chapter 0.

explanation of Billy's company. 1994. spoiler. alert.

Look at the images, it is more or less the state of Billy's company as an organizational chart, so that you understand the complexities, present and future, and the plans drawn up for the companies in the coming months and years.

Billy has spent almost 30,000 points over the years.

The art system works as a support in knowledge and skill, it's a crutch or the back wheels of a bicycle, perhaps the engine in a canoe race.

The system represents unquantifiable skills. I'll explain fine details of the system, which I've been explaining here and there, but since it's not a book released all at once and you read it week to week, it needs to be explained.

The units are 00. To go from 20.00 to 25.00, you need 99 points, but from 25 to 30, you need 999 points. Any range before 20 is for hobbyists, and enthusiasts, after 20 come the professionals - semi-professionals, who are good at their craft but not considered regular professionals.

By this term, I mean everyone who performs actions in a job, like commoners, that is to say, after 30, they are considered true experts. After 30, you need 1999 points to reach 35.

Let's say they can draw anything without difficulty, not limited to one theme. In acting, over 30 means having the ability to take on any role but lacking what it takes to be a superstar. Note, that the system is a crutch; Billy's drawing skills were already good from his past life and it doesn't add recognition.

Sometimes, a bad job can have more recognition than a good one. After 35 points, it requires 9999 points to level up, talking about people who are better than the regular average, enough to stand out. At 40 points, you need 99,999 points to go up, and we're talking about stars who can push anything to the limit, the 10% that surpasses the good. At 50 points, 999,999 points, are for true legends, a state that I think very few reach. Only the old, wise, and lucky ones.

Billy Carson:

Drawing: 32,509

Literature:31,700

Acting:33,950* they increase with a normal point, meaning an exclamation point increases by 10. Points: 789]*

admiration points, meaning there are 7890 points.

Each series is worth admiration points, meaning

Slam Dunk costs 300 points, and we're only talking about the comic, more points are spent on the series and peripherals. The two main series are Yu Yu Hakusho and Slam Dunk: Billy earns points daily. In the last five years. This is the point classification I have: * it's not so accurate, but it is, all series have been worth 9100 points.

How much each series has earned

Slam Dunk: 305 points

Yu Yu Hakusho: 301 points

Evangelion: 255 points

Hellboy: 220 points

Samurai Jack: 200 points

Toy Story: 185 points

Hercules: 160 points

Doom: 150 points

Lion King: 145 points

Game of Thrones: 110 points

Pokémon: 98 points

Wolfenstein: 79 points

Cartoon series: * Johnny Bravo, Dexter, Animatics, Recess, Billy Mandy, Hey Arnold, Robot Jones: 59 points

Power Rangers: 14 points.

More or less, that's the points earned per series. All in admiration points and worth 10. More or less, he has earned about 21,000 points from his series, which he has used to distribute.

Billy has spent almost 32,000 points over the years.

In In the balance sheets carried out, the Lux Comics company has an income of 5,190,000 thousand dollars per month, the toy company only establishes about 9,200 dollars to 12,300 dollars in profits, and it is preferable to save it for the toy company. T-box burgers earn between $19,500 to $35,000 per month. Paradise Hotel, 500,000 dollars per month, high seasons 3,000,000. Autodesk 29 million annually.Principio del formulario

ID software earned 88 million per year. + peripherals 35 million.

Warner and Nike: 12 - 20 million per year. The Nike license is about to expire.

Pixar Pixar has earned 129 million together with Lux Nation at the box office, I'm talking about profits. Subtracting production cost distribution and so on, in peripherals they have earned five times more than 670 million. These are the profits, eye. profits, subtracting expenses.

However, those are the profits now the expenses, in shares he has invested, by simple calculation, 390 million. That's why he has so many dividends because he even has a board position in some companies, he just doesn't attend. In salaries, it spends approximately 39 million dollars a year. Why so much? Because it has a legion of animators, it has almost 300 animators, 2 producers, 5 coordinators, 4 organizers, and 6 team leaders, who work like crazy, to fulfill Billy's deliveries, almost 16 hours a day. some sleep at work.

