CODA 

Released Aug. 13, 2021

Directed by Sian Heder

Starring Emilia Jones, Marlee Matlin, and Eugenio Derbez

Currently streaming on Apple TV+

Whenever K says that she’s read a good review about a movie, I get concerned. I suspect she’s setting me up for something she knows I won’t cotton to. So, when she told me she’d read a good review about CODA last week, I must have shown a little skepticism in my eyes. She followed up by informing me that it was nominated for several Academy Awards. And then she gave me a choice: “Or would you rather watch some dumb movie you randomly come across clicking on your idiot wand?”

So, we watched CODA. And, sure enough, it was a chick flick! Well, not a chick flick exactly, but a genre every bit as uncomfortable: a coming-of age story about a teenage girl!

As one critic (whose name I forgot to hold onto) put it:

CODA begins as “a pleasantly familiar coming-of-age tale, following a talented small-town girl from modest means with dreams to study music in the big city. There’s an idealistic teacher, a winsome crush, moving rehearsal montages, a high-stakes audition, and naturally, a family reluctant about their offspring’s ambitions. Again – and only at first glance – you might think you already know everything about this feel-good recipe.”

And I did feel that way. But then I kept watching. And although nothing about the plot or characters defied those conventions, I found myself gradually falling for this story.

As the credits rolled, K asked, “So?”

Me: “I liked it.”

K: “Okay. Now admit you were wrong!”

Me: (sheepish look)

K: “Don’t give me that sheepish look. Say it out loud! I want to hear the words!”

Me: (wincing)

K: “I….”

Me: “I…”

K: “Was…”

Me: “Was…

K: “Wrong…”

Me: “Wrong.”

K: “That wasn’t hard, was it?”

The movie won me over. Not because it broke any teenage-girl-coming-of-age conventions, but because of how well and subtly they were scripted, directed, and performed.

There was also what I thought at first was going to be a too-clever directorial conceit of shooting many of the conversations in sign language (with subtitles). It didn’t feel too clever. It felt clever. The experience was very different from watching foreign movies with subtitles (in which you can hear the actors speaking, but in another language) or silent films (where the blocking and acting and photography are designed to supplement the printed text). Observing a heated conversation that is played out silently with hand gestures gave me a sense of what it was like to be deaf. Evidence of how well this trick worked is that in the third act, two of the most emotionally compelling moments in the film were done this way.

The Plot 

Ruby is the only hearing member of a deaf family in Gloucester, MA. At 17, she works mornings before school to help her parents and brother keep their fishing business afloat. One day, she impulsively decides to join the school’s choir club, and she’s smitten by her duet partner’s looks. Sure enough, a romance blooms between them, but a passion for singing also blooms in Ruby’s heart.

What I Liked About It 

* The acting of the principal cast was good and believable throughout.

* The set design worked well with the storyline.

* The cinematography was restrained in deference to the story, but conveyed the atmosphere of Gloucester very well.

* As mentioned, the decision to do so many important parts in sign language was brave, and a risk that succeeded brilliantly at the end.

 What I Didn’t Like So Much 

The character of Bernardo Villalobos, the singing teacher, is a bit overdone. Eugenio Derbez was tasked with not only playing the prototypical hard-love/inspirational teacher, but also the fey arts teacher and the failed star all at the same time, and with the most banal and predictable lines. The result is artificial, but Derbez inhabits it with such commitment that it was only a small problem for me.

Critical Reception 

* CODA had its world premiere on Jan. 28, 2021 at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival and became the most awarded film in Sundance history. It has won or been nominated for multiple Golden Globes, Screen Actors Guild awards, Critics’ Choice awards, and Oscars.

* The movie scored 95% on Rotten Tomatoes’ Tomatometer (based on 262 reviews) and had an Audience Score of 93% (based on 1,000+ ratings). The site’s critics consensus: “CODA’s story offers few surprises, but strong representation and a terrific cast – led by Emilia Jones’ brilliant performance – bring this coming-of-age story vividly to life.”

