Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas
Heller manages the art collections of six Wall Street money managers, several of whom are billionaires.
Sarah Thornton • Seven Days in the Art World

Larry Lisser
@larrylisser
By the end of this walk I was totally sold. I called my friend and said something like: Go for it! Swap shares with Sam Bankman-Fried! Do whatever he wants to do! What could possibly go wrong? It was only later that I realized I hadn’t even begun to answer his original question: Who was this guy?
Michael Lewis • Going Infinite: The Rise and Fall of a New Tycoon
Michael Kass
@storyandspirit
Albert Azout
@albertazout
One of the agencies the package went to was Frederick Hill Associates in San Francisco, where Bonnie Nadell, a new associate who had worked in the subsidiary rights department at Simon & Schuster when Less Than Zero was published,
D. T. Max • Every Love Story Is a Ghost Story: A Life of David Foster Wallace
But it compelled me to watch Jefferies more closely, a company whose namesake and origin, unlike Morgan Stanley, had a pretty non illustrious past (for starters, I had never worked at an established firm that had only one name).
Robert Lessin • Lessin's Lessons
Jane Street, as Sam put it, was “just a place where people come to work each day to play some games and increase the number in their bank account, because what the fuck else are they going to do with their lives?” Alameda Research, as he was calling the new firm, was going to be different: a vessel to save some vast number of lives.