Character Limit

How Elon Musk Destroyed Twitter

480 pages

English language

Published 2024 by Penguin Publishing Group.

ISBN:
978-0-593-65613-6
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4 stars (4 reviews)

Rising star New York Times technology reporters, Kate Conger and Ryan Mac, tell for the first time the full and shocking inside story of Elon Musk’s unprecedented takeover of Twitter and the forty-four-billion-dollar deal’s seismic political, social, and financial fallout

The billionaire entrepreneur and Tesla CEO Elon Musk has become inextricable from the social media platform that until 2023 was known as Twitter. Started in the mid-2000s as a playful microblogging platform, Twitter quickly became a vital nexus of global politics, culture, and media—where the retweet button could instantly catapult any idea to hundreds of millions of screens around the world, unleashing raw collective emotion like nothing else before. While its founder had idealistically dreamed of building a "digital town square," he detested Wall Street and never focused on building a profitable business.

Musk joined the platform in 2010 and, by 2022, had become one of the site’s most influential …

4 editions

Perfect Journalism; Painful to Read

No rating

Reading Character Limit is like watching a man repeatedly punch himself in the face and then blame the people around him for his nose hurting. It is an utterly embarrassing portrait of a narcissistic egotist who believes that he is a genius because he has often been lucky. Musk's purchase of Twitter was a tragedy, in both the literary and dramatic senses. Conger and Mac tell it gently with minimal editorial — why would they need to: these facts are absolutely the worst. RIP Twitter. I could not put this book down.

What a douche

4 stars

In some ways this is a parallel companion piece to Nick Bilton’s Hatching Twitter, and the authors actively consulted that book while writing this one. I was expecting Musk to come off incredibly badly, and he does; I was not necessarily expecting the wider cast of sycophants and narcissists, up to and including the biographer Walter Isaacson. There’s no pretense of objectivity here - Musk’s associates are repeatedly referred to as “goons” - and in a way that’s a detraction. The unadorned facts themselves are already an indictment. But this is grippingly told - and takes on a new meaning given Musk’s involvement in the second Trump administration. Someone please stage an intervention.

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rated it

4 stars