Aleksey Vayner
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Aleksey Vayner (born Aleksey Garber) is an Uzbekistan-born student at Yale University, known for having sent a résumé to UBS AG that included the URL for an inadvertently comical[1][2][3] online video,[4] titled "Impossible is Nothing".[5] In the video, Vayner discusses his philosophy of success, shows off his physical prowess, and dances with a scantily-clad woman.
Since their circulation began in October 2006, the résumé and video have been discussed on the web, television, and in print media world-wide. The story first broke widely on the Ivy League blog IvyGate, and was picked up by many mainstream outlets, including The New York Times,[6] Metro paper,[7], on Fox News[8] New York Post,[9] The Sun,[10] Daily Mail,[1] MarketWatch,[11] U.S. News and World Report,[12] The New Yorker,[13] and other global media.[14]
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[edit] Résumé and video claims
In his résumé Vayner claims that he runs a charitable organization, is the CEO of an investment firm and has written a book on the Holocaust, among other things. Bloggers claim to have shown many of these claims to be false:[15]
- His investment firm's website lists a non-existent address, and the charitable organization is using an unauthorized Charity Navigator logo. The president of Charity Navigator has stated that he believes Vayner should be expelled from Yale for this.[16] Vayner defended himself to the New York Times by saying the logo had been added to his website by developers "in India and Pakistan", and that he had played no role in adding it.[17]
- Excerpts of Vayner's self-published book, Women's Silent Tears, a "unique gender-focused perspective on the Holocaust in Eastern Europe" made available for free at Lulu.com, show that at least some of its content had been plagiarized from an online Holocaust encyclopedia and other sources.[15][18] Vayner responded that the text at Lulu was an early draft of the book, and that the final version would have been worded differently.[17]
[edit] Athletic claims
The video shows Vayner lifting free weights marked 120 pounds, with captions claiming the weights are 140 pounds each. In the next section Vayner is shown bench pressing, with captions claiming the weight to be 495 pounds. Later it shows him serving a tennis ball, again with captions claiming the speed of the serve to be 140 miles per hour. Vayner is also seen ballroom dancing. The video contains one scene with a masked skier. In another scene, a person, shown only from the waist down, splits a stack of bricks with his bare hand[19] followed by a dissolve to a shot of Vayner bowing martial arts style to the camera.[20]
No proof has yet been found to verify Vayner's participation in these events, and Vayner tellingly sought to buy skiing footage on Craigslist before the video was produced. Vayner defends himself by saying that his Craigslist posting was intended only to find a good cameraman, and insists that all the physical feats shown in the video are really his, with the exception of the skiing, which he thinks is "probably" him.[17]
[edit] Yale and achievement claims
Before Vayner's freshman year had begun, his tendency to lie was discussed in an article in Rumpus, a Yale humor magazine.[21] He apparently had visited as a high school senior and told unbelievable stories about himself. Among his reported claims to people on campus, or to the public, starting with this initial visit to Yale:
- He claimed that he "is one of four people in the state of Connecticut qualified to handle nuclear waste".[18]
- He was employed by both the Mafia and the CIA during his childhood.[21]
- He gave tennis lessons to Harrison Ford, Sarah Michelle Gellar,[21] and Jerry Seinfeld[13]. He further claims to have won two games in a tennis match against Pete Sampras.[13]
- He is a specialist in "Chinese orthopedic massage".[13]
- The Dalai Lama had apparently written his college recommendation.[13]
- He has killed two dozen men in Tibetan gladiatorial contests.[13]
- He claimed to be "an action star, an espionage expert, and a professional athlete. He would be on the C.I.A. firing range one day and at a martial-arts competition that took place in [a] secret system of tunnels underneath Woodstock, New York[13] the next."
In addition, Vayner apparently arranged for a film he had made about Zen Buddhism to be displayed in a Yale class on Eastern philosophy. The film included "b-roll of Vayner performing various physical feats of questionable veracity".[22]
Vayner responds that most of these claims come merely from the Rumpus article, and contends that the author of that piece, Jordan Bass, had never interviewed him before writing it. Bass stated in the original article,[21] and again after the video was circulated,[13] that his article had merely cataloged the outlandish stories Vayner told him personally.
