Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - Martin Luther King Jr, the Jewelry Genius, and the Art of Public Speaking
Episode Date: February 26, 2021One speechmaker inspired millions with his words, the other utterly destroyed his own multi-million-dollar business with just a few phrases.Civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr (played by Jeffrey W...right of Westworld, The Hunger Games, and the James Bond films) and jewelry store owner Gerald Ratner offer starkly contrasting stories on when you should stick to the script and when you should take a risk.Read more about Tim's work at http://timharford.com/ Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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One late summer day in 1963, thousands upon thousands of people gathered on the mall in Washington DC. They had come to America's capital for jobs and freedom
to show the Kennedy administration
that civil rights legislation must be pushed through Congress
and to hear the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. speak.
The official program had been long packed with speeches
that a quarter of a million
people defied the heat as they waited. The crowd stretched back from the Lincoln Memorial,
packing the sides of the famous reflecting pool swirling around the base of the Washington
Monument, and extending toward the intransigent capital itself. The mall usually dwarfs anything on a human scale, not that
afternoon. The gospel singer, Mahalia Jackson, sang,
I've been beaut and I've been scorn, anticipation was building. All three television networks switched
to live coverage. Dr. King stepped forward to speak.
To address, not only the sweltering crowd,
but a national audience he had never had before
and might never have again.
Dr. King had spent the night laboring on his speech
with a few trusted aides,
weighing every word of what he would say.
For a few minutes, the nation, even the world,
would be focused on those words from the Lincoln Memorial Steps,
Dr. King knew that those words had to be perfect.
But now, let's leave this iconic scene behind us
and travel across time and across the Atlantic.
28 years later, a very different man would give a very
different speech in front of a very different audience. This man's name was Gerald Ratner and he He had a nightmare. I'm Tim Halford and you're listening to cautionary tales.
Gerald Ratner's speech, to be clear, wasn't about civil rights. It was about selling cheap jewelry. It became iconic because it didn't go well. And as you've probably figured
out by now, I'm fascinated by things that didn't go well. But I'll
let you into a secret. I'm also fascinated by the art of public speaking. I love doing
it, and I love studying it. Public speaking is such a strange thing, as natural as talking
and yet wrenchingly difficult, and how it was approached by these two men, Gerald Ratner and Martin
Luther King, and what happened to them could teach us a lot.
Dr. King and Mr. Ratner are a study in contrasts.
Martin Luther King took the high road through education, earning a doctorate in theology.
Gerald Ratner took the low road. Ratner was born in London in 1949
and expelled from school at the age of 13. When he was 15 he joined the family business,
a group of six jewelry shops. Ratner worked behind the counter for 10 years, but noticed that he
didn't have many customers his age or younger. Those people
had no interest in gold and diamond rings. They were spending plenty of money on clothes
and music. Shopping malls were busy. Jewelers were not. They were dusty and intimidating.
Nothing had a price tag. The doors would be locked behind you when you entered.
Young Gerald soon had a management role
and steered the family business towards more informal shops,
selling products that would appeal to young shoppers on a budget.
It was a cany move.
By the age of 35, Ratner was a millionaire.
He began a series of ambitious takeovers.
By the age of 40, he was running 1500 stores in the UK
and a thousand in the US. His brands included K, Watches of Switzerland and Rattner's itself.
Gerald Rattner had built the largest jewelry group on the planet.
And then he destroyed it in a matter of seconds.
Gerald Ratner had been asked to address the Institute of Directors, a prestigious audience
of 6,000 British business leaders.
The venue was the Royal Albert Hall, fast and trimmed with gold and red velvet, perhaps the grandest auditorium
in London. Understandably, Ratner started his speech looking nervous. He was a self-made
man, a school dropout, who now stood in front of business royalty, and in fact there were
actual royalty in the audience too. Ratner was rich and successful to be sure, but did he fit in?
Three minutes after starting his speech, he finds his theme,
mocking his own products.
We've got this imitation book that you lay on your coffee table.
Pages don't actually open,
but they're beautiful cold up corners
with imitation antique dust. I know it's, you might say it's not in the best possible
taste, but we sold a quarter of a million of them last year. The audience love it, they
laugh, they clap, Ratner looks braver. We also do this nice cherry to canter, it's cut glass,
and it comes complete with six glasses on a silver plated tray
that your butler could bring you in, he served you drinks on.
Oh, you're too funny, Gerald.
Some other people in the audience would have employed butlers,
but Ratner's customers certainly couldn't afford one,
any more than they could afford a genuine antique book.