* “No theatrics, no gimmicks – just a wonderful coming-of-age gem that aims directly at the heart and hits the bullseye.” (Mara Reinstein, US Weekly)

* “By twisting the formula and placing this recognizable story inside a new, perhaps even groundbreaking, setting with such loving, acutely observed specificity, she [Sian Heder] pulls off nothing short of a heartwarming miracle with her film.” (Tomris Laffly, RogerEbert.com)

I wondered how CODA would be received by the deaf community. From what I found, reviews were mixed. Some applauded the casting of so many deaf performers in key roles. Others felt the film didn’t go far enough in advocating for authenticity in media representations of deaf and CODA culture.

You can watch the trailer here.

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Fear: Essential Wisdom for Getting Through the Storm 

By Thich Nhat Hanh

176 pages

First published Jan. 1, 2012 by HarperOne

This was a Christmas book – a stocking stuffer that fit easily into my reindeer stocking hanging on the mantle. I put it in the bookcase where I keep books that have been given or recommended to me. Since it was a thin book, it was selected well ahead of others that have been in that bookcase for years. (Plus, it was given to me by a relative that was going to be asking, “So, did you read it? What did you think?”)

What I Liked About It 

* It’s wise.

* It’s poetic.

* It’s unpretentious.

* It’s a quick read. (Did I already say that?)

What I Didn’t Like So Much 

It’s replete with thoughts that, however wise, are so familiar that I thought it might have been better published as a Thought-of-the-Day calendar.

About the Author

According to the NYT, Thich Nhat Hanh “ranks second only to the Dalai Lama as the Buddhist leader with the most influence in the West.”

The jacket cover describes him as a “Vietnamese Buddhist Zen Master, poet, scholar, peace activist, and one of the foremost spiritual leaders in the world – a gifted teacher who was once nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by Martin Luther King Jr.”

And there’s this from Facebook, posted after Hanh’s death on Jan. 22 at the age of 95: “Ordained as a monk aged 16 in Vietnam, Thich Nhat Hanh soon envisioned a kind of engaged Buddhism that could respond directly to the needs of society. He was a prominent teacher and social activist in his home country before finding himself exiled for calling for peace. In the West, he played a key role in introducing mindfulness and created mindful communities (sanghas) around the world. His teachings have impacted politicians, business leaders, activists, teachers, and countless others.”

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Re the Feb. 23 issue on Depression:

“I want to thank you Mark for being open about a very important challenge for a lot of people. I enjoyed reading your deep dive in applying an analytical metric to this problem. I do think your rating is valid. I have been aided by utilizing CBT. I am sure you have read of this treatment. Discovered by Dr Aaron Beck, a U Penn doc, David Burns, wrote a book, Feeling Good, which applies practical use of CBT…. Let me know your thoughts on CBT.”  – JM

Re my Indulgence Diet:

“Just back from Ireland after nearly two years of no international travel… and business travel packs on the pounds if you aren’t careful…. My core vices are starch, alcohol, and chocolate/sweets. I’d love a rotation like this. Your diet plan has given me hope… let me know if this 10lb loss holds up.” – EN

My Response: Give it a try! I’m down 14 pounds in three weeks and I never think about what I’m missing. Today, for example, I’m doing no alcohol, but I had a donut for breakfast and I just might have a cookie right now. Maybe two!!!

Re the Mar. 2 issue, where I included a quote from Bill Bonner about long-term stock market cycles suggesting that both in 1929 and 1966 it took the market nearly 30 years to recover from its low. AG wrote to clarify:

“I don’t know whether perma-bears don’t know this – or whether they don’t want others to know it – but the long dry spells for stocks they regularly cite are not real. Why? Because by looking only at the level of the indexes and omitting dividends, they grossly distort actual returns.

