|
Richard Branson
Virgin
Casino website Virgin
Poker website Virgin
Bingo website
Virgin
Games Affiliates website

Virtually
Vegas Virgin
Enterprises Limited

Cleopatra
MegaJackpots
Cleopatra Cleopatra
II Da
Vinci Diamonds
   
Profiles:
Virgin Virgin
Casino Virgin Poker
Virgin
Games
Richard
Branson and Greg Tingle (Media Man director)
Richard
Branson bio
Sir
Richard Charles Nicholas Branson (born 18 July 1950)
is an English entrepreneur, best known for his Virgin
brand of over 360 companies.
Branson's
first successful business venture was at age 15, when
he published a magazine called Student. He then set
up a record mail-order business in 1970. In 1971,
he opened a chain of record stores, Virgin Records,
later known known as Virgin Megastores and rebranded
as zavvi in late 2007.
With
his flamboyant and competitive style, Branson's Virgin
brand grew rapidly during the 1980s - as he set up
Virgin Atlantic Airways and expanded the Virgin Records
music label.
Today,
his net worth is estimated at over £4 billion
(US$7.8 billion) according to The Sunday Times Rich
List 2006, or US$3.8 billion according to Forbes magazine.
Early
life
Branson
was born at Stonefield Nursing Home in Blackheath,
South London, the son of Edward James Branson and
Eve née Huntley Flindt. His grandfather the
Right Honourable Sir George Arthur Harwin Branson
was a Judge of the High Court of Justice and a Privy
Councillor. Branson was educated at Scaitcliffe School
(now Bishopsgate School) until the age of thirteen.
He then attended Stowe School until he was fifteen.
Branson has dyslexia, resulting in poor academic performance
as a student. He was the captain of football, rugby
union and cricket teams, and by the age of fifteen
he had started two ventures that eventually failed:
one growing Christmas trees and another raising budgerigars.
At
sixteen, Branson left school and moved to London,
where he began his first successful business, Student
magazine. When he was seventeen, he opened his first
charity, the "Student Advisory Centre."
Record business
Branson
started his first record business after he travelled
across the English Channel and purchased crates of
"cut-out" records from a record discounter.
He sold the records out of the boot of his car to
retail outlets in London. He continued selling cut-outs
through a record mail order business in 1969. Trading
under the name "Virgin" he sold records
for considerably less than the so-called "High
Street" outlets, especially the chain W. H. Smith.
The name 'Virgin' was a selling point because records
were sold in a new condition (unlike in other shops
where records were being handled when listened to
in record booths). At the time many products were
sold under restrictive marketing agreements which
limited discounting, despite efforts in the 1950s
and 1960s to limit so-called resale price maintenance.
In effect Branson began the series of changes that
led to large-scale discounting of recorded music.
Branson and some colleagues were discussing a new
name for his business when one suggested that it should
be called 'Virgin' since they were all virgins to
business.
Branson
eventually started a record shop in Oxford Street
in London and, shortly after, launched the record
label Virgin Records with Nik Powell. Branson had
earned enough money from his record store to buy a
country estate, in which he installed a recording
studio. He leased out studio time to fledgling artists,
including multi-instrumentalist Mike Oldfield.
In
1971, Branson was arrested and charged for selling
records in Virgin stores that had been declared export
stock. He settled out-of-court with UK Customs and
Excise with an agreement to repay the unpaid tax and
fines. Branson's mother Eve re-mortgaged the family
home to help pay the settlement.
Virgin
Records' first release was Mike Oldfield's Tubular
Bells, which was a best-seller and British LP chart
topper. The company signed controversial bands such
as the Sex Pistols, which other companies were reluctant
to sign. It also won praise for exposing the public
to obscure avant-garde music such as the krautrock
bands Faust and Can. Virgin Records also introduced
Culture Club to the music world. In the early 1980s,
Virgin purchased the gay nightclub Heaven. In 1991
in a consortium with David Frost, Richard Branson
had made the unsuccessful bid for three ITV franchisees
under the CPV-TV name.
