Celebrity Rand Fans: Rock Trio Rush

You probably already know that the rock trio Rush (and especially its drummer Neil Peart) are long-time fans of Ayn Rand’s writings.
Bay-area TV station KTVU recently profiled the band while reviewing their latest tour. The review makes brief reference to Rush’s adaptation of the storyline from Ayn Rand’s novelette Anthem for the title track on their 70s-era album 2112.
The profile begins:

There aren’t many surviving acts from the ’70s who can boast the kind of durability and integrity that Canadian trio Rush can. In an era when KISS continues touring years after its alleged farewell jaunt and hires two imposters to take on the costumed personas of original members, Rush’s line-up of bassist/vocalist Geddy Lee, underrated guitar hero Alex Lifeson and drummer/lyricist Neil “The Professor” Peart has managed to stay intact for three decades while remaining true to the unique kind of virtuoso musicianship and thought-provoking hard rock that have become Rush trademarks.

See KTVU’s full Rush profile for further information about this terrific rock band.
(If you’re unfamiliar with Rush, but interested in exploring their work, I particularly recommend their albums Moving Pictures and Permanent Waves. These two albums were released at the height of Rush’s career, and are masterpieces of classic, guitar-driven rock.)

Celebrity Ayn Rand Fan: Michelle Williams

Dawson's Creek star Michelle WilliamsAccording to her “The Williams Center” fan site, Dawson’s Creek star Michelle Williams includes Ayn Rand among her favorite authors:

In her spare time, Michelle Williams enjoys reading more than anything else. Some of her favourite authors are Hermann Hesse, Dostoyevsky and Kurt Vonnegut Jr. and Ayn Rand. She describes herself as “independent, determined and a risk-taker.” With that in mind, it is certainly just a matter of time before she becomes an established and respected actress in Hollywood.

See Ms. Williams’s full bio for more information about this fetching Rand fan.

Celebrity Rand Fan: David Duval

Ranked No. 1 in the world at one time, celebrity golfer David Duval has ended a seven-month layoff to play in this year’s U.S. Open.
From a new profile of Duval in the Detroit News:

He craves a simple life, but being in the spotlight, being scrutinized, being a high-profile professional athlete and being famous isn?t always simple. It can be, but only if you make it so.
There?s the rub. For Duval, life is a maze. His thoughts are deep. He thinks and uses words such as existentialist. His favorite book is Ayn Rand?s ?Atlas Shrugged.? Duval deals with questions such as, ?Who is John Galt?? Not, ?How many birdies you make today, Double-D??
Duval returns to the PGA Tour today when he tees it up at Shinnecock Hills after a seven-month layoff. He didn?t play competitive golf because he didn?t want to. He?s playing here because he wants to play. He?s not here to think about winning or to win, only to play.
?I didn?t really know when I would play again,? Duval said. ?I just felt like at some point I would feel like I was ready to go, just play and have some fun.?

See Duval’s full profile for additional information.
(Thanks to Atlasphere member Scott Croom for this media citing.)

Ronald Reagan's Legacy

In honor of the late President Ronald Reagan, The Objectivist Center‘s Ed Hudgins examines Reagan’s moral legacy:

First, he offered an optimistic vision of America and the world, knowing that there is no limit to the achievements of free individuals.
Second, he understood that government is the problem, not the solution, and its powers should be limited.
And third, he understood that communism was truly evil and more than any single individual was responsble for its demise.

For a further tribute, read Hudgins’s “Happy Birthday Ronald Reagan” from earlier this year.
PS. Reagan considered himself an admirer of Ayn Rand.

