Minyans and Animal House (2024)

Here are two great reads from Minyanville.

First, The New World Order

…The news flow of late has been staggering. An additional $350 billion in TARP funds, the $825 billion stimulus package, another $20 billion for Bank America (BAC) and Merrill Lynch (MER) and the systematic dismantling of once-venerable institutions such as Citigroup (C).

Conventional wisdom dictates that the only solution is to induce fresh spending with fertile credit, a last ditch effort to shock the economy out of its coma and pave the way to better days. That is a fundamentally flawed assumption, for sustainable growth will arrive by way of debt destruction rather than credit creation.

Interest rates on bank deposits are near zero and the Federal Reserve guided them there for a reason: they want to remove incentive to save and jumpstart the spending cycle. While saving is an intuitive individual solution, it’s the death knell of an economic ecosystem measured by the sum of its parts and reliant on the velocity of money.

What we’re witnessing isn’t a garden-variety one-and-done recession; it’s the cumulative comeuppance of a massive credit bubble rooted in faulty monetary policy aimed at avoiding small, corrective recessions. Conventional wisdom has been wrong about what's been happening the last 20 years so shame on us if we rely on the same people who never saw the bubble building in the first place to guide us through it.

The answer to a debt bubble isn’t to create more debt. That’s as absurd as saying we should have created more technology stocks in 2000 or more homes in 2006. As it stands, we’ll be adding another $2 trillion to the national debt this year, an obligation that will invariably be passed to future generations.

Our current course has ominous ramifications for the dollar. As the greenback is the world reserve currency, those implications extend throughout the global landscape. A currency holds a nation together and the economy—perhaps society at large—assumes more, not less, risk as a function of the path of our attempted fix.

…While efforts at job creation will result in more cash in people’s pockets, that cash will be worth less as the government borrows more. Sustainable and realistic solutions require an overall reduction of government influence as we take our free market medicine of time and price. That is, if the free market capital structure is to survive.

The underlying problem is that we have no savings to support sound lending. In their desperate attempt to fix the problem, the Federal Reserve created more imbalances and prolonged the inevitable. They are shifting private debt into public debt but their only end game is to print more currency.

A balanced economy needs a savings pool commensurate with its debt pool. Any solution that deviates from that equilibrium will lower the standard of living for our children. It took years to deplete our collective fortunes and it will take years of saving, coupled with painful debt destruction, to establish a stable foundation for economic growth.

Second, Op-Ed: Capitalism Placed on Double Secret Probation

If there had been such a hearing, we might have at least gotten to hear a defense similar to the one given by Eric “Otter” Stratton, perhaps presented by a Wall Street executive:
Ladies and gentlemen, I’ll be brief. The issue here is not whether we broke a few rules or took a few liberties with derivative securities - we did. (Wink). But you can't hold all of Wall Street responsible for the behavior of a few individual companies.

If you do, then shouldn’t we blame the whole financial system? And if the whole financial system is guilty, then isn’t this an indictment of our legal institutions in general? I put it to you: Isn’t this an indictment of our entire American society?

Well, you can do what you want to us, but we’re not going to sit here and listen to you badmouth the United States of America! Gentlemen!

Unfortunately, we never got to hear such inspiring words, and government is doing exactly what Otter argued against. It is punishing everyone for the poor business decisions made by a few. By handing out bailouts and running massive fiscal deficits, it is we taxpayers and future generations who are being held responsible for others’ mistakes.

…The rejection of capitalism as a failure might be frustrating, but there could be a silver lining. After all, John “Bluto” Blutarsky sustained a GPA of 0.0, yet went on to marry the beautiful Mandy Pepperidge and have a successful and illustrious career in the United States Senate (he even became president, by some accounts). Perhaps capitalism, having been deemed a failure, has a bright future ahead in US politics.

For those who are not so optimistic and think that the battle between socialism and capitalism is over, and that the parade of socialist interventions will commence with the President Obama's inauguration, I will leave you with the inspiring speech given by Bluto after the Deltas were kicked off campus:

“Over? Did you say over? Nothing is over ‘til we decide it is! Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor? Hell no! And it ain’t over now! Cuz when the going gets tough…the tough get going. Who’s with me!”

Minyans and Animal House (2024)

FAQs

Which fraternity was Animal House based on? ›

The genesis for Animal House lay in Miller's own experiences as a Dartmouth undergraduate from 1959 to 1963. The film's title is a reference to Delta Tau Chi, the movie fraternity modeled after Alpha Delta, a now-unrecognized fraternity of which Miller was a brother.

