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*****
If an angry regulator ever looked, they wouldn't find a foreign speculator who'd extracted cash and fled. They'd find a patient, long-term investor who'd entered the market at the bottom of a crisis and stayed to help rebuild.
That was a highly defensible story. A boring one, even.
In international finance, *boring* was good.
Boring didn't generate screaming newspaper headlines or Congressional subpoenas.
His twelve-year-old son had won those nights in August. The sa son who had quietly executed a multi-jurisdictional currency strategy weeks before the crisis was visible to the Harvard-educated economists paid millions to see it coming.
The 1997 Asian crisis had involved hundreds of participants at vastly different scales. Soros's Quantum Fund famously made roughly $1 billion in profit. But hidden below him in the murky waters were dozens of macro hedge funds, proprietary trading desks, and smaller family offices that made anywhere from $10 million to $500 million running the sa currency short strategies.
Most of their nas might never co out publicly. The press focused entirely on Soros and other Titans because they were already famous from breaking the British pound in 1992, and because Soros's scale made him the perfect comic-book villain for the narrative.
Pri Minister Mahathir of Malaysia publicly blad Soros by na on television. Thailand's governnt made statents about "evil currency speculators." Indonesia focused entirely on dostic corruption and the IMF riots. None of them went looking for the dium and small-tier players.
The legal reality was simply too uncomfortable for them: currency trading is internationally legal. Prosecuting foreign speculators for executing legal trades creates a chilling precedent for future foreign investnt, which these devastated Asian countries desperately needed during their recovery.
Then, staring at the glowing taillights of the car in front of him, Grant rembered what the dia outlets had repeated over the last three months. They openly declared that his son's mouth was *blessed by God*.
As is well-known in the dark corridors of Wall Street, people involved in high finance are often deeply superstitious—especially the ultra-rich.
Grant reached into his suit jacket and pulled out his car phone.
On the quiet, rainy way back to the luxury hotel, Grant yers placed an irrevocable buy order with his broker in New York. He didn't just buy the tech stocks for his son's account; he leveraged his own personal capital, and the capital of the broader yers money, to buy millions of shares of Apple, Microsoft, and soon, Amazon.
His future self would praise this wise, blind leap of faith. It was a single decision that would multiply the wealth of the yers family countless tis over, elevating them to beco one of the truly untouchable, super-rich elite families on the planet... completely independent of his son's massive fortune.
---
After the emotional crucible of his parents' visit, principal photography for *The Sixth Sense* progressed with ruthless efficiency.
There were grueling days when the focused crew burned through twelve different script setups before the sun dipped below the Philadelphia skyline. And there were frustrating days when a single scene proved impossibly difficult to wrap up, usually because an extra kept breaking character, unable to stop looking at the "ghosts" pointed out by the boy standing in the center of the room.
But the daily shooting experience proved intellectually satisfying for him.
Marvin used the $45 million movie set as a masterclass. He absorbed everything. He learned from Shyamalan's cara blocking, from the sound crew wiring lavalier mics, and from the raw instincts of his veteran co-actors.
He discovered that one of the most difficult technical aspects of screen acting was the rigid discipline of spatial awareness—knowing exactly, to the milliter, where to look or physically stand. Or, as the crew called it, hitting the "mark."
This physical discipline might seem trivial to a layman eating popcorn in a theater, but the actor had to make sure they never looked directly into the black lens of the Panavision cara. To break the fourth wall was to shatter the illusion entirely.
Then, there were the isolating tis when the script required actors to converse emotionally with another human being, but in reality, no one stood in front of them. The director would tape a neon pink 'X' to a C-stand and tell them to cry at it.
Such sterile scenes are notoriously difficult. The lack of another breathing, reacting person to converse with makes it difficult for actors to summon genuine emotion.
Of course, it wasn't a problem for him.
Marvin knew this isolating challenge would beco painfully obvious in the future, during the impending era of green-screen CGI blockbusters. He knew exactly why actors in future superhero flicks often looked wooden on screen; from the violent fights to the crumbling environnts, everything had to be artificially generated by computers months after the actors had gone ho.
