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There's No Business Like the Movie Business

Is there a better business book than Indecent Exposure: A True Story of Hollywood and Wall Street? I don’t think so. Before such classics as Barbarians at the Gate or Den of Thieves demonstrated that well-made business narratives could be as gripping as any ambitious work of non-fiction, Wall Street Journal reporter David McClintick produced the best potboiler you’d care to find. His 1982 book explores how the criminal behavior of motion picture mogul David Begelman (at the time the President of Columbia Pictures), first discovered as a $10,000 embezzlement made possible by forging actor Cliff Robertson’s signature, exposed the entirely corrupt culture of the broader company. Extraordinarily well-researched and written, the book sheds fascinating insight into how the ultimate industry town (Los Angeles) defers to its celluloid power. Earlier this year HarperBusiness reissued this title under its Essentials line--adding a new afterword. I can’t recommend it highly enough. It would be beach reading if only the book could make it to the beach.

In the vein of other great movie biz books, two other enthusiastic touts come to mind. Easy Riders, Raging Bulls: How the Sex Drugs and Rock n Roll Generation Saved Hollywood by Peter Biskind is another compulsively readable gem about the interplay of culture and commerce in la-la land. Yet while McClintick focuses his story on the culture of the business of the movie business, Biskind gracefully limns the link between the studio system and the sometime art it produced in the seventies. Finally, screenwriter and novelist William Goldman’s book Adventures in the Screen Trade: A Personal View of Hollywood and Screenwriting is one more rollicking read on the inner workings of Hollywood—not to mention the source of my favorite business aphorism ever. Describing the rules by which executives can predict a hit with certainty, Goldman lays down the law that applies equally to stock pickers, venture capitalists, and any pie-eyed entrepreneur who promises the next big thing. His maxim: NOBODY KNOWS ANYTHING. It’s a great lesson. "Not one person in the entire motion picture field knows for a certainty what’s going to work. Every time out, it’s a guess—and if you’re lucky, an educated one."

Posted by tom at 03:05 PM | Comments (1)

Take Kids To Work?

Tomorrow is Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day, a recent tradition I’m decidedly ambivalent about. I respect the spirit of the day, which is to provide healthy role models for our children and show them possible opportunities; but I also feel that the day solves a problem that has already evolved into a more complex one. Today I did a Marketplace commentary about this. Also, here is a longer piece I’ve written on the topic.

Last year Take Your Daughter To Work Day caught me by surprise. While driving my daughters to school, I pulled up to the Dunkin Donuts drive-thru and was handed a bag of munchkins by Lindsay, a five-year-old whose Mom had outfitted her with a name tag, headset, and Dunkin Donuts cap.

Oh, I realized. Either they’re having real troubles finding good help, or, It’s Take Your Daughter to Work Day.

I observed the day by taking my two daughters to work—other people’s work, that is. I took them to the vet. And to the checkout clerks at the supermarket. And then to see how proficiently the Staples people sell loose-leaf binders and toner.

As a freelancer working out of the house, every day is take your daughter to work day for me. Not to mention that every day is take your work to your daughter day as well. Some people look at my life and suggest that I should get an office out of the house. Frankly, I think that a better idea would be for my family to spend more time out of the house. Whatever.

This year the organizers of the event have changed the day to include sons. This feels to me like the wrong response. My work life makes the notion of Take Your Daughter to Work day feel quaint, an anachronistic solution to problems that have evolved beyond the proposed cure. In theory, I’m in favor of a day that helps bridge the work-family chasm. In practice, however, it seems to me that the rules of the game have shifted much faster than the terms of the argument—much like Amazon.com’s explosive rise making moot the debate about whether superstores are killing independent booksellers.

The "holiday" rests on the premise that there is a huge discrepancy between work and family; a gulf between the two worlds that is bridged for a day when you introduce your child, like a tourist in a foreign land, to the place that they have heard so much about. Yet for the many of us who fly below the radar of the 1950’s split between work and family, this contrived day feels like overkill. We’re struggling with dilemmas that are gray-er and more complex than this day suggests.

Take, for the example, the continued use of the phrase "Mr. Mom," a joking form of shorthand that folks have often called me when they realize that I do laundry and dishes, pick kids up from school, and even end up at the mall some mornings at 11 am. This seeming oxymoron runs on the premise that when a man takes on a fair share of the parenting duties, he becomes…a mom. For anything else is uncomfortable and kinda funny—a joke solid enough to sustain one crappy film (and source, I believe, of the phrase,) and one I hear as often from—if not more than—women as men.

Today I feel that we’ve undergone one more social strategic inflection point around parenting and gender roles than people like to acknowledge—and that Take Your Daughters To Work has already become dated, a 90’s solution to a 70’s crisis. The intention—of showing young girls positive role models in the world of work—is good, but, in some ways, loves "not wisely but too well."

In this world of blended workfamily, the word Blackberry is no longer the punch line to a beautiful Robert Hass poem, let alone a yogurt flavor for your child; rather it’s a reminder of our constant conduit to work work work. Why should we take another day to remind our children of that continually encroaching terrain? For most of us, the problem is not that our children don’t know what we do for work, but that they know far too well.

Here’s my counter-offer. Next year, on this day in April let’s celebrate something new: The Least Present Parent Leaves Work Behind Day. Whichever of the parents, for whatever reason, is more frequently (constantly) absent from the family because of work, must devote a day of presence to their children. Not a minute, or hour, but a day, for as any fulltime parent knows, quality time only happens as a function of quantity time. Scheduling quality time with young children into a set hour is like planning for perfect weather in a week. Sure, this suggestion might be a bit a of stretch. But hey, for some people it just might become a habit.

Posted by tom at 08:47 PM | Comments (1)

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