Joy mangano biography hsn clearance
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Joy Mangano
American inventor
Joy Mangano | |
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Born | (1956-02-01) February 1, 1956 (age 69) Brooklyn, New York |
Nationality | American |
Education | Pace University |
Occupation | Entrepreneur |
Years active | 1989–Present |
Spouse | Anthony Miranne (m. 1978; div. 1989) |
Children | 3 |
Website | joymangano.com |
Joy Mangano (mang-GAN-oh; born February 1, 1956)[1] is an American inventor and entrepreneur known for inventions such as the self-wringing Miracle Mop.[2][3] She was the president of Ingenious Designs, LLC, and appeared regularly on the U.S. television shopping channel HSN until her departure in late 2018.[4] Mangano is the founder and CEO of Clean Boss, a company that develops and sells cleaning products.[5]
Mangano released her autobiography, Inventing Joy, in 2017. The 2015 film Joy was loosely based on her life. Jennifer Lawrence
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Joy Mangano Leaving HSN
One of HSN‘s highest-profile and most inventive on-air celebrities, Joy Mangano, is leaving the home shopping spotlight.
“She has been an important part of the family for many years, and her creativity has influenced us all,” said Mike Fitzharris, president of HSN. He said Mangano is “departing to pursue other professional opportunities.”
Mangano, a self-made millionaire, is best known for inventing the Miracle Mop and launching it on QVC in 1992. She continued with QVC until HSN acquired Mangano’s company, Ingenious Designs Inc. in 1999. Mangano was the subject of the 2015 movie “Joy.” She was played by Jennifer Lawrence.
At HSN, which like QVC is part of the Qurate Retail Group, Mangano introduced a stream of innovative products, such as Huggable Hangers, My Little Steamer, Shades Readers, the Forever Fragrant line of cleaners and fresheners, the Ultimate Closet line of organizers, and she collaborate
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Joy Mangano, real-life inspiration of ‘Joy,’ has an empire based on extroversion, and mops
Reporting from St. Petersburg, FLA. — Just before midnight on a recent Saturday at the headquarters of HSN, the home-shopping pioneer Joy Mangano had a time-sensitive mission.
Mangano had just wound down an hour, in heels, of striding around a set, pitching a space-saving closet contraption she devised called Huggable Hangers. About 60 seconds later she was due to go live on another set several hundred yards away. Mangano is lithe, with long legs, but even they were no match for the labyrinthine corridors and stacks of blenders, skin-care products and ergonomic pillows that lined her path.
So an assistant handed Mangano a mini-box of coconut water and strapped her into a wheelchair. Then the assistant got behind the chair and, like an airline porter ansträngande to get a late passenger onto a red-eye at Heathrow, took off, a half-dozen HSN and Mangano employees running behind them.
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