Difference between revisions of "Ronn Torossian"

From Powerbase
Jump to: navigation, search
 
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:Torossian.jpg‎  ||300px|thumb|right|Ronn Torossian, Source: [http://www.adweek.com/prnewser/dinner-with-ronn-torossian-will-cost-you-40/12283/ Adweek] ]]
+
[[Image:Torossian.jpg‎  ||250px|thumb|right|Ronn Torossian, Source: [http://www.adweek.com/prnewser/dinner-with-ronn-torossian-will-cost-you-40/12283/ Adweek] ]]
 
'''Ronn D. Torossian''' is the outspoken and controversial chief executive of [[5WPR]] public relations company in New York. His clients range from Baywatch actress Pamela Anderson and rapper P. Diddy to the [[Government of Israel]].<ref>Michael Bush, [http://www.prweek.com/article/1258861/defiant-torossian-takes-pride-pushing-buttons Defiant Torossian takes pride in pushing buttons], PRWeek.com, 18 February 2007, accessed 13 August 2015 </ref>
 
'''Ronn D. Torossian''' is the outspoken and controversial chief executive of [[5WPR]] public relations company in New York. His clients range from Baywatch actress Pamela Anderson and rapper P. Diddy to the [[Government of Israel]].<ref>Michael Bush, [http://www.prweek.com/article/1258861/defiant-torossian-takes-pride-pushing-buttons Defiant Torossian takes pride in pushing buttons], PRWeek.com, 18 February 2007, accessed 13 August 2015 </ref>
  

Latest revision as of 12:18, 11 January 2016

Ronn Torossian, Source: Adweek

Ronn D. Torossian is the outspoken and controversial chief executive of 5WPR public relations company in New York. His clients range from Baywatch actress Pamela Anderson and rapper P. Diddy to the Government of Israel.[1]

Background

In 2004 Nathanniel Popper reported on the PR man's clients:

But the 29-year-old publicity guru was unable to attend the pop singer’s exclusive soiree. Instead, Torossian was in Washington, D.C., with a different kind of celebrity: Israeli minister of tourism Binyamin Elon, a member of the right-wing National Union Party. The roster of clients at Torossian’s firm, 5W Public Relations, stretches across all cultural boundaries. In addition to Elon, whose American touring he oversees, Torossian’s clients include both the Christian Coalition of America and Bad Boy Worldwide Entertainment Group, the business arm of rap impresario Sean “P. Diddy” Combs’s hip-hop empire. The worlds through which Torossian passes during his daily rounds are diverse, but in Torossian’s presence, the seams between hip-hop and conservative politics seem to disappear. Torossian calls himself “a Jewish bad boy from the Bronx,” and his fighting attitude makes everything fit together. The political figures he works with tend to stand to the far right of the political spectrum — expressing sentiments consistent with Torossian’s own days as a rough-necked agitator in Israel, when he was escorting bulldozers into East Jerusalem to help force out Palestinian residents.[2]

Torossian has also acted as a spokesperson for Aish HaTorah, an international Jewish Orthodox organisation that staunchly defends Israeli policies and features pro-settlement articles on its website. The Tampa Bay Times reports that Aish HaTorah has close ties to the virulently anti-Muslim Clarion Fund, which was behind the notorious anti-Islam film Obsession.

Torossian once told writer Jeffrey Goldberg of The Atlantic magazine, "I think we should kill a hundred Arabs or a thousand Arabs for every one Jew they kill," adding that: "If someone from a town blows himself up and kills Jews, we should wipe out the town he’s from, kill them all." [3]


Career

Contact and resources

Blog

Torrossian's blog

Resources

References

  1. Michael Bush, Defiant Torossian takes pride in pushing buttons, PRWeek.com, 18 February 2007, accessed 13 August 2015
  2. Nathaniel Popper, Publicist Scores With Rappers, Right-wing Politicians, Forward, 2 Apr 2004.
  3. Sarah Marusek and David Miller, The brothers who funded Blair, Israeli settlements and Islamophobia, Middle East Eye, 12 August 2015
  4. Michael Bush, Defiant Torossian takes pride in pushing buttons, PRWeek.com, 18 February 2007, accessed 13 August 2015