Category: Autobiography & Biographies, Business
Language: EnglishKeywords:
Written by Joshua Knelman
Read by Andrew Shaver
Format: M4B
Bitrate: 128 Kbps
“Youâll inhale this tell-all book about the tobacco industry and never look at a No Smoking sign the same way again!”
âMargaret Atwood, via Twitter
Mad Men meets Bad Blood in this addictive, behind-the-scenes globe-trotting narrative of moral ambiguity, law, public policy, and big tobacco.
âGiven everything the lawyer knew up to that point about smoking, as far as he could tell, cigarettes shouldnât even have been available as a mass market product…â
Itâs the start of the new millennium and a young lawyer is recruited to work for an unnamed multinational company. It isnât until his second interview that the product the company produces is revealed to cigarettes. Possibly the most controversial consumer product in human seductive, addictive, and deadlyâyet completely legal. Over the next decade, he travels the world as he works as legal counsel to help successfully market cigarettes in dozens of countries.
Firebrand ventures into the heart of the tobacco industry and the icy paradoxes of capitalism, each chapter a counterintuitive lesson on how cigarette companiesâthe target of increasingly intense anti-smoking campaigns and government regulations, including the 1964 Surgeon Generalâs Report and 200-billion-dollar debt of the 1998 Master Settlement Agreementâcontinue to pivot and thrive in the 21st century, inhaling profits from their one billion smokers worldwide.
As Mad Men did for the alcohol-fueled, oversexed, corrupt world of New York advertising, Firebrand does for the even more despised world of big tobacco, in an addictive, behind-the-scenes piece of storytelling. The lawyerâs work takes him from manufacturing factories to hocking âsticksâ at UK corner store counters; from tacky resorts in Spain and pirate city-states to luxury hotels and Grand Prix events across European and Asian cities. A contemporary tale of our ambiguous times, told with character-based drive and dry humour, Firebrand is a grand tour of the compelling paradoxes of globalization and corporate culture, shrink-wrapped in an engrossing narrative of a morally dubious yet completely legal enterprise.
âThis is storytelling at its best. Wry observation, compelling narrative, fascinating characters, page-turning writing, and an age-old question driving it all… â
âJoel Bakan, author of The New How âGoodâ Corporations are Bad for Democracy
“Youâll inhale this tell-all book about the tobacco industry and never look at a No Smoking sign the same way again!”
âMargaret Atwood, via Twitter
Mad Men meets Bad Blood in this addictive, behind-the-scenes globe-trotting narrative of moral ambiguity, law, public policy, and big tobacco.
âGiven everything the lawyer knew up to that point about smoking, as far as he could tell, cigarettes shouldnât even have been available as a mass market product…â
Itâs the start of the new millennium and a young lawyer is recruited to work for an unnamed multinational company. It isnât until his second interview that the product the company produces is revealed to cigarettes. Possibly the most controversial consumer product in human seductive, addictive, and deadlyâyet completely legal. Over the next decade, he travels the world as he works as legal counsel to help successfully market cigarettes in dozens of countries.
Firebrand ventures into the heart of the tobacco industry and the icy paradoxes of capitalism, each chapter a counterintuitive lesson on how cigarette companiesâthe target of increasingly intense anti-smoking campaigns and government regulations, including the 1964 Surgeon Generalâs Report and 200-billion-dollar debt of the 1998 Master Settlement Agreementâcontinue to pivot and thrive in the 21st century, inhaling profits from their one billion smokers worldwide.
As Mad Men did for the alcohol-fueled, oversexed, corrupt world of New York advertising, Firebrand does for the even more despised world of big tobacco, in an addictive, behind-the-scenes piece of storytelling. The lawyerâs work takes him from manufacturing factories to hocking âsticksâ at UK corner store counters; from tacky resorts in Spain and pirate city-states to luxury hotels and Grand Prix events across European and Asian cities. A contemporary tale of our ambiguous times, told with character-based drive and dry humour, Firebrand is a grand tour of the compelling paradoxes of globalization and corporate culture, shrink-wrapped in an engrossing narrative of a morally dubious yet completely legal enterprise.
âThis is storytelling at its best. Wry observation, compelling narrative, fascinating characters, page-turning writing, and an age-old question driving it all… â
âJoel Bakan, author of The New How âGoodâ Corporations are Bad for Democracy