What Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy is really like to work with, according to the CEO

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What Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy is really like to work with, according to the CEO

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He's a "brilliant creator."

  • Erika Nardini is the CEO of Barstool Sports. Dave Portnoy is the founder.
  • Portnoy is known for inciting controversy - he once stormed the lobby of Twitter's offices and got arrested for protesting The Patriots' deflategate.
  • But Nardini said Portnoy is humble, a great listener, and intellectually curious. He also maintains a real connection with his audience.


Erika Nardini remembers hearing stories about Dave Portnoy.

Nardini, now the CEO of Barstool Sports, lived in Boston when Dave Portnoy - also known as "El Prez" - founded the now-$100 million digital media company as a free Boston newspaper in 2003. She admired his gumption from afar.

On an episode of Business Insider's podcast "Success! How I Did It," Nardini told US editor-in-chief Alyson Shontell: "I loved the idea that there was this guy who was out there like a Don Quixote pursuing his own path, and he was on a quest, and brick by brick and handing out papers and sharing a point of view of whether it was popular or unpopular, it was a point of view. I really admired that always."

Barstool Sports is a comedy website known for its coverage of news, sports, and women. Portnoy is notorious for inciting controversy.

In 2015, he was arrested, along with three other Barstool Sports employees, while protesting the NFL's punishment of Tom Brady and the New England Patriots after Deflategate. In 2016, he stormed the lobby of Twitter's offices demanding to get his account verified. He also got in a recent spat with ESPN and its star anchor, Samantha Ponder, over sexist remarks his team made about the anchor three years ago. It led to ESPN dropping Barstool's TV show after just one episode.

Nardini first met Portnoy over coffee in 2016, while she was working for Bkstg (pronounced "Backstage"), a direct-to-consumer platform for music artists. In person, Nadrini describes a more tame Portnoy.

"He and I clicked," Nardini said of Portnoy. "I loved what he had to say."

Nardini realized then that Portnoy was "quite humble and a great listener and intellectually very curious." She saw him as a "brilliant creator" who had launched a publication that could reach a wide audience - but his company didn't "have the tool set to get there."

After a few more coffee meetings, Nardini realized she wanted to work at Barstool Sports.

Today, the company is worth about $100 million, according to Bloomberg, and 8 million "Stoolies" visit the site several times every day.

Nardini praised the connection that Portnoy and the rest of the leadership team have with Barstool Sports' audience. "It's just real," Nardini said. "They were always average guys who got a chance to do something non-average, but they still tapped it like average guys."

She said: "What makes Dave very rare is that he is exceptionally savvy and a funny brilliant creator."