![]() You really do get a feel for where the organization is going. ![]() There will be some transition - it’s day 12 - but we’re very quickly jumping into a lot of things that we were already very deeply involved with.īruce Dixon: I can’t underscore enough how closely Hozefa and I worked with Nancy. And as you think about transition, we have been at the most senior roles in this company and we’ve spent a lot of time with the most senior leadership, in all the work that we do, both internal, operationally and external work. She’s a part of the blueprint that got us to where we are. Look, she’s been at the top of the company for about five years. Hozefa Lokhandwala: I don’t think we should comment on Nancy’s departure except to say that she was a very valued friend and colleague of ours. I’d like to start with what led to Nancy Dubuc’s exit as CEO and what the transition has been like over the past few weeks since you were named co-CEOs. The new leaders of Vice also spoke about the current state of a sale and potential buyers, what the post-Dubuc regime will be like and how Vice-owned titles including “The Dark Side” franchise and Vice Studios’ upcoming HBO doc following the University of Alabama’s TikTok-famous sorority rush week (aka “Bama Rush”) are just the start of building on company-wide IP. 27 - that coincided with the release of Vice’s fourth annual diversity, equity and inclusion report (which reveals, among other stats, that 65% of new hires in the company globally in 2022 were women), as well as the launch of their new brand campaign video (which can be viewed above) featuring a slogan that touts Vice Media as a company “For Everyone Else.” The company’s portfolio also includes Refinery29, the media and entertainment brand focused on women acquired in 2019 London-based Pulse Films and i-D, a digital and print style publication covering fashion, culture and design.ĭixon and Lokhandwala opened up to Variety in an interview Tuesday - among their first sitdowns since being named co-CEOs on Feb. ![]() The company’s five main business units are:, the Vice Studios film and TV production unit the Vice TV television network Vice News and creative agency Virtue. 40% of respondents stated that buying local food/drinks became more important to them during the pandemic, while 7 in 10 respondents agreed that it’s important/extremely important for brands to give back to their local community.Vice co-CEOs Hozefa Lokhandwala (left) and Bruce Dixon (right)/Image courtesy of Vice Media 76% of respondents say the brands they buy make the world a better place and 67% said the brands they buy make them a better person.
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