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Trailer for 'Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine' shows a bold, brilliant, brutal Apple founder
Mashable ^ | July 24, 2015 | BY JOSH DICKEY

Posted on 07/25/2015 10:46:29 AM PDT by Swordmaker

Mashable Debuts exclusively premieres music, videos, artwork, trailers and more. You saw it here first!

LOS ANGELES — Steve Jobs never compromised, nor did he pull punches. Neither does Oscar-winning documentary filmmaker Alex Gibney.

Jobs' life, influence and legacy get Gibney's full journalistic treatment in Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine, the first trailer for which Mashable debuts here.

Despite an uphill climb for access, Gibney, a perennial Academy Award contender who won for 2007's Taxi to the Dark Side, captured several of Jobs' personal acquaintances for this film that debuted at the South by Southwest Film Festival.


The "Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine" poster.
IMAGE: MAGNOLIA PICTURES

Gibney's film will open in select theaters and on demand on Sept. 4.


TOPICS: Arts/Photography; Business/Economy; Computers/Internet; TV/Movies
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 07/25/2015 10:46:29 AM PDT by Swordmaker
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To: ~Kim4VRWC's~; 1234; Abundy; Action-America; acoulterfan; AFreeBird; Airwinger; Aliska; altair; ...
First trailer for 'Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine' shows a bold, brilliant, brutal Apple founder — PING!


Steve Jobs' Documentary Ping!

If you want on or off the Mac Ping List, Freepmail me.

2 posted on 07/25/2015 10:49:09 AM PDT by Swordmaker ( This tag line is a Microsoft insult free zone... but if the insults to Mac users continue...)
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To: Swordmaker

How many myopic films are going to be made of him?


3 posted on 07/25/2015 10:49:49 AM PDT by Vendome (Don't take life so seriously-you won't live through it anyway-Enjoy Yourself ala Louis Prima)
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To: Swordmaker
I'm not an Apple fanboy, but I respect Jobs. If a company is going to do great things, it needs someone at the top to demand greatness.

If you work at the Dunder Mifflin Paper Company you can be un-serious about the work. If you want to build the future, someone needs to be a jerk. Because human nature wants to turn the high tech dream into the Dunder Mifflin Paper Company. And you can't let that happen.

4 posted on 07/25/2015 10:58:58 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy (Henry Bowman where are you?)
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To: Swordmaker

Jobs was the personification of what the left thinks of when they think of ruthless corporate CEO’s. Yet, they forgave him because they loved the technology he introduced.


5 posted on 07/25/2015 11:05:37 AM PDT by MNDude (God is not a Republican, but Satan is certainly a Democrat.)
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To: All
The insiders at Apple who knew Steve Jobs claim that this documentary is an unfair representation of the man they knew, and some walked out of a screening of it.


Trailer debuts for Steve Jobs documentary derided by Apple exec as 'mean-spirited'


By Neil Hughes — Apple Insider — Friday, July 24, 2015, 11:39 am PT (02:39 pm ET)

The trailer for "Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine," a highly criticized documentary from Oscar winner Alex Gibney, premiered on Friday, giving the general public their first glimpse at the controversial film.

Theh upcoming documentary from Magnolia Pictures and CNN Films was shared with Mashable. Gibney won an Academy Award for his 2007 film "Taxi to the Dark Side," and recently earned acclaim for the HBO documentary "Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief."

The film opens in select theaters on Sept. 4, but it debuted at the South by Southwest film festival earlier this year. It was there that Apple executive Eddy Cue saw the documentary, leading him to slam the film on Twitter.

"An inaccurate and mean-spirited view of my friend," Cue wrote back in March. "It's not a reflection of the Steve I knew."

Other Apple employees who saw the film during its screening in Texas reportedly walked out before it finished airing.

A poster for the film has also been released by Magnolia pictures, as seen below.

The 120-minute documentary has been promoted as a "provocative and sometimes startling re-evaluation of the legacy of an icon." Other critically acclaimed films from Gibney include "Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room," and "Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God."

Earlier this month, the full trailer for Oscar winner Aaron Sorkin's film "Steve Jobs" premiered. That dramatic retelling of the life of Jobs, as played by actor Michael Fassbender, will hit theaters on Oct. 9.


6 posted on 07/25/2015 11:12:57 AM PDT by Swordmaker ( This tag line is a Microsoft insult free zone... but if the insults to Mac users continue...)
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To: Vendome
How many myopic films are going to be made of him?

