词条 | David I. Saperstein |
释义 |
|name = David I. Saperstein |image = |alt = |caption = |birth_date = {{Birth year and age|1941}} |birth_place = Baltimore |death_date = |death_place = |other_names = |parents = |spouse = Phyllis Grief (divorced) Suzanne Carlstrand (divorced) Hillevi Svensson (her death in 2019)[1] |children = with Grief: --Michelle Saperstein Coppola --Jennifer Saperstein Kalapoutis with Carlstrand: --Jonathan Saperstein --Alexis Saperstein --Stefanie Saperstein with Svensson: --Ethan Saperstein --Makenna Saperstein |family = |known_for = founder of Metro Networks |occupation = businessman |Citizenship = United States }} David I. Saperstein (born 1941) is an American entrepreneur and founder of Metro Networks. BiographySaperstein was born to Jewish parents in Baltimore. He dropped out of college to sell used cars. When he got stuck in a snowstorm he came up with the idea to sell traffic reports on the radio. He used his Ford Dealership to start his new venture in Baltimore. When Ford withdrew its support of Saperstein and he lost his dealership, he founded Metro Networks in 1978. the company grew to serve over 1,500 radio stations in the U.S. In 1996, Saperstein decided to take Metro Networks public under the Nasdaq exchange, stock symbol MTNT. He made his fortune when he sold the company to Westwood One in 1999 for $1.25 billion in stock. Now he operates tree farms in Texas and Florida: "It's a growing business," he once told a reporter for Forbes magazine.{{Citation needed|date=December 2009}} In 1988, Saperstein was elected to the Common Cause National Governing Board. EntrepreneurismSaperstein began his career selling used cars in Baltimore, but quickly found there was a niche for radio programming to include traffic reports. While traffic reporting was already a part of radio programming in some cities, Saperstein found there was no single company providing concise reports for stations, either regionally or nationally. In 1978 he founded Metro Networks, in Houston, Texas. The company grew, through the 1980s, into a veritable traffic reporting empire, and in 1996, Saperstein took the company public on the Nasdaq exchange. In 1992, Saperstein's daughter married Shane Coppola in Baltimore, Maryland in a wedding that was described as "the social event of the season in the nation's capital." The wedding is referenced in the 1993 film Dave, starring Kevin Kline. In 1998, Saperstein, with his son-in-law, Coppola, began negotiating a merger agreement with Westwood One, and in September 1999 three companies merged, Metro Networks, Copter Acquisition Corp. and Westwood One. Only 9 days before the merger between Metro Networks and Westwood One, Saperstein started a new company called Five "S" Capital, Inc. Five "S" is an investment company that helps to fund new business development. PhilanthropySaperstein sits on the boards of Cedars-Sinai Hospital and Music Center of Los Angeles. He is also a member of the Homeland Security Advisory Committee. In 2006, the Saperstein Critical Care tower that bears his name was opened at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. Initially named the David and Suzanne Saperstein Tower, it had to be renamed after his rancorous divorce. In 2009, he donated $12 million to help build the Milken Middle School, a Jewish day school in Los Angeles, California; it was renamed the David Saperstein Middle School in his honor.[2] Personal lifeSaperstein has been married three times. He has two children with his first wife, Phyllis Grief: Michelle Saperstein Coppola and Jennifer Saperstein Kalapoutis. In 2006, Saperstein divorced his second wife of 23 years, Swedish philanthropist Suzanne (née Carlstrand) Saperstein. He had the divorce papers served to her in Texas on a stopover on her way from California to Europe.[3][4] They had three children: Jonathan (b. 1987), Alexis (b. 1988), and Stefanie (b 1990).[5] Saperstein later married another Swedish woman, Hillevi Svensson from Bua in Varberg, formerly nanny to his children.[5][6] They had two twins together, Ethan (b.2012) and Makenna (b. 2012). On January 2, 2019, Hillevi died while vacationing in Anguilla with David and their two children.