Whose Chopstick Art craft company amused the Sharks but failed to elicit so much as a nibble?”
Later today, on our special AfterShark page, WalletPop’s Jason Cochran will bring us a video interview with Bryan Parks, whose Chopstick Art craft company amused the Sharks but failed to elicit so much as a nibble. It’s part of our ongoing post-show coverage on the nail-biting venture capitalism docu-series, in which Americans with big ideas try to make money fast by begging five millionaire Sharks for cash. Check out all of our previous interviews with Sharks, unlikely winners, and notorious losers on our AfterShark home page! Parks, an environmentalist and entrepreneur from Eugene, Oregon, wanted $100,000 for 10% of his enterprise and tried to convince the investors to help recycle some of the 25 billion sets of chopsticks that are thrown away annually by turning them into necklaces, lamps, and a cool-looking bowl that folds flat when it’s not in use. They liked it, and were gentle with him, but after calling his concept a mere small business and hardly a million-dollar idea, the Sha
Later today, on our special AfterShark page, WalletPop’s Jason Cochran will bring us a video interview with Bryan Parks, whose Chopstick Art craft company amused the Sharks but failed to elicit so much as a nibble. It’s part of our ongoing post-show coverage on the nail-biting venture capitalism docu-series, in which Americans with big ideas try to make money fast by begging five millionaire Sharks for cash. Check out all of our previous interviews with Sharks, unlikely winners, and notorious losers on our AfterShark home page! Parks, an environmentalist and entrepreneur from Eugene, Oregon, wanted $100,000 for 10% of his enterprise and tried to convince the investors to help recycle some of the 25 billion sets of chopsticks that are thrown away annually by turning them into necklaces, lamps, and a cool-looking bowl that folds flat when it’s not in use. They liked it, and were gentle with him, but after calling his concept a mere small business and hardly a million-dollar idea, the Sha
Later today, on our special AfterShark page, WalletPop’s Jason Cochran will bring us a video interview with Bryan Parks, whose Chopstick Art craft company amused the Sharks but failed to elicit so much as a nibble. It’s part of our ongoing post-show coverage on the nail-biting venture capitalism docu-series, in which Americans with big ideas try to make money fast by begging five millionaire Sharks for cash. Check out all of our previous interviews with Sharks, unlikely winners, and notorious losers on our AfterShark home page! Parks, an environmentalist and entrepreneur from Eugene, Oregon, wanted $100,000 for 10% of his enterprise and tried to convince the investors to help recycle some of the 25 billion sets of chopsticks that are thrown away annually by turning them into necklaces, lamps, and a cool-looking bowl that folds flat when it’s not in use.