Steve Jobs was the elephant in a room of blind people. . . and all of them saw him differently. All of these bios and films are trying to describe the elephant by what they felt about him in their blindness, that part of him they encountered, giving only a portion of the multi-phasic, complex man that was the phenomenon that was Steve Jobs. He was a person who made an outsized impact on the world's culture over 30 years. It's natural that people are trying to understand what made him what he was and how he came to be what he was, and how he did what he did. . . but they are doing it like the blind men with their touching of the elephant.

7 posted on 07/25/2015 11:18:51 AM PDT by Swordmaker ( This tag line is a Microsoft insult free zone... but if the insults to Mac users continue...)
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To: Swordmaker

India visit gave a vision to Steve Jobs

In an interview to Indiatoday.in, his friend Daniel Kottke throws light on the visit.

By Shashank Chouhan, India Today, October 13, 2011

Steve Jobs had a spiritual side too10 products that defined Steve Jobs’ careerSteve Jobs knew end was near: BiographyApple co-founder Steve Jobs diesThe best Steve Jobs quotes

New Delhi: Before he began his journey to becoming perhaps one of the greatest innovators of our time, Steve Jobs embarked on a journey to find his inner self in India. In the 1970s, Steve had just joined his first company Atari and was hooked to the Eastern philosophy of Nirvana. He read up some bestseller philosophical guides of the day and decided he had to visit India where the Kumbh Mela was on. He came with college friend Daniel Kottke, who later became the first employee of Apple. Kottke put together the first Apple computer in Steve Jobs’ garage along with Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak in 1976.

The memories of the heady 70s that Steve spent in India are hazy - the duo didn’t maintain any diary and did not have cameras. They were here to get away from materialism after all. The experience changed the thinking of Steve Jobs who returned as a Buddhist with a shaved head and whose faith in human intelligence and technology was strengthened while they visited Neem Karoli Baba, the well-known mystic of that era.

In an exclusive interview to Indiatoday.in, Daniel Kottke throws light on that visit and what went on and into one of the most brilliant minds ever.

What are your thoughts on Steve’s passing away?

Daniel Kottke: I was hoping he’d have some kind of miraculous recovery though it was hard to be optimistic after seeing the photos of how he looked right after his resignation in late August.

Steve was a huge influence on my life, both for good and for bad. For all his brilliance, he definitely had a dark side and treated many people harshly at times but we are all sad he has left us so soon and personally I am inclined to be much more forgiving of his shortcomings at this point.

How did the two of you become friends?

We met during the first few weeks of our freshman year at Reed College but our friendship blossomed over our mutual interest in the book ‘Be Here Now’ which had just been published... which led to seeking out other books in the vein of Eastern spirituality - in particular Autobiography of a Yogi, Ramakrishna and his Disciples, Way of the White Clouds, Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism, Zen Mind/Beginner’s Mind.

Did he show any signs of being the genius that he was in his college days?

I would say he was not remarkable in any particular way but a very thoughtful young man with a wide-open, inquiring mind and a good sense for adventure, and a good sense of humour. He had a passion for ideas that paralleled my own and led to many long discussions about the nature of reality and consciousness. The quality that had the most appeal for him was ‘clarity’... which I think he got from Suzuki Roshi (Zen Mind/Beginner’s Mind).

What do you think was in his mind when he quit college? What did he say before doing it?

He had already withdrawn as an enrolled student before I got to know him; he did that within the first few weeks. What he said later was that he felt he was spending “his parents’ savings” and had doubts about how much he needed to be on the college degree track. I thought it was odd at the time... now I think he must’ve had a sense of ambition and future success that I didn’t see in him at the time (in order to take that step of getting the tuition money back). But he did stay at Reed auditing classes most of that entire first year.

Did he always want to do what he ended up doing or was it a change in plan?

I don’t see how he could’ve had a ‘plan’ as the technology that enabled Apple’s success was so new. I do think that by the time Apple II came out, he grasped its immense potential as a transformative factor in our lives, and he pursued that vision relentlessly.

How and why did you two decide to visit India?

As I said it was first ‘Be Here Now’ about Neem Karoli Baba, and then a whole series of further books about Eastern spirituality that set the stage for our trip. Then he found work at Atari in Los Gatos which gave him the financial resources for the trip. Then it was our mutual friend Robert Friedland who told us about the Kumbh Mela in Hardwar/Rishikesh in the summer of 1974 which was the springboard for deciding to go.

