Enthusiast Gaming has just acquired Omnia Media, an esports organization and broker to popular streamer names such as Shroud, Pokimane, and MrBeast, for USD $38 million (CDN $50 million), despite reported quarterly and total deficits.

Through its procurement, Enthusiast gaming gains access to an additional 90 million gamers on top of its estimated 260 million fan base. The premier esports strategies company has meant to capture this potential by developing live video channels dedicated to gaming fans as well as extensive franchising units around the world. Twitch, the video streaming platform so popular on which Enthusiast Gaming will be built, recently announced that it also purchased an additional 30 million subs, currently at 100 million, for a 7x per year growth, almost the same as Enthusiast Gaming's.

When asked why it chose to acquire this story, Enthusiast Gaming CEO Bobby Lee explained that getting a $40 million acquisition is a natural progression of what they already do for their customers. "Seeing your brand on our platform before your game's retail launch elevates the value you place on the influencers that you have in the evangelist gate." Other significant features of Omnia Media include, standards for vendor fraud prevention and 24/7 live support.

"I believe we can accommodate even higher demand in the future," claimed Lee. "Our growth rates are exceeding many other projects, and I'm confident in Omnia Media's ability to accumulate scale and growth quickly. Some things happen once when you scale, and it can be a challenge to manage these sorts of massive project as you grow. Oculus has only just tied themselves aside from this possibility, and Vancouver thinks VR will be better, not worse for Enthusiast Gaming. This just goes to show what one entrepreneurial female owner with a humble

but determined know-how can do with her own properties."

Rewards for investors are announced for two weeks.

Image copyright AFP Image caption An expert says Mr Obama could have pursued charges, but instead chose to "sell the uranium for dollars"

An expert at the head of the State Department at the time as the US approved the sale of US uranium to Russia believes several members of the Obama administration "had a conflict of interest" in approving the deal.

Jeffrey Kingston, wrote a friend three weeks before President Barack Obama sold control of our uranium, saying of another scandal involving the Clintons - this one involving uranium, lots of uranium." Jeff continued, "I am certain that once this was made public in court, Hillary Clinton would be under FBI investigation."

However, the Obama Justice Department prevaricated. The deal cost two Democrats and a Republican in Congress their jobs.

Kingston's friend emailed him in "early summer of 2015", describing as "a major crisis". He said:

"George Stephanopoulos is flying cross-country to
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