Netflix Invested Its Budget In Dogecoin And Earned Millions.
- Posted on November 23, 2023 5:15 PM
- Cryipto News
- 147 Views
The director of Netflix's sci-fi series 'Conquest,' Carl Erik Rinsch, reportedly took $4 million from the series budget to open a Dogecoin derivative position and made $27 million during the process.
According to an article published in The New York Times on November 22, director Carl Erik Rinsch requested an additional $14 million from Netflix. The article detailed the behind-the-scenes events of the sci-fi series 'Conquest,' which was produced with a budget of $55 million, although not a single episode has been released yet.
Reportedly, in March 2020, Netflix allocated an initial budget of $44 million to buy Rinsch's idea. However, 16 months later, the director requested an additional $11 million to complete the series, and Netflix accepted the request, provided that he finishes the project.
Rinsch reportedly used $10.5 million of the new funds in the stock market, engaging in risky transactions on the options market for S&P 500 and pharmaceutical companies. Allegedly, he lost about $6 million in these trades within a few weeks. Transferring the remaining $4 million to the crypto exchange Kraken, Rinsch invested it entirely in Dogecoin. According to the investigation, in May 2021, Rinsch made a withdrawal of $27 million.
Wild Netflix story.
— Trung Phan (@TrungTPhan) November 22, 2023
In 2018, it bought a sci-fi series from director Carl Rinsch. By 2020, Netflix spent $44m on the show.
Production was floundering and Rinsch demanded $11m more. He took the funds and quickly lost ~$6m in pharma option YOLOs.
A bit later, he took $4m and… pic.twitter.com/JnvY09Op9A
It has been revealed that during a live chat with an alleged Kraken representative, Rinsch said, 'Thank you. May God protect crypto.'
Rinsch's divorce attorney, representing his ex-wife in the divorce case, claimed that Rinsch spent the income he earned on high-end furniture, designer clothes, a luxury watch worth over $380,000, five Rolls Royces, and a Ferrari, totaling about $9 million.
According to The New York Times, in a confidential arbitration process initiated by Rinsch against Netflix, he claimed that the streaming service contract was breached, and he should be compensated $14 million. However, Netflix countered that it owed nothing to Rinsch, characterizing his demands as extortion.
Rinsch claimed that the $9 million expenditure was for the set design of the Conquest series. In a subsequent lawsuit, he argued that this money belonged to him, and Netflix owed him an additional $14 million.
The case was reportedly heard with a mediator at the beginning of November, and a decision is expected to be made soon.