Jennifer Lopez Reveals Why She Picked Her Bel Air Mansion: ‘This Is Where I Want My Kids to Grow Up’
Jennifer Lopez is a powerhouse in the worlds of music, dance, TV, and film, but when it comes to buying up real estate, the only cap she dons is mom.
In an interview with Vanity Fair, which she covers this month with boyfriend Alex Rodriquez, the superstar recalls, “We walked into this house, and I said, ‘This is where I want my kids to grow up.’” Lopez, 48, has 9-year-old twins, Emme Maribel and Maximilian David, with ex Marc Anthony. Rodriguez, 42, has two children of his own — Natasha, 12, and Ella, 9 — from his previous relationship with Cynthia Scurtis.
Related: Inside Jennifer Lopez...
In an interview with Vanity Fair, which she covers this month with boyfriend Alex Rodriquez, the superstar recalls, “We walked into this house, and I said, ‘This is where I want my kids to grow up.’” Lopez, 48, has 9-year-old twins, Emme Maribel and Maximilian David, with ex Marc Anthony. Rodriguez, 42, has two children of his own — Natasha, 12, and Ella, 9 — from his previous relationship with Cynthia Scurtis.
Related: Inside Jennifer Lopez...
- 11/1/2017
- by Mackenzie Schmidt
- PEOPLE.com
Jennifer Lopez and Alex Rodriguez are a proud power couple in Vanity Fair's December issue. Though they both have a long list of famous ex-lovers, it's hard to imagine a more perfect pairing than the 48-year-old actress/singer and the 42-year-old athlete. Given their undeniable chemistry, Vanity Fair dispatched Bethany McLean to sit down with the couple for an interview. Here are four highlights E! News gleaned from the cover story: 1. Lopez Boldly Made the First Move Last winter, Lopez was having lunch in Beverly Hills when she spotted Rodriguez. "I almost yelled out 'Alex,' but I am the shyest person when it comes to things like that," she says. She saw him later, outside, and...
- 10/31/2017
- E! Online
Jennifer Lopez admits that had she refused to step out of her comfort zone, she might not be dating Alex Rodriguez.
The power couple speaks withVanity Fair's Bethany McLean for the magazine's December issue, and recall how they came to connect after meeting 12 years earlier.
"It was just one of those things where you feel compelled to do something you wouldn’t normally do,” Lopez says, remembering when she spotted Rodriguez in Beverly Hills, California, when she was having lunch. "I could literally just have walked away, but I walk over and tap him on the shoulder and say ‘Hey.’"
More: Alex Rodriguez Raves About 'Amazing' Girlfriend Jennifer Lopez -- 'She's the Hardest Working Person'
The 48-year-old triple threat star notes that, at the time of "the tap," she was dressed as her Shades of Blue character, detective Harlee Santos, but despite her getup, Rodriguez told her, "'You look so beautiful.'"
It wasn't...
The power couple speaks withVanity Fair's Bethany McLean for the magazine's December issue, and recall how they came to connect after meeting 12 years earlier.
"It was just one of those things where you feel compelled to do something you wouldn’t normally do,” Lopez says, remembering when she spotted Rodriguez in Beverly Hills, California, when she was having lunch. "I could literally just have walked away, but I walk over and tap him on the shoulder and say ‘Hey.’"
More: Alex Rodriguez Raves About 'Amazing' Girlfriend Jennifer Lopez -- 'She's the Hardest Working Person'
The 48-year-old triple threat star notes that, at the time of "the tap," she was dressed as her Shades of Blue character, detective Harlee Santos, but despite her getup, Rodriguez told her, "'You look so beautiful.'"
It wasn't...
- 10/31/2017
- Entertainment Tonight
Vanity Fair magazine is taking a social media thrashing for publishing a lengthy profile of disgraced pharmaceutical CEO Martin Shkreli. The Conde Nast glossy devoted over 5,000 words to the former KaloBios executive and Twitter users are sick over the platform handed to the drug baron, who famously hiked the price of lifesaving HIV medication Daraprim from $13.50 to $750 per tablet. “What’s your publication’s integrity worth? Clearly not much. Shameful and pathetic. Unfollowing,” wrote user @tchuds of Bethany McLean’s story, titled “Everything You Know About Martin Shkreli Is Wrong — or Is It?” Also Read: Martin Shkreli and 6 Other Real-Life...
