into drugs or gets arrested for drunk driving, how long it takes him to get over those things? I mean, they end up in jail, then in court, then in rehab, then in community service, and most of them have to go through that two or three times before they finally get it. The ones who don’t get it end up in prison or dead.”
“Well, yeah, I’ve noticed that.”
“All that stuff they have to do to get straight takes up years of their lives. You and I don’t need to waste that kind of time getting out of trouble we should never have gotten into in the first place.”
“You have a point,” Ben conceded.
“Ben, I think you would make a terrific movie producer.”
“Really?”
“You’re smart, you’re good with money, you’re well organized. But you’re not motivated—not yet, anyway.”
“What should motivate me?”
“Would you like to be a movie producer?”
“Yeah, sure I would. Who wouldn’t?”
“Okay, everybody, but only a few are suited to the work. First of all, you love the movies.”
“Well, I love everything you’ve shown me.”
“A good motivation to have would be to want to make movies as good as or better than those.”
“Yeah, I can see that.”
“If you’re motivated, then making that happen becomes the most—well, one of the most important things in your life, and you do the things you have to do to achieve that ambition.”
“What are the things I have to do, if I want to be a movie producer?”
“First of all, you have to do the things that everybody ought to do anyway, like getting an education and behaving yourself. Then you have to pick out a few things to do that lead you toward your goal.”
“Such as?”
“Such as coming to Yale Drama School with me, instead of going to Columbia.”
“Drama school? Me? ”
“Why not? In drama school you’ll learn how to produce a play and a movie, and you’ll meet the kind of people you’ll later be working with when you’re a producer: directors, actors, writers, technicians. And while you’re at it, you should take some business courses, too, particularly accounting and marketing. Then, maybe, you should get an MBA.”
“Drama school, business school,” Ben mused, half to himself. “You know, that makes a lot of sense— if I decided I wanted to be a movie producer.”
“Do you have some other career in mind?”
“My dad wants me to go to law school. I think he wants me to be like Stone.”
“He’ll get over it. What does your grandfather want you to do?”
“He says I should do something I love, and he’ll help me get to the top of it.”
“Can he help you switch from Columbia to Yale?”
“Just between you and me, Peter, I think my grandfather can make anything happen.”
“Then he’s a valuable ally. From what I’ve heard about him, he’s very rich, too.”
“Yeah, I guess he is.”
“And you’re his only grandchild, aren’t you?”
“Yeah.”
“That means you’re going to have a lot of options other kids don’t have.”
“I never thought of it that way,” Ben said, “but you’re right.”
“How does this sound, Ben.” Peter raised a hand as if framing a big sign. “A BEN BACCHETTI PRODUCTION OF A FILM BY PETER BARRINGTON.”
Ben laughed. “Hey, that sounds pretty great!”
“It can be great, if it’s what we both want. What do you want, Ben?”
Ben took a deep breath. “I want that.”
“Are you willing to do the things you have to to get it? Now, I don’t mean stabbing people in the back, the way they seem to do in Hollywood. I mean, are you willing to do the things you have to do to learn how to do it and be great at it?”
“Yes,” Ben said firmly. “I’m willing to do those things.”
“And are you willing not to do the things you shouldn’t do?”
“Yeah, I’m willing not to do those things.”
“Great! We’ll have a lot more fun if I’m not bailing you out all the time.”
Ben laughed. “You know, my dad is always saying stuff like this
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