A decanter in a silver tray for your butler. Nice one.
And it's really only cost £4.95.
That's about $12 in today's money.
People say to me, how can you sell this for such a low price?
I say because it's total crap.
More laughter, more applause,
Ratnus killing it on stage.
He's also just killed his own business empire.
He didn't realize it at the time.
The speech had gone down very well with the audience
in the Royal Albert Hall, but the newspaper reporters
in the room smelled a story.
The jokes that have played so brilliantly on the day did not go down so well when served
up cold on the front page of the morning papers.
At the time, the UK was in the middle of a recession.
Ordinary people didn't take kindly to a multi-millionaire standing in front
of his fellow 1% and mocking his own customers for their crass taste. And who would buy an
engagement ring from a company whose own boss had declared their products were crap?
Sales Ebt. Ratner's group shares fell nearly 90% between the speech in April and Christmas.
Ratner was sacked from his own company.
Inevitably, they changed the company name.
Ratner's was a toxic brand for ever tarnished.
To this day in the UK, doing a ratna is part of the language universally understood as committing
a humiliating, career-ending gaff. Ratna's name became its own one word cautionary tale.
The lesson seems obvious enough. If everyone's watching, choose your words with care.
Don't wing it, but what if that lesson has the story completely backwards?
In retrospect, the Reverend Dr. King had been preparing his whole life to give the speech
from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. His memory had always been prodigious. At the age
of five he was learning Bible passages by heart. He told his parents that when he grew up,
he was going to get some big words. So he did. Martin's father was a preacher, and
the boy took to the craft of speech-making early. At the age of 14, Martin travelled across
Georgia on a bus to compete in a public speaking contest.
On the way home to Atlanta, things went sour. Very sour. King and his friend were sitting near the front of the bus, with their teacher Sarah Grace
Bradley.
It's a busy stop, a rush of white passengers got on, and the bus driver also white, ordered
King and his friend to give up their seats.
You boys moving!
Get yourselves to the back of the bus.
There was a pause. Dr. King later said,
We didn't move quickly enough to suit him so he began cursing us.
The driver was now hurling every racist slur you can imagine and threatening to call the
police.
Haram? Martin, please do what he says.
So we walked to the back of the bus and I had to stand all the way to Atlanta.
It was dark outside.
For 90 miles there was nothing to look at, but the seats on the bus filled with white
people.
It was late at night and I was tired, but that wasn't the point.
It was the humiliation.
Martin, remember, was just 14 years old.
That night will never leave my memory,
it was the angriest I've ever been in my life.
Suddenly I realized you don't count.
You're nobody.
But Martin Luther King Jr. wasn't destined to be nobody for long.
And the journey on the way to being not just somebody, but somebody who made his mark
on history arguably began not with that unforgettable humiliation, but with the triumphant day that had preceded it.
The long and infuriating bust journey of Martin Luther King Jr. had been on the way home
from a public speaking competition. Martin had won a prize at the contest, delivering his speech titled, The Negro and the Constitution,
entirely from memory. My heart, Throbs and you, in the hope that inspired by the example of Lincoln,
imbued with the Spirit of Christ, they will cast down the last barrier to perfect freedom. That speech showed off the teenage King's approach. He would research,
draft, redraft, memorize, finally, deliver with passion. King used the same principles
three years later. Preaching for the first time in a small meeting room at his father's
church, he was spectacular. The crowds kept coming
until young Martin had to move to the main auditorium. Martin won an oratory prize in
college. He used to practice imagined court testimony in front of a mirror, dreaming of becoming
a lawyer. Instead, he applied for a job as a minister at a Baptist church in Montgomery, Alabama.
As part of his application, he had to give a sermon.
And of course, he used something meticulously crafted, a sermon he had preached several
times before.
Practice.
Don't just make it up as you go along.
Once he secured that job, he stuck to that winning formula. King's responsibilities
as a minister had to be fulfilled while he was still finishing his doctorate in theology.
So he rose at half past five each morning, made coffee, shaved his stubborn bristles into
a neat moustache, then worked on his doctorate for three hours before his pregnant wife, Kareta, woke to join him for breakfast.
