Rodney Adler’s slow rise from corporate purgatory continues unabated.
Rodney adler
Rodney Adler the fodder in shareholders’ revolt
Disgraced businessman Rodney Adler is at the centre of a shareholder complaint against a Queensland company that makes containers for growing animal food, writes Crikey intern Margaret Paul.
Strange days when Rodney Adler starts making sense
It is a bizarre state of affairs where the person making most sense about executive excess is a convicted corporate criminal who was involved in the collapse of one of Australia’s largest insurers, writes Adam Schwab.
Tips and rumours
When Lin Hatfield-Dodds announced in a blaze of publicity that she was withdrawing from the Olympic torch relay, she gave the impression that she did so with the full support of the various organisations with which she claims allegiance - Uniting Care Australia, the Australian Council of Social Service and the Uniting Church. The only […]
Lookalikes
Billy Bowden and Rodney Adler … Kevin Rudd and Kim Jong-Il … David Hicks and Chucky. Could they possible be related?
A last word on Conrad Black … from Rodney Adler
Casting around yesterday for people to write on the demise of Conrad Black, we immediately thought of Rodney Adler…
That was the week that was…
The week in one liners:
Kevin Rudd committed his government to transparency, while the Liberal party boasted they had beaten him to the punch by electing a leader everyone could see through…
President Bush continued to insist that Iran remains a nuclear threat in the face of intelligence reports to the contrary, pointing out that the CIA […]
Rodney Adler didn’t like jail. That was probably the point
The media is sometimes just downright cruel. If you were an average Joe prisoner, The Bulletin magazine would not take any sort of interest in your condition. If you are Rodney Adler, from Sydney’s eastern suburbs, then suddenly the Packer run Bulletin will pay you to recount tales of your jail experiences.
Dick Pratt takes money from ordinary Aussies — so where is the uproar?
Steve Vizard and Rodney Adler would be within their rights to be feeling a little hard done by at the moment. Richard Pratt has had much better treatment, though his actions have cost ordinary Australians more, writes Adam Schwab.
Your Say: Daily Mail readers' feedback: Comments, corrections, clarifications, and c*ckups
Akerman on the Heiner Affair … Adler not on Enough Rope … Brough’s takeaway grog rules … soft Labor votes … Australia’s official foreign reserves … let’s blame Grandma …






