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Newman splits, saying his job is done, and Jerry only paid him for three contacts worth of work. A visibly drunk Kramer joins Jerry and Elaine at Monk's. The whole group is dejected. Kramer drinks half of his coffee and then dumps the rest of the flask into the remaining coffee. After a few minutes of staring into his coffee, Jerry realizes that nobody ever bothered to check George's apartment. The gang leaves Monk's and goes to George's apartment as fast as they can. When they knock on the door, George answers covered in Cheeto dust and dressed like Winnie the Pooh (T-shirt, no pants). Jerry says they thought George was given the cement shoes and disposed of in the Hudson. George tells the gang that he dropped his phone in the river while taking a boat ride, and just decided to use the opportunity to take some time off from everything. He's just been watching TV and eating pizza. Jerry wonders aloud why they didn't think to check with Ray's Pizza, George tells them that should have been the first place they looked, because he's talked to them every day.
He promptly leaves. Kramer's next visit is to Newman. As a mailman, Newman apparently knows a lot about the seedy underbelly of New York's organized crime. Newman's contacts who may be able to point them in the right direction, for a price. Kramer has to convince Jerry to pony up some cash, then Newman and Kramer go to investigate. They proceed on to Newman's first contact, a man named Salvatore. According to Newman, Salvatore deals with a lot of loan sharks and may know something if George got in trouble for gambling. Salvatore has never heard of George, but says his name sounds like "can't stand ya, " and makes it clear he feels that way about Newman. Kramer takes a big swig from his flask, and tells Salvatore that while George may not be the most pleasant guy to be around, he's still worth saving. Humiliated, Newman leaves and takes Kramer with him. Jerry and Elaine go to George's office, where nobody has heard anything. Nobody even noticed he was gone. They move on to Newman's second contact, a woman named Patricia, a criminal lawyer who often defends those of ill repute, and may not exactly be the best of people herself.
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Public market investors have typically expected companies to become profitable within 18 months or so of an IPO. This timeline has been loosened as fast-growing startups make their public debuts with S-1s that warn: "We expect our operating expenses to increase significantly in the foreseeable future, and we may not achieve profitability. " Woodworth said she doesn't feel added pressure for Peloton to become profitable faster now that it's a public company. Several months ago, she said, an investor asked her the following question: "What will change when you're public? " "And I said, 'Nothing. ' My job is to help this company build shareholder value, " Woodworth said. "It doesn't change when you're public. I've seen how market sentiment can shift on you, and the idea of changing your entire strategy based on a market shift is not something we want to do. " More must-read stories from Fortune: — Fortune Most Powerful Women Summit 2019 livestream —After WeWork, private investors have a message for startups: lose money "thoughtfully" — Leaders embrace innovation by disrupting company culture —Old Navy is about to sail away from Gap Inc. —and into some choppy waters —These women are at the forefront of Asheville's explosive fermentation industry__ Keep up with the world's most powerful women with Fortune's Broadsheet newsletter.