Marvin already had a few multi-billion-dollar ideas on how to fix that technological gap. He intended to sink his fingers deep into the dual roles of directing and producing the second he established his own studio.
But that architectural planning was for the future. For now, he quietly learned everything he could from being in the trenches.
He didn't just learn from the technical crew; he learned from his co-stars. While coastal critics had criticized Bruce Willis over the years for his supposedly limited acting range, Marvin believed that noise to be elitist hogwash.
The second Shyamalan yelled "Action," Willis was in full control of the emotional situation. Watching the massive man work up close was a cinematic treat in itself.
Bruce mostly kept to himself between setups.
To a cynical Hollywood outsider, his isolation might seem like the arrogant ego of an A-list star. But Marvin thought boundary-setting was warranted, given how many hundreds of millions of dollars his films printed at the global box office.
And not once, on a single day of shooting, had Bruce ever been rude, patronizing, or dismissive to Marvin.
Perhaps it was his billionaire background. Or perhaps it was the crushing weight of the historic awards now attached to his na. Ever since his four-trophy sweep at the Grammys, an endless parade of industry people had tried to connect with him.
The frenzy had only gotten worse after his historic win at the Oscars.
The roaring, unscripted standing ovation for his solo piano performance had made the world weep. It single-handedly helped propel the 70th Academy Awards to the highest television ratings in Oscar history. In the United States alone, more than 55 million viewers watched the ceremony live in full, while nearly 87 million tuned in for at least part of the broadcast.
Internationally, the scale beca even more monstrous. The ceremony was broadcast across more than seventy countries, with global viewership estimates surpassing 320 million people over the course of the live event and delayed rebroadcasts throughout the following week.
Network executives across North Arica, Europe, Asia, and Latin Arica reported massive audience spikes specifically during Marvin yers' piano performance and Oscar acceptance appearances. Several broadcasters privately admitted the numbers resembled World Cup or Olympic-level retention curves rather than a conventional awards ceremony.
The Nielsen ratings in Arica alone reached a staggering 34.9 household rating with a 55 percent audience share—numbers so overwhelming that ABC executives internally referred to the ceremony as a "once-in-a-generation broadcast anomaly."
In the weeks that followed, the global demand to simply see Marvin yers again escalated into near hysteria. Bootlegged VHS "highlight tapes" of his Oscar performance spread through schools, malls, music stores, internet forums, and college dormitories like black-market treasure. Teenagers traded duplicated recordings in high school hallways like classified contraband. Entire families replayed his piano performance repeatedly inside living rooms.
Entertainnt programs across the world rebroadcast fragnts of the footage endlessly because audience retention trics surged every single ti his face appeared onscreen.
People were no longer rely consuming the performance. They were preserving it like a sacred fragnt of entertainnt history itself.
The reaction from young won and teenage girls was particularly intense.
Millions openly cried during the live broadcast, while the scheduled rebroadcasts of the ceremony shattered dayti television ratings across multiple countries entirely because of Marvin's singular appearance on stage. Networks that replayed his piano performance reported dramatic audience retention spikes the mont he appeared onscreen, forcing producers to repeatedly rebroadcast the footage simply to maintain viewership numbers.
And Hollywood noticed.
Because of the unprecedented heat surrounding the twelve-year-old phenonon, the machinery of the entertainnt industry descended into near panic trying to secure even the smallest fraction of his attention before soone else did. Every day brought new invitations from studio executives, producers, billionaires, and A-list celebrities promising private etings, exclusive parties, or outright blank checks in exchange for a single composition, soundtrack contribution, or public appearance.
But it did not stop with Hollywood.
The luxury world arrived next.
Executives from Versace, Armani, and Calvin Klein quietly reached out through interdiaries, fascinated by the impossible mixture of innocence, beauty, artistic prestige, and mass-market hysteria surrounding Marvin yers. The fashion industry had spent decades trying to manufacture icons capable of crossing generational boundaries this effortlessly. Marvin had accomplished it at twelve years old.
anwhile, the corporate advertising machine beca even more aggressive.