What was your impression of India?

We were very young and had no preconceptions... we wore khadi kurtas and lungis, trying to blend in, but of course it was obvious enough we were foreigners and the swarms of beggars at first was a shock (for example, when getting off the bus in remote villages). But we did learn to appreciate the deep spiritual culture of India and how that enables so many to live richly fulfilling lives in the midst of material poverty.

We both were big fans of Indian food, thanks to the Hare Krishna Temple in Portland, so that was a daily pleasure. We stayed in the Hotel Vikas in Paharganj and particularly enjoyed the chapatti wallah next door and the dahi wallah on the corner and the burfi at the sweet shop down the block. Our main diet was mangos with dahi and chapatti. We were not much interested in cannabis much less any other drugs. I was naïve about hard drugs and when some sketchy character asked to borrow my enamel mug for ‘fixing’ I loaned it to him... then when Steve found out, he immediately went and retrieved it for me.

When we were in Kainchi near Neem Karoli’s ashram there was hemp growing everywhere, so I dried some and would take a puff from time to time. But really it was the books that had the most interest for us. I remember carrying around the Hundred Thousand Songs of Milarepa, The Book and The Way of Zen by Alan Watts, the Diamond Sutra, and the Dharma Bums by (Jack) Kerouac.

What was Steve like when he was in India?

I think we were both pretty low key about expectations... it was a bit of a disappointment that when we got to the Neem Karoli ashram it was basically deserted - after Neem Karoli had passed earlier in the year, the crowds of western hippies and seekers were encouraged to disperse and they did! Then we made a long trek up a huge dry riverbed to an ashram of Hariakhan Baba, a reincarnating avatar as the story went. It was a long difficult trek then we had to climb a hundred-plus steps up a cliff to get to the ashram. The Hariakhan Baba we encountered was surprisingly young, and accessible enough, but he didn’t strike either of us as being particularly profound. He did give us both ‘secret’ spiritual names... I regret now that I wasn’t keeping a travel journal and can’t remember mine!

What did you and Steve take back from India that stayed with you?

It seems in retrospect that we spent a lot of time on endless long hot crowded bus rides from Delhi to Uttar Pradesh and back, then up to Himachal Pradesh and back. We enjoyed our trip to the hill town of Manali, which was burdened with many Tibetan refugees at the time due to the Chinese occupation of Tibet. We visited many temples, especially in Delhi where during the later part of the summer it was too hot to go out during the day but we’d go for long walks at night. I think what stayed with both of us was an appreciation for the rich culture of India and the huge contrast between opulence and poverty to be found there. The most memorable incident was probably when we were making the day-long hike back from the Hariakhan Baba ashram and a violent thunderstorm caught us out in the open with no place to take shelter. We were huddling under our loincloths from the pelting rain, afraid we’d get hit by lightning... happy when we got back to the nearest village that evening.

How was Steve influenced, if at all, by the experience?

I think the trip influenced us both in a general sense of broadening our experience of life on earth and putting our lives in the US in a wider perspective. Neither of us found a ‘guru’ or had a ‘miracle story’ or an encounter with someone with advanced yogic powers but I would say that wasn’t particularly a disappointment. Steve’s return date was several weeks before mine so I went up to Dalhousie and took back-to-back 10-day Vipassana retreats with Goenka, which was a great experience and has served me well throughout my life. Steve was mostly drawn to Zen meditation and he went to the zendo in Los Altos regularly after his return from India.

Tell us about the birth of Apple and the role Steve played...and how you became its first employee?

Steve hadn’t said much to me about his activities with Steve Wozniak in California building the blue boxes (for phone hacking) in 1973-4, and I was quite surprised when he said in the spring of 1976 that he was starting a company with Woz to sell a hobby computer they named the Apple-I. I don’t know that Woz needed or received much encouragement from Steve Jobs in building the Apple-I prototype, but it was Steve Jobs who seized upon the opportunity to make a product out of it and sell kits... when it wasn’t so clear what it could really be used for! However the Altair and Imsai kits had generated a lot of interest so they reasonably thought they could tap into that hobbyist market. I became the first employee because I offered to come out to the Bay area from NY (where I was then a music student at Columbia College) for the summer to help with the Apple-I production effort. It was part-time work at $3.25 an hour, not so lucrative but interesting and I was eager to learn how the chips and the computer worked.

