Lakshmi Rana and Atlas Shrugged

Lakshmi RanaShe may not be a fan yet, but Indian fashion model Lakshmi Rana reports that she’s currently reading Atlas Shrugged:

New Delhi, October 16: ??During the fashion season I usually work on Sundays, but on days that I am home I wake up around 9a.m,?? says model Lakshmi Rana. After breakfast she goes through newspapers. Being an avid reader Rana takes time out to read books on Sundays. ??Currently I am reading Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand,?? she says. Richard Bach is also a favourite. ??I enjoyed reading Hari Kunzru?s The Impressionist recently,?? adds Rana. In the afternoon she hits the gym. ??I go to Ozone (in Defence Colony) where I usually work out for about two hours. Sometimes I take the sauna and steam bath and do a pedicure,?? she says. After that Rana hangs out with friends. ??When they come home I enjoy cooking for them. I usually make fish curry or fish fry.?? On Sundays she sleeps late as she usually catches up on movies on her DVD player. The last film that Rana watched was Michael Mann?s Collateral.

If you need a dating service, Miss Rana, we’ll be right here for you.

'Apprentice' Bill Rancic and The Fountainhead

Sounds like Bill Rancic (winner of last season’s The Apprentice, starring Donald Trump) knows where to turn for inspiration. From the Chicago Tribune‘s description of Rancic’s home:

The master bedroom, on the third floor, is large but not outrageously so, with a fireplace, a vaulted ceiling and a balcony that looks out over the back yard shared with the main house. The walls are a dark, mossy taupe with white trim, and heavy black velvet curtains block out the light.
On his nightstand is a copy of Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead. Clearly, architecture and the perils of selling out are on the mind.

No indication, yet, whether he is actually a fan of the novel. But he seems like someone who should be.

Harry Potter and Philosophy

Harry Potter and Philosophy - Click to OrderA new volume of essays titled Harry Potter and Philosophy (Open Court, 2004) has just been published. The book contains contributions by Atlasphere members Shawn Klein (who was also co-editor of the volume) and Diana Hsieh. Atlasphere interviewee Mimi Reisel Gladstein also has an essay.
The book is not specifically targeted towards Rand admirers, of course. Shawn writes:

There isn’t too much Ayn Rand. But Diana’s essay and my essay make passing references, and in the quotes from philosophers section there is a quote from Ayn Rand. (I made sure of that!)

From the back cover:

You don?t need a diploma in arithmancy, the friendship of a hippogriff, or even a Hogwarts Library card to discover amazing and arcane secrets in the labyrinthine world of Harry Potter.
In the book you now hold in your hands (or for more advanced students, the book you have levitated into a suitable position while you feed snacks to your owl), seventeen philosophical scholars unlock some of Hogwarts? secret panels, displaying fresh insights enlightening both for sorcerers and for the more discerning Muggles.
Among the occult lore here revealed, behold the best recipe for true courage, proof that self-deception does not yield happiness, how ethics can be applied to the branch of technology known as magic, why the Mirror of Erised isn?t adequate for real life, whether prophecy rules out free choice, and what dementors and boggarts can teach us about joy, fear, and the soul.
All the pages of this book are acid-free and have been individually bewitched with an anti-befuddlement incantation. Don?t forget to keep your wand primed and read between the lines. Failure to observe these precautions may invite the malign influence of Vol?sorry, He Who Must Not Be Named.
“Harry Potter and Philosophy is the most enjoyable HP spin-off I?ve read?and I?ve read most of them. Some chapters are so full of good reflections, clear thinking, and reliable scholarship, I couldn?t resist reading entire passages aloud. Our family plans to read these thought-provoking essays at the dinner table, sparking intelligent conversation with our teen- and college-aged children?Harry Potter fans all.”
   ?Connie Neal
   Author of The Gospel According to Harry Potter
“With insight, humor, and a style and structure true to the world and characters of Hogwarts, David Baggett and Shawn Klein have compiled a wonderful, stimulating book of philosophical insights. From the Slytherins and ambition-as-virtue to feminism and the women of Hogwarts, readers will enjoy stretching beyond the normal boundaries of Muggles? classrooms.”
   ?Roderic Owen
   Professor of Philosophy, Mary Baldwin College

The book is available in bookstores, and is also available online from Amazon.com.

Ayn Rand and the Youth Culture

The Detriot Free Press highlights the pursuits of two enterprising — Ayn Rand influenced — young men who started up a successful, youth-orientated pop culture magazine. Brandon Green and John Chase of Dearborn, Michigan founded The Royal magazine to target teens and twenty-somethings and give their generation its own voice. The Royal website says the magazine is a “quarterly collection of the hottest emerging talents and trends from around the world.”
According to the Free Press article, the young entrepreneurs “both like unknown bands, films by Wes Anderson, the novels of Ayn Rand, the Cartoon Network and capitalism.”
Read the full article…

America Loves to Hate Dastardly CEOs

USA Today recently published an article on the demonization of CEOs in America:

CEOs have been portrayed as villains since the dawn of silent movies and black-and-white TV. The recent real-life parade of perp walks and pay packages is making them even bigger marks.
CEOs didn’t even escape this summer’s sci-fi releases: Halle Berry becomes Catwoman due to skin cream made addictive; Dr. Otto Octavius turns villain in Spider-Man 2 in a gone-haywire attempt to make a profit; and I, Robot exposes the ultimate warranty hassle when products made by U.S. Robotics start killing humans because sleazy executives in 2035 try to cut a few corners.

