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Open in hackernews

Trade Secrecy in Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory (2009)

https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1430463
50•NaOH•8mo ago

Comments

MarkusQ•8mo ago
c.f. The Candymakers, W. Mass et al
staplung•8mo ago
That’s nothing on the Slurm factory from Futurama

https://youtu.be/cRRMmb5cK0I?si=SoNzN-57mFlu6eDI

Obscurity4340•8mo ago
Grun-ka Lun-ka shi-gi-tty doi-rom
alwa•8mo ago
> …some aspects of the story are baffling from the vantage point of trying to understand how Willy Wonka and his competitors act. First, given the value of the information inside the chocolate factory to Wonka‟s competitors, it is surprising that they did not try to win golden tickets to enter and spy in the chocolate factory. They could, in theory, have bought up hundreds of thousands of candy bars just as Mr. Salt did to indulge his daughter, Veruca, to maximize their chances of winning a ticket worth its credential in gold.

Seems the Slugworth who was up against Timothee “Lil’ Timmy Tim” Chamalet’s Wonka read this paper in the years since Gene Wilder’s Wonka (and Ronald Dahl’s)—and wised up to the corporate espionage side of the golden ticket racket…

Then again, he made the competitively-shrewd move to recruit rather than plant agents: there’s a lesson in there for us all, no?

FridayoLeary•8mo ago
>Second, it is surprising to see that Wonka put little to no restriction both on who could win the contest and on what the winners could see inside the factory and do with that information after they left.

The author is making an unjustified assumption that Wonka had no contingencies in place. Consider the sadistic cruelty he shows towards children, and the fact that he's not worried about law enforcement. And consider his narcissistic personality.

There's more then enough evidence to suggest that he would and could ruthlessly silence any of the competition winners who would dare to leak his secrets.

That, really is the best method of preserving your trade secrets, and the reason why willy wonka is so successful.

Malazath•8mo ago
Or, he's 'whimsical' and child-like. Someone that may not have been able to be a child when they were young.

Who knows though; is up for interpretation.

AStonesThrow•8mo ago
> Consider the sadistic cruelty

Well, I uh, can't do that if I don't see it.

I think Wonka's character is a great way to personify the distant coldness of the industrialized corporate bosses of Dahl's day and our own.

I can't honestly say that Wonka exhibited any sadism or cruelty. He simply acted as a corporate boss. He was distant, apathetic, unemotional. His Oompa-Loompas were there to do his bidding and nothing more. The children he invited in, well, he CYA'd with the initial contract, [that's why he's unworried about law enforcement, in civil matters], and the misfortunes they met were definitely not at his own hand. They were simply "occupational hazards" from inexperienced and careless persons getting too close to the industrial machinery.

Wonka was never gratified or pleased when someone got hurt, even while lacking regret or remorse. And he was often right there to give assurances to the parents, about the incinerator or the squeezing process or something. Wilder's comic portrayal was masterful as he remained aloof, with a thousand-year-stare in those closeups; his business patter undisturbed by the strange happenings around him; he simply didn't care about this world and was floating in an executive bubble that no other character could understand. He was a politician with no stake in human suffering.

As far as showing off trade secrets -- won't read TFA but -- Wonka was essentially giving a Guided Tour for the entire plot. The kids straying from the path, were all meeting misfortune when they did it. They saw what they saw when they saw it, and then they were ushered onwards. Slugworth's entire plan revolved around reverse-engineering a prototype, and that's all he could do!

Tell me, if a group of five innocent children and parents toured a real-world modern manufacturing plant or data center, what sort of Trade Secrets would they steal when they were dismissed at the end of a long day? Especially after four were chewed up in the machinery quite early on

A sadistic and cruel business owner would not have hundreds of healthy Oompa-Loompas or a worthy successor who was happy to take over the business after the glass elevator ride.

FridayoLeary•8mo ago
That is certainly a perspective i didn't consider. It's been a long time since i last read the books. But i don't agree with you that that's all there is to Wonka.

>Wonka was never gratified or pleased when someone got hurt

No, but the author clearly intended that the readers should be.

>A sadistic and cruel business owner would not have hundreds of healthy Oompa-Loompas

Were they compensated for their efforts? Slave labour. (please don't be offended, it's a joke)

>or a worthy successor who was happy to take over the business after the glass elevator ride.

What of it? Everyone needs a successor. Otherwise when he gets old and infirm, the oompah loompahs and the squirrels will rise up against him and throw him down the garbage chute into the incinerator. Although he did discover immortality so that shouldn't even be a problem.

>Tell me, if a group of five innocent children and parents toured a real-world modern manufacturing plant or data center, what sort of Trade Secrets would they steal when they were dismissed at the end of a long day?

The article quotes Wonka where he asserts that his rivals would give their front teeth to be part of the tour, so he certainly thought that there were secrets to be stolen.

AStonesThrow•8mo ago
> No, but the author clearly intended that the readers should be.

Damn straight, and as a demonstration of moral ethics for an audience of young children, Dahl exploits our instincts to be thrilled/pleased when someone who's really bad gets exactly what they deserve.

Key factors in each character's demise is that they didn't die -- they weren't really maimed, injured, or in pain, per se, and we were always left with hope in their recovery.