- 12/21/2015
- by Matt Donnelly
- The Wrap
The names Ken Lay, Jeff Skilling and Andrew Fastow are not as prevalent in the media as they were in the last decade. These men, behind the success (such as it was) and severe failure of Enron, were eventually found guilty of fraud and other charges.
The 2005 documentary Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room is based on the book of the same name. Director Alex Gibney (Taxi to the Dark Side, The Armstrong Lie) interviews the book's authors, journalist Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind, along with journalists, political figures and former Enron employees. Peter Coyote (E.T., Erin Brockovich), who could narrate practically anything and lend it a certain credence, talks of the bravado and bluff in the history of the energy-trading company based in Houston.
These interviews and Coyote's narration speak to the shenanigans going down at the once-praised company. The "macho culture" at the business is described, corraborated...
The 2005 documentary Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room is based on the book of the same name. Director Alex Gibney (Taxi to the Dark Side, The Armstrong Lie) interviews the book's authors, journalist Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind, along with journalists, political figures and former Enron employees. Peter Coyote (E.T., Erin Brockovich), who could narrate practically anything and lend it a certain credence, talks of the bravado and bluff in the history of the energy-trading company based in Houston.
These interviews and Coyote's narration speak to the shenanigans going down at the once-praised company. The "macho culture" at the business is described, corraborated...
- 7/29/2014
- by Elizabeth Stoddard
- Slackerwood
On her show Tuesday afternoon, Alex Wagner had a little segment called "Wags Wager." The aptly titled game involved Wagner and her panel — comprised of Governor Ed Rendell, Vanity Fair contributing editor Bethany McLean, The Daily Beast’s Patricia Murphy and Salon.com’s Steve Kornacki — placing bets on the outcome of tonight's primary races. Literally. With poker chips. And fake money.
- 3/13/2012
- by Meenal Vamburkar
- Mediaite - TV
Photo by Jonathan Becker.New York, N.Y.—“It was permissible, but I wouldn’t advise another fund to do it!” Philip Falcone says of the $113 million loan he took from the fund he manages, Harbinger Capital Partners, to pay his 2008 taxes—a move that has made him the subject of an S.E.C. investigation. “I have always kept the bulk of my money, and I mean the bulk of my money, in the fund,” he tells Vanity Fair. “How can anyone possibly say my interests aren’t aligned with theirs?” Contributing editor Bethany McLean spoke to “Manhattan’s most controversial couple,” Philip and Lisa Maria Falcone, about the gossip and accusations that surround them.
- 6/2/2011
- Vanity Fair
HBO Films has an incredible feature coming your way beginning May 23rd. The cast is amazing, and the subject is one that is sure to grip you. Check out the info below - including a trailer and several photos - and make sure you catch Too Big To Fail.
An HBO Films presentation of a Spring Creek/Deuce Three production, a film by Curtis Hanson, Too Big Too Fail is based on Andrew Ross Sorkin’s bestselling book of the same name. Directed by Oscar®-winner Curtis Hanson (“L.A. Confidential”) and debuting Monday, May 23 (9:00-10:45 p.m. Et/Pt), the film offers an intimate look at the epochal Wall Street financial crisis of 2008 and explores the inner sanctum of the powerful men and women who decided the fate of the world’s economy in a matter of a few weeks. Centering on Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, the...
An HBO Films presentation of a Spring Creek/Deuce Three production, a film by Curtis Hanson, Too Big Too Fail is based on Andrew Ross Sorkin’s bestselling book of the same name. Directed by Oscar®-winner Curtis Hanson (“L.A. Confidential”) and debuting Monday, May 23 (9:00-10:45 p.m. Et/Pt), the film offers an intimate look at the epochal Wall Street financial crisis of 2008 and explores the inner sanctum of the powerful men and women who decided the fate of the world’s economy in a matter of a few weeks. Centering on Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, the...