What kind of a co-worker and boss was Steve?

In the Apple-I phase during 1976, Steve was a good friend and a delight to work with. We rented a house together in Cupertino 1977-79 but during that time when Apple was rocketing to huge success his personality was changing and we drifted apart; by 1979 I rarely saw him as he stayed at his girlfriend’s house up on Summit Road. I never worked directly for him after 1976... I graduated from Columbia in June 1977 and came back to Cupertino right away to work full-time in the Apple production department, assembling Apple-II’s and learning to fix the logic boards. I was hired into Engineering a year later and plunged into learning to be an electrical engineer on the job. I do, however, recommend going to school to learn electronics! Steve was both a product design innovator and a master at marketing... really it requires both to some extent to have great success I think, as well as having the brilliant detailed design work of someone like Woz. And, the contributions of the third founder of Apple, Mike Markkula, can’t be overlooked... he provided the seed capital and business plan and assembled the board of directors and secured the line of credit.

Will Apple be the same again?

Well, sadly, no, of course not but Apple has a very solid business and momentum which will no doubt keep it in the forefront of digital lifestyle products for years to come. And one hopes that Steve Wozniak will transition to a bigger role at Apple in the future and help fill the void that Steve Jobs has left.

Source: http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/india-visit-gave-a-vision-to-steve-jobs/1/154785.html


8 posted on 07/25/2015 11:26:40 AM PDT by Jyotishi (Seeking the truth, a fact at a time.)
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To: ClearCase_guy
If you work at the Dunder Mifflin Paper Company you can be un-serious about the work.

That reminds me of a conversation I had with a friend at a party I hadn't seen in a while. Asked him what he was doing since having been laid off a couple years ago from a good job. He told me he was working at a box company. I said that's got to be interesting. He said "Are you kidding? It's cardboard, just cardboard all day long.". Very un-serious about his job, no joy in his voice. I think he'd rather be building the future.

9 posted on 07/25/2015 11:30:50 AM PDT by roadcat
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To: Vendome

Only one more: Steve Jobs and the Avengers.


10 posted on 07/25/2015 11:40:57 AM PDT by DPMD
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To: DPMD

Only one more: Steve Jobs and the Avengers.That is the one I'm waiting for!

 

11 posted on 07/25/2015 12:52:02 PM PDT by zeugma (The best defense against a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun)
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To: Swordmaker

Maybe he would still be alive if he didn’t think cauliflower cures cancer.


12 posted on 07/25/2015 12:59:27 PM PDT by DesertRhino (I was standing with a rifle, waiting for soviet paratroopers, but communists just ran for office)
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To: Swordmaker
Oscar winner Aaron Sorkin's film "Steve Jobs" premiered

Aaron Sorkin? The guy who wrote The West Wing? The guy who said of Obama, "I do not diminish the incredible symbolic importance of a black man getting elected president. But my euphoria was a smart guy getting elected president. Maybe for the first time in my lifetime we had elected one of the thousand smartest Americans president."

That guy?

13 posted on 07/25/2015 1:10:38 PM PDT by Gideon7
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To: Swordmaker

...and dead. Jobs died. Veggies don’t cure cancer. So much for a brilliant mind.


14 posted on 07/25/2015 1:16:37 PM PDT by CodeToad (If it weren't for physics and law enforcement I'd be unstoppable!)
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To: Gideon7
That guy?

That guy.

15 posted on 07/25/2015 1:26:11 PM PDT by Swordmaker ( This tag line is a Microsoft insult free zone... but if the insults to Mac users continue...)
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To: Vendome
How many myopic films are going to be made of him?

More than enough to irritate you.

16 posted on 07/25/2015 2:14:00 PM PDT by itsahoot (55 years a republican-Now Independent. Will write in Sarah Palin, no matter who runs. RIH-GOP)
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To: itsahoot

Prolly


17 posted on 07/25/2015 2:25:25 PM PDT by Vendome (Don't take life so seriously-you won't live through it anyway-Enjoy Yourself ala Louis Prima)
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To: Jyotishi

Thanks for posting this. I hadn’t read about the India connection that must have been key to opening his intellect to a higher wisdom.


18 posted on 07/27/2015 12:04:04 PM PDT by sarasota
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To: CodeToad

Cancer doesn’t care what you eat. It eats you.


19 posted on 07/27/2015 12:05:23 PM PDT by sarasota
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