To
keep his airline company afloat, Branson sold the
Virgin label to EMI in 1992 for $1 billion, a more
conservative company which previously had rescinded
a contract with the Sex Pistols. Branson is said to
have wept when the sale was completed since the record
business had been the genesis of the Virgin Empire.
He later formed V2 Records to re-enter the music business.
Personal life
Branson
is married to his second wife, Joan Templeman, with
whom he has two children, Holly, a trainee doctor,
and Sam Branson. The couple wed at Holly's suggestion
when she was eight years old. He owns Necker Island,
a 74-acre island in the British Virgin Islands which
was featured on MTV's Cribs as the most expensive
crib at 150 million. In 1998 Branson released his
autobiography entitled Losing My Virginity.
Business exploits
Branson
formed Virgin Atlantic Airways in 1984, launched Virgin
Mobile in 1999, Virgin Blue in Australia in 2000,
and later failed in a 2000 bid to handle the National
Lottery.
In
1997, Branson took what many saw as being one of his
riskier business exploits by entering into the railway
business. Virgin Trains won the franchises for the
former Intercity West Coast and Cross-Country sectors
of British Rail. Launched with the usual Branson fanfare
with promises of new high-tech tilting trains and
enhanced levels of service, Virgin Trains soon ran
into problems with the aging rolling stock and crumbling
infrastructure it had inherited from British Rail.
The company's reputation was almost irreversibly damaged
in the late 1990s as it struggled to make trains reliably
run on time while it awaited the modernisation of
the West Coast Main Line, and the arrival of new rolling
stock.
Virgin acquired European short-haul airline Euro Belgian
Airlines in 1996 and renamed it Virgin Express. In
2006 the airline was merged with SN Brussels Airlines
forming Brussels Airlines. It also started a national
airline based in Nigeria, called Virgin Nigeria. Another
airline, Virgin America, began flying out of the San
Francisco International Airport in August 2007. Branson
has also developed a Virgin Cola brand and even a
Virgin Vodka brand, which has not been a very successful
enterprise. As a consequence of these lacklustre performers,
the satirical British fortnightly magazine Private
Eye has been critical of Branson and his companies.
After
the so-called campaign of "dirty tricks"
(see expanded reference in Virgin Atlantic Airways),
Branson sued rival airline British Airways for libel
in 1992. John King, then-chairman of British Airways,
counter-sued, and the case went to trial in 1993.
British Airways, faced with likely defeat, settled
the case, giving £500,000 to Branson and a further
£110,000 to his airline and had to pay legal
fees of up to £3 million. Branson divided his
compensation (the so-called "BA bonus")
among his staff.
On
25 September 2004, Branson announced the signing of
a deal under which a new space tourism company, Virgin
Galactic, will license the technology behind Spaceship
One—funded by Microsoft co-Founder Paul Allen
and designed by legendary American aeronautical engineer
and visionary Burt Rutan—to take paying passengers
into suborbital space. Virgin Galactic (wholly owned
by Virgin Group) plans to make flights available to
the public by late 2009 with tickets priced at US$200,000.
Branson's
next venture with the Virgin group is Virgin Fuels,
which is set to respond to global warming and exploit
the recent spike in fuel costs by offering a revolutionary,
cheaper fuel for automobiles and, in the near future,
aircraft. Branson has stated that he was formerly
a global warming skeptic and was influenced in his
decision by a breakfast meeting with Al Gore.
Branson
has been tagged as a "transformational leader"
in the management lexicon, with his maverick strategies
and his stress on the Virgin Group as an organization
driven on informality and information, one that is
bottom-heavy rather than strangled by top-level management.
He
was 9th in the Sunday Times Rich List 2006, worth
just over £3 billion.
On
21 September 2006, Branson pledged to invest the profits
of Virgin Atlantic and Virgin Trains in research for
environmentally friendly fuels. The investment is
estimated to be worth $3 billion.
