Who Had the Worst Week?

  • A United Airlines flight from Los Angeles to Shanghai was forced to return to the U.S. two hours into the flight when one of the pilots realized he had forgotten to bring his passport. A new crew was brought in and the flight took off again six hours after its initial departure.
  • What do you get when you put librarians in charge of doing math? A $25.4 million estimate for an open-records request. The Pikes Peak Library District in El Paso County gave a journalist the $25.4 million estimate that calculated it would take 613,440 hours to complete, the equivalent of a team of five people working full-time for 59 years.
  • The genetic testing company 23andMe has filed for bankruptcy, meaning that its DNA registry containing sensitive information on millions of people could be bought for pennies on the dollar by bad actors. California‘s attorney general issued a rare consumer privacy alert reminding residents that they have the option to direct the company to delete their data and destroy any samples of genetic material it holds prior to any sale.
  • Don’t delay that vacation: Hawaii is sinking 40 times faster than scientists initially thought.
  • It was quite a week for the White House:
  • The live-action remake of “Snow White” is on pace to be one of the biggest flops of the decade, even bigger than “Joker: Folie à Deux.” At the heart of the debacle: a series of self-inflicted wounds.
  • A jury ordered the makers of the Roundup weed killer to pay $2.1 billion in damages to a plaintiff who argued the product caused his non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma cancer. Appeals courts have reduced previous large jury awards against Roundup by about 95%, which could also happen here.
  • The Colorado Rockies will play the first game of the 2025 season today, and they are already 1.5 games back from the division-leading L.A. Dodgers.
  • It is not easy being a mid-major program like the Colorado State University Rams. You want the program to do well, but when they do, you start to worry about losing players or coaches to schools in bigger conferences. That is what happened this week. Men’s basketball coach Niko Medved methodically built CSU into a team that made the NCAA “March Madness” tournament regularly, and his team gave one of the all-time great performances in a last-second loss to the University of Maryland. And then, less than 24 hours later, the University of Minnesota hired Medved away.
  • It has been a tough couple of weeks for the Denver arts and business communities. First, we lost former Metro Denver Economic Development Corporation CEO Tom Clark, who was a behind-the-scenes driving force for many of Denver’s biggest accomplishments over the past few decades. And, this week, the family and friends of Denver Botanic Gardens CEO Brian Vogt are mourning his passing. He was 66.

Who won the week?

  • GFM|CenterTable added Shelbey Royal as a senior director of search.
  • Connect For Health Colorado named Nina Schwartz as its new chief policy and external affairs officer.
    • Turner PR has been named agency of record for Xanterra Travel Collection. Turner will handle earned media and social media strategy for the company’s National Parks collection, including accommodations, experiences and outposts in the Grand Canyon, Yellowstone, Death Valley, Glacier, Rocky Mountain and Mount Rushmore.
  • The Sundance Film Festival is relocating from Park City, Utah, to Boulder. Fun fact: The New York Times article covering the news first described Boulder as a “ski town,” which it is not, and then issued a correction calling it a “mountain town,” which it also is not. We’ll see if a second correction appears.

Who Had the Worst Week?

  • Tesla issued a recall for 46,000 Cybertrucks – nearly every one it has produced – due to a risk that its stainless steel panels can fall off. It’s been a tough year for Tesla. Between increasing competition for electric cars in China and Elon Musk‘s embrace of President Donald Trump, the company’s stock has dropped more than 50% over the past four months.
  • We experienced an annual rite of spring last weekend when the best team left out of the NCAA March Madness basketball tournament started complaining about how unfair the process is. This year, West Virginia has that (dis)honor, and the state’s governor held a press conference announcing he had directed the state attorney general to launch an investigation into the selection committee.
  • Employees who work at the Cherry Creek Shopping Center are not happy that the mall plans to start charging them $20 per month for parking.
  • Uber-progressive ice cream maker Ben & Jerry’s has been a thorn in the side of its uptight corporate parent Unilever for the past couple of decades, but the war in Gaza – combined with the current boycott culture – has amplified their conflict. Unilever announced it would spin Ben & Jerry’s off by the end of this year, but that hasn’t stopped the conglomerate from trying to kick the ice cream maker one final time. This week, Unilever fired Ben & Jerry’s CEO despite its continued strong financial performance.
  • The NHL was minding its own business when it learned from media reports that it had become a bargaining chip between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. What could go wrong?
  • ICE has been having a hard enough time reaching its quota for arresting undocumented immigrants, and now it is having to arrest some of them twice. Two of its detainees held in a secure facility in Aurora escaped during a power outage.
  • What could you possibly say about an oil company that would cause $667 million in damages? I don’t know, but that is what a jury in North Dakota has ordered Greenpeace to pay to the one that operates the Dakota Access Pipeline.
  • The last time Jackie Robinson had a win this big was the 1955 World Series. Robinson posthumously defeated Pentagon spokesman John Ullyot after Ullyot defended removing an online article about Robinson’s military background to the point that even Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was uncomfortable and demoted him.
  • It’s Spring Break week for Jeffco, Cherry Creek, Douglas County and several other school districts, so say a little prayer for those who ventured to Europe for a little vacation. A fire at a nearby power substation shut down Heathrow Airport in London, throwing the schedules of international airlines into chaos. Heathrow officials claim the airport will be operating at 100% again by Saturday, but I wouldn’t count on it.
  • Friends are mourning the loss of former Rocky Mountain News reporter Norm Clarke. He was known for his must-read Herb Caen-inspired column about celebrities, politicians, sports stars and business leaders. He left Denver in 1999 for Las Vegas, where we can all agree that he had much better fodder for his columns. He was 82.

Who won the week?

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?

Boulder’s Comprise PR Files for Bankruptcy

BizWest: “’To be clear, this is a reorganization; it’s not a closing the doors kind of thing,’ Comprise owner and CEO Doyle Albee told BizWest. Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code enables businesses or individuals to reorganize debts while continuing to operate, rather than liquidate assets.”

“’What it allows me to do is kind of right-size things to some degree,’ Albee said. ‘I’m going to not have the entire team that I had, and this allows me to do that with fewer restrictions and dramatically less upset to clients.’”

“Albee said Comprise’s current financial situation is in part a result of several clients being unable to pay their bills. ‘We’ve had plenty of work, we just haven’t been paid for all of it,’ he said. ‘I absorbed 30% to 35% of my billings last year. Three clients went bankrupt (and others) just have some payment issues. It was just a gut punch that we just couldn’t economically recover from.'”

Who Had the Worst Week?

Who won the week?