- 5/19/2011
- by Marc Eastman
- AreYouScreening.com
Photograph by Annie Leibovitz. The future of Berkshire Hathaway is the subject of intense speculation throughout the financial world, for millions of investors and at the company itself. “It is all we talk about [at board meetings],” Warren Buffett tells Vanity Fair’s Bethany McLean, who spent 11 hours in Omaha with the octogenarian Berkshire Hathaway C.E.O. to discuss who might lead the company he founded when, as David Sokol, one of his executives, puts it, “the bus hits.” Buffett, who has no plans to retire, tells McLean that he “tap dances to work.” His partner and vice-chairman for more than 40 years, Charlie Munger (who, at 86, is not a contender) also speaks to McLean for a profile that provides an in-depth look at Warren Buffett’s thinking on succession as well as the possible choices. Buffett also talks to Vanity Fair about the evolution of his investment strategy, his trust in the wisdom of American capitalism,...
- 1/5/2011
- Vanity Fair
Today, a decision I made several months ago caught up with me in a big way. Back at the beginning of the semester I said to myself "Self, you live less than a mile from campus. Buying a parking pass would be a foolish waste of money! And the parking lot is always full anyway! You should walk to school, it's all healthy and green and shit and more importantly you won't have to shell out $500 you don't have." And I've had a great run of it... until today when I took out about ten books from the library to start a research paper. Large books. About Nazis. That doesn't make them heavier, I just felt like mentioning it. I'll be spending the night on the couch with the Advil mourning the fact that I'm not wealthy enough to have a masseuse/masseur come to my apartment. Here's your Tuesday...
- 11/16/2010
- by Intern Rusty
HBO has assembled the cast of Too Big to Fail, the Curtis Hanson-directed movie about the 2008 financial crisis and the power brokers who decided the fate of the world's economy as the system teetered on collapse. Joining William Hurt, previously set to play Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, are James Woods as Dick Fuld, the last chairman and CEO of Lehman Brothers nicknamed the "Gorilla" on Wall Street; HBO regular Paul Giamatti as Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke; Billy Crudup as Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner; Ed Asner as Warren Buffett; Kathy Baker as Wendy Paulson and Cynthia Nixon as Michele Davis. Also cast in the movie, set to begin production in mid-October, are Ayad Akhtar as Neel Kashkari, Topher Grace as Jim Wilkinson, Dan Hedaya as Barney Frank, Michael O’Keefe as Chris Flowers, Tony Shalhoub as John Mack and Joey Slotnick as Dan Jester. Peter Gould wrote the script,...
- 10/11/2010
- by NELLIE ANDREEVA
- Deadline TV
In their new book, All the Devils Are Here: The Hidden History of the Financial Crisis (Portfolio Hardcover, November 16), V.F. contributor Bethany McLean and Joe Nocera, of The New York Times, go back two decades to expose how the market, the mortgage industry, and the government conspired to change the way Americans bought their homes and invested their nest eggs. In the excerpt below (also featured in V.F.’s November issue), McLean takes us inside Merrill Lynch to explain how, under C.E.O. Stanley O’Neal, it developed a raging case of Goldman Sachs envy, and pursued unprecedented risk to a point that would eventually sink an American institution. Listen to the podcast after the jump.
- 10/6/2010
- Vanity Fair
Reviewed at the 2010 Toronto Film Festival.
There's something unusually fitting about the way "Client 9" will advertise itself on the promise of Eliot Spitzer showing some recalcitrance or regret in his first major interview since resigning as the Governor of New York when in fact that's not what Alex Gibney's documentary is really about. Longtime supporters of Spitzer will likely know this in advance, having understood long ago that the same intellectualism that powered his crusade as a state attorney general to bring transparency to Wall Street would also render him nearly emotionless when trying to rationalize something personal.
As Gibney tries to pry in "Client 9," you'll hear Spitzer toss off comparisons to Icarus and boilerplate contrition, but what's far more telling is how the ex-governor can barely suppress a smile when talking about bringing down former Aig chairman Hank Greenberg or facing off with disgraced New York politician Joe Bruno.
There's something unusually fitting about the way "Client 9" will advertise itself on the promise of Eliot Spitzer showing some recalcitrance or regret in his first major interview since resigning as the Governor of New York when in fact that's not what Alex Gibney's documentary is really about. Longtime supporters of Spitzer will likely know this in advance, having understood long ago that the same intellectualism that powered his crusade as a state attorney general to bring transparency to Wall Street would also render him nearly emotionless when trying to rationalize something personal.