“For example, during the periods mentioned… stocks often yielded over 8%. (And when you reinvest those dividends when stocks are down, good things happen.) When the market hit bottom in 1932, they yielded over 14%. It took just 4 1/2 years for investors reinvesting dividends to be whole again even if they bought at the very top before the 1929 crash. (See link below.) Of course, most investors panicked and sold – or went broke on margin – but that’s another story.

“Nothing has beaten the return on a diversified portfolio of common stocks over periods measured in decades. Not gold, bonds, real estate, cash, collectibles, or commodities. $1 invested in gold in 1802 was worth $2.97 inflation-adjusted by 2016. The same amount invested in a basket of common stocks with dividends reinvested was worth more than $1.1 million inflation-adjusted over the same period. Yet stocks were a ‘losing trade’?

“For a fuller treatment of the subject, you might read Jeremy Siegel’s classic Stocks for the Long Run. The last edition is 18 years old. But you can extrapolate the charts forward and nothing has changed.”

Click here.

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Bill Maher on Florida and COVID…

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Why Good Advice Usually Doesn’t Work 

“Who’s this guy?” I asked Giovanna.

“He’s the brother of a person that used to work for you. You said you’d take his call.”

“What brother?”

“I can check.”

“Don’t bother. Put him through.”

We spent an hour talking. He was courteous, intelligent, and affable. I was happy to help him. His question: How to grow his business from $2 million, where it was hovering, up to the next level – $5 million to $10 million.

I asked him the usual questions I ask for a business of that size. He had good answers for some of them, and didn’t pretend to know what he didn’t know. That sort of humility – coupled with intelligence, persistence, and self-confidence – is a formula for success. I gave him some advice and said, “Call me when you hit $5 million.”

After I hung up, I had the same hopeful-cynical thoughts I always have after these sorts of conversations: “I hope he implements my suggestions, but he probably won’t. I’ll be happily surprised if he hits his target.”

I’ve developed this perspective from 20 years of advising entrepreneurs. If they have what it takes, success should be a lay-up. But that is a highly unlikely outcome from informal “consultations” like this one. For two reasons:

First, because my advice was free – i.e., it didn’t cost him anything except a half-hour of his time. The first rule of mentoring is that anything gotten for free is valued cheaply. The value of the “gift” doesn’t matter. The receiver discounts it unconsciously because he didn’t have to do/pay anything to get it.

Second, because my advice was given without any obligation on my part. The second rule of mentoring is that advice given without a commitment by the mentor to follow through with the advisee is likely to be rejected (or forgotten or ignored) when obstacles arise. In this case, I’m quite sure that this young man will put a good initial effort into effectuating one or even several of the suggestions I made. But when he discovers that they aren’t working for him, he’ll conclude that the advice was wrong, and shift his attention and energies in some other direction.

Of course, if this person were an employee or family member, I would have been personally invested in the outcome and our conversation would not have ended the same way. I would have insisted that he initiate a plan of action immediately – within 24 hours. I would have also insisted that he check back with me on a regular basis until he had accomplished his goal.

But in this case, I have neither the time nor motivation to commit myself to doing all that work. So, as I said, I am doubtful that our conversation will do him much good.

But I am not without hope. At least several times a year, I hear from someone with whom I’ve had such short counseling sessions who did, in fact, follow my advice and achieve what they set out to achieve. And that’s why I continue to provide free entrepreneurial advice on occasion. It’s like playing the quarter slot machines when I’m drinking tequila. My investment is de minimis. But the reward, however unlikely, is exhilarating.

Making It Happen… or Not 

The number one reason that most entrepreneurial businesses fail is not because of weak ideas or lack of market research or insufficient capital.  It is because founders/CEOs fail to move forward quickly enough after they have landed on their ideas.

As someone that’s been involved in dozens of start-ups over the years, I feel very strongly about this claim. In fact, in 2008, John Wiley published a book I wrote about it (Ready, Fire, Aim) that became a bestseller.

