Barry Diller
Morning Memo: Elle 'Aufs' Nina Garcia; Elton John Gets a Big Whiff of Tom Ford
Nina Garcia, You. Are. Out. The Project Runway judge reportedly got fired from her post as fashion director at Elle magazine last week. [US Weekly]
Barry Diller who's recently triumphed in court over Liberty Media chairman, John Malone, has a brand new discrimination lawsuit on his hands. [P6] read more »
Tina Brown and Barry Diller to Start an 'Aggregator Site'
Over at Radar, Neel Shah is reporting that Tina Brown is partnering with Barry Diller to develop what Ms. Brown called "a new take on an aggregator website."
Edward Felsenthal, a former editor of the Wall Street Journal, will be the editor. There aren't many other details—Brown didn't give a launch date, or really any specifics—but apparently there will be no "ideological stance." read more »
Barry Diller to 'Change the Way the Black Community Drives the Web'
The Media Mob just received an invitation to an April 9 launch party for a new InterActive Corp. Web site called RushmoreDrive.com, hosted by IAC CEO Barry Diller and RushmoreDrive CEO Johnny Taylor. But just what is RushmoreDrive? The invite claims that it will be "the web destination that will change the way the Black community Drives the Web." (Drive! Oh, we get it.) Currently, its Web site just says, "Discover More Here Spring 2008," and when The Observer called up Mr. Taylor to find out more, he was tight-lipped.
"Right now we're telling people what it's not," he said by phone from RushmoreDrive's offices in Charlotte, N.C. "I'm telling them it's not a content site. Most of the products you see in the black space are celebrity, sports or entertainment sites, like BET.com or BlackVoices.com. Then you have social networking sites like BlackPlanet.com. We're none of those." read more »
Diller, Graydon Put Oscar Parties on Chiller, But Others Plow Ahead
With the writers’ strike and all, what’s goin’ on with the Oscar parties? read more »
It’s Diller Time!

On far West 18th Street—past the housing projects and the parking lots and the auto-body shops, where the High Line is home not to condos but homeless people—the new, $100 million international headquarters of Barry Diller’s company, InterActiveCorp, rises like an undulating, reflective space station. The lobby is home to the largest video wall in the world, and another video wall, behind the security desk, that shows statistics from various IAC Web sites. read more »
The Afternoon Wrap: Wednesday
The American Institute of Architects has announced 2007's Top Ten Green Projects, but none of them are in New York. A local honorable mentioned, however, goes to Coney Island's Stillwell Avenue Terminal Train Shed. [Architectural Record]
Real estate titan Barbara Corcoran, smiley and excited, tells the Today show: "People don't know which way this market is going, it's causing mass confusion!" Does mass confusion lead to chaos and anarchy? Nope. "Confusion, I always believe, begets bargain." [Corcoran, via Curbed]
Gehry's ugly-faced IAC/InterActiveCorp building on the West Side Highway is finally open for business. Why did IAC boss Barry Diller chose Frank Gehry to design his headquarters? He'd heard the architect was "expensive and difficult and ornery." [L.A. Times via Gawker]
Nike, plus the way-cooler LA-based vintage shoe store Fight Club, are each opening their second New York City stores. Expensive tennis sneakers for everyone! [Crain's]