[edit] Results of the publicity
On 2006-10-09, Vayner sent emails under the subject "Cease and Disist [sic] Notification" to YouTube and other websites hosting copies of his video. IvyGate reports that the letters themselves had been plagiarized from online sources, and that the lawyers Vayner cc'd in the letters denied representing him.[23] Vayner also said he was exploring the possibility of suing various parties for invasion of privacy, but when checked by the Wall Street Journal, the lawyer to whom he referred in connection with these suits also denied that she represented him.[24]
UBS has stated that it will launch an internal investigation to discover how Vayner's letter and résumé were leaked.[2] Vayner claims to have been extensively harassed as a result of the video's publicity, has taken a leave of absence from Yale, and has hired counsel to explore the possibility of suing UBS.[17][25]
On 2006-10-19 Vayner was interviewed by the New York Times' online financial news report DealBook, accompanied by his lawyer, Christian P. Stueben, and his sister, Tamara Garber, a New York real estate developer,[26] who is also listed as director of Vayner's purported charity, Youth Empowerment Strategies.[27] In the interview, Vayner defended the athletic feats depicted in the video as genuine, and his charity and investment firm as legitimate, although he admited he currently lacks an investment dealer's license. He disavowed any connection to the more outlandish claims made about him and, together with his lawyer, confirmed that he is considering legal action against UBS for breaching the confidentiality normally associated with a job application, a breach he claimed has dimmed his employment prospects, exposed him to ridicule, and resulted in multiple invasions of his privacy.[17]
Advertising executive Donny Deutsch said on MSNBC that he "would hire this guy sight unseen." [13]
In late 2006, a parody of Vayner's video resume was released featuring Michael Cera of Arrested Development, entitled "Impossible is the Opposite of Possible."
[edit] References
- ^ a b "Hilarious video-CV makes student laughing stock of Wall Street," Daily Mail, October 12, 2006
- ^ a b "How Not To Get A Job," Lisa Lerer, Forbes.com, October 13, 2006
- ^ "Why this ghastly jobseeker is a model corporate candidate," Lucy Kellaway, Financial Times, October 23, 2006, p.7
- ^ Video Resume
- ^ "Impossible is Nothing" was the advertising slogan of athletic footwear maker Adidas, which used it in a 2004 advertising campaign. "Impossible is nothing" adidas launches new global brand advertising campaign (February 5, 2004). Retrieved on 2006-12-30.
- ^ de la Merced, Michael J. (2006), "A Student’s Video Résumé Gets Attention (Some of It Unwanted)", The New York Times, October 21, 2006, Business, p. 1; [1]
- ^ "The greatest CV ever filmed," London Metro, October 10, 2006
- ^ "Egomaniacs Need Not Apply," FoxNews, October 10, 2006
- ^ "Wannabe Banker's Video Resume Backfires," New York Post, October 12, 2006
- ^ "What a total merchant banker," The Sun, October 12, 2006
- ^ "Wall Street's Citizen Vayn may hold some truth," MarketWatch, October 12, 2006
- ^ ""The Next Kaavya"? Ivy League Gossip Blog Thinks It's Found Her...Er, Him," U.S. News and World Report, October 10, 2006
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "The Talk of the Town: Aleksey The Great," The New Yorker, Ben McGrath, October 23, 2006
- ^ "Lachwekkende motivatievideo van sollicitant populair op het net," HLN.BE, October 12, 2006
- ^ a b "Lord of the Lies: Aleksey Vayner Outdoes Himself," IvyGate, October 9, 2006
- ^ a b c d e "The Resume Mocked ‘Round the World," New York Times Dealbook, October 19, 2006
- ^ a b "Vayner faces scrutiny after charity subterfuge," Cullen Macbeth, Yale Daily News, October 10, 2006
- ^ Splitting the bricks: 5:06-5:31 and 5:38-5:54 in the video
- ^ Dissolve to Vayner bowing: 5:54-5:59
- ^ a b c d "Craazy Prefrosh Lies, Is Just Weird," Yale Rumpus, May 2002
- ^ "Bullshit: It's not just for Ukrainians," David Chernicoff, Yale Daily News, October 13, 2006
- ^ "Calling Aleksey Vayner's Bluff," IvyGate, October 10, 2006
- ^ "Severance at Sovereign Irks Governance Advocates/Yale Student Gets a Lesson On the Power of Video," The Wall Street Journal, David Enrich and Jaime Levy Pessin, October 14, 2006, p.B3
- ^ "Resume Leak Has Yalie Calling Foul," Dan Mangan, New York Post, 2006-10-19
- ^ "Tycoon in the making", CnnMoney.com, 2005-03-10. Retrieved on 2006-10-24.
- ^ Youth Empowerment Strategies. Retrieved on 2006-10-24.
[edit] External links
- IvyGate's initial report
- IvyGate's posts about Vayner (Many details within)