Saying media credits were a fraud tool used to rai
Post# of 43064
Saying media credits were a fraud tool used to raise money is in insult to the ingelligence of fundamental investors who have a clue.
Why is it that after they were acquired and up until the time they were restated, there was......
41 PRs with zero mention of media credit value whatsoever. Not one red cent of it. WTF?
3 conference calls with zero mention of media credit value whatsoever. Not one red cent of it. WTF?
1 three hour long AGM with zero mention of mediia credit value whatsoever. Not one red cent of it WTF?
Is there no PR, no CC, no AGM, no "paid promotion website," no interview, no magazine, or any other conventional public promotional document whatsoever using this "media credit valuation" ?????
I mean, after all, if anybody falls for the absolutely laughable notion that the accounting treatment of media credits is some of sort fraud attempt tool used to raise money, how come with all these press releases, interviews, conference calls, and even a live shareholder meeting -- not once, even once, is this valuation even remotely hinted at.
WTF? The number one tool in their capital-raising arsenal isn't being used even once?
The notion of fraud is ridiculous and laughable in reference to a one-liner accounting entry buried deep in an SEC filing never once promoted -- or even so much as mentioned -- in the public ever.
Not even once.
Saying media credits were a fraud tool used to raise money is in insult to the ingelligence of fundamental investors who have a clue.