Tag Archives: James Cameron

4 Financial Futuristic Nuggets: The Economics of The Jetsons

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That’s what keeps me going: dreaming, inventing, then hoping and dreaming some more in order to keep dreaming. – Joseph Barbera

This is the truth: I’d rather fail at this, whatever failure is, than waste my life doing something elses, and feeling empty. – William Hanna

If you grew up in the 1960’s through the 1990’s, then you are sure to remember the Hanna-Barbera produced cartoon series The Jetsons. The Jetsons is an American animated sitcom, which originally aired in primetime from September 23, 1962, to March 17, 1963, then later in syndication, with new episodes in 1985 to 1987 as part of The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera block. It was Hanna-Barbera’s Space Age counterpart to The Flintstones, another show they also produced.

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In contrast to The Flintstones comical version “stone age” world, The Jetsons lived in a comical version of a futuristic world that was powered by gadgets, robots, and machinery.

nycscout/Flickr

The Jetson ran in reruns for decades on ABC starting in the 1963-64 season, and aired on Saturday mornings.

See my post What I loved about Saturday morning cartoons

The Jetsons stands as one of the single most important piece of 20th century futurism. The 24-episode first season has come to define the future of Americas present.

The Jetsons are a nuclear family in the “space age” future residing outer space in a place called Orbit City. The city’s architecture is Google style, and all homes and businesses are raised high above the ground on adjustable columns. The year is 2062. Although, the show always references it’s the 21st century. The family consists of a husband, wife, two kids and a dog.

Let’s meet the family.

“Meet George Jetson…”

George Jetson lives with his family in the Skypad Apartments: Jane his wife, daughter Judy, and his boy Elroy. He works at Spacely’s Space Sprockets where he has a (relatively stable job) *cough* *cough* sideways glance and air quotes insert here please.  

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Meet Jane his wife…

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His wife Jane is a homemaker, a mother of two children, enjoys the latest fashion, has a robot named Rosie that actually does most of the housework, and is obsessed with new gadgetry.

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Housekeeping is seen to by a robot maid, Rosie, which handles chores not otherwise rendered trivial by the home’s numerous push-button Space Age-envisioned conveniences. A show before it’s time. 😉

Robot Jar Opener

Her favorite department store is the Mooning Dales.  She enjoys charity work as she is a member of the Galaxy Women Historical Society and is an avid art fan of Leonardo de Venus and Picasso Pia.

I love how they take things and make them their own version on this show. However, somethings need no modifications or improvements. For instance, in my opinion, I say pay cash for all appliances like they did before the invention of credit cards in the 1950’s.

However, some things do. A great response that a movie star once gave when asked about changing silent films to “talkies” that is films with words, was the following:

“Talking pictures are like lip rouge on the Venus de Milo.” – Mary Pickford (The Queen of the Movies)

Variant: Adding sound to movies would be like putting lipstick on the Venus de Milo.

And meet their kids…

Daughter Judy: their teenage daughter Judy attends Orbit High School. She enjoys buying clothes, hanging out with boys, listening to music, having fun, and talking to her digital diary she calls DiDi. (That ain’t nothing but FaceTime 😉

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Some may even call it a Vlog or Vlogging, which is similar to a Blog and Blogging.

His boy Elroy: their son Elroy attends Little Dipper School. He is wicked smart. As sharp as they come, and just whip smart. He is a mild-mannered child that enjoys all space science such as astrophysics, star geometry, and space history. His best friend is his dog; the family pet dog named Astro.

Now, let’s talk about the future. Financially speaking of course.

Meet George Jetson . . . His boy Elroy . . . daughter Judy . . . . Jane his wife. I just love that song.

Fun Fact: The theme song to The Jetsons was a pop hit in 1986 on the Billboard charts.

MAKE THAT MONEY: FROM THE SALT MINES TO SPACE OFFICES

1. Earn a living

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George Jetson works for Mr. Spacely and he owns Spacely’s Space Sprockets. R.U.D.I.: is George’s work computer and one of his best friends. His name is an acronym for Referential Universal Differential Indexer and he has a human personality.

Based on which version you have heard, George works either one-hour-a-day, two-day-a-week or three-hour-a-day, three-day-a-week job. Either way that’s a workweek of no more than 3-9 hours. Pretty sweet!

