Mahbod Moghadam ((1982-11-17)November 17, 1982 – March 2024) was an American[1] internet
entrepreneur.[2] In 2009, he, Tom Lehman and Ilan Zechory co-founded Rap Genius (now
Genius), a website on which users can submit annotations and interpretations of song lyrics and other content. In 2015, he,
Sam Kazemian and
Theodor Forselius co-founded
Everipedia, a
wiki-based online encyclopedia, where he worked as the Chief Community Officer for several years. After leaving Everipedia, he became an entrepreneur-in-residence at the
venture capital firm Mucker Capital, then worked on HellaDoge, a cryptocurrency-based social network.
Early life and education
Moghadam was born to an
Iranian Jewish family on November 17, 1982,[3] and grew up in
Encino, California.[1] His family emigrated from Iran to the United States shortly before he was born.[1]
After graduating from law school in 2008, Moghadam became an attorney at the law firm of
Dewey & LeBoeuf.[1] In 2009, many law offices who were trying to endure the
Great Recession placed junior employees on "deferral", paying them a partial salary to take time off and encouraging them to intern at other companies. While on deferral from Dewey & LeBoeuf, Moghadam was hired as an intern at
Berkshire Hathaway in
Omaha, Nebraska. However, shortly before departing for his internship, the internship offer was rescinded and he was fired by Dewey & LeBeouf when a Berkshire Hathaway employee discovered a satirical memo he had written and published on his blog, addressed to "Ballstate Insurance Company" (a reference to the
Allstate insurance company, which was a client of Dewey & LeBoeuf).[4][5]
Genius
In August 2009, Moghadam, Tom Lehman, and Ilan Zechory founded
Rap Genius, a website that initially allowed users to annotate and interpret song lyrics.[6] Moghadam inspired Lehman to build the site when he explained
Cam'ron's lyric "80 holes in your shirt, there: your own Jamaican clothes" to Lehman.[7][8]
Moghadam was included in the 2013
Forbes 30 Under 30 list along with the other Rap Genius cofounders.[6] In 2014, Rap Genius rebranded to Genius and expanded to support annotations for news stories, poetry, and other documents.[9] Moghadam resigned from Genius that same year after receiving negative media attention when he added annotations to the manifesto written by the perpetrator of the
2014 Isla Vista killings, describing it as "beautifully written".[10][11][12] His comments were described by
CNN as "tasteless and creepy";[10] later, Genius co-founder Lehman said in a statement that the annotations "not only didn't attempt to enhance anyone's understanding of the text, but [also] went beyond that into gleeful insensitivity and misogyny."[13][14][15]
In 2021, Moghadam said he was angered by the "
fire sale" of Genius to MediaLab that year, a deal which reportedly made Lehman and Zechory multi-millionaires but did not pay anything to him.[16]
Other activities
After leaving Genius, Moghadam started an internet controversy by writing an article in Thought Catalog titled "How To Steal From
Whole Foods".[5]Thought Catalog later removed the article, along with the other articles Moghadam had published with the site.[1]
In 2015, Moghadam met
Sam Kazemian and joined him as co-founder and Chief Community Officer of
Everipedia, a blockchain- and
wiki-based online encyclopedia.[5][17][18][19] He left Everipedia in 2019.[20]
Moghadam began working at
venture capital firm Mucker Capital in 2019.[21] Moghadam later worked on HellaDoge, a social media platform based around the
Dogecoin cryptocurrency.[16]
Personal life
Moghadam was known for his “outlandish” personality and behavior.[22][23][13] In 2013 he received media attention for telling
Mark Zuckerberg in an interview and
Warren Buffett in a tweet to "suck [his] dick", and for his subsequent public apology to them during an onstage appearance at the
TechCrunch Disrupt New York conference.[24][25][26][27] He later attributed some of his behavior to a benign
brain tumor that was discovered and removed in 2013.[26]
In August 2018, Moghadam appeared as a guest on
Sacha Baron Cohen's television series Who is America?, in which Cohen adopted various disguises and personas to capture his guests behaving in embarrassing ways.[28] Believing he was doing a photoshoot with a "playboy photographer" named Gio, Moghadam is shown making the
Bloodsgang sign and imitating shooting a gun when Cohen asks him to "do something like a black guy." Later Cohen has him pose in front of a
green screen so he could later be photoshopped into scenes as though he is feeding starving children.[13][29][30]
In September 2018, Moghadam had an
epileptic seizure attributable to a second brain tumor, and had brain surgery later that month.[31]
In March 2024, Moghadam died at the age of 41 due to complications from his recurrent brain tumor.[32][33]
^Lindström, Emil (December 16, 2015).
"Emil möter: Theodor Forselius" [Emil meets: Theodor Forselius]. Emil Lindström (in Swedish). Archived from
the original on January 7, 2018. Retrieved November 15, 2018.