All the while, King lavished enormous effort on his sermons. He would begin drafting on Tuesday
and continued to research and draft throughout the week, drawing ideas from Plato, Aquus, Freud, Gandhi. As Sunday approached, he would write it all out on yellow-lined paper
and commit it to memory, just as he had done at the age of 14. He would bring the script
to church with him, but as he ascended to the pulpit, he would leave it in his chair,
and speak without notes for half an hour or more. He was fantastic, people said. The congregation
adored him, and the way he spoke with style about matters of substance. And to achieve
this mastery, the young Reverend King spent 15 hours or more crafting each sermon. Martin
Luther King was one of the greatest speech makers to grace the English
language, and at first it might seem obvious why. As well as being educated and prodigiously
talented, he ensured that every syllable of his oratory was meticulously prepared. Gerald
Ratner could have learned from Dr. King's example, couldn't he?
Well, the truth is way more interesting than that.
So, why would a public speaker set aside the script or memorised remarks and speak off the
cuff?
I asked Charles Lim, he's a neuroscientist, a surgeon,
a jazz saxophonist, and one of very few people who's actually studied the improvising brain.
Lim researches people as they improvise inside brain scanners called FMRI machines. Imagine sliding on your back so that your head is surrounded
by a giant white plastic doughnut with a feel of a vintage iPod. The scanner is generating
powerful magnetic fields to illuminate the contrast between oxygen-rich blood flowing
to different areas of your brain and the oxygen depleted blood flowing away again.
Your head is held perfectly still.
If you're a hip-hop artist, you then have to spit some rhymes in response to random words.
If you're a jazz musician, you have to tap out riffs on a plastic keyboard lying across
your knees, and no metal.
Otherwise, the magnetic field would rip the keyboard apart and pull the
shrapnel into the scanner with your hand.
It's a tough gig.
Through these experiments, limb and other neuroscientists have been discovering hints of what goes
on in an improvising brain. There's a distinctive pattern in the prefrontal cortex, which seems
to be the seat of consciousness, memory, morality, humour and even the sense of self.
But the pattern isn't that the prefrontal cortex is lighting up during improvisation, on
the contrary, broad areas of it shutting down. The door so lateral areas either side of the top of your forehead
and the lateral orbizel areas behind your eyes. Improvises are escaping their internal
restraints. They're letting go. Most of us go through our days holding back our mental
impulses to swear or lash out. All this requires a degree of self-control so that filtering is a good thing.
You could have too much of a good thing, says Charles Lim. Too much filtering can squash our
creativity. Improvises shut down their inner critics and allow new ideas to flow out. The improvising
brain is disinhibited, although not so crudely as the drunk brain,
that is why improvisers can produce flashes of pure brilliance. It's also why improvisation
feels so risky.
A script can seem protective, like a bulletproof vest.
But sometimes it's more like a straight jacket.
Improvising unleashes creativity, it feels fresh and honest and personal.
Above all, it turns a monologue into a dialogue.
Miles Davis, the legendary jazz trumpeter, talked about improvisation as
the freedom and space to hear things.
That's a fascinating turn of phrase, not the freedom and space to play things or to do things,
but to hear things, to be more open to the sound of your own instrument, the sound of the group.
And that matters for more than just music or rhetoric, because we are scared of improvising. And
we're not just afraid to improvise on stage, we're also becoming afraid to improvise face-to-face.
The sociologist Sherry Terkel has been interviewing young people about their communications through
smartphone apps. It wasn't just because the apps were convenient or addictive, although they could be both. Texting is attractive because traditional conversations feel scary.
I'll tell you what's wrong with conversation.
One high school senior told Sherry Terkel,
It takes place in real time and you can't control what you're going to say.
This student is so used to being able to proofread every message that he's become scared
of simply talking and seeing what happens.
But then, perhaps he's right to be scared.
We should ask Gerald Ratner.
Gerald Ratner learned to laugh at himself a long time ago. But he rejects the idea that
somehow his mistake all worked out for the best.
People ask me if I'm glad I said what I said. They're ridiculous. How could I be grateful?
I lost everything.
Drakener plunged into depression. He has bounced back in some ways, he had some success setting up a chain
of health clubs and even an online jewelry business. But the truth is that there was nothing he could
do, no success that he could achieve, that would ever be as famous as his gaff. The search for a good
joke destroyed his business, and it nearly destroyed him. Who would want
to risk the fate of Gerald Ratner when they could follow the meticulous example of the
young Martin Luther King? It seems obvious that when speaking in public we should prepare
as diligently as King did when he drafted and memorized his sermons. But the truth about Gerald Ratner's impromptu remark about his products being total crap
is this.
It wasn't impromptu.
He chose those words with care after circulating drafts of the speech to get comments.
He'd used the total crap joke before without running into problems.
And as he prepared to deliver the speech on
a larger stage, he sought advice. His wife told him to be careful, but others, including
a friend who was one of the most influential figures in the advertising industry, encouraged
him to tell even more daring jokes. They thought Ratner would sound self-deprecating,
and the disordinates would love the gags, which was true, those in the hall that day did love it.