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A common theme on the show was George being fired.

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That is all too common in today’s time too.

The retail apocalypse, such as the recent closure of Payless shoe stores, has cost thousands of American jobs. Toys R’ Us resulted in about the loss of 30,000 jobs alone.

Here is some dialogue from the show.

Episode Unilab (Nov 25, 1962)

George Jetson: It’ll be easy. I’ll just tell Mr. Spacely I’m very sorry and that I’ll never call him names again.

[Nearly has a head-on collision with another car]

George Jetson: Why you big strata-jerk. It’s vacuum-heads like you who keep fuselage and fender shops in business. Come on out and face the music.

Mr. Spacely: [Emerges from the other car] ‘Morning, Jetson. Nice day isn’t it?

George Jetson: M-M-M-Mr. Spacely, I presume?

Mr. Spacely: That’s correct. I hope you’re wearing your watch, Jetson, because you have exactly 5 MINUTES TO CLEAN OUT YOUR DESK!

Mr. Spacley: JETSON. YOU’RE FIRED.

Fun Fact: Forbes made a list in 2007 and figured out what 25 fictional companies would be worth in today’s market. Spacely Space Sprockets, where George Jetson worked, ranked number 25 on their list. Listing its worth as $1.3 billion. In the article it said, “[CEO] Cosmo Spacely’s coddled employees said to only work three-hour-a-day, three-day-a-week jobs, but workers must suffer his notoriously volatile temper and endure incessant termination threats.”

In the illustrious words of Charlie Brown, “Good Grief.”

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See my post on Life Lessons from Race for your life Charlie Brown

Although, on the show its comedy fodder, in the real world this is no laughing matter. Due to the lack of financial teaching and literacy in public school (where like 90% of preK-12 students go), many people are left unprepared financially for setbacks. You must plan ahead.

I read this information on public versus private school enrollment predictions in the Huffington Post. According to the U.S. Department of Education, most preK-12 students, about 91 percent, go to public school.  

I, personally, plan 2-3 years ahead or more if I can. I started by paying off debt, then rerouting that money to savings and investments. I have a minimum of 6 months’ emergency fund at all times, $100,000 invested in 1 out of 5 index funds, own a home that was way less than $1 million to buy, and am striving to have a 12-24-month emergency fund for those just in case moments.

THE GOLDEN AGE OF AMERICAN FUTURISM IN TECHNOLOGY

2. Automation is on the rise

The Jetsons it had everything our hearts could desire: jetpacks, video chats, e-books and electronic newspapers, flying cars, convertible objects, computerized watches (Apple Watch anyone?), robot maids, air chamber elevators, and moving sidewalks. They even predicted tanning beds! Tanning beds didn’t come into the U.S. until the 1970’s. This show first aired in 1962!

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The Jetsons showed a technologically advanced culture where the largest concern of the middle class was getting “push-button finger.” And yes, The Jetsons were middle class! And still living paycheck to paycheck in the techno-savvy utopian future.

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Grinding it out in the rat race.

” I told them 1,000 years from now or a million years, the problem is always going to be parking.” – Joseph Barbera

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Think people don’t think much of this show or write it off as merely a cartoon. Think again.

James Cameron was once asked about interactivity for future movies. He concedes it is far off and replies: “You’re talking ‘Jetsons’ here.”

Your girl, Greenbacks Magnet, even recently did a shout out to The Jetsons in a tweet.

See my tweet

MILLIONAIRE PETS

3.  Income Inequality

On the 15th episode of The Jetsons, which originally aired on January 6, 1963 and was titled “Millionaire Astro.”

This episode shows how their dog Astro came from money. Elroy found Astro on the street. His original owner wants him back. A custody battle over Astro ensues where the original owner wins and he is returned to the estate. Given a life of incredible wealth and boredom (All the steaks he can eat, all the bones he can gnaw on), Astro is depressed and drowned in wealth and extreme luxury.

Meanwhile, George teeters on the edge of middle and working class, while it seems that everyone is living in the lap of luxury, but tangible quality of life improvements have not funneled down to those at the bottom of the economic pyramid.

You may remember they did similar stuff like this at Walt Disney studios with the cartoon Ducktales.

See my post Money Lessons I Learned from Scrooge McDuck

Case in point, The Occupy Wall St. movement, Americans being reported to not have $400 to cover an emergency, little to no retirement savings, and living off meager Social Security and minimum wages.