Oliver Stone and Brad Pitt on Remaking the Fountainhead

The purpose of “Media Citings” and “Culture” categories on this blog is to bring some attention to the ways in which Ayn Rand’s work has become a part of the cultural vernacular. As I point out here, in an Atlasphere article (which I have expanded considerably for publication in a Fall 2004 Centenary Culture Symposium in The Journal of Ayn Rand Studies), Rand’s cultural impact is growing at an almost exponential rate. To merely cite the positive and negative cultural references to Rand, however, does not imply a “sanction” of any of the said references. On this blog, I’m mostly playing the role of “messenger”: My posts are more “reportage,” rather than Op-Ed.
So, for example, my comments on “John Galt,” radio pirate, are not a sanction of his radio piracy or even a championing of his battle against the FCC. It is simply a post that illustrates the possible Randian influence on a small group of people. These people invoke the Robin Hood legend in a way that recalls Rand’s own invocation and inversion of that legend; she notes in her description of Ragnar Danneskjold, in Atlas Shrugged, that he is a pirate “Robin Hood who robs the [parasitic] humanitarians and gives to the [productive] rich.” The radio pirates in Denver claim they are “taking radio back from the rich,” but their struggle is against a system of government licensure that enriches those privileged enough to secure the licenses. My post includes no assessment of the legitimacy of their struggle; such an assessment would be well beyond my scope, in this context.
I provide this long prefatory note because what I’m about to report to my Atlasphere readers is that Brad Pitt, mega-star of the new film, Troy, which opens nationwide today, told interviewer Charlie Rose that Oliver Stone?yes, he, of the left, who admires Fidel Castro?was still interested in directing a new version of The Fountainhead.
As he has done on other occasions, Pitt talked glowingly of the science and aesthetics of architecture. Rose asked him if he knew of any way to combine his passion for architecture with his passion for acting; he wondered if there was any “story of a great architect” that might inspire Pitt. “That would go back to The Fountainhead,” Pitt replied. Rose wondered if Pitt would even consider re-making it. Pitt said that the book is “so dense and complex, it would have to be a six-hour movie … I don’t know how you do it under four, and not lose, really lose, what Ayn Rand was after.” But he affirmed his profound interest to star in a re-make, and cited Oliver Stone’s own interest in directing it as a feature film.
Whether you revel in or revile the possibility of a Stone-Pitt collaboration, the fact is that Rand’s work is still inspiring a generation of admirers?left, right, and center?who have been deeply impressed with her paean to individual integrity and authenticity. And in an age that has seen the devastation of the New York City skyline, a skyline that Rand worshiped as “the will of man made visible,” I can think of few novels more in need of a modern re-telling.
So… let the arguments begin over who should direct and who should star in any big-screen adaptation. I’m just a reporter here.

Billy Beane on 'The Fountainhead'

Jeffrey Miller points out that A’s GM Billy Beane is a huge fan of Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead:

“Moneyball” made Billy Beane one of the most polarizing figures in baseball, but the book that really gets the A’s GM feeling like a man apart is “The Fountainhead.” Ayn Rand’s classic is about a renegade architect named Howard Roarke [sic–it’s Roark] who refuses to yield to conventional standards, even when it means creating enemies who want to destroy him for it. “He’s my favorite,” Beane said. “He said (the heck with) everything else and did it the way he wanted to. He didn’t care. I read it, like, three times.” Beane is something of a Howard Roarke himself, a renegade baseball architect who refuses to yield to traditional methods, even if it means the old guard wants to destroy him for it. And it does. Beane has de-emphasized the role of field scouts and stripped his manager of most in-game strategy decisions.

India's Richest Woman: Kiran Majumdar-Shaw

Kiran Majumdar-ShawBiotech entrepreneur Kiran Majumdar-Shaw is the CEO of Biocon India Corp.
When her company opened publicly in the stock market yesterday, she also became India’s richest woman:

After a frenetic day of watching her baby make a billion dollar stock market debut on Wednesday, Kiran Majumdar-Shaw popped open the bubbly and thanked all who helped Biocon become India’s first big-ticket biotech listing.
On a balmy evening, the 50-year-old entrepreneur, who started her business with just Rs 10,000 from a garage in Bangalore, threw a party at the Taj Mahal Hotel at Mumbai’s southern tip of Colaba.
There was lots to celebrate — she is now the richest first generation woman promoter ever in the country with a net worth of $450-million […] — thanks to the 50 per cent premium commanded by her company valuing Biocon at $1.1 billion. Majumdar-Shaw owns 40 per cent of the firm.

And to whom does Indian’s richest woman turn to for personal inspiration? Ayn Rand, among others.

