Playboy has been packaging some of their most famous interviews together in a series of recent books, each around a central theme. The Playboy Interviews: Movers and Shakers centers around some of the most successful entrepreneurs and/or business leaders of the past 40 years, and it doesn't disappoint. While there's nothing new here, the collected interviews of major business leaders, stretching back as far as 1974 to as recent as 2004, is a treat both for its insight into what makes these people tick and the ability it gives us to see if the future played out the way the interviewees thought it might.
Interviewed in Movers and Shakers are Barry Diller, Calvin Klein, Steve Jobs, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, Jeff Bezos, Hugh Hefner (twice), Leona Helmsley, Donald Trump (twice), Vince McMahon, Ted Turner (twice), Bill Gates, Larry Ellison and Malcolm Forbes.
Most of the interviewees are larger-than-life characters, and these in-depth interviews bring that impressive aspect out. Perhaps the most entertaining of the subjects is Ted Turner, interviewed originally in 1978, fresh off of having won the America's Cup yacht race and taking over ownership of the then last-place Atlanta Braves. At the Braves' games Turner would sit behind home plate with a microphone tied directly into the stadium's public address system, offering his comments to the few thousand fans who attended Braves games at that time. Interviewer Peter Ross Range describes the constantly moving "Mouth of the South" as someone who never stops talking, continuing to yell commentary even when on the other side of a closed restroom door.
Interviewed five years later, again by Ross Range, Turner's fame had grown and he comes across full of stress over competing with the broadcast networks with the recent launch of his Cable News Network (CNN). Ross Range's somewhat aggressive questioning of Turner at this time leads to Turner eventually ripping the tape recorder from his hands, destroying the tape and throwing the recorder at the cockpit door of the commercial passenger plane they are flying on at the time.








Article comments
1 - Natalie Bennett
This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States. Nice work!