As Gibney tries to pry in "Client 9," you'll hear Spitzer toss off comparisons to Icarus and boilerplate contrition, but what's far more telling is how the ex-governor can barely suppress a smile when talking about bringing down former Aig chairman Hank Greenberg or facing off with disgraced New York politician Joe Bruno.
- 9/8/2010
- by Stephen Saito
- ifc.com
Exclusive: HBO has set William Hurt to play Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Curtis Hanson to direct Too Big To Fail, a dissection of the 2008 financial crisis and the power brokers who decided the fate of the world's economy as the system teetered on collapse. Shooting begins in early fall. Peter Gould wrote the script, based on the book by The New York Times columnist Andrew Ross Sorkin who is a consultant on the project. Also consulting are Bethany McLean and Joe Nocera. HBO had originally intended to make the film using their financial crisis book, All the Devils Are Here, as the basis for the film, but it wasn't completed in time to be used as source material for Gould's script. Hanson will be executive producer along with Spring Creek Productions' Paula Weinstein and nm2321927 autoJeffrey Levine[/link]. Carol Fenelon is co-executive producer and Ezra Swerdlow is producer. It...
- 8/27/2010
- by MIKE FLEMING
- Deadline
“Nobody really understands Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.” You can say that again! Here’s Vanity Fair contributing editor Bethany McLean untangling that utterly confounding (and, for taxpayers, expensive) mess on Bloomberg TV, and talking about something way more fun: Goldman Sachs, whose recent spate of horrendous press strikes many onlookers as decidedly overdue. Says McLean, “They don’t know how to deal with a new world where people are more inclined to criticize them than to admire them. Read “The Bank Job,” Bethany McLean’s January 2010 exposé on Goldman Sachs. Buy The Great Hangover: 21 Tales of the New Recession from the Pages of Vanity Fair at Amazon.
- 3/11/2010
- Vanity Fair
An HBO movie about the 2008 financial meltdown is finally moving. HBO has acquired rights to Too Big to Fail, the bestselling book by New York Times reporter Andrew Sorkin. Peter Gould has been hired to write the drama, and Spring Creek’s Paula Weinstein and Jeffrey Levine are executive producers. The project has been slow going because it was first set up with a book co-written by Sorkin’s Times colleague Joe Nocera and Vanity Fair writer Bethany McLean, and they haven't turned in their manuscript. HBO execs say they will marry the source materials to chronicle the financial crisis the same [...]...
- 3/4/2010
- by MIKE FLEMING
- Deadline Hollywood
On the heels of the most devastating economic collapse in recent history, Vanity Fair presents The Great Hangover: 21 Tales of the New Recession from the Pages of Vanity Fair, out next week by Harper Perennial. The collection features stories on the crisis from some of the country's best business journalists, including Michael Lewis, Mark Seal, Bryan Burrough, Bethany McLean, and Mark Bowden. In this exclusive audio excerpt, Nina Munk reads from her article, “Rich Harvard, Poor Harvard,” which examined the worst financial fallout in Harvard’s 373-year history and offered a cautionary tale about how even America’s oldest and most famous university wasn’t immune to the hubris and recklessness that shattered the nation’s economy. Listen to the podcast after the jump.
- 3/2/2010
- Vanity Fair
Andrew Ross Sorkin, Niall Ferguson, Bethany McLean, Bryan Burrough, and moderator Michael Lewis at last night’s Vanity Fair/Bloomberg discussion, “Covering the Crisis.” Photograph by Justin Bishop. Can business journalism save the world? Or, to be a bit less grandiose about it: Should business writers concern themselves first and foremost with telling great stories or with educating the public. For Niall Ferguson, the Scottish-born Harvard historian who discovered the subject of finance while investigating the causes of Hitler’s rise in Germany, writing about bank balance sheets is almost a holy mission. The fate of Planet Finance, as he called it in this 2008 article for Vanity Fair, is simply too important to leave in the hands of deeply biased participants. The public must be alerted. The arcane details of high finance must be explained and exposed. A worthy goal, to be sure, but Ferguson’s fellow participants in last...
