Showing posts with label Warren Buffet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Warren Buffet. Show all posts

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Aristocats


America has no aristocracy in the hereditary sense of the word. This is something which de Tocqueville acknowledged way back in the l8th Century when he wrote Democracy in America. Another Frenchman Bernard-Henri Levy updated de Tocqueville several years back recording his travels around the country in The Atlantic to mark the bicentennial of de Tocqueville’s journey. In America being upper class is simply a matter of having money and, as de Tocqueville noted, in America today’s rich can easily be tomorrow’s paupers. The passage from riches to rags is a sad story that never ceases to provide fodder for the tabloids. Realizing that their status lies on shaky ground, the American upper class is characterized less by noblesse oblige than apologia pro vita sua. Perhaps due to the insecurity associated with their status and how merit orientated American society tends to be, America’s rich rarely pull rank and are constantly trying to affirm their kinship with their fellow man. The American upper class are friends with the doormen of the high rises in which they live while a Paraguayan who still holds Stroessner in high esteem, or a member of the Spanish elite with fascist leanings, who still looks back fondly on Franco, will likely treat the servants like servants. Nowhere is this more evidenced than in Manhattan where you have wealthy people of all nationalities, real aristocrats otherwise known as Eurotrash, the distaff of whom won’t be seen in public without their Carolina Herrera outfits, living with self-made rags to riches types in luxurious Park Avenue co-ops. Warren Buffet epitomizes the best qualities of the American upper class. He still lives unpretentiously in the Omaha house he purchased over fifty years ago. And he sports an ethic based on the pragmatic notions of The Intelligent Investor. Benjamin Graham's famed tome, with its emphasis on value, provides the no nonsense framework for his investment philosophy.

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Searching for Sugar Man


Warren Buffet and Sixto Rodriguez the real life hero of Malik Bendjelloul’s Searching for Sugar Man have one thing in common. They both have occupied the same modest diggings for many years (Buffet for over 50 years in downtown Omaha, Rodriguez in downtown Detroit). Searching for Sugar Man tells the story of how recognition eluded one of music’s greatest talents. Rogdriguez's two albums Cold Fact (l970), which includes the iconic song “Sugar Man” and Coming from Reality (1971) never sold in the United States, but they became huge underground hits under the apartheid regime of P.W. Botha in South Africa .When Rodriguez was rediscovered in l998, he played sold out concerts in a triumphant return to South Africa. There are numerous paradigms for fame, mythmaking and celebrity and Rodriguez’s career epitomizes many of them. For instance his popularity in South Africa partakes of the spirit of Samizdat which made Pasternak and Akhmatova cultural heroes in Russia. “Every revolution needs an anthem,” one of Bendjelloul’s subjects comments about Rodriguez’s popularity. And then there is the reclusiveness which has characterized the careers of writers like Pynchon and Salinger, though as he appears on screen Rodriguez is less reclusive than humble. Searching for Sugarman starts off like a film noir with fog and smoky rooms and the implication of a conspiracy against genius. But when asked about what happened after he completed Coming from Reality, Rodriguez explains he stopped recording since he had to get back to his day job as a construction worker. Rodriguez's songs are often despairing and dark. During the film, the producer Steve Rowland describes “Cause” from the Coming from Reality  album with its lyrics “Cause I lost my job two weeks before Christmas/ And I talked to Jesus at the sewer/And the Pope said it was none of his God-damned business/While the rain drank champagne” as one of the saddest songs that’s ever been written. The truly surprising thing about Searching for Sugar Man is how uplifting the film turns out to be.