But in the newspapers the next morning, Ratner simply sounded like a millionaire mocking
his struggling customers.
When I listen back to Ratner's speech, I don't hear the mockery at all, I hear something
else. Immediately after saying his own products were crap, Ratner says,
Some people say they can't even see the jewellery for all the banners and posters smothering the shop windows. There's a different tone suddenly. There's a note of defiance, even anger.
So it's interesting that these shops that everyone has a good laugh about
take more money per square foot than any other retailer in Europe.
The hall is hush now. Nobody is laughing.
Why?
Because we give the customer what they want.
Geryl Draetner wasn't laughing at his customers.
He identified with them.
He thought the business royalty and the hall were laughing at his customers and his business
ideas.
And him.
This was his response.
You laugh at us, he was saying.
But my customers are happy, and I'm rich.
So who's laughing now?
Ratner's downfall wasn't caused by a lack of preparation, but by a lack of judgment. Ratner did exactly what he planned to do, he had
simply failed to foresee the consequences. Improvisation was not to blame. Improvising does expose us to new
and different risks, but even careful preparation cannot remove risks entirely.
In December 1955, Rosa Parks was arrested after refusing to give up her seat on a bus in
Montgomery, Alabama, to a white
man. As a local church leader with a reputation as an orator, Martin Luther King was asked to
organize a boycott of Montgomery's buses. He hesitated. He was exhausted. His newborn
baby daughter, Yokey, wouldn't stop crying in the night. King asked for
time to mull over the idea of a bus boycott, but an influential local activist, Edie Nixon,
would have no delays. He ain't got much time to think, said Nixon, you're in the chair
from now on. So it was that King found himself bounced into leading the Montgomerie Improvement Association.
He had to give an inaugural speech, and he had to give it immediately.
Rosa Parks was news, the bus boycott was news.
There wasn't time to spend days redrafting or consulting the sayings of Plato or Gandhi.
Dr. King arrived home from the meeting with Edie Nixon and the activists
at half past six. He had to head to the speech venue, Holt Street Church, at 10-7.
I had only 20 minutes to prepare the most decisive speech of my life. I became possessed by fear.
King knew that newspapermen would be there, perhaps even television crews, and yet, just
as the stakes were highest, the habit of meticulous preparation that had served him so well
all his life was useless.
He couldn't research, draft, redraft and memorised, he had no time.
King looked at his watch, already five minutes had ticked away while he
fretted. Every Sunday he delivered a sermon based on 15 hours of hard work.
Now he was about to deliver the most important speech of his life and he had
just 15 minutes. He sketched a couple of thoughts with his hand shaking, pondering
the delicate balance he had to strike between militancy and moderation,
and he prayed. That was all the preparation he could spare before driving to the Holt Street
Church.
10,000 people stood outside, unable to cram themselves in, listening to the proceedings via a loud speaker on the roof. The Montgomery police were there in force, so were the television
cameras pointing at the pulpit as King stepped up and began to speak.
My friends, we're here this evening for serious business.
The speech is brilliantly described in Taylor Branch's biography of King.
Instead of the usual careful script lovingly prepared and committed to memory,
King was groping his way towards the right words.
I think I speak with legal authority, not that I have any legal authority,
but I think I speak with legal authority behind me that the law, the ordinance,
the city ordinance has never been totally clarified.
He had never in his life delivered a sermon with a line as weak and confused as that one.
15 hours of preparation always ironed out every wrinkle, but King was finding something more valuable than time to prepare.
In Miles Davis' phrase, the freedom and space to hear things.
As he spoke, King listened to the crowd, feeling out their response, speaking in the moment.
His early sentences were experiments, grasping for a theme, exploring how each sounded and how the crowd responded,
each phrase shaped the phrase that followed. His speech was not a solo, it was a duet
with his audience.
After a cautious opening, King talked of Rosa Parks of her character and Christian commitment. And just because she refused to get up, she was arrested.
The crowd murmured their assent.
After a pause for breath, King changed direction.
You know my friends, there comes a time when people get tired of being trampled over by
the iron feet of a press.
And suddenly the avalanche began.
A few yells of support became a roar of approval and anger.
The spirit of the crowd was self-sustaining, a torrent of emotion and sound which grew stronger.
Just when it seemed the sound was fade, further waves crashed in from the thousands of voices
outside.
The cheering was everywhere.
Then King spoke up again with the help of the crowd who found his theme.
