Subscribe


  • DDO Email Subscription

  • RSS Subscription

  • "Everyone ultimately gets what they want from the market." - Ed Seykota

About the DDO

Search



  • WebDDO

Weekend Viewing: Glengarry Glen Ross

In the first ever DDO video clip, I've posted a short excerpt from one of the great business movies of all time, Glengarry Glen Ross.

Best known for the "ABC: Always Be Closing" scene with Alec Baldwin (a scene that was copied and modified for Boiler Room) Glengarry Glen Ross looks at real estate salesmen in high pressure situations, and the questionable tactics employed out of greed and desperation.

One of my favorite scenes from the movie (among many) is this clip of Al Pacino as the smooth talking Ricky Roma, selling a piece of property to Jonathan Pryce, as the timid James Link.

If you haven't seen the movie the whole way through, rent it today, or just go ahead and buy it on Amazon. You won't be disappointed. - Ed

Please note: if you are offended by crude language, don't watch this clip.

The complete opening phrase is cut off in this clip. Here's the text:

"All train compartments smell vaguely of sh*t. It gets so you don't mind it. That's the worst thing I can confess. You know how long it took me to get there? A long time."


Video enabled by a cool new blog tool, Videoegg.

My favorite quotes, which basically occur in sequence:

Ricky Roma: "Great meals fade in reflection. Everything else gains. You know why? 'Cause it's only food. Just shit we put in us." [...]

"The great f*cks you may have had, what do remember about them? I don't know. For me, I'm saying what it is, it's probably not the orgasm. Some broad's forearm on your neck, something her eyes did, there was this sound she made. Or it's me and the, uh, I'm telling you; I'm in bed the next day; she brought me cafe au lait, gives me a cigarette. My balls feel like con-crete." [...]

"What I'm saying, what is our life? It's looking forward or it's looking back. That's it. That's our life. Where's the moment? And what is it that we're afraid of? Loss. What else?  The bank closes, we get sick, my wife died on a plane, the stock market collapsed. What of these happen? None of 'em; we worry anyway, why?"

Weekend DDO: How to Tip Your Way Into an Exclusive NYC Restaurant

This article is an old favorite of mine. I still have not tried it, having read this about three years ago, and with ample opportunities to try. (Note: full article text has been collapsed under the link below. Enjoy! - Ed

Bruce Feiler, Gourmet, October 2000

I am nervous, truly nervous. As the taxi bounces southward through the trendier neighborhoods of Manhattan - Flatiron, the Village, SoHo - I keep imagining the possible retorts of some incensed maître d': "What kind of establishment do you think this is?"

"How dare you insult me!"

"You think you can get in with that?"

It's just after 8 p.m. on a balmy summer Saturday and I'm heading toward one of New York's most overbooked restaurants, Balthazar, where celebrities regularly go to be celebrated and where lay diners like me call a month in advance to try and secure a reservation. I don't have a reservation. I don't have a connection. I don't have a secret phone number. The only things I have are a $20, a $50, and a $100 bill, neatly folded in my pocket.

Continue reading "Weekend DDO: How to Tip Your Way Into an Exclusive NYC Restaurant" »

My Photo

Disclaimer


  • This is a personal web site, and statements on this site reflect the opinions of its author only. This site is intended for informational purposes only, and may include facts and speculation about companies and markets as part of that process. None of the information on this site is guaranteed to be correct, and anything written here should be considered subject to independent verification. Any investment actions taken by you as a result of information written here are your responsibility.

Miscellany