Tag Archives: credit

Money and Chocolate: Life Lessons from the film The Witches

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The most sophisticated people I know – inside they are all children. – Jim Henson

If you ever saw the film Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, then you know how much people love chocolate. And it can be a goldmine business or chocolate mine depending on how you look at it. 😉 People were losing their minds to get that golden ticket.

Chocolate Mania had swept the nation! 😂

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It was pure marketing genius. They even commented on that in the film. Wonka was making a mint selling those chocolate bars. It’s all about marketing folks!

It’s sort of like Patron. They don’t have the best tequila; they just have the best marketing. Get that money.

Just look at all the money the candy business makes! Billions!

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Here are some of the top chocolate companies in the world.

1. Mars Inc., McLean, VA., USA.

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2. Mondeléz International Inc., Deerfield, Ill.

Largest Chocolate Manufacturers

3. Nestlé SA, Vevey, Switzerland.

Largest Chocolate Manufacturers

4. Ferrero Group, Alba, Italy.

Largest Chocolate Manufacturers

5. Hershey Foods Corp., Hershey, Pa., USA.

Largest Chocolate Manufacturers 2019

6. Meiji Co. Ltd., Tokyo, Japan.

Largest Chocolate Manufacturers

7. Chocoladenfabriken Lindt & Sprüngli AG, Kilchberg, Switzerland.

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The confectionery business is big money. These companies are raking in billions of dollars.

Did you know Snickers earns more than $2 billion by itself annually?

The Маrѕ fаmіlіеѕ аrе thе оwnеrs оf thіѕ соmраnу thаt ореrаtеѕ wоrldwіdе. Тhеу hаvе wіdе vаrіеtіеѕ оf brаndѕ іnсludіng Gаlаху, Воuntу, М&М, Тwіх, Міlkу Wау, аnd Ѕnісkеrѕ. Globally they are making bank!

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They may have even helped spread the let’s have candy at every event or holiday cheer. If not, I am sure they somehow found a way to cultivate and capitalize on Halloween and even Christmas.

Who says you need a box of chocolate on Valentines?!!! Most people don’t even eat most of it. That box of chocolates is still bought and paid for!

If you ever saw the film Legally Blond, you actually saw her do what most do with a box of variously filled chocolates. That’s right. She took a bite and put it BACK in the box!

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Reese Witherspoon in Legally Blond

Mondelez International Inc. even tried to cash in on this love of chocolate. However, they have officially abandoned its pursuit of Hershey Co., which would have created the biggest confectionery conglomerate in the world.

Now that you have some background on the business of chocolate, let’s get down to money affairs.

Back in 1990, the movie, The Witches, based on the 1983 children’s novel of the same title by Roald Dahl, was released in theaters. The movie premiered on 25 May 1990, in London and was scheduled to open the same day in the United States, but was delayed until August.

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Sadly, it would be Muppet and Fraggle Rock creator, Jim Henson’s last film.

As in the original novel, the story features evil witches who masquerade as ordinary women and hurt children. However, a boy and his grandmother need to find a way to foil and destroy them.

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The witches decide they will open up, get this, chocolate shops to lure poor unsuspecting children.

This is where the story begins.

GUARDIANS OF THE MILKY WAY GALAXY

While on vacation in Norway, eight-year-old American boy Luke Eveshim is warned about the witches, female demons with a boundless hatred for children and various methods of destroying or transforming them.

Helga, Luke’s Grandmother, becomes his legal guardian after the passing of his parents. They move to England. His grandmother is advised to take a vacation for a summer by the sea for fresh air after discovering she has diabetes.

Also staying at the hotel are a convention of witches, masquerading as the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, with the Grand High Witch, the all-powerful leader of the world’s witches, attending their annual meeting under the name Eva Ernst (played by Academy Award Winner Angelica Houston).

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Really? They have some nerve naming their coven the Prevention of Cruelty to children. Hiding in plain sight like that, but open to interpretation. Yes, indeed.

Let us examine the fact that Luke had a grandmother that not only decided to raise him, but has the financial means to take a vacation by the sea.

I have it on good authority that if you try to rent a house on Virginia Beach for a week it can set you back $5,000!

I wouldn’t mind paying that if I had investments like interest earned from stocks or royalties to pay for it.

If you have $25,000, you could earn over 2 percent in a high yield savings account. That’s the ish I’m talking about right there. Making money for breathing. That is the equivalent of doing a part-time gig and earning $500 a year.

I find the idea of earning money just for having a pulse so sexy.  I find that It’s like Beyoncé says in her song Rocket. Shhh. Just listen.  To the words. Hell yeah, you the sh*t That’s why you’re my equivalent So sexy! Haha

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See my posts

How Beyonce and Jay-Z became a $1 billion couple

Earn Money with High Yield Savings Accounts

FOR THE LOVE OF CHOCOLATE

The witches are going to open up chocolate shops!

Inside a ballroom where the witches hold their meeting, Luke spies upon them as the Grand High Witch unveils her latest creation: a magic potion to turn children into mice, which they will use on confectionery products in sweet shops and candy stores to be opened using money provided by her.