There is a corollary to this that applies to growing businesses from, say, $1 million to $10 million, from $10 million to $100 million, or from $100 million to $1 billion. It’s basically the same idea: The reason businesses often hit revenue ceilings is that they fail to move quickly enough on testing new product and marketing ideas.

That is the problem my young advisee is going to run into the moment he goes back to his business and lays out some of the ideas that we agreed could bring his business to the next level.

He may begin with all the enthusiasm and determination he seemed to have at the end of our conversation. But his employees – the people he will need to implement those ideas – will not be so enthusiastic.

This is almost universally true. Great employees are always great at doing what they know works well. But they are skeptical of initiating new projects and/or protocols because they aren’t so sure they will work as well as the founder/CEO believes they will. And so, they will raise questions and voice concerns. As they feel they should.

And since these are capable and smart employees, many of their questions will be difficult to answer. And many of their concerns will be well-founded. And because the founder/CEO respects their concerns and can’t easily answer their questions, the process of moving forward will slow down.

That’s not always a bad thing. But smart founders/CEOs should treat it like it is. Because the alternative is the gradual asphyxiation of an idea that could work.

I am going through this exercise now with one of my clients. I’m trying to put into motion an idea I have that will add $10+ million to the bottom line. Not once, but every year into the future.

It’s not a complicated idea. To me, it’s a no-brainer. There is zero chance it will fail. There is a chance it won’t hit the $10 million mark, but – even if problems arise that I am not anticipating now – it will definitely make at least several million.

But a month has gone by since we agreed to work on this objective. In my view, we should be at the point where we are already testing the idea and bringing in dollars. Instead, we are stuck in the think-it-over phase.

I know that if I don’t push this thing through, it’s going to die on the vine. So, I’m going to do what I always do when I find myself in this situation.

It usually goes like this:

* I suggest the idea the moment it comes to me. (Because I know I will forget it if I don’t.)

* The reaction: Silence. Nobody gets it.

* The next time we meet, I suggest it again, but shaped better, to make it easier to  understand.

* They sort of get it, but they have doubts. They express them. I answer them as well as I can, but not to their satisfaction. Silence.

* The third time we meet, I remind them that we should already be moving on the idea, and guarantee them that it will work. I put a number out there (“$10 million net a year in perpetuity!”).

* They don’t know exactly what to say. Maybe I’m right. They don’t know. So, they give me a tepid go-ahead.

* I get to work on it, forming a team and setting an agenda. The first time we meet, the team is excited. They buy in. They want to be a part of it.

* In the weeks that follow, at every juncture there are questions and concerns, which I view, perhaps incorrectly, as passive resistance.

* I say, “Don’t worry. Let’s keep moving. We can solve these problems later.”

* They agree. Sort of. So, they move forward, but slowly and carefully. They are worried about failure. And my confidence makes them even less sure, because they see me as impulsive and possibly reckless.

* I keep pushing until we get the idea ready enough to test. We test it.

* If it fails, game over. If it is a huge success, everyone’s happy. If it’s a modest success, it is met with further doubts and concerns.

* We work through those doubts and concerns, one at a time. Then we test the improved idea. And this time, it usually works better.

* I try not to, but sometimes I can’t resist telling them: “I told you so.” They don’t understand. In their minds, they’ve been supporting me all along.

* We roll out the idea, making refinements as needed. Eventually, it becomes a staple of our business.

* Years later, nobody remembers all the questions and criticism.  In their minds, they always knew it would work.

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Amazon Drops BLM Non-Profit Funding Platform

If you are a NYT reader, you may not have heard all the stories out there in the conservative media about how the head of the BLM Global Network Foundation (BLMGNF) was buying multimillion-dollar mansions soon after the organization raised many millions of dollars.

It’s gotten worse since then. As a registered tax-exempt 501(c)(3) organization, BLMGNF is required to report its income and expenses on a yearly basis.

