Posts Tagged ‘Character’

Tweeting About Michael

Saturday, June 27th, 2009

In the mid-1980s, I directed a TV series entitled The Disney Family Album.  Michael Jackson was a fan of the series, as he was of all things Disney.  He was particularly interested in the episode about the Sherman Brothers, Richard and Robert, who had written the music for Mary Poppins and a lot of other Disney music, including hit pop songs for the superstar Mouseketeer, Annette Funicello.

One day, Michael’s assistant called my office and asked if my producing partner, Cardon Walker Jr., and I would come to lunch, and could we bring the Sherman Brothers with us?  The four of us spent a very interesting afternoon with Michael at his house in Encino. 

This week, on the evening Michael died, I commemorated the story of our visit that day by tweeting it.  In the interest of brevity, I wrote it as a two-person scene between Michael and me.

The tweets are all hashtagged as #michaeljackson.  Here they are in chronological sequence:

mid 1980s, Michael invited me to lunch at his house in Encino. He was a fan of a TV series I directed, Disney Family Album (more…)

Lot o’ Love

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

LynnLove1A

Nothing.  And that is the precisely the point.  When you want to change the game, one way to do it is change your environment.

The April 7 CBS Evening News with Katie Couric reported the story of Lynn Love, who for 22 years owned and operated a used car lot in Tampa.  When the economic downturn hit the car business, Love liquidated his inventory and, with the last of his savings, bought a catering truck and began serving meals in his empty used car lot.  He didn’t know anything about cooking, but he learned quickly (giving yourself problems to solve is a great way to learn) and the inexpensive, simple meals on his menu have been a hit with his customers, some of whom formerly bought cars from him. (more…)

SXSW #4 – THE GOON

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009

Goon1

Getting out of an elevator on Day Two, I run smack into The Goon, a.k.a. Mike McGinley.  We touch bald heads as greeting, like alien frat brothers.  The Goon is co-founder of a new app called CitizeNet, which, without going into details, sits atop a set of algorithms that replace flat, right-rail web page advertising with meaningful center-page content.  That evening, he and I meet for drinks in the bar at the Driskill Hotel.  The Goon, a smiling, twinkly-eyed gentleman, got his nickname because for many years, he was the most-feared and respected production accountant in the live music business.  When literally several million in cash was on the table after big stadium concerts and had to be divvied up so promoters got their cut and everyone involved got out alive, literally and figuratively, The Goon was the go-to dude.  You did not cross the The Goon.  It’s still a good idea to align with him.  Don’t bet against CitizeNet.

GameChangers of the Month – February 2009

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

For the first time, we have two winners of the coveted Gamey in the same month.  They are Ty’Sheoma Bethea, an eighth-grader from South Carolina and Leonard Abess, a banker from Florida, both of whom were recognized by President Obama in his state of the nation address last month.

GCMonthFeb09

Bethea wrote a letter.  It was what she could do and she did it.  In that letter, she maintained of she and her classmates, “We are not quitters!”  And that letter changed the game.

Abess had $60,000,000 in the bank, proceeds from the sale of his company.  He gave it away to 471 employees and former employees who’d supported him over the years.  That gift changed the game, too.

She gave a small gift that became something big.  With that one letter, she opened a thousand doors that would have not been open to her otherwise.

He gave a big gift that got bigger.  The number ‘60,000,000′ didn’t change, but the potential for that ‘60,000,000′ to make things happen in the world increased overnight by a factor of 471.

We honor Ty’Sheoma and Leonard because they bookend three important elements of gamechanging.

Big gifts and small gifts are equally important to our scenes.   That’s the first piece of what these gamechangers teach us.  All gifts have the potential to inspire profound scenes.

Here is the second piece:   Action flows from character.  Beathea and Abess didn’t just wake up one day and shazaam!—in a puff of genie smoke, suddenly turn into the people with game.

She is a young woman who wants to learn, and doesn’t want to be held back from it.  She is a writer of letters, and a righter of injustice.  She is not a quitter.

He is a friend who values friendships that go all the way back to grammar school, a manager with employee relationships that extend beyond current staff, a player who recognizes that he owes much of his success to others on his team.  He is not greedy.

They took actions that were consistent with their characters.

And here’s the third piece:   We can never know for sure how the game will change.  But if we bring what we can to our scenes…if we are consistent in character and action…we can trust that, as Ty’Sheoma Bethea and Leonard Abess showed us, the game will change, as  unforeseen opportunities bloom into new and fruitful realities.

Obama the Improviser

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

(This is a version of a piece I wrote for the Huffington Post early in 2008.  The context is even more appropriate today than it was then.)

ObamaImproviser1Barack Obama is an improviser.  His campaign, his platform, his history, draws on a spirit kindled in the same Chicago South Side neighborhoods where modern improv was born in the 1930s.

How does Barack Obama improvise?

He says “Yes and…” Like any good improviser, President Obama understands that agreement enables a scene to progress, and new, shared realities to emerge from it.  “I know that the hardening of lines, the embrace of fundamentalism and tribe, dooms us all,” he writes in the preface to Dreams From My Father.   As an improviser, Obama understands that erasing the lines that divide us–enabling “Your situation” and “My situation” to  become “Our situation”  is what makes any kind of progress possible. (more…)

Trust the Game Before You Trust the Player

Monday, December 29th, 2008

Madoff1Skillful players can play many roles. This is usually a good thing. It lets one relate to one’s audience and fellow players in ways that result in communication, learning and transformation–the triple-score for brands operating in the Networked World.

