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Re: janicen_98 post# 646

Monday, 09/25/2017 1:29:59 PM

Monday, September 25, 2017 1:29:59 PM

Post# of 1157
I dont think sellfingerrz hiring a NMGC strategy guy

http://www.neomagic.com/Employment.html

to manage a cupple Alexxxxa 10m - rankkked websitez
and sum out-of-date chipz and patentz ... itz gotta be to help with tha upcumming NMGC shell m&a deal- the nu website pr 2day being a smokeskreen to
cover sum moar insidrr frontlodeing in advance of the upcumming PONG reverse merger. PONG iz the Only game in town... and with PONG CEO Granier being Tommyz podner at Attiva Kapital, & with attivaz game being murgers and akwishishunz ,, and granier also being Tommyz podner in the merkadomagiko startup in 2012-- there is a Bigg NMGC-PONG konnecktshun hear,,,

NMGC-PONG "latino Netflixxxx" Murgur shure lookz gud too, and wud be tha biggist play of tha millenium- bigger than SPEA cuz 10000 bagg spea wuz about tha past(Elvis memorabilia), and PONG iz about tha future.
NMGC $60-$100 share on 2nd day gap and run wudd put Tomasello and Granier back in the billion-dolla Hedge fund saddle aftrr tha DRL/COSI meltdownz ... Yu can tell Granier and sellfingrr have been looking for tha big payday for 5 yearz, and now it cudd be just dayz away:

“I started my journey with two thoughts. The first was ‘What ideas and stories can I bring from Latin America and reimagine for the general market in the U.S.?’ And that’s how ‘Jane the Virgin’ came to be,” said Granier, 35, Póngalo’s CEO. “And the second was ‘Where can I find content for Spanish-speaking Latinos on the new digital platforms?’ But I couldn’t, because there was nothing — so I started working on what is now Póngalo.”

That was about three years ago.

Since then, Granier, who at the time co-owned digital entertainment company GoTV with his brother, merged it with Hull’s Latin Anywhere. Together, they acquired technology startup, Inmoo. They opened an office in Wynwood, renamed the new company “Latin Everywhere” and later settled on “Póngalo,” which means “play it” in Spanish.


The digital streaming service — touted by its creators as being the only to focus on Spanish-speaking audiences — costs $5.99 a month and provides subscribers more than 50,000 hours of telenovelas, feature-length films, television shows, daily short-form content and original Póngalo-exclusives such as web series “Corazón Traicionado,” “Talion” and “Piel Salvaje.”

Granier referenced the declining ratings of traditional media outlets such as Spanish-language network Univision and recent initiatives by media companies such as Cox Communications, which announced the test launch of Spanish-language subscription video on demand site Glosi as validation that his efforts are on the right path.

“When you see the big companies turn to this, it tells you you’re on the right track,” he said.