[1] His cousin, Ken Mehlman was the former national Republican chair and president George W. Bush's strategist for both of his terms. During the 1990s, Saperstein built a 12-bedroom, 15-bathroom Versailles-style estate for his then-wife, Suzanne, sprawled across several acres on Carolwood Drive in Holmby Hills. The home is listed by Forbes magazine as one of the most expensive in the United States, with an estimated property value of about $125 million. The compound, which according to W Magazine is inspired by France's 17th-century Vaux-le-Vicomte, occupies about {{convert|45000|sqft|m2}} and is called Fleur de Lys ("Lily Flower" in French). The home took five years to build and the couple were divorced 18 months after it was completed. His wife Suzanne had the house on the market at a listing price of $125 million shortly after divorcing her husband.[7][8] In the spring of 2014, the estate reportedly sold for $102 million, becoming the most expensive home ever sold in Los Angeles county.[9] He also owns a horse ranch nestled in the hills at the east end of Simi Valley, California, called Hummingbird Nest Ranch.[10] The ranch has a main villa, a period ranch house, four guest houses, and stables for dozens of horses. By 2014, the 126-acre property had become a self-contained village with housing for staff, a commercial laundry, water wells, diesel generators, a gasoline pump and a large solar panel field.[11][12] References1. ^1 [https://radaronline.com/exclusives/2019/01/david-saperstein-wife-mistress-hillevi-mysterious-death-vacation/ Billionaire L.A. Family Reeling From Mysterious Death Of Nanny-Turned-Mistress], RadarOnline.com, January 7, 2019. {{DEFAULTSORT:Saperstein, David I}}2. ^Jewish Journal: "Milken Middle School Gets New Campus" by Julie Gruenbaum Fax September 2, 2009 3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.newyorksocialdiary.com/socialdiary/2005/09_20_05/socialdiary09_20_05.php|title=It's Splitsville for Billionaire David Saperstein|accessdate=25 November 2009}} 4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.sundayindependent.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=3217310|title=Sapersteins square up for most expensive divorce in history|publisher=Sunday Independent|accessdate=25 November 2009}} 5. ^1 W Magazine: "Oh, Suzanne - After lying low during her billion-dollar divorce, Suzanne Saperstein is back—with a new man and plenty of unexpected new missions" by Christopher Bagley December 2008 6. ^[https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/the-billiondollar-divorce-475255.html Sunday Independent: "The billion-dollar divorce - Magnate may lose half his fortune to high-spending wife in biggest ever settlement" by David Usborne] April 23, 2006 7. ^[https://www.forbes.com/2008/11/17/homes-expensive-ten-forbeslife-cx_mw_1117realestate.html Forbes "World's Most Expensive Homes" By Matt Woolsley] November 17, 2008 8. ^W Magazine "Revenge of the Billion Dollar Divorcée: After lying low during her much-gossiped about divorce (husband David dumped her for their hot Swedish nanny), the couture-loving LA hostess Suzanne Saperstein is back, with a young boyfriend and a new attitude" By Christopher Bagley December 2008 9. ^{{Cite web|title = Bel Air's very own Palace of Versailles sells for $102 MILLION|url = http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2593915/The-unsellable-estate-finally-finds-buyer-Bel-Airs-Palace-Versailles-sells-102-MILLION-seven-years-market-new-owner-mystery-French-billionaire.html|accessdate = 2015-08-02}} 10. ^{{cite news |last=Covarrubias |first=Amanda |title=This Corral Is More Than OK: Hummingbird Nest Ranch |url=http://venturacountytrails.org/News/0036-HummingbirdRanch/NewsPage.htm |accessdate=2 August 2014 |work=Los Angeles Times |date=4 July 2004}} 11. ^McGrath, Rachel (October 25, 2014) "Plans for spa resort start to take flight at Simi Valley's Hummingbird Nest Ranch" Ventura County Star 12. ^Brumback, Elijah (October 10, 2014) "Hummingbird Ranch project in Simi falls out of nest" Pacific Coast Business Times 9 : 1940 births|American Jews|Living people|Farmers from Texas|American communications businesspeople|American billionaires|Businesspeople from Baltimore|People from Houston|Businesspeople from Los Angeles |
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