10 Business You Didn’t Realize Were Also Founded by Famous Entrepreneurs

by Johan Tobias

It’s every entrepreneur’s hope that the business endeavors they undertake will be successful. No one likes being a failure and businesspeople especially like to succeed and make money off of their plans. While some entrepreneurs strike a chord with their customer base and get lucky, others seem to have the ability to make lightning strike twice, or even more often, and come up with multiple business ideas. Often these businesses are complementary and make sense but sometimes an entrepreneur will come up with businesses that are remarkably dissimilar such that you’d never guess the same person was behind each one.

10. The Founder of Atari Also Founded Chuck E. Cheese

Nolan Bushnell is clearly a guy who likes fun which seems to be the only common thread linking his two greatest business achievements. In 1972, Bushnell co-founded what can be considered the grandfather of the modern gaming world – Atari. Long before anyone had a PlayStation, an Xbox or even a Nintendo in their homes, they had the Atari 2600 and were playing extremely simple games like Asteroids and Pong

While introducing the concept of home console gaming seems like it should have been enough to keep anyone set for the rest of their lives, that was a long time ago and the industry was a lot different. So Bushnell had to keep working and his next big idea was something of a left turn. He was also the force behind Chuck E. Cheese which he developed at Atari.

Corporate overlords being what they are, the money men were not amused that Bushnell was making singing robots and otherwise wasting time and resources. He was actually kicked out of the company in 1978. Though he never made as big a splash again with his later work, his contributions to pop culture are certainly legendary and just a bit weird. 

9. Lee Byung-chul Founded Samsung But Started Out Running a Dry Goods Company

Samsung’s 2021 revenue was around $244 billion USD. They’re clearly one of the biggest electronics companies in the world and they make everything from phones to washing machines. This diverse approach is ingrained in the company as their origins are even more wide reaching thanks to the founder, Lee Byung-chul, and his dedication to selling pretty much anything. 

That multi-billion dollar empire started with $25 back in 1938 when the future founder opened a dry goods store to sell things like dried fish and other food. The company sold goods from in and around the city of Taegu and had about 40 employees.Because they sold dried food; the company did well during the Korean War in 1950 and branched out. They moved into sugar and then textiles. That worked too, so they expanded into insurance, retail and by the 1960s they were manufacturing electronics. They’d go on to manufacture ships, telecommunications, and pretty much anything else you can think of. 

The family still runs Samsung today, and the company is obviously most well known for its cell phones and electronics, but the company likely wouldn’t exist at all without dried fish and noodles nearly a century in the past.

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8. The Founder of Domino’s Also Founded a Law School

We already saw the founder of Chuck E. Cheese was behind Atari and it turns out pizza guys just have a lot of diverse interests. Tom Monaghan, the man behind Domino’s, also started his own law school. He invested $50 million of his own cash in the school back in the late 1990s. The school’s mission? To educate lawyers with a Roman Catholic perspective. 

Monaghan actually divested himself of the pizza chain to devote himself to Catholic causes. He sold Domino’s for $1 billion, so he certainly had the resources to follow his dreams. And the school really was built and still exists today. It’s been sanctioned in the past for having low entrance standards and is considered one of the most conservative law schools in the country.

7. The Inventor of the Lava Lamp Founded a Nudist Resort

Did you ever have a lava lamp growing up? Or, you know, right now? They are very symbolic in most people’s minds of hippie counterculture and the 60s and 70s, though they enjoyed a retro resurgence once or twice since those times. 

Lava lamps were invented in 1963 by a British accountant named Edward Craven Walker. Walker was known for only one other thing in his life and that was his penchant for nudity. The man made underwater nude films.

Prior to inventing the lamp, Walker had made movies with names like “Eve on Skis” which featured naked people doing things naked. One movie was presented as an underwater ballet. Water and nudity really seemed to move him, so much so that after achieving some success with his movies he bought an entire club and founded his own nudist resort. He then tried to ban anyone from showing up if they were overweight. He was quoted as saying he was again “fat fogies” and they were not what naturism was about.

6. The Co-Founder of Paul Mitchell Also Founded Patron Tequila

Paul Mitchell, more correctly known as John Paul Mitchell Systems, is a hair care company dating back to 1980 with an annual revenue of about $1 billion. It’s safe to say Paul Mitchell is doing alright. 

The company was founded by two men – Paul Mitchell himself, and John Paul DeJoria. Mitchell passed away from cancer back in 1989 and Dejoria continued to run the company from then on but he also managed to diversify his portfolio. In addition to the world of hairspray and brushes, Dejoria is also the man behind Patron Tequila, the third best-selling tequila brand in America. That works out to over 3 million cases sold in 2021 alone. Of course, Dejoria doesn’t need to worry about that anymore since he sold the company in 2018 for over $5 billion

5. Avi Arad Invented the Skip It and Later was Behind Marvel Studios

Before Kevin Feige was the Man Behind the Curtain at Marvel creating the MCU and more or less printing money for the Walt Disney Corporation, there was another man who put Marvel up on the big screen and that was Avi Arad. He was the producer behind most of those non-MCU films from the ’90s and early 2000s like the X-Men, Blade, Daredevil, Punisher and so on. 

