|
|
Classical Studies
Home
Last updated: 9/26/02
|
|
|
|

|
Robert Edward "Ted" Turner III (1938 - ), media-mogul
and billionaire
One of Ted Turner's greatest heroes has always been Alexander
the Great, so at Brown University, he decided to major in
Classics. His choice of major made his father, who ran a billboard
advertising company, "almost puke," as he wrote in a now
famous letter to his son (reprinted in Arion 1.1 (1990) 237-39;
click on "Autolycus").
Ted Turner subsequently left college and turned his father's billboard
business into a huge media-conglomerate. In the process, he launched
CNN, the first 24-hour all-news network, founded Turner Network
Television (TNT), the Cartoon Network, and Turner Classic Movies
(TCM), and acquired sports franchises like the Atlanta Braves. Currently,
Mr. Turner heads the Turner
Foundation, which is devoted to the protection of the environment,
the United
Nations Foundation, which in 1999 donated $28 million to help
eradicate Polio world-wide, and, together with former Senator Sam
Nunn, the Nuclear Threat
Initiative (NTI), a charitable organization working to reduce
the risk of use and prevent the spread of weapons of mass destruction.
|
| |
Ted Turner about himself and Alexander
the Great:
"They laughed at me when I
started CNN. They laughed at me when I bought the Braves. They laughed
at me when I bought M-G-M. I spent a lot of time thinking, and I
did not fear, because of my classical background. When Alexander
the Great took control when his dad died, he was twenty years old.
He took the Macedonian Army, which was the best army in the world
at the time, and conquered Greece, got the Greeks to all join with
him, and then marched across the Hellespont and invaded Asia. They
didn't even know where the world ended at that time. And he was
dead at thirty-three, thirteen years later. He kept marching. He
hardly ever stopped. And he never lost a battle."
(Source: Ken Auletta, "The
Lost Tycoon," The New Yorker, April 23&30, 2001,
p. 151)
|
Back
to Classics VIPs
|
|
For corrections or additions, please contact oknorrATwillamette.edu.
|