Who is the highest paid actor in Animal House? ›

Donald Sutherland, the most famous and highest paid actor in the film, was cast as the beloved professor.

Is Animal House based on Delta Chi? ›

The antics of his fellow fraternities, coupled with experiences like that of a road trip to the University of Wisconsin–Madison and its Delta Chi Fraternity, became the inspiration for the Delta Tau Chis of Animal House, and many characters in the film (and their nicknames) were based on Miller's fraternity brothers.

Did John Belushi improvise in Animal House? ›

John Belushi's performance in the cafeteria scene was entirely improvised. When he began piling food on his tray, director John Landis urged the camera operator to "stay with him." The infamous "I'm a zit" gag was also improvised, and the reaction from the cast is completely genuine.

What fraternity is Brad Pitt in? ›

Though Brad Pitt only attended the University of Missouri for two years, he was a part of the Sigma Chi fraternity.

What fraternity is on double probation in Animal House? ›

Dean Vernon Wormer wants to remove the Deltas who are already on probation due to various campus conduct violations and an abysmal academic standing. Invoking his emergency authority, he places Delta on "double-secret probation" and directs Omega president Greg Marmalard to find a method to permanently remove Delta.

What did John Belushi get paid for Animal House? ›

Greg Brown's Little Known Facts: John Belushi made the same amount of money for his role in "Animal House" as the HORSE in the movie! Belushi and Junior, the horse ridden by ROTC fanatic Neidermeyer, were each paid... $40,000!

Why is there a Tennessee flag in Animal House? ›

One is an American flag, and the other is a Tennessee state flag, even though the film was supposed to have taken place in Pennsylvania. (This was due to the producers not being able to find a Pennsylvania flag that was large enough, so they settled on what they felt to be a fairly generic-looking state flag.)

Is Faber College real? ›

National Lampoon's Animal House, one of the most successful American film comedies of all time, was filmed in the Eugene area in the fall of 1977. The producers needed a campus setting for their story of the disreputable Delta Tau Chi fraternity and the mayhem it creates in 1962 at fictional Faber College.

What town was Animal House filmed in? ›

National Lampoon's irreverent and slapstick comedy "Animal House" was filmed in the Eugene, Cascades & Coast region in the late 70s. Today, this both hilarious and present-day politically-incorrect movie has become a cultural centerpiece in Eugene. Singing "Shout" is a beloved football tradition.

Was Bill Murray in Animal House? ›

Producer Ivan Reitman's original choices for the roles of Boon and Otter were Bill Murray and Chevy Chase. However, John Landis did not think Chase was right for the part, and convinced him to star in Foul Play (1978) instead, by telling him that it was an ensemble film.

How much of Animal House is true? ›

So while Animal House isn't exactly "based on a true story," Delta Tau Chi's legacy is pulled from a sea of real life experiences, both in actual fraternities and the way the filmmakers and actors behaved during production.

How old was Jim Belushi in Animal House? ›

Though “Animal House” was an ensemble comedy, it had one breakout star: 28-year-old John Belushi.

How old was Kevin Bacon in Animal House? ›

The cast of National Lampoon's "Animal House" acted very similar on and off the screen. The 1978 comedy classic was the acting debut of Kevin Bacon, who was only nineteen at the time.

Are Jim Belushi and John Belushi brothers? ›

Jim Belushi and his brother John Belushi made their main stage debut with their band called The Blues Brothers.

What was Animal House inspired by? ›

Animal House was co-written by Doug Kenney, Harold Ramis and Chris Miller, whose days at Dartmouth College in the early 1960s served as an inspiration for the film.

What fraternity is the movie goat based on? ›

Based on Brad Land's 2004 memoir about his time pledging Clemson University's Kappa Sigma, the movie offers an unflinching view of fraternity hazing, including the hom*ophobic, obscenity-laced mental and physical bullying the pledges (or “goats”) experience.

Is Animal House based on Mizzou? ›

Here's the story: The “Animal House” antics are based on composites. One writer recalled his experiences at Dartmouth. Another writer brought his experiences from a campus in Missouri. (But not Mizzou.)

What college is Animal House supposed to be? ›

The producers needed a campus setting for their story of the disreputable Delta Tau Chi fraternity and the mayhem it creates in 1962 at fictional Faber College. After being turned down by the University of Missouri, Universal Studios approached the University of Oregon in September 1977.

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