Apparently, they don’t want to do that. Because they’ve been resisting every attempt to get them to file properly.

Click here.

And Another Juicy Tidbit 

Michael Avenatti, former media hero, on his way to jail. Click here.

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How Not to Raise Spoiled Brats 

I believe children grow up to be what their parents want them to be.

When my children were young, I wanted them to be good at everything they did – school, sports, music lessons, etc. And they did a reasonable job of that. But when they became young adults, I wanted something very different for them. I wanted them to be independent (financially and emotionally) and kind.

I believe that, as parents, our first two obligations are to make our children respectful of adults and children their own age. By building on these good habits, we can then focus on helping them become both independent and also kind. Independent so they can succeed in life when we are not there for them. And kind because we want them to grow into adults we can both like and admire.

I believe, further, that we cannot help our children become independent and kind by indulging them in whatever they want. Nor can we help them by befriending them. A good parent is a parent, which means setting reasonable expectations and firm boundaries.

Jordan Peterson has much to say on this topic. Click here for one of his thoughts on the challenges of raising children – in this case, on the consequences of overprotecting them.

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Curious: About the Inflation Rate

The core inflation rate, for some reason, does not include two metrics that are very important: the price of food and the price of fuel. That seems bizarre to me. Those are two of the most important commodities that affect the wallets of everyday Americans

Noteworthy: About Long-Term Stock Trends

Economic and financial historians sometimes talk about “primary trends” – i.e., long-term swings in one direction or another. In a recent issue of The Daily Reckoning, Bill Bonner gives examples for the US stock markets:

“Stocks hit a high in 1929, after which investors waited 27 years (inflation adjusted) for a new high. Measured from the bottom, in 1932, prices rose for 34 years to reach the next top, in 1966.

“Then, it was down again, with investors in a losing trade for the next 29 years. Finally, in 1995, the Dow traded once again (inflation adjusted) at levels last seen in 1966.

“And then, with the Dow at 5,300, it was off to the races with another huge bull market run, which took it over 36,000 in 2021. From the bottom of that cycle – which came in August 1982 to today – stocks have been going up for nearly 40 years.”

Interesting: God Bless You! 

This de rigeur reply to a sneeze has a very interesting origin. It came into use as a result of a mandate by the Roman Catholic Church. On Feb. 16, 600, Pope Gregory I issued a papal edict stating that the phrase “God bless you” was the correct response whenever a Christian was within earshot of a sneeze. The pope hoped to ward off illness and death by encouraging Christians to answer any sneeze with a blessing.

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Venice

Here’s the most important thing a new visitor should know about Venice: It’s just too crowded with tourists during the season. Better to visit in the Spring or Fall. And it’s got much more than the big square and gondolas. Spend some time walking the back streets.

The Facts: Venice, the capital of northern Italy’s Veneto region, is built on more than 100 small islands in a lagoon in the Adriatic Sea. It has no roads, just canals – including the Grand Canal thoroughfare – lined with Renaissance and Gothic palaces. 

What I like about Venice:

* The art and architecture of St. Mark’s Basilica

* The bridges, particularly the Bridge of Sighs

* Gondola rides (but once a visit is enough)

* Views from St. Mark’s bell tower

* The back streets

* The Libreria Acqua Alta bookstore

* The Doge’s Palace (Palazzo Ducale)

* The Gallerie dell’Accademia

What I don’t like so much: The tourists – especially the North Americans.

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Letter from Ralph Waldo Emerson to his daughter, April 8, 1854: 

“Finish every day and be done with it. For manners and for wise living it is a vice to remember. You have done what you could; some blunders and absurdities no doubt crept in; forget them as soon as you can. Tomorrow is a new day; you shall begin it well and serenely, and with too high a spirit to be cumbered with your old nonsense. This day for all that is good and fair. It is too dear, with its hopes and invitations, to waste a moment on the rotten yesterdays.”

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