Motivation
The Social Network film is based on the rise of the 'Facebook' founder Matt Zuckerberg.
Visit the official site at http://500MillionFriends.com
In theaters October 1, 2010

Eddie Murphy when asked on giving advice to young people:
"I never was one to give advice. But if a kid wants to become a comedian, I would say, “Go for it.” As far as following in anyone’s footsteps, I don’t know about that. See, I never took advice from anybody. When I was 16 years old, a real famous comedian saw me act and told me, “Hey, that s---- ain’t funny. Where are you going to go with that?” That really messed my mind up, but I realized that what works for one person isn’t necessarily going to work for another person in this business. I can’t give any real advice because times are changing, and I change from day to day. Each year my ideals change, and I get a different outlook on life. It wouldn’t be fair for me to give a young person some advice because I’m changing too much. I’m still getting my stuff together."
Source: Ebony Magazine
A small Paparazzi teams explains the Ins and outs of the paparazzi business to comedian, Dave Chapelle.
*Making A Buck In The Cut Throat Industry*

Magazine magnet, Felix Dennis on the sacrifices it took to make hundreds of millions:
"I forgot to have many sensible relationships. Forgot to get married, forgot to have children...I would have preferred it the other way. But, I was spending all day every day doing what I was doing and I had no time to figure it out...This is a pretty lonely road, you know. And, I do say throughout the book, 'Are you sure you want to do this? Are you sure you want to do this?' If their answer is 'Yeah, I want to do this,' I say, 'Yeah, here's what we do' and then start off saying, 'Are you sure you really want to do this?' (laughs)"
Click here for the full interview.

Guess what famous person owns this mansion?
A great scene on how to haggle from movie 'Lock Stock and two Smoking Barrels'.
'Rich Dad, Poor Dad' author, Robert Kiyosaki explains the basic financial knowledge you need to get yourself out of the 'rat race'.

Leonardo DiCaprio On How Hollywood Brain Washed Him To Become One Of The Greats (A Must Read)
Extracted from the Rolling Stone magazine: August 2010 issue
On sacrificing the norm:
He expected to be married with kids by this age (35 years old), but his career, “this roller coaster,” took over. “I feel like I’m 70 years old sitting here,” DiCaprio says, breaking into a quavery old-man voice: “I have no family, no children. This grand Hollywood monster’s eaten me up and spit me out.’ That’s not the case. Everything will happen in due course.”
On being influenced by the greats:
I got to watch Robert De Niro – his focus, his improvisational ability, all the intricate detail that went into it. I’d never seen anything close to that before.”
Around that time, DiCaprio gave himself a crash course in film history, spending three months watching movies every day on the little TV in his bedroom, riding his skateboard to the video store to pick up rentals. “I hadn’t seen Raging Bull, I Hadn’t seen Taxi Driver, so bam, I started watching these movies. They blow my mind, it takes me back into the people that influenced them – James Dean and Montgomery Clift and Marlon Brando and all these guys from the fifties that ripped their heart out onscreen, playing jazz for the first time as actors. I said to myself, “Those are the types of movies I want to do, the type of work I want to achieve.’ That hasn’t changed.








