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・ Victor Kandinsky
・ Victor Kanevsky
・ Victor Kanevsky (dancer)
・ Victor Kanke
・ Victor Karpenko
・ Victor Karpov
・ Victor Kearney
・ Victor Keegan
・ Victor Kelleher
・ Victor Kendall
・ Victor Keppler
・ Victor Keyru
・ Victor Khain
・ Victor Khanye Local Municipality
・ Victor Khryapa
Victor Kiam
・ Victor Kiernan
・ Victor Kilian
・ Victor Kim
・ Victor Kiriakis
・ Victor Kissine
・ Victor Klee
・ Victor Klemperer
・ Victor Knauth
・ Victor Kneale
・ Victor Kodelja
・ Victor Kofi Agawu
・ Victor Kolar
・ Victor Kolyvagin
・ Victor Koman


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Victor Kiam : ウィキペディア英語版
Victor Kiam

Victor K. Kiam (December 7, 1926 – May 27, 2001) was an American entrepreneur and TV spokesman for Remington Products, and the owner of the New England Patriots football team from 19881991.
==Biography==
After attending Yale University, the Sorbonne and Harvard Business School, Kiam worked for Lever Brothers and Playtex as a salesperson. He first made his fortune as the President and CEO of Remington Products, which he famously purchased after his wife bought him his first electric shaver. Kiam became famous as the spokesperson for the Remington shaver. Kiam's famous catchphrase, "I liked the shaver so much, I bought the company", made him a household name. He recorded each advertisement in the native language for the country in which it was broadcast. In the UK he became a celebrity appearing on TV chat shows including 'Wogan', 'The Tube' and David Frost's 'Through the Keyhole'.
In 1994, Victor Kiam sold a controlling interest in Remington Products to Isaac Perlmutter. Kiam also operated two other companies: Ronson and TravelSmart. Kiam also bought the Benrus Watch Company in 1968, selling his majority stake in 1977.
In 1988, Kiam bought the NFL's New England Patriots for $84 million from founder Billy Sullivan.〔[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C03E3D9143EF937A15751C0A96E958260 Billy Sullivan, 86 [sic], Founder Of Football Patriots, Dies] ''The New York Times''. Accessed October 20, 2007.〕 The sale did not include Foxboro Stadium, which Sullivan lost in a bankruptcy sale to paper magnate Robert Kraft, and Kiam lost money on the deal. In 1990, Lisa Olson, a ''Boston Herald'' reporter sued Kiam and the Patriots when Zeke Mowatt allegedly exposed himself and made lewd comments to her in the team change room. The incident stirred debate over female reporters in the locker room. Kiam became the center of the controversy when he came to the defense of the players' actions. "I can't disagree with the players' actions," he said, and claimed that the Herald "asked for trouble" by assigning a female reporter to cover the Patriots.
By 1992 Kiam was facing bankruptcy. He was in considerable debt to St. Louis businessman James Orthwein, and was forced to sell his 51 percent stake in the Patriots to him in part to service the debt. Orthwein would eventually sell that stake to Kraft only two years later after an aborted attempt to move the Patriots to St. Louis.
Kiam is also very well known for "Lady Remington" jewelry, a direct sales jewelry company specializing in in-home parties. Later, it was renamed Lia Sophia after his granddaughters, Lia and Sophia. The direct sales portion of the company closed in December 2014 and its 25,000 sales advisors in the United States and Canada were laid off.〔http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/ct-lia-sophia-closing-1203-biz-20141202-story.html〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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