On
4 July 2006, Branson sold his Virgin Mobile company
to UK cable TV, broadband, and telephone company NTL/NTL:Telewest
for almost £1 billion. As part of the sale,
the company pays a minimum of £8.5 million per
year to use the Virgin name and Branson became the
company's largest shareholder. The new company was
launched with much fanfare and publicity on 8 February
2007, under the name Virgin Media. The decision to
merge his Virgin Media Company with NTL was in order
to integrate both of the companies' compatible parts
of commerce. Branson used to own three quarters of
Virgin Mobile, whereas now he owns 15 percent of the
new Virgin Media company.
In
2006, Branson formed Virgin Comics and Virgin Animation
an entertainment company focussed on creating new
stories and characters for a global audience. The
Company was founded with author Deepak Chopra, filmmaker
Shekhar Kapur and entrepreneurs Sharad Devarajan and
Gotham Chopra.
Branson
also launched the Virgin Health Bank on 1 February
2007, offering parents-to-be the opportunity of storing
their baby's umbilical cord blood stem cells in private
and public stem cell banks after their baby's birth.
In
June 2006, a tip-off from Virgin Atlantic led US and
UK competition authorities to investigate price-fixing
attempts between Virgin Atlantic and British Airways.
In August 2007, British Airways was fined £271
million over the allegations. Virgin Atlantic was
given immunity for tipping off the authorities and
received no fine - a controversial decision the Office
of Fair Trading defended as being in the public interest.
On
9 February 2007, Branson announced the setting up
of a new Global science and technology prize—The
Virgin Earth Challenge—in the belief that history
has shown that prizes of this nature encourage technological
advancements for the good of mankind. The Virgin Earth
Challenge will award $25 million to the individual
or group who are able to demonstrate a commercially
viable design which will result in the net removal
of anthropogenic, atmospheric greenhouse gases each
year for at least ten years without countervailing
harmful effects. This removal must have long term
effects and contribute materially to the stability
of the Earth’s climate.
Branson
also announced that he would be joined in the adjudication
of the Prize by a panel of five judges—all world
authorities in their respective fields: Al Gore, Sir
Crispin Tickell, Tim Flannery, Jim Hansen and James
Lovelock. The panel of judges will be assisted in
their deliberations by The Climate Group and Special
Advisor to The Virgin Earth Prize Judges, Steve Howard.
Richard
Branson got involved with football when he sponsored
Nuneaton Borough A.F.C. for their FA Cup 3rd round
game against Middlesbrough F.C.. The game ended 1-1
and the Virgin brand was also on Nuneaton Borough's
shirts for the replay which they eventually lost 2-5.
In
August 2007, Branson announced he takes up 20 percent
stake in Malaysia's AirAsia X.
On
October 13, 2007, Branson's Virgin Group sought to
add Northern Rock to its empire after submitting an
offer which would result in Branson personally owning
30% of the company, changing the company's name from
Northern Rock to Virgin Money.
Humanitarian
initiatives
In
the late 1990s, Branson and musician and activist
Peter Gabriel discussed with Nelson Mandela their
idea of a small, dedicated group of leaders, working
objectively and without any vested personal interest
to solve difficult global conflicts.
On
July 18, 2007, in Johannesburg, South Africa, Nelson
Mandela announced the formation of a new group, The
Elders, in a speech he delivered on the occasion
of his 89th birthday. The founding members of this
group are Desmond Tutu, Graça Machel, Kofi
Annan, Ela Bhatt, Gro Harlem Brundtland, Jimmy Carter,
Li Zhaoxing, Mary Robinson, and Muhammad Yunus.
The
Elders will be independently funded by a group of
"Founders", including Branson and Gabriel.
Desmond
Tutu serves as the chair of The Elders—who will
use their collective skills to catalyze peaceful resolutions
to long-standing conflicts, articulate new approaches
to global issues that are causing or may cause immense
human suffering, and share wisdom by helping to connect
voices all over the world. They will work together
over the next several months to carefully consider
which specific issues they will approach.
