Porter Bibb
Porter Bibb (born c. 1937, Louisville, Kentucky)[3] is an American financier, media producer, and writer. He is best known as the first publisher of Rolling Stone magazine.[1] BiographyBibb began his career as an investment banker specializing in media, entertainment, and technology ventures. He founded the first investment banking boutique in London [who?] in 1962.[citation needed] He worked on the team that began Bankers Trust's investment banking unit in 1977,[citation needed] which completed over 300 media and entertainment transactions in five years.[citation needed] For over 15 years, he was a senior partner and director of investment banking at Ladenburg Thalmann.[when?][citation needed] Bibb attended Louisville Male High School and was a member of the Athenaeum Literary Association, a school-sponsored literary and social club. There he got to know another club member, Hunter S. Thompson, who would become an influential counterculture journalist.[4] Bibb convinced Albert and David Maysles to film the 1969 Woodstock Festival despite the bad weather and the withdrawal of Warner Bros.' financial backing.[1][5] Bibb also convinced The Rolling Stones to perform at the Altamont Free Concert in 1969, and he produced the 1970 documentary film of the event, Gimme Shelter.[1][6] As a journalist, Bibb was a White House correspondent for Newsweek magazine,[when?][citation needed] the first publisher of Rolling Stone magazine,[when?][citation needed] and a corporate development director for The New York Times Company.[when?] He was the author of several books, including a best-selling biography of Ted Turner (Random House, 1993 and 1997). He graduated from Yale University with a B.A. in History and earned graduate certificates from the Harvard Business School and London School of Economics. Bibb is a direct descendant of the first two governors of Alabama: William Wyatt Bibb (1781–1820) and Thomas Bibb (1783–1839).[1] Books authored
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