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EARLY LIFE AND CAREER Arnold Greenberg was born in the United States to Russian immigrant parents. His father, Maurice Greenberg , started Coleco . Arnold Greenberg entered Law and practiced until 1966. He then joined Coleco, where he quickly came to dominate the company as its driving force and chief of marketing while his brother, Leonard Greenberg , provided engineering and manufacturing know-how.De Maria and Wilson 32. At this time, Coleco's main business was plastic Above-ground Swimming Pool s. Greenberg quickly acquired Eagle Toys, a maker of Tabletop sports games, to diversify the company's offerings. GREENBERG AS CEO Greenberg eventually became CEO of Coleco. In 1975, he decided to move Coleco into the Video Game business. The company developed the '' Telstar '' Video Game Console , a home tennis game. This sold well, leading Coleco to the head of the market.Kent 96. Greenberg aggressively developed new games and hired talent from rival companies, keeping Coleco competitive through the 1970s. Near the end of the decade, Greenberg decided to develop a home console that could play a variety of Arcade -quality games. In 1981, Coleco began producing tabletop versions of arcade titles. The home ColecoVision console was released the following year. Greenberg also moved into Third-party game development for systems from rivals Atari and Intellivision . His biggest coup was winning the license to '' Donkey Kong '' from Nintendo , although this eventually got him embroiled in a Court Case . LATER CAREER AT COLECO After the Video Game Crash Of 1982 , Greenberg decided to move into Home Computing . He put all hope in the Adam Computer .Kent 253. Greenberg rushed the product through development in order to ship in 1983. As a result, many of the units were defective and had to be returned. Coleco shares fell 22 points. Greenberg swore to rectify the situation, but the damage had already been done.Kent 254. Meanwhile, in 1983, Greenberg had obtained the license to produce Xavier Roberts 's Little People dolls, which Coleco renamed Cabbage Patch Kids . The company produced 2.5 million dolls that year, not anticipating the huge rush for the toys that holiday season. The Cabbage Patch fad lasted until 1985 but was unable to rescue the ailing toymaker. Greenberg tried to salvage his company by purchasing the rights to '' Trivial Pursuit '', but it was too late. Coleco declared Bankruptcy in 1988. Those who worked with Greenberg have described him as nervous, driven, and short in both stature and temper. One associate described him as a "buttoned-down lawyer who was very creative, very forceful, and willing to take great chances."Quoted in Kent 95. His associate Michael Katz described him as "incredibly bright and articulate, just a wonderful, spontaneous speaker. I think was a very good leader . . . . dynamic and very tough and demanding."Quoted in Kent 204. NOTES REFERENCES
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