 If my memory serves correct, didn’t Real Estate Mogul Leona Helmsley leave her dog like $7 million? In addition, I recently heard rumblings that the recently deceased Karl Lagerfeld (House of Chanel) and worth over $100 million, may have left $2 million to his dog? Interesting and disturbing.  

ENTERTAINERS ARE ALL THE RAGE OR A SCREAM

4. Rock star money

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One of the funniest things I ever saw on The Jetsons had to be Judy’s obsession with celebrity. And one in particular: Jet Screamer.

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He is the quintessential rock god. The sun, moon, and the stars revolve around him. People go wild when he comes in a room (as he always makes a grand entrance). You get to see first-hand that he is living a very different life than the average-joe.

In today’s time, that is still very relevant. I have nothing against people with talent or those that create something out of nothing.  It’s like Shakespeare says, “I am a true laborer. I earn that I eat, get that I wear, owe no man hate, envy no man’s happiness, glad of other men’s good.”

 However, after hearing so many stories of celebrities going broke, it makes me wonder if he really is making all the dough we think he is as a rock star. For all we know, Jet Screamer may be making $12,000 on 2.5 million downloads of music from Apple iTunes as I read something like that in an article online. Maybe, he is making $0 after all the money he owes to mangers, lawyers, stylists, and publicists. Who really knows?

See my post How Beyoncé and Jay-Z became a $1 billion couple

Regardless, this show was fun, vibrant, and cool to watch. It still is.

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How Arnold Schwarzenegger Totally Recalls making $20 million-dollar paychecks

Strength does not come from winning. Your struggles develop your strengths. When you go through hardships and decide not to surrender, that is strength. – Arnold Schwarzenegger

Arnold Schwarzenegger is one of the biggest movies stars in the world. His iconic roles in The Terminator, Predator, Total Recall, and True Lies are just some of his hit Hollywood blockbuster movies. During the 80’s and 90’s he raked in big bucks at the box office and cashed in big paychecks at the bank as a result.

In my quest to study the self-made, I decided to read up on the “Governator” himself, Arnold Schwarzenegger.

I actually mentioned Arnold in a couple posts I wrote, Forget casinos, bet on yourself and Money Lessons I learned from Jay Leno.  Now, I am going to talk about how he became self-made.

Arnold wrote his autobiography, written in 2012, entitled, “Total Recall: My Unbelievably True Life Story.” Clocking in at 656 pages long, it is a massive read. I actually completed this undertaking last December 2017. It took me 3 weeks to finish reading from cover to cover. In the book, Mr. Schwarzenegger actually lists his paychecks for his hit films. At one point, he was making $20 million per film.

How did he do it? There is only one word to describe it: unbelievably.

Here is his story.

ALL GREAT STORIES HAVE GREAT BEGINNINGS

The mind is the limit. As long as the mind can envision the fact that you can do something, you can do it, as long as you really believe 100 percent. – Arnold Schwarzenegger

Arnold Alois Schwarzenegger was born on July 30, 1947, in Thal, Styria, Austria. His father, Gustav Schwarzenegger, served in World War II. Arnold’s mother, Aurelia, was working at a local shop when she spotted his father in uniform. That was all it took for her to fall for him as she loved a man in uniform. I must admit, so did I.

His parents married on October 20, 1945. His mother was 15 years younger than his father as she was 23. They were strict disciplinarians. Arnold said in Austria the rod was not spared if a child was disobedient. In the book, he said his father would make him and his brother earn their breakfast by doing pushups or sit-ups.  His father believed that the way to fix any problem was through discipline.

YOUNG EXUBERANCE

Arnold was an average student but, was popular and well-liked for his boundless energy, humor, and cheerfulness. He started playing sports and picked up his first barbell at age 14. He decided that bodybuilding would be his career. His deep interest in the sport took up almost all his spare time. At one point, he even broke into the local gym when it was closed and began to lift weights for a couple hours just to get in his workout.

Money was tight growing up. There was no inside plumbing or bathroom. They fetched water to bathe from a local well and one of the highlights of his youth was getting a refrigerator, where he said they would marvel at the opening and closing of the fridge door. When going shopping his mother only used cash and never bought anything other than the essentials.

