This Week's Book: Ted Turner, Unfiltered and Unstoppable
I’ve committed to learning as much as I can about entrepreneurship, and the best way I’ve found to do it is by studying entrepreneurs. Reading about their journeys is my preferred method. I read a book every week, usually a biography, and then share it in my Library on this site. Every Sunday, I post the latest book I read.
Last summer, I read Call Me Ted, an autobiography by Ted Turner. The book is a great recap of Turner’s entire career through 2008 or so. But when I read it, I could tell Ted was speaking from the perspective of a wiser man who had calmed down a lot. I enjoyed that perspective, but I wanted to hear from Ted in his prime, when he was full of energy and said outlandish things publicly on a daily basis.
I did some digging and found another book. Last week, I read a biography of Turner, Lead, Follow or Get Out of the Way by Christian Williams. Williams was attached to Turner’s hip throughout 1979 and 1980. He saw and heard a lot. He was even aboard Turner’s yachts for some of his famous and tragic races.
The thing I like most about this book is that it’s filled with quotations of things Ted said. He was brash and direct, to put it mildly. His words offer a unique insight about his thinking and mind during, arguably, his prime. A period when he was undertaking some of his most ambitious projects (e.g., launching CNN), fighting some of his fiercest battles with competitors and regulators, and racing yachts all over the world (and winning, too).
If you’re interested in learning about the early years of Ted’s journey, how he was thinking at the time, and the details of what he was doing, consider reading this biography.