The article then goes on to ask if the rampant depiction of CEOs in such a negative light is harmless, or “does it have a lasting impact on a system that has made the USA the world’s economic engine?”
Sound like a good plot-line for a novel? How about a movie? American CEOs think so:

CEOs have long awaited the promised production of the movie Atlas Shrugged from the 1957 Ayn Rand novel that portrays business leaders as heroic and society’s saviors. The screenplay is supposedly being written, but that’s been reported before.

I highly recommend you read the full article, which includes a sidebar of movies in which business executives are portrayed as evil — ironically enough, The Fountainhead is one of the movies listed.
You might also be interested in the The Atlasphere’s Atlas Shrugged Movie Archive, as well as The Unofficial Atlas Shrugged Movie Homepage, which was last updated August 29th.

Five Ayn Rand Essay Semifinalists in One Class

The Albany, NY Times Union recently published an article about five students from the same class being chosen as semifinalists in the Ayn Rand Institute’s annual essay contest:

Marc Sullivan shrugged when asked how five of his students at Mohonasen High School ended up as semifinalists in an Ayn Rand essay contest with more than 14,000 entrants across the country. He attributed their success to having them do several rewrites and critiquing one another’s work.

While the teacher misrepresents Ayn Rand’s philosophy as “uber-libertarianism” and opposed to cooperative efforts, five semifinalists from one class is quite an accomplishment. See the full article to read more about them.
According to ARI’s list of 2003 Fountainhead Winners, one of the students went on to become a finalist.

Ayn Rand in Smart Money Mag

The teaser for the June 21 edition of Smart Money magazine’s Tradecraft feature begins by explicitly endorsing Ayn Rand’s view of government.
Smart Money is the major financial publication of Hearst Corporation, (which is also publisher of Esquire magazine). Subscribers to Smart Money can read the full article.
UPDATE: Rand’s appearance in Smart Money is more than a coincidence: The article was written by Atlasphere member Jonathan Hoenig, of Chicago, who’s given us permission to reproduce the full article here.

Get Off Our Backs!
by Jonathan Hoenig – June 21, 2004

AS THE SAYING GOES, there’s no such thing as being a little bit pregnant. When it comes to freedom, the same applies: People either are free, or they aren’t. Either they’re sovereign individuals who own their lives and the results of their productive efforts, or they’re servants to the state. If basic rights are always subject to a majority vote, it’s not liberty, but mob rule.
Free trade is one of those rights. As philosopher Ayn Rand wrote, “political freedom cannot exist without economic freedom; a free mind and a free market are corollaries.” People who aren’t free to trade their property, time or productive effort in accordance with their own values aren’t free at all.
Continue reading “Ayn Rand in Smart Money Mag”

Wayne Kramer on Remaking 'The Fountainhead'

Last month we reported that Brad Pitt and Oliver Stone are interested in remaking the movie version of The Fountainhead.
Wayne Kramer's The CoolerIt turns out that South African-born director Wayne Kramer (whose charming-looking The Cooler comes out on video tomorrow) is also interested.
From an interview with Kramer at the Times Online:

Is there a book that you would particularly like to make a film from?
My dream book to make a film of would be The Fountainhead, by Ayn Rand. There was a version starring Gary Cooper in 1984, but that didn’t do it justice. I think that book is a film just begging to be made.

See the full interview for more info about Wayne Kramer.
(Incidentally, the King Vidor version of The Fountainhead movie starring Gary Cooper was actually released in 1949, not 1984 as stated above.)

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.)

2004 Coca-Cola Scholar Nicole Newman

Nicole NewmanSan Diego-area high school graduate Nicole Newman is one of this year’s Coca-Cola Scholars.
And she’s yet another bright, ambitious, talented young person whose favorite novel is The Fountainhead:

Few students pack as much into the day as 18-year-old Nicole Newman.
It begins at 4 a.m. with ice skating practice, followed by Advanced Placement courses at school, varsity track practice and a part-time job at Frog’s gym.
And she does it all while maintaining 4.0 grade-point average, coaching children in Special Olympics and taking a youth leadership role at church.
Nicole, a senior at La Costa Canyon High School here, was selected from 80,000 students nationwide to be a 2004 Coca-Cola Scholar.
The honor comes with a $20,000 college scholarship, which will go toward tuition at Dartmouth College where Nicole might major in bio-engineering. […]
Nicole plays the piano, and her favorite book is Ayn Rand’s “The Fountainhead,” though she devours Harry Potter books.

See her full profile at SignOnSanDiego.com for additional information.