There comes a time when people get tired of getting pushed out of the glittering sunlight of life's July.
And left standing amidst the piercing chill of an Alpine November.
Amid the sound of feet thundering on the church's wooden floor walls,
King was forced to pause. As with any extemporaneous performance,
King's was imperfect with some meandering lines and a limp conclusion.
Despite all that, these improvised remarks were easily the finest speech that King had yet given. People who'd seen him speak many times were astonished he spoke with so much
force.
Nobody said one witness. Nobody dreamed of Martin Luther King being that sort of man
under these conditions. King himself, on suspects,
had not truly understood what he could unleash, once he let himself go. He didn't want
to improvise the speech, preferred the script, but when the situation gave him no alternative, and what older preachers had told him. Open your mouth and God will speak for you.
Seven and a half years later, in 1963,
he found himself faced with speaking
to a quarter of a million people
who'd marched on Washington, DC.
He knew he'd be live on every national television network.
This speech demanded the preparation of old.
It was too important to be left to chance.
Dr. King and his aides had prepared a typewritten script,
unpromisingly titled,
NAMOS IN NEVER A GAME.
King's team was trying to navigate complex waters
with the text of this address.
King needed to reach out to White Allies to rebut the hardline approach of Malcolm X and
others, and to respond to President Kennedy's civil rights bill.
Was the bill to be criticised as inadequate or welcomed as progress?
There was much politicking behind the scenes.
And each speaker had been allotted only seven minutes. There was no exception
for Martin Luther King, all of these constraints, called for precise drafting. He knew that he would
be speaking with the vast statue of Abraham Lincoln behind him. A hundred years after Lincoln's
emancipation proclamation had declared the enslaved people of the
United States to be free. So, King decided to open with an artful echo of Lincoln's great
Gettysburg address and referred to the emancipation proclamation as a promissory note on which
America had defaulted. As a script, normal scene never again was overformal and flawed.
Parts of it read like poetry, others were clumsy legalese.
As King read out the speech, it did not stir the soul.
But then, toward the end, came a biblical flourish. And we will not be satisfied until justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream.
And as King said those words, approving cheer is rippled up and down the mall.
Then King looked down at his script. The next line was pretentious and limp.
He couldn't bring himself to say the words.
And so instead he started to improvise, telling the crowd,
Go back to Mississippi, go back to Alabama.
Behind him stood his friends and colleagues.
They knew that King had stepped away from the script and at the moment of maximum danger
and maximum opportunity the climax of his speech, he was looking for something to say.
Something that would touch the people there at the mall and watching across the country.
Tell him about the dream, Martin!
Yelder Singer, Mahalia Jackson.
It was a reference to something Dr. King had been preaching of late
to church congregations, a dream of a brighter future
in which whites and blacks lived in harmony.
And as he stood facing the television cameras
and the vast, expectant crowd looking for inspiration
Martin Luther King heard
Mahalia Jackson and he began to create on the fly one of the most famous speeches of the century
About how he had a dream a dream that America would live up to the words
Oh men are created equal a dream of an oasis of freedom and justice,
a dream that little black boys and black girls
would be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls
as sisters and brothers.
I am a freedom to be.
Normalcy, never again, was forgotten. The conclusion to the speech that shook the 20th century wasn't in the script.
The best things usually aren't. Key sources for this episode include Taylor Branch's book, Parting the Waters, Martin Luther King
Juniors Autobiography, and my own book Messy, The Power of Disorder to Transform Our Lives.
For a full list of references, see TimHalford.com C. Tim Harford. Corsion Retails is written by me, Tim Harford, with Andrew Wright, it's produced by Ryan
Dilly and Marilyn Rust.
The sound design and original music is the work of Pascal Weiss.
Julia Barton edited the scripts.
Starring in this series of Corsion Retails, I had an abot on Carter and Jeffrey Wright,
alongside Nizah Eldorazi, Ed Gohan, Melanie Guthridge, Rachel series of cautionary tales about Helen a bottom-cater and Jeffrey Wright alongside
Nizar Elderazi, Ed Gohan, Melanie Guthridge, Rachel Hanshaw,
Koenholdbrook Smith, Greg Lockett, Masey M. Monroe, and Rufus Wright.
This show wouldn't have been possible without the work of Mia Label, Jacob Weisberg, Heather Fein, John Schnarrz, Karly McGlory, Eric Sandler, Emily Rostick, Maggie Taylor,
Anniella LeCarn, and Maya Canig.
Corsionary Tales is a production of Pushkin Industries.
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