Bluth Company

The Bluth Company, founded by George Bluth Sr., is a fictional company in the television series Arrested Development. As of the end of the series, the company was labeled as a Risky stock by Jim Cramer of Mad Money.
The Bluth Company is a real estate development firm. The chief executive officer was George Sr. At his retirement party, he announced that his wife, Lucille Bluth, would be the new CEO of the company, surprising his son Michael Bluth, who had expected to take his father's place as head of the company. Just after this announcement, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission boarded the boat upon which the party was being held and arrested George for defrauding customers and spending the company's money on "personal expenses." (His family, with the exception of Michael, was also using the company's money for personal expenses). Lucille places her favored son in charge of managing the company, but he soon shows himself to be completely incompetent, and the family asks the departing Michael to return and act as CEO. Most of the action in the series comes from Michael's futile attempts to try to get the company back on track, while the family continues to take money from it, and hide their activities.
At the end of the first season, it is revealed that the company is suspected of illegally building homes in Iraq for Saddam Hussein. A mysterious box of evidence emerges, labeled "H. Maddas" ("Saddam H." backwards). George Sr. is to be charged with "light treason".
The Bluth company has also owned and run a frozen banana stand started by George Sr. in 1963 on the Newport Beach boardwalk on Balboa Island. The stand was a popular meeting place for the buying and selling of marijuana in the 1970s. As the stand itself was built to resemble a large yellow banana, it was commonly known as "the big yellow joint", and became the topic of a hit song by the same name (which was a parody of Arlo Guthrie's "Alice's Restaurant"). George Sr. had initially lined the walls of the banana stand with money. As the Bluth Company was struggling, George Sr. repeatedly assured to Michael, "there's always money in the banana stand." Weary of his father's constant involvement in the business, Michael burned the stand down in a moment of protest, not realizing that the statement was meant to be taken literally; there were $250,000 contained in the walls of the banana stand. Throughout the series, the banana stand gets destroyed and rebuilt several times.
During the series, Jim Cramer of the hit CNBC show Mad Money appeared to discuss the recovery of the Bluth Company's stock. He appeared to first announce that he had upgraded Bluth Company stock to a "Don't Buy" from a "Triple Sell", and then to say that the stock was not a "Don't Buy" anymore, but a "Risky". Each upgrade signified a step in the right direction for Michael as he rebuilt the company's image, but also led to his family trying to sell their shares for immediate monetary gain. The upgrades were also shown to be brief moments of celebration for Michael and George Michael, as well as the firm's employees. During the final episode, when Cramer upgraded the stock to "Risky", the employees of the Bluth Company put up signs that read "Risky Business" in the office.
 
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