of Chicago, Presidential Chief of Staff and U.S. Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel, American oncologist and bioethicist Ezekiel Emanuel, and sister Shoshana Emanuel (who was adopted). His father, Jerusalem-born Benjamin M. Emanuel, was a pediatrician who was active in the Irgun in Mandatory Palestine.[6][7] His mother, Marsha Emanuel (née Smulevitz), was a civil rights activist, and the one-time owner of a Chicago-area rock and roll club.[8] During his third grade at school, Ari was diagnosed with ADHD and dyslexia.[9] To supplement instruction at school, his mother spent many hours helping him to learn to read. She hired tutors and private instructors to give him private reading lessons at home.[8][10] CareerPrior to founding Endeavor, Emanuel was a partner at InterTalent and senior agent at ICM Partners (ICM). Emanuel has served as a member of Live Nation Entertainment board of directors since September 2007.[11] Emanuel has been described as a mogul and power player in Hollywood.[12][13] Emanuel and Patrick Whitesell, the co-CEO of WME, have both been named to Fortune's Businessperson of the Year list.[14][15] In a May 2013 article on Emanuel, Fortune called him "one of the biggest guns in the consolidating entertainment business".[16] Emanuel's relationships with his clients, coupled with his stature in the industry, has led to various homages and parodies over the years, including Bob Odenkirk's character Stevie Grant on The Larry Sanders Show, and Ari Gold, played by Jeremy Piven on the HBO television show Entourage.[17][18] In April 2002 agent Sandra Epstein and other Endeavor employees sued Ari Emanuel on allegations that a pornographic website was operated out of Endeavor's offices and that Emanuel made racist and anti-gay remarks.[19] Emanuel disputed these accusations at the time. Emanuel settled Epstein's claims for $2.25 million.[19] In 2011, Emanuel co-founded TheAudience with Sean Parker and Oliver Luckett.[20] Endeavor went public in 2021, the first Hollywood agency to do so,[18] with Emanuel owning a stake worth around $480 million according to Bloomberg.[21] He and Patrick Whitesell are also co-CEO of IMG, a global sports, events and talent management company headquartered in New York City.[22] In 2023, Emanuel's total compensation from Endeavor was $83.9 million, up 340% from the previous year and representing a CEO-to-median worker pay ratio of 1,184-to-1 for the company, as well as making Emanuel the seventh highest paid CEO in the US that year.[23] Public advocacyEmanuel has hosted fundraisers for the Democratic Party.[24] He donated $2,700 to Hillary Clinton in the 2016 United States presidential election. His long-standing relationship with his former client Donald Trump is well documented.[25] During the 2016 Republican Party presidential primaries, Emanuel offered to produce a movie for Trump which was considered for the 2016 Republican National Convention but ultimately was not followed through on.[26] After the disappearance of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi on October 2, 2018, and reports that the Saudi hit squad had assassinated him inside their consulate in Turkey, Emanuel called White House senior adviser and Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner.[27] Emanuel tried to extricate Endeavor from a $400 million deal with the Saudi Arabian government.[28] In October 2022, Emanuel urged several businesses to stop working with rapper Kanye West over his antisemitic comments.[29][30] Emanuel was critical of Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu over his handling of the 2023–24 Israel–Hamas war, when he was awarded the Humanitarian Prize at Simon Wiesenthal Center's National Tribute Gala. Emanuel called for Netanyahu to step down during his speech, which caused a negative reaction from the audience.[31][32][33] PhilanthropyEmanuel has in the past been active on the board of trustees of P.S. Arts, a Los Angeles, California-based nonprofit organization that works to bring art education programs to Southern California schools. He has also helped the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, establish MOCAtv, a dedicated YouTube art channel. In 2012, he joined the museum's board of trustees.[34] Personal lifeIn 1996, Emanuel married girlfriend Sarah Hardwick Addington; they have three sons.[8][35] The couple divorced in 2018.[2] In May 2022, he married fashion designer Sarah Staudinger, founder of the Los Angeles label STAUD.[36] References
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