TIP084 : BILLIONAIRE TED TURNER’S STORY

W/ PRESTON & STIG

14 April 2016

In this episode Preston and Stig discuss billionaire Ted Turner’s book Call Me Ted. Ted Turner had a net worth of 10 Billion before the burst of the Dot Com Bubble, founded CNN, and was very successful in buying and building complementary businesses. In the second half of the podcast episode Preston and Stig answer 2 questions from the audience.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • How Ted Turner built a media empire.
  • How greed and wrong life priorities might be the cause of Ted Turner’s financial and personal downfall.
  • Why gold is insurance rather than an investment.
  • How Preston’s short position in bonds is going.
  • How to implement a dollar cost averaging strategy.

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TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

Intro  00:06

Broadcasting from Bel Air, Maryland, this is The Investor’s Podcast. They’ll read the books and summarize the lessons. They’ll test the waters and tell you when it’s cold. They’ll give you actionable investing strategies. Your hosts, Preston Pysh and Stig Brodersen!

Preston Pysh  00:29

Hey, how’s everybody doing out there? This is Preston Pysh. I’m your host for The Investor’s Podcast. And as usual, I’m accompanied by my co-host Stig Brodersen out in Denmark.

Today, we’re doing a book and the name of the book was “Call Me Ted,” written by Ted Turner, who’s a wealthy billionaire who did all sorts of things, which we’re going to talk about here on the episode. But just so everyone knows the layout of the show today, we’re going to be talking about the book “Call Me Ted” for the first segment of the show. Then, in the second segment of the show, we’re going to answer probably about three questions from our audience.

Stig and I are just going to talk about Ted Turner’s history, the timeline of how he created the businesses that he created. After that, we’re going to talk about the key things that we learned from his experiences in his life, just the highlights that we took away from the book. So without further ado, we’re gonna go ahead and kick this off, and we’re just going to be talking about Ted Turner.

So Ted Turner got his start in a… I can’t say he’s 100% self-made, because he got a start and had a huge advantage. His father left him with how much money? Did it say exactly how much?

Stig Brodersen  01:35

Yeah. Just short of a million dollars I think.

Preston Pysh  01:37

I see. I thought it was maybe a little bit more than a million but it was around a million dollars. We could go with that. His father left him a fairly large inheritance, especially when you think about the time of that, you know? I don’t know what the inflation value would be today, but that’s probably $5 million or something in today’s value, which is a significant amount of money to be left with when you are 24. So he did have a huge advantage when he started off, folks. So don’t think that he did all this without having a jump.

But the thing that you gotta understand is for him to and at one point time, his net worth was as high as $10 billion. I don’t care who you are to go from $5 million to 10 billion, you got to know what you’re doing. You can’t be some guy that just gets lucky every single time. So he was a very good businessman. It explains all the different steps and his mindset throughout the book. I did want to start off by clarifying that upfront so people know that.

02:34

Now, one of the unique things that I think was interesting about his upbringing may have led to some of his success. So his dad was an abusive person. Although his dad was abusive, and he had like this love-hate relationship with his father and in many ways, I think he was a lot like his father. But later on in his life, I think he started drifting a little bit further away from that behavior.

So his father was abusive, a real strong personality, a very good businessman for the most part, and love to spend his time working in the business. And so Ted learned that behavior from his dad. Ted did some time in a military school. As a young kid, he didn’t live with his parents for most of his high school career. He was in a military high school. And that’s where I think Ted got his military regimen if you will. He was very on time for everything. He had a strong work ethic. It took him some time to get to that point whenever he first showed up the Military Academy because he talked about some of his antics and how bad he was when he was there. But then he had a major shift.

That behavior was ingrained in him at a very young age and he carried that with him into his life as a business magnate. So after he graduated, Ted went on to go to Brown University, which everyone knows is a fantastic school. But his senior year, he got kicked out because he had a woman in the dorms, and Ted says that that was part of it but really, I think that’s what happened. So he had like a little bit of a spin. Do you remember what his spin was in the book where he said…

Stig Brodersen  04:06

Yeah. It was something like he already decided to quit. And then he just thought, why not have fun if I’m going to quit anyway? And yeah, I don’t know.

Preston Pysh  04:17

So that was the story that he told. It’s his personal book. So that was his side of the story. So it’s good that you get the balance. So he gets thrown out of Brown and his dad was not… There was a funny story where he was choosing his major at Brown. And do you remember what the major was, Stig? I can’t remember what it was.

Stig Brodersen  04:35

It was something like, if not philosophy, then he was like classics or something like that. Definitely not a major that his father would prefer.

His dad just wrote him this scathing letter. The letter was impressive that he read in the book, I was like, “Wow, his dad can write.”

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