(Even if the salary is higher, due to bonuses, that deducts them from movie profits. to subtract taxes.)

In software, it invests at least another 70 million in all its companies, games, programs, and animation per year.

He has earned more or less 1,500 million in four years, which are liquidated, first by the 20 to 30 percent in taxes, which leaves him with more or less 1,000 million, because many taxes are paid, he has spent on average 800 million in The last four years, he has 200 million free that he has used to invest in purchases like toor books, investments in other areas, which you will know later, and in more movies and equipment, sabbatical trips and extra payments also count, the account must having almost 80 million, he owes the bank 95 million.

2. point. 

investments.

1. Coca-Cola: 45.670 shares of stock. + 390.000 shares of stock. + 23.000 shares of stock.

prize of shares of stock.

8,77 dollars

2. WorldCom 349. ooo shares of stock. + 6'450.500 + 8´234.000 

prize of shares of stock. 1.73 dollars.

3. Apple: 298.324 shares of stock. + 4'640.000 shares of stock. + 6´000.000 + 14´340.504 //18,65% at January 1994. +3'00.120 shares of stock. in March 1994.

prize of shares of stock. 1,1 dollars. - 1992- 1,73, - 1993.

1994, 0, 32 dollars.

4. Walmart: 133.450 shares of stock. + 123.000 shares of stock.

prize of shares of stock.

2,42. dollars.

5. Home Depot: 319.120 shares of stock. + 300.000 shares of stock.

prize of shares of stock.

11.84, dollars.

6. McDonald´s: 41.000 shares of stock. + 49.000 shares of stock + 4320 shares of stock in 1994.

prize of shares of stock. 6.18 dollars - 1992. 11,45, dollars 1994.

7. General Electric: 34.930 shares of stock. + 430.000 shares of stock. +1994, 634.000 shares of stock. + 700.000 +1000 + 540

prize of shares of stock. - 10.11 - 1994 - 23.00

8. Cisco systems: 530.231 shares of stock + 6´920.000 shares of stock. at January 1994.

 + 2'340.000 shares of stock. march

prize of shares of stock. 3, 00 dollars, 1992 - 1994 - 21,00 dollars.

9. Intel: 468.213 shares of stock + 6'870.000 shares of stock. + 3´000.000 shares of stock.

prize of shares of stock. 1,23 dollars, 1992

10. Oracle: 490.000 shares of stock. + 5'410.000 shares of stock. + 6´500.000 acciones. + 5´700.000. //14%

prize of shares of stock. 1.95 dollars, 1992 - 1.70 1994.

11. Sony: 150.000 shares of stock.

prize of shares of stock. 16, 88 dollars, 1992

12. Microsof: 9'435.670 shares of stock. 1992 + 4´040.000 shares of stock. 1993 +12'008.800 1994 //21,69%

1992 - 0,44 - 1993, 0,91, -1994 2,04

prize of shares of stock. 1,49 dollars, 1992

13. Sunmicrosistems: 3'125.000 shares of stock.

prize of shares of stock. 1,49 dollars, 1992

prize of shares of stock. 1,43 dollars, 1992

14. Berkeshi Hathaway: 1'235,000 shares of stock

prize of shares of stock. 1,43 dollars, 1992.

15. Aol(american online): 534.000 shares of stock.. + 5´600.000 shares of stoc.. + 3´456.986 + 15´340.123 //24% 

prize of shares of stock. 6,66 dollars, - second 5,43 dollars. - prize regular in August 1994, 7,23 dollars.

16. Qualcoomm: 3'450,000 + 4'333.930 

prize of shares of stock. 7,21 dollars

17. Nokia: 4'700.000. + 4'800.000. + March 1994 5´600.340 + 4´500.000

prize of shares of stock. 2,17 dollars

18. LotusDevelopment Corporationn: 2'233,943 prize of shares of stock. 1,16 dollars

19. The cheesecake factory: 9´435.000 + 12´000.000. // 9,65 % prize of shares of stock. 6,40 dollars 

21. Marvel: 1'100.000. – // 1,63%.- prize of shares of stock. 1,40 dollars

My main sources are Google Finance, historical data on the stock market, and graphs that I find on the internet.