Facebook graffiti artist David Choe, from homeless to millions
- By Chenda Ngak
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Choe was hired by then Facebook president Sean Parker to paint a  mural at Facebook's first office in Palo Alto in 2005. When the mural  was finished, Parker gave Choe the option of taking cash or stock  options. At the time, Facebook was only a year old and only open to  college and high school students. There was no "like" button, no revenue  from advertising and no hype of a $5 billion dollar IPO.
Instead  of taking cash, Choe took a chance and opted for the stock options. If  you're not familiar with the Silicon Valley culture, gambling on a dot  com has either failed miserably or made millionaires out of  receptionists.
According to a Facebook employee,  Choe was added on as an "adviser" and received 0.1 to 0.25 percent of  the company. After you do the math, Choe's share could be worth $200  million. That's a mind-blowing figure, if you also consider that Choe  has been homeless since painting that fateful mural. 
In the aftermath of Facebook's filing and the value of his share of the social network, 
Choe took to his blog to express his disbelief. 
"Have  you had the dream where you ARE this guy?!? And then some kind of happy  accident happens, and as you're in the middle of this glorious car  crash, you stop to realize, that there is actually no such thing as an  accident, and no chance encounters, and that everything has a direct  purpose?" 
Choe embodies a true tale of an artist's  transformation from rags-to-riches in the most dramatic fashion. If  Wednesday was a historic day for Facebook, it was also a momentous  occasion for the American dream.