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Before Arad was giving us the joy of Nic Cage as Ghost Rider, he worked in toys. Specifically, he worked for a company called Tiger Toys and was the inventor of one of the most popular toys in history, the Skip It. That was a little hoop you hooker around your ankle attached to a ball on a string that would spin around your ankle, forcing you to skip it, hence the name, with your other foot. Arad, along with two others, filed a patent for their version of it in 1990. It was hugely successful and so was Arad. For a time the man was considered basically the biggest toy designer in America. And some of his biggest toys were based on comic books. 

He was already executive producer of cartoons like the X-Men and stated his goal was to “exploit” the Marvel universe characters in toys, shows and films. And that’s how he ended up kicking off the world of Marvel movies. Arguably the MCU would not exist today without Arad and the Skip It. 

4. The Founder of Wikipedia Ran a Porn Site First

Wikipedia is so ubiquitous on the internet these days it’s essentially just what everyone thinks of when they need to know literally anything they don’t already know. It’s one of the top ten most visited sites on the internet and has been for ages. Just a random sampling shows that, in November 2021 alone, the site traffic reached 5.97 billion, making it the fourth most visited site online after Google, YouTube and Facebook.

Despite not generally being accepted as a “real” source for info, it’s a great starting point if nothing else and, according to Wikipedia itself, it has published over 57 million pages of information. 

The site was founded by Jimmy Wales back in 2001. But before that he had started a site known as Bomis which featured things like the “Bomis Babe Report” which featured galleries of half naked women, the Babe Engine which was a search engine for sexy women and, of course, Bomis Premium which was $2.95 per month and gave you access to X-rated content.

It was the money that Wales made from Bomis that allowed him to start Wikipedia and, in fact, Wikipedia was borrowing bandwidth from Bomis in its early years to stay active. He used money made from Bomis to pay to keep the servers online. So while Wikipedia may be a hub of knowledge today, it’s built on a foundation of soft core porn with a dash of hardcore on the side. 

3. The Founder of Toho Also Founded a Railway

Long before Godzilla was a multi-million dollar blockbuster franchise in America it was a multi-million dollar blockbuster franchise in Japan, but with less savvy special effects. Everyone knows the classic man-in-a-suit Godzilla and the Toho company still makes Godzilla movies the same way. 

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Toho was founded by Ichizo Kobayashi in 1932 as the Tokyo Takarazuka Theater Co. Kobayashi was a man who dabbled in just about everything and, years before his company would create everyone’s favorite radioactive lizard, he was doing things like starting railroad companies and department stores. 

It was the railroad that inadvertently led to Godzilla, as Kobayashi wanted more customers on his trains so he devised a theater troupe to entertain people. The train theater evolved to normal theater and then later that turned into film. Later his company would not just create Godzilla but Akira Kurosawa’s legendary The Seven Samurai as well. 

2. Donald Duncan Made a Fortune in Yo-Yos and Parking Meters

Donald Duncan counts as a serious threat to the wallet because this man was all over the map with his business dealings and had success on multiple, disparate fronts. While he was once a franchise owner of a Good Humor Ice Cream, it’s not true that he invented the Eskimo Pie as some sources claim. That aside, he did make a name in yo-yos and parking meters. 

In 1946, Duncan Yo-Yos was making 3,600 yo-yos per hour. They sold 45 million in 1962. And when Duncan wasn’t keeping kids busy with a simple hobby, he was annoying their parents with parking fees. The Duncan Parking Meter Company was an idea he came up with years earlier and he managed to convince cities it would be a good way to make money. Though he sold the company in 1959, when he was still in charge, 80% of all parking meters in America were made by Duncan. 

1. Gavin McInnes Founded Vice Media and the Proud Boys

If you don’t know the name Gavin McInnes, that’s alright. His name tends to pop up most often in media circles in terms of his relationship with the media as he’s best known for being on both sides of that world.

McInnes founded Vice magazine in 1994, which grew into Vice Media, which is still very much a media company on the internet. The magazine was a sort of counterculture Canadian news magazine that was very much focused on the punk scene, or at least it filtered news through a sort of punk perspective. Vice Media is maybe best known in the mainstream for its documentary-style videos that were aired on HBO and covered a variety of topics. 

In more recent years, Vice Media has had to go on record to state they are no longer affiliated with McInnes because his other claim to fame is that he founded the Proud Boys. The Proud Boys are described as a neofascist white nationalist organization by Encyclopedia Britannica, and an extremist group with a violent agenda by the Anti-Defamation League.

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