Austrians believed in conformity and were not allowed to be individuals. However, Arnold had different plans. He was considered a rebel because he wanted to move to America and be rich. He stated he wanted to be somebody. Due to his rebellious tendencies and other issues, Arnold was never close to his father as his favorite was Arnold’s brother. However, he had a close relationship with his mother until her death.

A chance meeting at his bodybuilding coaches house would change his life. Arnold, in 1966, met bodybuilder and movie star Reg Park, his idol, and he went on to become his mentor. Schwarzenegger decided he would not only be a body builder, but also a movie star, just like Reg Park.

BARBELLS AND COMPETITIONS

Training gives us an outlet for suppressed energies created by stress and thus tones the spirit just as exercise conditions the body. – Arnold Schwarzenegger 

Arnold would work out almost every day. Lifting weights became an obsession. He would break into the gym on weekends when it was closed and work out.

He couldn’t stand to miss a workout. Arnold has said he couldn’t even look himself in the mirror, if he missed a workout. That is dedication. This was 1961. By 1965, all Austrian males, at the age of 18, are required to fulfill one year of military service, but Arnold had other plans.

AWOL BODYBUILDER

While in basic training, Arnold learned he was able to eat meat every day. Growing up, his mother had a garden where she would grow vegetables so she could feed her family on a tight budget. They rarely ate meat. Once he was able to get protein on the daily, he was constantly growing out of his uniforms. He went up a size every month and required a new uniform several times.

During his service, he learned basic tank mechanics, almost wreaked one by not putting it in park, and learned to ride a motorcycle. He said those skills would later serve him well while doing the Terminator and other films. Arnold learned to become pretty fearless. He was scared, but he would push ahead anyway.

During his time in the military, a Junior Mr. Europe Contest came up. He went AWOL and served a week in military prison because he chose to attend. But Arnold won that title.

He later received a job offer to work and train in a gym as a bodybuilder. He used this information and his past transgressions to convince the military to release him and he received an honorable discharge. That competition in Europe made him famous and the Mr. Universe title was his ticket to America-the land of opportunity, where he felt he could become rich.

CALIFORNIA BOUND AND HOLLYWOOD DREAMS

Arnold was happy to leave Austria as he had been telling people for many years as a kid he was going to America, but no one believed in his dreams. But the day came in October of 1968, when he was headed to California to train at the infamous Gold’s Gym in Venice, Los Angeles. He could barely speak English, but at the age of 21, was going to America to live and work.

Arnold was able to get a role in a film in 1969, “”Hercules in New York”, which paid him $12,000. He continued to train from 1970-1974 non-stop. In 1970, he won his first of seven, Mr. Olympia titles.

EDUCATION IS JUST AS IMPORTANT AS PHYSICAL FITNESS

In the 1970s, Arnold is enrolled in college throughout the decade. He bounced around to several taking math, English, science, and eventually earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Wisconsin-Superior in 1979. It took about 10 years, but finally he had his college degree.

He also stated in the book he would write down his goals on an index card at the start of every new year.

At one time in his life, he met Pope John Paul II in 1983, they talked about workouts. The pope rose daily at 5 a.m. in order to stick to his regimen. It was something like 300 push-ups. If he could do it, this book says, you can do it, too. This is where I got the idea to start my daily fitness routine. I, personally, like boxing.

ALL ROADS LEAD TO HOLLYWOOD

All roads not only lead to Rome, but in Arnold’s case also to Hollywood, California.

OLYMPIC CHAMPION

Arnold also competed in the Olympics and won the title of Mr. Olympia 3 times. After the 1971-74 competitions, in 1975, filmmakers convinced him to do the bodybuilding film Pumping Iron.

SAVING MONEY AND INVESTING

The worst thing I can be is the same as everybody else. I hate that. – Arnold Schwarzenegger 

Arnold is big into frugality. He saved every dime he could from any winnings he made while competing. When he first got to America, he had $27,000. That is the equivalent of $173,000 (adjusted for inflation) in 2017. His motto was turn every dollar into two.

Arnold invested his money in real estate. He researched for 3 years and worked with an agent before finally setting his sights on putting a down payment on his four-unit apartment building at the cost of $214,000. Then he sold the building the next year for $360,000. Then immediately put his profits into a new 12 unit building. He did this to avoid the huge tax bills of his profits.