World record attempts
Richard
Branson has been involved in a number of world record-breaking
attempts since 1985, when in the spirit of the Blue
Riband he attempted to cross the Atlantic Ocean in
the fastest recorded time. His first attempt in the
"Virgin Atlantic Challenger" led to the
boat capsizing in British waters and a rescue by RAF
helicopter, which received wide media coverage. Some
newspapers called for Richard Branson to reimburse
the British government for the cost of his rescue.
In 1986, his "Virgin Atlantic Challenger II"
made a successful crossing, beating previous records
by two hours. This was followed a year later by the
epic hot air balloon crossing of the same ocean in
"Virgin Atlantic Flyer". This was not only
the first hot-air balloon to cross the Atlantic, but
was the largest ever flown at 2.3 million cubic feet
(65,000 m³) capacity, reaching speeds in excess
of 130 miles per hour (209 km/h).
In
January 1991, Branson crossed the Pacific Ocean from
Japan to Arctic Canada, the farthest distance of 6,700
miles. Again, he broke all existing records, with
speeds of up to 245 miles per hour in a balloon of
2.6 million cubic feet (73,600 m³).
Between
1995 and 1998 Branson, Per Lindstrand and Steve Fossett,
made a number of attempts to circumnavigate the globe
by balloon. In late 1998 they made a record-breaking
flight from Morocco to Hawaii but were unable to complete
a global flight before Bertrand Piccard and Brian
Jones in Breitling Orbiter achieved the first circumnavigation
in March 1999.
In
March 2004, Branson set another world record by travelling
from Dover to Calais in a Gibbs Aquada, breaking all
previous records for fastest time in crossing the
English Channel in an amphibious vehicle. The crossing
was performed in 1 hour, 40 minutes, and 6 seconds.
The previous record was set by two Frenchmen at 6
hours. In the tenth series, second episode of Top
Gear, the team tried to break his record, but failed.
Television, film, and print
Branson
has guest starred, usually playing himself, on several
television shows, including Friends, Baywatch, Birds
of a Feather, Only Fools and Horses, The Day Today,
a special episode of the comedy Goodness Gracious
Me and Tripping Over. Branson made several appearances
during the nineties on the BBC Saturday morning show
Live & Kicking, where he was referred to as 'the
pickle man' by comedy act Trev and Simon (in reference
to Branston Pickle). Branson also appears in a cameo
early in XTC's "Generals and Majors" video.
He
was also the star of a reality television show on
Fox called The Rebel Billionaire, in which sixteen
contestants were tested for their entrepreneurship
and sense of adventure. It did not succeed as a rival
show to Donald Trump's The Apprentice and only lasted
one season.
His
high public profile often leaves him open as a figure
of satire—the 2000 AD series Zenith featured
a parody of Branson as a super villain, as the comic's
publisher and favoured distributor and the Virgin
group were in competition at the time. He is also
caricatured in The Simpsons episode "Monty Can't
Buy Me Love" as the tycoon Arthur Fortune, and
as the ballooning megalomaniac Richard Chutney (a
pun on Branson) in Believe Nothing. The character
Grandson Richard 39 in Terry Pratchett's Wings is
modelled on Branson.
He
has a cameo appearance in several films, Around the
World in 80 Days (2004) where he played a hot air
balloon operator, Superman Returns, where he was credited
as a "Shuttle Engineer", alongside his son
Sam, with Virgin Galactic-esque commercial suborbital
shuttle at the centre of his storyline. He also had
a cameo in James Bond film Casino Royale in which
Branson played a passenger going through airport security.
He makes a number of brief and disjointed appearances
in the cult classic documentary Derek and Clive Get
the Horn which follows the exploits of Peter Cook
and Dudley Moore recording their last comedy album.
Branson and his mother were also featured in the documentary
film, Lemonade Stories.
