Craig Hanson CPA - December 2021

HAVE A Laugh

If you’ve seen the classic movie “Casablanca,” you might be surprised to learn the original version was more risqué that what was shown on theater screens. The night Rick and Ilsa shared in Paris was more, ahem, explicitly passionate, but those lines were dropped on the cutting room floor. And it wasn’t because of artistic choice. There was an industry standard of the time called the Hays Code (or officially, the Motion Picture Production Code). This now- forgotten list of rules predated today’s movie rating system and governed Hollywood from 1934 to 1968. It was intended to clean up the violent, drug-filled movie business much like The Little-Known Story of the Hays Code

Prohibition — which preceded it — had been designed to clean up a drunken America.

You’ve likely watched many movies and TV shows filmed under the restrictions of the Hays Code. For example, Mental Floss reports the code is the reason “I Love Lucy” never showed Lucy and Ricky sharing a bed or used the word “pregnant,” even when Lucy was expecting!

Think Better With Adam Grant’s ‘Think Again’

A Better Mindset for Growth

Think about the sting you feel when you are proven wrong. It hurts, doesn’t it?

we can speak and argue with conviction while actually engaging and listening to arguments as if

But what if it didn’t have to? Better yet, what if it shouldn’t?

Regardless of our attempts at humility, humans’ egos have inflated, and we are all conditioned to believe that being wrong somehow equates to being a bad person. However, renowned author and psychologist Adam Grant challenges this notion in his New York Times bestseller, “Think Again: The Power of Knowing What You Don’t Know.” With today’s divisive climate, Grant argues that we hold our beliefs up like a badge, illuminating them so brightly that we become blind to other truths or realities. Far too often, our mindsets focus on what is black and white, rather than understanding the gray nuances found in between. In “Think Again,” Grant’s third book, he argues that as rapidly as we get information in today’s digital world, we cannot be expected to fully know all of it. Being wrong is part of human nature, but as we gain more accessibility to information, we must be willing to do two things: rethink and unlearn. Grant challenges readers to stand in the discomfort of being wrong, celebrate that there is something new to learn, and challenge themselves to interact with those who propose a new way of thinking. By doing so, Grant asserts that

we are wrong. This allows us to learn, engage, and grow. In “Think Again,” Grant asks readers to consider better ways to approach their steadfast beliefs. Readers will find

amusement in Grant’s real-world examples of turning skeptics into believers within a variety of topics. And, through these examples, readers will discover new ways to listen so they can gain a greater understanding of the world around them.

You can pick up your copy of “Think Again” and other books by Grant from an independent book retailer or by visiting Amazon.com.

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