The Los Angeles real estate market was booming. You could make $100k profit in just a year or two.

Arnold then bought a 36 unit building, followed by a 100 unit building. Within about 10 years, Arnold Schwarzenegger was a real estate tycoon and millionaire.

This was close to 7-8 years before he would become a bankable Hollywood action star. He was able to be pickier and choose plum movie roles because he did not have to take any role that came his way. He always believed in going to the top. Go where its empty and you can chart your own path. He aimed to be the leading man.

CONAN

“The idea is not to live forever, it is to create something that will.” ― Andy Warhol.

After small roles in various film and television, he was offered the lead in his breakthrough film role of Conan the Barbarian in 1982. The movie was a hit.

Love the painted look.

Then he starred in the sequel, Conan the Destroyer, in 1984.

For me life is continuously being hungry. The meaning of life is not simply to exist, to survive, but to move ahead, to go up, to achieve, to conquer. – Arnold Schwarzenegger 

Arnold got to meet and work with lots of people. He feels that building relationships is key to having a successful, happy, and fulfilled life. Some of those people include, Linda Hamilton, Sharon Stone, Michael Ironside, Vanessa Williams, and the late Andy Warhol.

THE TERMINATOR

I’ll be back. – Arnold’s famous line as The Terminator

Arnold was offered a role in a film where there is a futuristic war between man and machines. At the meeting, with Gale Anne Hurd (The Walking Dead) and James Cameron (Avatar), he was convinced that the role of the T1 was pivotal, if the film was to be a success.

He was right. Listen to Ah-nuld! I just watched the film a few weeks ago. It still holds up.

Here’s one of my favorite scenes from the film; it’s Kyle Reese, played by actor Michael Biehn. He did an incredible job as he also did in the film Aliens.

Arnold Money Lesson: When Arnold met his future wife, Maria Shriver, he accidentally left his wallet at home. She had to write him a check for $70, to pay his train ticket home. He paid her back and wrote her a thank you note. In addition, he learned a valuable lesson. Always have cash. From that moment on, he would carry $1000 cash and a high or no limit credit card. He learned the motto of this blog, that cash is king.

He then decided to do a film by new first time director, Jim Cameron, called The Terminator.  It went on to gross $80 million and Arnold was officially a bonafide movie star.

Fun Fact: Arnold likes to tell jokes. He decided early on that his films should include quips that are memorable one-liners and catchphrases.  Like this, “Hasta la vista, baby” — Terminator 2: Judgment Day.

I actually heard that same phrase in a Jody Whatley song Looking For A New Love from her self-titled 1987 album. That was 4 years before T2.

HOLLYWOOD MAKING IT RAIN DOWN ON ARNOLD

“Money doesn’t make you happy. I now have $50 million, but I was just as happy when I had $48 million.” – Arnold Schwarzenegger

From there it just keeps getting better. He’s a hit factory and the paychecks got bigger and bigger. Arnold made $250,000 for Conan and $360,000 for Conan 2. Then took a pay cut for The Terminator, at $75,000.  Arnold earned $1.5 million for 1985’s Commando, $3 million for 1987’s Predator and $8 million for 1988’s Red Heat. Bang, bang, bang! That’s all money in the bank.

He hit the deca-million ($10 million USD) paycheck mark with Total Recall in 1990. Then made $15 million for Terminator 2 and True Lies. Arnold eventually hit a $20 million-dollar payday in 1996 with Eraser. Yes, that’s US Dollars!

Source: themovietimes.com

He is estimated to have a net worth around $400 million dollars.

And there you have it.

At the end of the book, he also listed Arnold’s Rules for Success.

Here is Arnold talking Life’s 6 Rules during the Governor’s 2009 USC Commencement Address. He said be unique, be a maverick. Maybe even an outlier?

How being an outlier can make you rich

So let’s recap…

  • Start with a dream
  • Write it down
  • Say out loud what you want to do or be
  • Work hard
  • Break the rules, not the law
  • Don’t be afraid to fail
  • Exercise
  • Weight lifting builds muscles and confidence
  • Trust yourself
  • Ignore the naysayers
  • Save and invest
  • Real estate can make you a fortune
  • Financial independence equals freedom
  • Give something back
  • Turn every dollar into two