They know how to make their vision a reality.

You have to chart a course and follow that path to where you want to go. What path? You just point to the top and go! That’s what I learned from Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson 😉

I have also learned that when you own something to hold onto it.

It doesn’t matter of it is a taco stand, food truck, or blog. If you own 100%, then it’s yours to do with as you wish. Hold on to as much equity and ownership in your company as possible. I learned that from Shark Tank’s Daymond John. Like McDonald’s does to its hamburgers, keep grinding.

And try to be cash heavy. Meaning stay away from debt. I learned that from Warren Buffet. 😉 They say his company Berkshire Hathaway aims to keep $1 billion or more in cash to snap up businesses and be able to make quick decisions when buying stocks.

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In addition, they say Apple does the same. The world’s first EVER $1 trillion-dollar company keeps billions in cash.  

Therefore, you should do the same and follow in their example. ALWAYS have cash reserves. NO EXCUSES!!!

Like Mr. Money Mustache once said, “Salads and barbells every day, no goddamned excuses!!!”

WE ALL WANT TO BE ROYALS

And I don’t mean Prince William and Kate Middleton.

I mean getting royalty checks in the mail.

I saw an article in which Don McLean owns only 2 stocks: Google and Amazon.

I also recently read that Don McLean continues to receive royalties off his music he wrote almost 50 years ago. Yes, this artist still makes $300,000 per year from something he created in 1971.

In the article by Sovereign Man, it retells McLean’s story.

Early spring in 1971 when an obscure American folk singer wrote a song that would change his life forever.

Sitting at a café in Saratoga Springs, New York, Don McLean scribbled the lyrics to a long ballad about an experience he had as a 13-year-old boy.

It began with a radio bulletin that said that Buddy Holly had died in a plane crash. In 1959, when this happened they called it the day the music died. The boy was crushed. But the man used this emotion to write a song that would take the world by storm.

Of course, that song was “American Pie.”

It stayed atop the Billboard music charts for more than a year. And it turned this once obscure folk singer into a global sensation.

Ah yes, the power of the pen.

More than that – McLean was immediately set for life: he still makes more than $300,000 a year from that song.

Imagine getting paid hundreds of thousands of dollars a year for something you did in 1971!

That is what stocks can do for you! That is why we must invest. Unless you can write the next hit song for Beyoncé, you must invest in the stock market to make money on your money. You already earned it and now your money works for you and this is your equivalent to getting royalties.

This story holds the key to one of the greatest business models ever invented: the idea that you can create something once and get paid on it for life.

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

For more information on the price of genius and Andy Warhol, see my post The Man Behind the Mohawk: An Interview with Budgets are Sexy.

It’s the royalty business. That’s right. I did the work like 20 years ago. Now cut the check!

In case you’re not familiar with the term, a royalty is a cash payment that you receive over and over again from an asset that you created, developed, or own.

For example, songwriters collect a royalty every time a song they write is played, purchased, downloaded or streamed. Some more than others.

That is why Taylor Swift was mad at Apple iTunes for giving away artists music, such as herself, for free for three months!

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That’s why McLean still makes money from American Pie. You have to pay to play. Music that is. In this case anyway.

Royalties are also common in natural resources. Royalty companies often provide financing to oil and mining companies… and those borrowers pay a royalty on every ounce of gold or gallon of oil that the land produces.

Authors earn a royalty every time somebody buys their book. Inventors receive royalties from their patents. Why do you think Beyoncé trademarked Blue Ivy, Taylor Swift trademarked Swiftmas, and Cardi B is trying to trademark OKrrrrrrr?!!!

Patents equals paychecks.  

And people who own royalties don’t have to do anything else to make money… except cash the checks.

The powerful cashflow of this model can be incredibly appealing to investors, and there are even some companies that specialize in acquiring assets that produce royalty income.

Therefore, if you are good at something, don’t give it away for free.

Even though I am a HUGE Marvel comics fan, I actually got the last comment mentioned above from DC Comics The Joker. 😉

It’s still true though. You have to admit.

If I could, I would tap dance on Twitter, if they paid me.

Me and my lipstick confessions charge a premium for the really good stuff.

I would hand draw or smack lipstick stickers 💋on Kylie Jenner’s lip kits if she paid me $400.

Joan Rivers wrote jokes for days. She once said jokingly, that she would, “write for Hitler for $500.”

See my post on Money gems from Joan Rivers

Whatever you do that is great, DON’T DO IT FOR FREE.

That’s just my 2 cents. And I take cash, check, or charge.

I’m like the girl scouts. Out there selling those cookies. You don’t see them giving it away for FREE.

I’m just saying. Have a plan for your life and your money, then make it happen.

Don’t let anyone tell you what you can’t accomplish or do. No matter how small you are. Even if you are just a kid.

The Witches always remind of that.

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Q&A with Lisa Servon, Author of The Unbanking of America: How the New Middle Class Survives

 

 

 

 

 

 

Lisa Servon is the author of The Unbanking of America: How the New Middle Class Survives, an engrossing exposé—why Americans are leaving our fractured banking system, and how alternatives are swooping in to get those being left behind. I had a chance to ask her a few questions about her book . . .

