Elon Musk brings bathroom sink into Twitter HQ changes Twitter bio
• “Entering Twitter HQ – let that sink in!” Musk tweeted Wednesday afternoon while literally bringing the sink into the building, smiling and laughing as he walked in.
• Musk also changed his Twitter bio description to read, “Chief Twit,” and his profile’s location now reads “Twitter HQ.”
The big picture: Twitter employees had expected Musk to visit the San Francisco office some time this week, ahead of the expected close of his deal on Friday, CNN reports.
• Twitter employees recently told Axios that Musk’s takeover bid has presented challenges within the office, impacting the company’s overall morale.
• “People are just exhausted,” said a Twitter employee. “It can be conflicting because as a shareholder you’re happy but as an employee, there’s a lot of uncertainty.”
Twitter did not immediately respond to Axios’ request for comment.
Go deeper: A timeline of the Musk-Twitter deal so far
Elon Musk strolled into Twitter headquarters Wednesday afternoon –and he brought a bathroom sink with him.
Driving the news: Musk visited Twitter ‘s HQ in San Francisco ahead of an expected meeting with employees , as he nears closing a deal to buy the social media company for a reported $44 billion, putting an end to a dramatic saga that’s been ongoing since March.What he said: Musk tweeted a video of himself walking into Twitter ‘s headquarters holding a bathroom sink .
• “Entering Twitter HQ – let that sink in!” Musk tweeted Wednesday afternoon while literally bringing the sink into the building, smiling and laughing as he walked in.
• Musk also changed his Twitter bio description to read, “Chief Twit,” and his profile’s location now reads ” Twitter HQ .”The big picture: Twitter employees had expected Musk to visit the San Francisco office some time this week, ahead of the expected close of his deal on Friday, CNN reports.
• Twitter employees recently told Axios that Musk ‘s takeover bid has presented challenges within the office, impacting the company’s overall morale.
• “People are just exhausted,” said a Twitter employee. “It can be conflicting because as a shareholder you’re happy but as an employee, there’s a lot of uncertainty.”