- 11/19/2009
- Vanity Fair
HBO has picked up rights to a book which has recently sold for seven figures to to Adrian Zackheim, publisher of the Penguin imprint Portfolio. The book focuses on the financial meltdown of 2008 and why it happened and will be written by New York Times business writer Joe Nocera and Bethany McLean. The book will be delivered next January. Variety reports that HBO plans a character-driven narrative that explains the roots of the crisis and how it was handled by Wall Street and Washington after it spiraled out of control and led to a multibillion-dollar government bailout. ...
- 2/3/2009
- Upcoming-Movies.com
HBO has picked up rights to a book which has recently sold for seven figures to to Adrian Zackheim, publisher of the Penguin imprint Portfolio. The book focuses on the financial meltdown of 2008 and why it happened and will be written by New York Times business writer Joe Nocera and Bethany McLean. The book will be delivered next January. Variety reports that HBO plans a character-driven narrative...
- 2/3/2009
- Upcoming-Movies.com
HBO has picked up rights to a book which has recently sold for seven figures to to Adrian Zackheim, publisher of the Penguin imprint Portfolio. The book focuses on the financial meltdown of 2008 and why it happened and will be written by New York Times business writer Joe Nocera and Bethany McLean. The book will be delivered next January. Variety reports that HBO plans a character-driven narrative...
- 2/3/2009
- Upcoming-Movies.com
PARK CITY -- Watching the downfall of Enron is like staring at a car wreck on the highway--it's ugly but you can't take you eyes off of it. It's not as if anyone doesn't know what happened, but to see the sleek edifice of power and wealth laid bare is shattering. This is one emperor that truly didn't have any clothes. "Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room" is not only a great cautionary tale, it's a civics lesson that should be seen by every concerned citizen.
Based on the best-selling book "The Smartest Guys in the Room" by Fortune magazine reporters Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind, Alex Gibney's documentary is a carefully constructed dissection of what went so terribly wrong at the seventh-largest corporation in the country. The starting point is the suicide of Enron executive Cliff Baxter in January 2002, from there the film backtracks to explore how the whole thing had been put together like a house of cards and came crashing down.
While the doc is full of juicy information and facts and figures a plenty, Gibney makes a point of keeping it on a human scale so that it is a story of personal greed, arrogance and pride as much as it is corporate malfeasance. At the center of the action, of course, is Kenneth Lay, the son of a Baptist preacher and friend to the president. Although Lay and his hand-picked CEO Jeffrey Skilling did not agree to be interviewed for the film, Gibney has impressively uncovered a treasure trove of archival material, some of it confidential company videos and audios.
Founded in 1985, Enron showed telltale signs almost from the start. In 1987 company traders were accused of padding their own accounts. Lay let it slide, setting a standard for future operations. The company motto, "Ask Why?" now seems ironic, but for years Enron managed to fool the best minds in the country, including Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan, who is seen giving Lay an award for distinguished public service.
Skilling, the architect of much of the company's polices, consistently managed to sidestep rules and regulations, such as using mark-to-market accounting which granted Enron the right to basically say profits were whatever they said they were.
Perhaps the most egregious offense and one that eventually led to the company's downfall was CFO Andy Fastow's grand scheme of creating shell companies to hide Enron debt. Fastow made $45 million from phony partnerships. Even more disturbing was the manipulation of the California energy crisis in a climate of deregulation. Enron traders caught on audio tape gloat over how they are making out like bandits taking money out of the pockets of grandmothers.
It's not surprising to learn that Skilling's favorite book was "The Selfish Gene", a 1976 ultra-Darwinian tract that argues money is the only thing that matters. It certainly wasn't personal responsibility or conscience for these guys.
While it's shocking enough to see the complete moral vacuum at the center of Enron's corporate philosophy, it is even more chilling to realize how tied in it is with the Bush administration, both on a personal and professional level. Looking at the bigger picture, Gibney demonstrates that in some ways this kind of capitalism run amok has become national policy. The only problem with Enron is that it got caught. Yet in testimony after testimony, Lay (Kenny Boy to the president) and Skilling deny any wrongdoing.
Film includes some impressive interviews with ex-Enron officials, who were courageous enough to come forward. With the help of crack cinematography by Maryse Alberti and intelligent editing by Alison Ellwood, it puts the pieces of the puzzle together. It's not a pretty picture. Gibney and his team have done a commendable job in creating both a riveting story and a record for future generations.