Tell us a little bit about how this book happened. When did you get the idea to write it? How did you start writing on issues of poverty?

While teaching gender development and finances, a speaker came in from a payday lending firm. He started a credit union in the south Bronx of New York. He compelled me to try and understand why people are using alternative financial services. This motivated me forward toward the question and was the genesis of the book. I knew I had to get as close to this as possible by going to work for a payday lender. It was the only way to answer the question.

I read that you are a professor at the University of Pennsylvania (UPenn). What made you decide to go from teaching to writing?

In academia, publishing is really important. It is the primary way to judge whatever it is you are doing and that you are doing your job. Mostly writing in the past was for academic journals, but unfortunately, people that have the power to make the change don’t read them. In order to make the broader public more aware of the issues, we have to go mainstream like writing for The New Yorker. The trade press has more publicity and this can help you be more successful.

How were you able to learn to write an exposé? What keeps you motivated? What advice could you give to other authors? How did you get published?

Learn another way of writing such as creative writing. Your trained in the university to write a particular way. At The New School, I took classes in creative writing and did a summer’s writing colony, which keeps me in step.

Write shorter things first, such as 100 words and progress from there. At one point, I was writing stories of 300-750 words and then got five or six offers of great feedback. Key pieces were already written. Shorter pieces helped sell the book. Another academic book is not interesting.

I got an agent by being introduced to one while speaking at a conference. Then wrote a book proposal. A colleague also gave me introductions to people. I met editors and presses, and both people were interested.

In the book, you give us your experience as a teller. How did you start working as a check casher in New York?

A payday lender came to a class to talk. The topic was very controversial.  I had a gut feeling there was more to this than meets the eye. Even though, alternative banking services were receiving harsh statements in the news, this guy seemed pretty happy. The backside of the story is that people called complaining. I discussed what I was doing and why with the owner of the payday lending store and got the job.

In the book, you’re a loan help operator for a hotline. How did this happen? How did you start working for a predatory loan help hotline? How would people find out about laws on payday lending?

It was a way to help me see what happens to people after they got the loan and can’t pay it back. Payday lending has different laws in different states. We would let people know if it was illegal to borrow funds online. If so, we always encouraged them to pay back what they owed in principal. You could also do an online search of what state laws there are for payday lenders.

What are the main takeaways you would want people to have after reading this book?

1) When people decide what to do with their money; don’t judge them.

2) Understanding. As there are a number of people experiencing financial difficulty.

3) People do have choices.

What are you working on right now?

I’m still speaking about the book. Also working on Move Your Money. It lays out the options people have and doing more research on banks.

What are you reading? What’s on your nightstand?

I’m reading Jesmyn Ward and the autobiography of Bruce Springsteen.

Any nuggets of wisdom for aspiring writers?

Write all you can. Practice. Writing is like a muscle. The more you work it, then the more you get better at it.

Where can people find you? Are you on social media? Do you have a website?

You can find me on Twitter @LisaServon, on my website, and contact me via email at UPenn.

To learn more about Lisa and her book visit LisaServon.com. You can also read book reviews of The Unbanking of America: How the New Middle Class Survives and purchase a copy here.

Do you hear that VISA? It’s me, Greenbacks Magnet

I like my Visa. Always have. But it does not outshine cash.

Let’s face it, Visa is everyone whether you want it to be or not. Visa is accepted at the gas station, grocery store, airports, restaurants, and shopping malls.

Even vending machines take credit cards now. I once read that if you have to put groceries and gas on plastic, then you’re in trouble.

A book I read called Maxed Out, discusses the dangers of heavy dependence on credit.

You want to get on the right side of Mr. Interest, whereas, you earn it instead of pay it.

Here’s how you do it.

Read the fine print. Make sure to read your credit card statement. Know what interest rates you are paying and pay attention to the fees.

Pay off in three years. Credit card statements now show payment information of what happens when you pay only the minimum or what to pay to pay off your account in 3 years. If you stop using your card, you can pay it off in this time and be out of debt.

Plan to repay debt. I have read over 100 finance books and many state the same messages. One in particular is to make a plan to pay off all debt if possible in 3 to 5 years. Excluding the mortgage.

Setting goals. Write down a realistic plan to get rid of credit card debt. You need the amounts owed and interest rates.  The goal has to be measurable such as 3, 4, or 5 years.

Stop digging. You will have to stop using plastic. It’s the only way.

Save for emergencies. Have a rainy day fund to help kick the credit card habit. If you can save 1-month worth of expenses, you can start to kick the habit as you can pay for what you want with cash.

Delayed gratification. Plan your expenses. If you want to go to a concert next year, then start planning well in advance and save the money to pay for it with cash. No credit equals no debt.

Right side of Mr. Interest. Once you pay off the credit card debt, you can focus on investing the money you were paying in finance charges and start earning interest of your own instead of paying it.

Simply put, you can go from paying interest to earning it on the money you invest. This 8-step plan will help you get there.