Tony Hsieh spent most of his last nine months in Park City, Utah, where he flew in new contacts and created a community amidst the pandemic.COVID-19 vaccines are expected to be approved by US regulators in the coming days. And as Shelby Livingston and Allana Akhtar reported, health systems and hospitals across the country are now gearing up to give the shots to their own workers.
'This is game time': Hospitals across the country are gearing up to give the first COVID-19 shots to millions of healthcare workersA fire truck and an ambulance whirred into one of Park City's tonier enclaves the Tuesday evening after Labor Day, summoned to action by an alarming report. It's not clear if something had gone wrong with the balloon, or what it was doing at the residential property on a Tuesday night — the report only notes that no one required medical attention and that emergency responders left after 45 minutes.
For a period of several months during the summer of 2020, Hsieh's property was the site of extravagant parties that drew a crowd of techies, free-spirits, hangers-ons, and locals — and often complaints from neighbors.Tony Hsieh sold Zappos for $1.2 billion in his 30s. He was dead by 46. Inside his final Park City months, where he hoped to deliver more happiness as he spiraled.U.S.