Zappos says goodbye to bosses

Online retailer Zappos has long been known to do things its own way. The customer-service obsessed company calls its executives “monkeys,” has staffers ring cowbells to greet guests, and offers new employees cash to quit as a way to test their loyalty.

The Las Vegas-based retailer is now going even more radical, introducing a new approach to organizing the company. It will eliminate traditional managers, do away with the typical corporate hierarchy and get rid of job titles, at least internally. The company told employees of the change at a year-end meeting, Quartz first reported.

The unusual approach is called a “holacracy.” Developed by a former software entrepreneur, the idea is to replace the traditional corporate chain of command with a series of overlapping, self-governing “circles.” In theory, this gives employees more of a voice in the way the company is run.

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Parash Pathar…

 

Satyajit Ray’s “Parash Pathar-The Philosopher Stone” is an entertaining fantasy fable that depicts the events in the life of a middle class clerk when he comes into the possession of a stone that can turn any metal into gold.

Tulsi Chakrabarti is just about perfect as the old man who is hurled into several out-of-his control circumstances. Satyajit Ray extracts a ‘musical’ kind of performance from him and his overplay of vacillating soul fits brilliantly into the what-if theme of the film.  Apart from the physical resemblance, this portrayal could be the reason one is reminded of the character of ‘Goblin’ from ‘The Lord of the Rings” ( both physical and behavioral aspects).

While there are several scenes that are note worthy, the lead scenes to the climax and the climax, are probably the best, as they deliver a resolution that you would least expect.

A must watch for anyone who is interested in a simple story, well told, without too many ‘twists’ in the name of screenplay. Sometimes a simple linear three act structure is all it takes when you have a good story and a great director.

DVD is available in the market (which I bought) but the quality is a lot to be desired.

Here’s an Youtube upload without subtitles that just about does it.

 

The Wolf of Wall Street….

‘The Wolf of Wall Street’ is a delirious ride even for Martin Scorsese’s fans and with a duration of 180ms (175ms for the Indian version) one needs to be even more prepared. He teams up with Leonardo DiCaprio for the 5th time and extracts his career-best performance.

In many ways the movie is a tribute to all of Martin Scorcese’s films that assembles most of his well known elements into a world of excess. This time around the gang of criminals are well dressed stock brokers who take over the wall street. And this gang makes their clients invest in future, while they take home hard cash, which leads them every where, from broads to (Swiss) banks. In the end, their crimes like chicken, come home to roost.

There are quite a few brilliant scenes in the movie (lunch with Matthew McConaughey, Leonardo DiCaprio first meeting with Jonah Hill, Leanardo De Caprio’s meeting with the FBI agents on the yacht etc) and the lead cast shines through all of these.

In the end, a crispier and less ribald version would have served better? 🙂 The F word reportedly is used more than 500 times (Source: IMDB) and the director breaks his own previous record (Source: Variety ) 🙂

ET, IT…and the rest