When a monster like Bernie Madoff gets away with such a long-running scam as the $50 billion-plus Ponzi Scheme he got busted for last month, it’s because he has been able to use his improvisational talent to obfuscate instead of communicate and indoctrinate instead of educate. Ultimately, he transforms wealth into information (i.e. news) instead of the other way around.

Madoff played all his ‘public facing’ roles — Philanthropist, Country Clubber, Yachtsman, Fisherman, Palm Beacher, Hamptonian, Bon Vivant, Patriarch, Temple Elder, Wall Street Guru–so well that it never occurred to his victims he could be fronting a crooked game, or that he had the role of Con Artist in his repertoire. Reportedly his office was adorned with a collection of bulls, the symbol of prosperity and growth on Wall Street. He cloaked himself in the wardrobes and placed himself on stages that were trusted, and so the people who got swindled made assumptions about the integrity of the game he was playing. They trusted good old Uncle Bernie without really knowing anything about what he was doing with their money. Today those victims are saying the same thing about Madoff that they say after seeing Sean Penn play Harvey Milk: “I totally believed him!” Of course you did! That’s what he was counting on!

It’s interesting that those who sniffed out and avoided the Madoff scam did so not by basing their judgment on the integrity of his character–skilled players perform every character with 100% integrity–but on the integrity of the game he was playing.

James Hedges, founder of JLH Securities, says he refused to invest billions with Madoff back in 1997 when during a two hour meeting “We could barely get past page one (of a 40-page due diligence questionnaire) with Madoff before alarm bells were going off. On the strategy itself, when I asked him to explain his investing strategy, it didn’t line up.”

In a recent piece for Portfolio.com, journalist Erin Arvedlund describes how she suspected in an article she wrote for Barrons back in 2001 that something was not kosher in Madoff’s story: “I went with the facts: Nobody, but nobody, on Wall Street traded options the way Madoff did and made the money that he made. Years later, a hedge fund manager whom I had known since the late 1990s said simply: ‘Nobody traded options that successfully. That should have been a big red flag.’”

The lessons of the Madoff Scandal are crystal clear:

Honest players play honest games.

It is easier to spot a crooked game than a crooked player.

Trust the game before you trust the player.

The T. H. Culhane Game

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

John Culhane, a Rockford, Illinois-born journalist, author, and the model for the character of Mr. Snoops in the Disney animated film, The Rescuers, met his wife, Hind Rassam, a native of Baghdad, Iraq, when he reviewed her in a student performance of Antigone. John and Hind fell in love and had two sons, T. H. and Michael.

CulhaneBros1

It is no surprise that the Culhane boys are born performers, a couple of very animated characters.

CulhaneDance

Once, as part of a story John did for the New York Times Magazine, he and the boys enrolled at Ringling Bros. Clown College in Sarasota, Florida, and T. H. and Michael became the youngest clowns ever to perform with Ringling Bros. Barnum & Bailey big show. (more…)

GameChanger of the Month – September 2008

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

Kinnear1I have not seen the film Flash of Genius, which opens tomorrow. I don’t have to see it to know that Greg Kinnear deserves a huge amount of respect for the professional path he has hacked through the Hollywood jungle. He could not have done it if he were not a GameChanger.

First of all, the guy is from Indiana, and anyone who makes it from Indiana to movie stardom has got to have a lot of game. James Dean. I rest my case.

Second, Kinnear was pegged by Hollywood early in his career as a talk show host and TV guy. Making any kind of career transition once the media companies have invested in your brand is next to impossible. There’s tremendous resistance, because a) the initial investment in your brand will have been wasted; b) like any brand, you have to be re-positioned in the marketplace, which will cost marketers even more money; and most importantly, c) you are making money, and so you’ll be questioned endlessly–especially by people on your own team–about the business wisdom of what you’re doing. (more…)

Make Good News

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

Paulson1

I read the news today, oh boy.  About a lucky man who made the grade.

When you subject yourself as I do to the whitewater of panic gushing out of every manhole in the New York financial community and live as I do in the Los Angeles media market and follow as I do the dismaying behaviors of the politicians in Washington as they try to cover their friends’ asses so those friends don’t lose the Siasconcset house, the boat and the jet (while three families on a street like the one a friend of mine lives on in Santa Monica are about to get the homes they actually live in foreclosed)  it’s easy to get swallowed up by it all and just let yourself drown in the bad news. (more…)

Love and the Bel-Tone Episode

Thursday, June 12th, 2008

Much of what I learned about improvisation in business came from my father, “Cowboy Bob” a farmer, entrepreneur and incorrigible dreamer from Ireland, Indiana by way of Louisville, Kentucky.

CB2

As my friend, the screenwriter Christopher Lofton, describes my early relationship with Cowboy Bob: “He was a teacher who didn’t know what he was teaching and you were a student who didn’t know what you were learning.” But teach and learn we did, and today I gladly share what I learned with my own sons, and with anyone else who’s interested. All you have to do is ask. (more…)