Alex Klokus
Alex Klokus is an American entrepreneur and executive producer. He is the co-founder of the technology news website Futurism, and co-founded Gravity Blanket. In 2017, Klokus was inducted into the Forbes 30 Under 30 in its media category alongside his Futurism co-founder Jordan Lejuwaan. Klokus is currently a founder and managing partner of the SALT fund. Klokus is a moderator at the SALT iConnections conference and World Government Summit.
Education
Alex Klokus received his undergraduate degree from New York University's Stern School of Business, where he was inducted into Beta Gamma Sigma in its 2012-2013 induction year.Corporate ventures
''Futurism''
Alex Klokus and Jordan Lejuwaan founded the technology news website Futurism through a Knight Foundation grant in 2017. Klokus and Lejuwaan were inducted into the media category of Forbes 30 Under 30 in 2017.Futurism was acquired by Singularity University in 2019, before subsequently being sold to Recurrent Ventures in July 2021.
SALT
Alex Klokus is a founder and managing partner of the SALT fund.Other ventures
Alongside AJ Scaramucci, Klokus co-founded "The Pineapple Palace" co-working space and a startup called Pandos. Klokus co-founded the cryptocurrency investment fund Kyber Capital.Film production and conference moderation
Alex Klokus has served as executive producer on multiple films, one of which won a Best Feature award and debuted at the Tribeca Film Festival. He has hosted multiple SkyBridge Alternatives Conference panels and also served as a moderator for the 2019 World Government Summit.Film production
In 2018, Klokus executive produced the 2018 documentary film Trust Machine: The Story of Blockchain alongside Zach LeBeau, Arie Levy-Cohen, and Joseph Lubin. The film, which was written and directed by British American actor Alex Winter, covers the evolution of blockchain technology and its divisive nature while considering whether it is an economic bubble.The following year he served as executive producer for the documentary I Am Human, which debuted at the 2019 Tribeca Film Festival to wide acclaim, alongside American director Geoff Clark. I Am Human follows the medical cases of three patients undergoing complex experimental brain treatments with the goal of regaining lost abilities, including body movement and vision. Praised as "an optimistic, wholesome antidote to fearmongering", the film contemplates the existential question "What makes us human?" The film won Best Director at the Oslo Film Festival and Best Feature at the Other Worlds Film Festival in Austin, Texas.