Executives from Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, McDonald's, Sony, and Nintendo all explored potential endorsent deals, limited campaigns, soundtrack collaborations, or promotional appearances tied to Marvin's rapidly expanding global audience. To them, he no longer resembled rely a successful child musician. He resembled a once-in-a-generation cultural event capable of influencing consur behavior on a planetary scale.
The terrifying part for the industry was that Marvin had not even entered adolescence properly yet.
And still, the entire comrcial ecosystem of Hollywood, fashion, music, luxury branding, and corporate advertising had already begun orbiting around him like satellites around a newly born sun.
Even Sean "P-Diddy" Combs—the king of 1990s hip-hop—cornered Jeff Raymond at a Manhattan after-party, offering an open-ended fortune just to get Marvin into his recording studio for one afternoon.
But every single offer, no matter how extravagant, was politely rejected at the iron gates guarded by Amy and Jeff. Luxury executives, corporate representatives, talent agents, and studio interdiaries quickly discovered that gaining access to Marvin yers had beco nearly impossible.
The boy at the center of the largest entertainnt frenzy of 1998 had abruptly vanished behind an enforced dia blackout while filming, with Marvin personally ordering that no comrcial appearances, endorsent negotiations, magazine campaigns, or advertising partnerships be accepted under any circumstances.
The decision baffled Hollywood.
From the perspective of the entertainnt industry, refusing such offers bordered on financial insanity. Major corporations were prepared to place eight-figure contracts in front of a twelve-year-old child without hesitation.
Marketing departnts viewed him as the most naturally marketable young figure to erge in decades: musically acclaid, emotionally adored by the public, internationally recognizable, critically respected, and carrying an almost supernatural ability to generate emotional attachnt among audiences.
Yet Marvin rejected all of it.
Not because the offers were too small, but because he fundantally despised the idea of becoming a decorative spokesman for soone else's empire..
He had no interest in spending his future smiling beneath another corporation's logo while helping enrich executives whose nas the public would never even rember. Marvin understood sothing most celebrities only realized after their careers began declining: true power was never in endorsing brands. The true power was in owning them.
To Marvin, lending his face to another company's products for temporary millions felt painfully shortsighted compared to what he intended to build himself. Every endorsent offer he refused beca another quiet confirmation of his larger ambitions. He did not want to wear another designer's symbol across his chest. He wanted the world to eventually wear his.
And so, while Hollywood believed they were watching the rise of a child superstar, Marvin was already thinking several layers higher than the system surrounding him. Music, films, and fa were only a big part of a massive picture.
They were infrastructure.
Foundations. The first stages of constructing an empire vast enough that one day entire luxury houses, dia corporations, and consur brands would compete not for his endorsent, but for the privilege of partnering with companies he personally owned.
However, that was intended for his future self to reflect upon, as it was a much higher step in his overall grand plan of building a global brand. At present, regardless of the reasons behind Bruce's respect, Marvin consistently saw a genuinely good and dedicated individual when observing his co-star.
He couldn't complain about that.
Then there was Toni Collette, the talented Australian actress playing his mother. Besides the raw emotion of their intense acting scenes, their quiet conversations off-cara were going smoothly. Toni found the boy articulate, polite, and possessed of a charming wit that disard her defenses.
By the ti the calendar turned to May, principal photography for *The Sixth Sense* was nearing completion.
---
On a humid Tuesday afternoon, a rare technical break in the shooting schedule allowed the lighting team to re-rig the interior of the house.
Inside the air-conditioned double-wide trailer, Marvin's assistant, Amy, was in a state of organized exhaustion.
She sat behind a folding desk buried under stacks of international legal directories, overflowing ashtrays, and curling reams of thermal fax paper. She was busy tracking down and contracting the obscure authors that Marvin had casually ordered her to acquire the global rights from.
*****
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