In
early 2006 on Rove Live, Rove McManus and Sir Richard
pushed each other into a swimming pool fully clothed
live on TV during a "Live at your house"
episode
Branson
is a Star Trek fan and named his new spaceship VSS
Enterprise in honour of the famous Star Trek ships,
and in 2006, offered actor William Shatner a free
ride on the inaugural space launch of Virgin Galactic.
In
August 2007, Branson announced on The Colbert Report
that he had named a new aircraft Air Colbert. He later
doused political satirist and talk show host Stephen
Colbert with water from his mug. Branson subsequently
took a retaliatory splash from Colbert. The interview
quickly ended, with both laughing[16]as shown on the
episode aired on Comedy Central on August 22, 2007.
The interview was promoted on The Report as the Colbert-Branson
Interview Trainwreck. Branson then made a cameo appearance
on The Soup playing an intern working under Joel McHale
who had been warned against getting into water fights
with Stephen Colbert, and being subsequently fired.
Politics
Branson
was honoured by the Conservative government in the
1980s, and was briefly given the post of "litter
tsar" by Margaret Thatcher—charged with
"keeping Britain tidy." He was again seen
as close to the government when the Labour Party came
to power in 1997. In 2005 he declared that there were
only negligible differences between the two main parties
on economic matters. He has frequently been mentioned
as a candidate for Mayor of London, and polls have
suggested he would be a viable candidate, though he
has yet to express interest.
Business
practices
Branson's
business empire is owned by a complicated series of
offshore trusts and companies. The Sunday Times stated
that his wealth is calculated at £3.065 billion;
if he were to retire to his Caribbean island and liquidate
all of this he would pay relatively little in tax.
When
Virgin Mobile launched its service in Canada on 1
March 2005, the use of "naughty nurses"
in its advertising triggered "The Registered
Nurses Association of Ontario" to demand an apology
from Branson and an immediate stop to the campaign,
and called on members to boycott Virgin Mobile. Virgin
Mobile spokeswoman Paula Lash said the company never
intended to offend anyone, but was not about to pull
the advertising.
When
Virgin Mobile included "super hot holiday"
wrapping paper with the December 2005 issue of youth
magazine Vice, as part of the Hot Box promotion, the
wrapping paper contained illustrated holiday angels,
where the male angel is touching the female's breast,
while the female angel has her hand on the male's
genitals. Famous Players stopped its partnership deal
with Virgin Mobile after a complaint.
Branson
has a criminal record for tax evasion. When caught,
he was fined £20,000 plus £40,000 in taxes,
the equivalent today of nearly £1 million.
In
1988, Branson wanted by buy Virgin Music back for
the same amount of money, per share, that he had sold
it for, valuing the company at £248m. The shareholders
agreed, although they were unaware that Branson had
already agreed to sell the same shares to Pony Canyon,
a Japanese media company, for £377m. The incident
was revealed in 2000 when Branson was on the verge
of winning the franchise for the National Lottery
from Camelot Group.
Honours
In
1993, Branson was awarded an honorary degree of Doctor
of Technology from Loughborough University.
He
was knighted in 1999 for "services to entrepreneurship".
Branson
is the patron of several charities, including the
International Rescue Corps and Prisoners Abroad, a
registered charity which supports Britons who are
detained outside of the UK.
Sir
Richard appears at No. 85 on the 2002 list of "100
Greatest Britons" (sponsored by the BBC and voted
for by the public). Sir Richard also ranks No. 86
on Channel 4's 2003 list of "100 Worst Britons".
Sir Richard was also ranked in 2007's Time Magazine
Top 100 Most Influential People in the World.
On
7 December 2007, United Nations
Secretary General Ban Ki Moon presented Branson with
the United Nations Correspondents Association Citizen
of the World Award for his support for environmental
and humanitarian causes. (Credit:
Wikipedia)
Profile
The
Virgin Group of Companies
Richard
Branson
The
Elders
PUBLICITY
STUNT!
Virgin
Casino
The
Virgin Group of Companies

Mega
Jackpots
Virgin
Casino
Profiles
Virgin
Group of Companies
|