ENRON: THE SMARTEST GUYS IN THE ROOM
A Magnolia Pictures presents
An HDNet Films production
Credits:
Director: Alex Gibney
Writer: Gibney
Producers: Gibney, Jason Kloit, Susan Motamed
Executive producers: Mark Cuban, Todd Wagner, Joana Vicente
Director of photography: Maryse Alberti
Music: Matt Hauser
Co-producer: Alison Ellwood
Editor: Ellwood
No MPAA rating
Running time -- 110 minutes...
Based on the best-selling book "The Smartest Guys in the Room" by Fortune magazine reporters Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind, Alex Gibney's documentary is a carefully constructed dissection of what went so terribly wrong at the seventh-largest corporation in the country. The starting point is the suicide of Enron executive Cliff Baxter in January 2002, from there the film backtracks to explore how the whole thing had been put together like a house of cards and came crashing down.
While the doc is full of juicy information and facts and figures a plenty, Gibney makes a point of keeping it on a human scale so that it is a story of personal greed, arrogance and pride as much as it is corporate malfeasance. At the center of the action, of course, is Kenneth Lay, the son of a Baptist preacher and friend to the president. Although Lay and his hand-picked CEO Jeffrey Skilling did not agree to be interviewed for the film, Gibney has impressively uncovered a treasure trove of archival material, some of it confidential company videos and audios.
Founded in 1985, Enron showed telltale signs almost from the start. In 1987 company traders were accused of padding their own accounts. Lay let it slide, setting a standard for future operations. The company motto, "Ask Why?" now seems ironic, but for years Enron managed to fool the best minds in the country, including Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan, who is seen giving Lay an award for distinguished public service.
Skilling, the architect of much of the company's polices, consistently managed to sidestep rules and regulations, such as using mark-to-market accounting which granted Enron the right to basically say profits were whatever they said they were.
Perhaps the most egregious offense and one that eventually led to the company's downfall was CFO Andy Fastow's grand scheme of creating shell companies to hide Enron debt. Fastow made $45 million from phony partnerships. Even more disturbing was the manipulation of the California energy crisis in a climate of deregulation. Enron traders caught on audio tape gloat over how they are making out like bandits taking money out of the pockets of grandmothers.
It's not surprising to learn that Skilling's favorite book was "The Selfish Gene", a 1976 ultra-Darwinian tract that argues money is the only thing that matters. It certainly wasn't personal responsibility or conscience for these guys.
While it's shocking enough to see the complete moral vacuum at the center of Enron's corporate philosophy, it is even more chilling to realize how tied in it is with the Bush administration, both on a personal and professional level. Looking at the bigger picture, Gibney demonstrates that in some ways this kind of capitalism run amok has become national policy. The only problem with Enron is that it got caught. Yet in testimony after testimony, Lay (Kenny Boy to the president) and Skilling deny any wrongdoing.
Film includes some impressive interviews with ex-Enron officials, who were courageous enough to come forward. With the help of crack cinematography by Maryse Alberti and intelligent editing by Alison Ellwood, it puts the pieces of the puzzle together. It's not a pretty picture. Gibney and his team have done a commendable job in creating both a riveting story and a record for future generations.
ENRON: THE SMARTEST GUYS IN THE ROOM
A Magnolia Pictures presents
An HDNet Films production
Credits:
Director: Alex Gibney
Writer: Gibney
Producers: Gibney, Jason Kloit, Susan Motamed
Executive producers: Mark Cuban, Todd Wagner, Joana Vicente
Director of photography: Maryse Alberti
Music: Matt Hauser
Co-producer: Alison Ellwood
Editor: Ellwood
No MPAA rating
Running time -- 110 minutes...
Magnolia Pictures, which has shown a knack for distributing provocative documentaries, has acquired North American distribution rights to Alex Gibney's Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room. The film is set to have its world premiere at this month's Sundance Film Festival as part of the documentary competition. The documentary, which bills itself as the inside story of the Enron business scandal, draws upon the reporting of Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind, who co-wrote the book The Smartest Guys in the Room. Gibney's film also uses corporate audio and videotapes to show how Enron traders affected the national economy.
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