At one point, The Acolyte was rumored to follow a Jedi Master (likely Carrie-Ann Moss) reunited with her padawan (Stenberg) as they solved a heinous crime.
Star Wars was doomed as soon as it changed hands. You can't have Trinity playing a Star Wars character, it ruins the unreality of the world. This wasn't just another Hollywood football you could pass to the next person in line for a favor. MBAs are the death of moviemaking.
Accounting, econ, and finance are the 2nd-4th most common undergrad diplomas held by MBAs, with marketing in 6th; the T25[1] schools might differ. Culturally, the stereotypical MBA is dissimilar to the CPA listed in the phone-book, usually landing in the sales, marketing, finance, or similar deparment of a medium-to-large enterprise. Those that give MBA a bad rep for arrogance, incompetence, and backstabbing don't develop an intrinsic skill-set or start self-funded companies[2]. Instead, they rely on being recruited by an established corporation or leaning on rich-people family connections.
Top twenty-five MBA programs, and what "MBA" is derogatorily referring to in everyday conversation.
Star Wars was doomed as soon as it changed hands. You can't have Trinity playing a Star Wars character, it ruins the unreality of the world. This wasn't just another Hollywood football you could pass to the next person in line for a favor. MBAs are the death of moviemaking.
MBAs?
Just so we're on the same page...Masters of Business Administration?
Accountants?
Yeah, I can buy that. No passion, only the quick buck.
Responding both to you and the preceding comment:
Accounting, econ, and finance are the 2nd-4th most common undergrad diplomas held by MBAs, with marketing in 6th; the T25[1] schools might differ. Culturally, the stereotypical MBA is dissimilar to the CPA listed in the phone-book, usually landing in the sales, marketing, finance, or similar deparment of a medium-to-large enterprise. Those that give MBA a bad rep for arrogance, incompetence, and backstabbing don't develop an intrinsic skill-set or start self-funded companies[2]. Instead, they rely on being recruited by an established corporation or leaning on rich-people family connections.