Community Corner
LEAKED AUDIO: Listen To AOL CEO Tim Armstrong Fire A Patch Employee In Front Of 1,000 Coworkers
Nicholas Carlson, provided by
Published 6:37 am, Monday, August 12, 2013 663
inShare Comments (99) Larger | Smaller Printable Version Email This
Georgia (default)
Verdana
Find out what's happening in Waynewith free, real-time updates from Patch.
Times New Roman
Arial
Find out what's happening in Waynewith free, real-time updates from Patch.
MORE FROM BUSINESS INSIDER
- Big, Beautiful Pictures Of Elon Musk's Hyperloop
- Here's What Happens If The Hyperloop Crashes
- This Map Shows Where The Hyperloop Is Going To Go
- In One Chart Here's Why The Hyperloop Could Be The Future Of Transportation
- ELON MUSK REVEALS THE HYPERLOOP (TSLA)
Below, we've embedded probably the most intense moment you'll ever hear during a workplace conference call.
It's from a call AOL CEO Tim Armstrong hosted Friday morning.
In the recording, obtained by media business blog Romenesko, Armstrong is speaking to the 1,000 or so employees of AOL's local news network, Patch.
To set the scene…
The day before the call, during AOL's Q2 earnings call, Armstrong told Wall Street analysts that Patch would shrink from 900 to 600 websites.
Patch employees took Armstrong's comments to mean that hundreds of them would soon lose their jobs.
Obviously, this sent morale plummeting.
The call was supposed to be Armstrong's attempt to rally the troops.
During the first minute or so of the recording, Armstrong says things like: "If you don't believe what I'm about to say, I'm going to ask you to leave Patch…We have to get Patch into a place where it's going to be successful."
But then things go suddenly awry.
At exactly two minutes into the recording, Armstrong addresses someone in the room with him.
He says, "Abel, put that camera down, now."
Then, without taking a breath, Armstrong says, "Abel, you're fired. Out."
It's pretty shocking stuff.
The person Armstrong is talking to in the recording is Abel Lenz, Patch's Creative Director. Obviously, Lenz is no longer with the company.
Armstrong picked an odd reason to fire him.
We hear that Lenz, based in New York, would always take pictures of people talking on company-wide conference calls so that he could post them on Patch's internal news site.
Listen up: