I first saw that movie in a Navy Leadership course in 1986. I've since watched it many times and have shared it with others. I'm easy going by nature and although I can't really even act totally hardcore like Savage(not sure he was really as hardcore as he came across), I've applied many of these concepts even in managing myself. The one phrase "Maximum effort" resonates with me." One bright moment in 1987 was when someone that worked for me needed extra motivation. I borrowed some of Savage's techniques and he asked, "why do I always want to set the world on fire after being with you?" He actually appreciated what I did.
@Arielxoxoxo Жыл бұрын
Thank You for making these videos! A lot of good info!!
@Arielxoxoxo Жыл бұрын
How many screens do you have there? I’m going to take whatever you say seriously because look at all those monitors!! ❤😂
@brianmartinez7979 Жыл бұрын
🤣 𝐩яⓞ𝓂𝓞Ş𝐦
@DudeWheresMyCurve2 жыл бұрын
I used to work at Carvana 2 weeks ago. It might be a money laundering pyramid scheme from what I witnessed as an employee. I've seen them throw thousands of dollars worth of parts and automotive equipment in the trash. They purchase company tools and storage for their younger technicians that disappear and get renewed with new ones. Seems odd that they (The owner and his dad) raked up billions of dollars worth of profit from the stock price going from $30 to $360. They then tried selling junk bonds to purchase ADESA but, wound up taking a loan from Apollo, (which the owners father is a board member of.) They buy ADESA auction real estate (Not the company) fired 12% of employees and now they are going broke? Also the Garcia's own a loan company called Bridgecrest. Not to mention the "owners" get a 10 to 1 stock value. Meaning they can never lose their company unless they sell almost all of their stocks. So a loss through purchasing parts and equipment over and over again leads to not owing any taxes on the billions they made from daddy selling his shares whenever he wants.