Saying Bye to the Say Hey Kid

The baseball world got a lot smaller on Tuesday with the death of Willie Mays, the Say Hey kid.

Willie, who passed away at the age of 93, had been in declining health for a number of years. Still, his presence was felt at every game at the San Francisco Giants ballpark. The name of the park changed 4 times over the last quarter century, but the address remains the same: 24 Willie Mays Plaza.

Willie started his career in the Negro Leagues, and entered the majors just a few years after Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier. In 1963, his $105K salary was the highest in baseball. (Shohei Otani of the Dodgers is today’s highest paid player, with a base salary of $70 million—quite a big difference!).

A 24-time All Star, Willie played his entire career in New York and San Francisco—first for the Giants, then his final years with the NY Mets. He has been called the second-best player in baseball history, after Babe Ruth.

But it’s not just his amazing career that people will remember about Mays. It’s the dedicated mentor who encouraged and advised generations of young players. The kind, gentle man who attended Giants games and interacted with fans even after his vision deteriorated and he had trouble getting around.

There will never be another Willie Mays, but one has to believe somewhere up there, the Willies (Mays and McCovey)—together with Gaylord Perry, Monte Irwin, and others—are having a heck of an incredible pickup game.

Just say hey.

 

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The Rich Coast

We just got back from a week stay in Costa Rica.

What a fascinating place! This small country (about the size of West Virginia) is full of diverse wildlife, rainforests and volcanos, as well as such activities as zip lining, white water rafting, and canopy tours.

It would be easy to categorize this as a third-world country, particularly considering that the road system has not kept up with the country’s growth and it can take a very long time to get from one point to another. Traffic, it appears, is a global problem.

However, Costa Rica has the latest in internet and mobile technology, as well as advanced medical and dental care. Education is both free and mandatory, meaning they have one of the highest rates of literacy in the world.

Even more interesting, Costa Rica eliminated its military in 1949 and seems to be doing just fine since then—despite bordering Panama and Nicaragua, and being in close proximity to Columbia, Venezuela, El Salvador, and Guatemala. While the US southern border is teeming with refugees from many of those countries, many more Americans are moving to Costa Rica than Costa Ricans (Ticos) are emigrating to the US.

Most of the population of Costa Rica is middle class. While there has been in influx of refugees from Venezuela over the last few years, there were virtually no homeless encampments or people sleeping on the streets (even with such a favorable climate). Somehow those people find a place to sleep and some kind of jobs.

A week was not enough time to really delve into why some things work better there than here. But it raises the question: Are there things we can learn from this Central American country that could help us address our own issues? Sounds like a rich subject to explore.

Check out our  marketing leadership podcasts and  the video trailer for my book, Marketing Above the Noise: Achieve Strategic Advantage with Marketing that Matters.
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Eighty Years Later

Today is the 80th anniversary of D-Day, when Allied forces stormed the beaches at Normandy, France—the largest seaborne invasion in history.

This was the beginning of the end of World War II in Europe. It was the end of the Nazi regime and the return of sovereignty to the many nations in Europe that the Axis had overtaken.

Over 2500 of the 4400 troops killed that day were Americans. During the Battle of Normandy, 73,000 Allied forces were killed and over 150,000 wounded, plus 20,000 French civilians lost their lives. They fought valiantly to rid the world of an existential threat to freedom and our way of life.

Today, eight decades later, we face a similar threat from Russia in Ukraine, and from terrorists in the Middle East, who freely proclaim their goal is to first destroy Israel, then America and other Western nations.

Do we have the fortitude and determination our parents and grandparents had to fight for what’s right? On this anniversary, let us remember those who made the ultimate sacrifice and understand our responsibility to continue the fight in their memory.

Check out our  marketing leadership podcasts and  the video trailer for my book, Marketing Above the Noise: Achieve Strategic Advantage with Marketing that Matters.
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Guilty

This afternoon, a jury in New York City convicted former president Donald Trump of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records to coverup hush payments to a porn star.

Trump, the presumptive Republican candidate for President, is the first US President to be convicted of a felony. (He was also found liable ofdefaming a woman he had sexually assaulted but that was a civil judgment, not criminal.His businesses were also convicted of business fraud last year.)

This conviction doesn’t prevent him from running for president—or even serving as president. His legal team is certain to appeal the judgment, so it’s unlikely that this will be settled before the election. There are three other criminal cases pending in Georgia, Florida, and Washington, DC that are also unlikely to conclude before the election.

Many of his supporters see this as politically motivated and say this won’t impact how they vote in November. Yet, lawsuits are not new to Trump and his businesses. From the 1970s till his election in 2016, Trump and his businesses were involved in over 4000 lawsuits in federal and state courts, including defamation and business tax disputes.

Could all those lawsuits and judgments be in error? Many o fthem came decades before his political career started. Or, might there be a reason this pattern persists?

To quote Maya Angelou, if someone tells you who they are, believe them.

Check out our  marketing leadership podcasts and  the video trailer for my book, Marketing Above the Noise: Achieve Strategic Advantage with Marketing that Matters.
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