Asian media In 1993, Brack was one of the first employees at
Turner Broadcasting System's
Hong Kong location. He also managed Time Inc.'s
Asiaweek and became the company's senior vice president in Asia. Specifically, Brack cited an existing economic slowdown in Asia paired with the aftermath of the
September 11 attacks. Shortly afterward, he was promoted to senior vice president of ad sales at
Time and
Fortune in Asia. Brack also later served as an executive at Time Warner where he helped launch
Cartoon Network in Asia.
Media consolidation in Asia In 2003, Brack co-founded and became the CEO of Redgate Media Holdings, a consolidated media company based in
China. He stated that Redgate "was principally an investment company" and "its role following any acquisition would therefore be primarily strategic in nature" with regard to the media market in Asia. As such, he closed deals on and acquired numerous titles, publications, and local media companies with the goal of establishing a "network of partner companies to provide seamless deals for advertisers." It merged with Inno-Tech Holdings in 2013. In 2004, Brack co-founded and became the CEO of One Media Holdings, a
Hong Kong-based magazine publisher that operated in Hong Kong, mainland
China, and
Taiwan. It served as the "magazine arm" of Ming Pao Enterprise Group. There, Brack oversaw the release of publications such as Chinese editions of
Popular Science,
Top Gear,
T3, and others publications—in Hong Kong specifically, One Media Holdings published titles like
Ming Pao Weekly,
City Children Weekly, and
Hi Tech Weekly. In 2008,
Media Chinese International became the major shareholder of One Media Holdings. Both Redgate Media Holdings and One Media Holdings went public on the
Hong Kong Stock Exchange. Brack is also one of six founding and managing partners at Hypothesis Ventures, a firm investing in early-stage
startup companies in
Opportunity Zones. == Personal life ==