T.J. Rodgers and Dartmouth College

Cypress Semiconductor CEO T.J. Rodgers has a reputation for standing up for rational principles, and has been known to require his managers to read Atlas Shrugged.
In the mid-90s, Rodgers “rebuked a nun who had criticized Cypress for its lack of women or minority board members, saying it would be immoral for him to pick directors based on criteria other than merit.”
More recently, an article for the San Francisco Chronicle reports that he’s decided to run for office. In particular, he’s running for the board of trustees for his alma mater, Dartmouth College, in a bid to reform its politically correct and educationally destructive policies:

Rodgers, class of 1970, said he’s concerned that his alma mater, long a bastion of traditional education, is wasting scarce money “in the diversity area.” He wants the college to stop adding ethnic studies classes and refocus its resources on the fundamentals, such as civics, science and history.
“I could live with (the spending) if it was for academics,” said Rodgers, who is running on a platform of fiscal prudence and a return to basics.
He was urged to undertake this diversion from running Cypress’ $863 million business by another Bay Area iconoclast — former legislator and Superior Court Judge Quentin Kopp.
“He is a man of convictions, unafraid to express those convictions, and a believer in Dartmouth,” said Kopp, class of ’49 and an active member of the college’s 62,000-member alumni association.
Clara Lovett, president of the American Association for Higher Education in Washington, D.C., said Rodgers and Kopp are not the only prominent alumni trying to counter “what they see as too much political correctness on campuses.”
“You can argue about their opinions or disagree with them, but they are people whose education has served them well,” Lovett said. “They can think, they care, and they can make an argument.”

See the full article for more details.

Joanne P. McCallie

Joanne P. McCallieMichigan sports fans are already familiar with MSU head women’s basketball coach Joanne P. McCallie:

Last season, McCallie guided a depleted MSU squad to a 17-12 overall record and its first NCAA Tournament appearance since 1997, as the Spartans earned a No. 8 seed in the East Regional. Despite numerous injuries that left MSU with a core of just six players getting nearly all of the minutes, she led Michigan State to its best Big Ten finish since 1997, as MSU tied for fourth in the league with a 10-6 record.
The Spartans improved by four wins over the previous season?s Big Ten win total – more than any other team in the conference. McCallie, whose three-year record at MSU stands at 46-43, earned her 200th career win Dec. 5, 2002, at Oakland and currently has a career record of 213-116 in 11 seasons as a head coach.
McCallie guided one of the nation?s top shooting teams last season. The Spartans ranked third nationally in three-point field goal percentage (.397), fifth in free throw percentage (.783) and 30th in field goal percentage (.448), becoming one of just four teams to rank nationally in all three shooting categories.
The Spartans also demonstrated a tough side, leading the Big Ten and ranking 11th nationally in rebound margin (+7.7), while ranking second in the league for the second straight year in scoring defense (60.7).

Now they know she’s also a huge fan of Dagny Taggart.
UPDATE: More information about Joanne McCallie and her successes during the past year.

India's First Woman Astronaut

Kalpana ChawlaKalpana Chawla was on the space shuttle Columbia during its fatal re-entry into Earth’s atmosphere on February 1, 2003.
An inspiration to millions of Indians, she is now the subject of her own biography, Dilip M Salwi’s Kalpana Chawla: India’s First Woman Astronaut.
In an extended excerpt published on rediff.com, we learn that Ayn Rand was one of her favorite authors:

In college, Kalpana showed total dedication to her subject because she enjoyed what she was doing. In fact, she was always dissatisfied with her performance and felt she could have done better. Always dressed in trousers, she used to come to college on a bicycle. As there was no girl’s hostel, initially she stayed in Mata Gujri Hall in the Punjab University campus. In fact, she changed several hostels as she found the hostel environment very noisy and distracting for studies. Later, she lived alone in one room above a garage in a bungalow.
Kalpana had a few select friends and would restrict herself to them and her studies. She learnt karate and became a black belt. She was mentally prepared to fight if any man tried to act smart with her. She also had an aesthetic sense in clothes, was fond of eating simple food and collecting precious stones. She loved a quiet environment and reading books. During those days, her favourite writers were Ayn Rand, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Salman Rushdie, Richard Bach and Oriana Fallaci. She would even persuade other friends to read these writers. Besides helping her friends in studies, she regularly paid the fees of one poor batch mate out of her pocket money without the girl’s knowledge. Although she believed herself to be no less than any boy and could do any task that they could, she disliked the more aggressive women’s liberation movement of the West.

Ayn Rand’s novels are quite popular in India. In fact, the Atlasphere currently contains 71 profiles from India [update 10/14/04: now more than 250 profiles from India] ? more than any other country but the United States.