But they all "got their just desserts" in a literal way. Their character sketches were thoroughly drawn as corrupt, indecent, egged on by bad parents, destined for Hell essentially. So yeah, the audience is gleeful and cheers and we revel in this cartoon violence, and we experience it completely differently from Wonka's attitude [hopefully], and when we compare ourselves to the folks on the page, we get to know ourselves better.

rightbyte•8mo ago
The punnishment is not in any way proportional to their misdeeds though. I remember noting that as a kid.

The other children seems like projections of type of people the author didn't like or something. They were given no chance of redemption but tempted by their weaknesses.

AStonesThrow•8mo ago
I'm unsure what a "proportional punishment" would look like, in context of a cartoon character suffering a cartoon fate in a cartoon factory.

Sure, the author didn't like the kids. They were wholly unsympathetic. Wonka didn't like them, either -- he waited until the very end to show partiality even to Charlie. The audience isn't expected to like them.

Projections, perhaps, but I would say we're looking at archetypes. Each child represented a particular type of moral excess -- gluttony, avarice, selfish intemperance of some kind. I'm saying they got "just desserts" because their fates aligned with those excesses. Augustus just gets immersed in the chocolate he coveted so much. Violet's impatience manifests itself physically as she became what she desired. Mike basically gets to be on TV for good in a miniature size. And Veruca, oh daddy's rich, haughty darling Veruca, is justly judged to be a "bad egg" on the very scales that measured wealth.

And Charlie managed to navigate the moral hazards and prove his mettle and take that hero's journey that purified him of minor faults. The point of the factory tour was not redemption, but a winnowing. The children had been led to the threshing floor and collectively given a final chance at redemption. Four of them individually failed, but Charlie, as an archetype, represents the redemption of all righteous dudes.

But Charlie had a destiny and didn't need to overcome the deadly sins of the other kids. His humble home was filled with righteous family members who encouraged his goodness. They prepared him to face evil influence when he went out into the world. All the other parents just egged on their stupid children's behavior on the tour. Charlie's weaknesses became his strength and salvation. Charlie's grandfather was a kindly mentor who saw he's good and refused to lead him astray. The other four families weren't merely weak, but thoroughly corrupt and blind to their own sins. They were already destined for perdition before they purchased their first chocolate bar.

So I don't know how you perceive proportionality, but I agree with the commenter upthread -- all seemed to get precisely what they deserved.

rightbyte•8mo ago
"Proportional punishment" would be falling into the chocolate and getting wet and going home or turning temporarely blue instead of becoming a ball. So ye, a boring book.

It is not really the severity of the punishments maybe but in what way Wonka delivers them from his position of strength. He is kicking downwards and you are supposed to applaud him.

Sure you can always go with fairy tail logic in wich turning someone into a miniature for being cheeky is not some sort of torture. (I am not sarcastic here).

I also find the story's way of portraying capitalists somewhat strange. The class struggle is just implicit.

WalterBright•8mo ago
> his rivals would give their front teeth to be part of the tour, so he certainly thought that there were secrets to be stolen.

But it doesn't mean that those secrets would be discoverable via the tour.

IAmBroom•8mo ago
> >A sadistic and cruel business owner would not have hundreds of healthy Oompa-Loompas

> Were they compensated for their efforts? Slave labour. (please don't be offended, it's a joke)

In at least one of the movies, Wonka reveals that he saved the entire race of Oompa-Loompas from some sort of ecological disaster, giving them a new home, and jobs.

Personally, I don't recall any of them seeming to resent their work, peeing in a bottle, or being sniped at in performance reviews. Reasonable labor for reasonable compensation is quite fulfilling (although that sentiment is often twisted sadistically by those in power into a caricature of 'reasonable').

WalterBright•8mo ago
> Wonka's character is a great way to personify the distant coldness of the industrialized corporate bosses of Dahl's day and our own.

I just took the movie at face value, and while Wonka was an odd character, I didn't look for a deeper meaning beyond being a fairy tale where everyone got what they deserved.

NooneAtAll3•8mo ago
which of the movies, tho?
WalterBright•8mo ago
the first one
AStonesThrow•8mo ago
Oh I see. There are many writers, such as Lewis Carroll, C.S. Lewis, and Isaac Asimov who were simple academic fellows with insular lives and limited social skills, who dashed off shallow fairy tales with a notable lack of allegory, deep meaning, or social/political import. That's all they knew.

On the other hand, there are other writers, such as Roald Dahl, Arthur C. Clarke, and Robert Heinlein, who had not only a distinguished education, served honorably in their nation's military service, saw combat, perhaps even worked in military intelligence, and led a cosmopolitan lifestyle with plenty of diverse contacts throughout the world, and they're also dashing off these cotton-candy, boilerplate fairy tales that people just consume and toss into the fireplace. Surely they enjoyed having a hobby where they could set aside their career and experience, and just sort of doodle with pen and paper.

</s>

WalterBright•8mo ago
Nothing wrong with just writing a good story.
FridayoLeary•8mo ago
Even as a child i was disturbed by Wonkas cruelty. The spiteful nature of Dahl comes through in all off his books. He was an excellent writer and i've read all of them, but my parents made it clear that i shouldn't draw any moral lessons from them.
RodgerTheGreat•8mo ago
The 1971 Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory adaptation seems to strongly hint at the interpretation that Wonka planted the golden tickets deliberately, rather than distributing them randomly, which is of course why "Arthur Slugworth" is always right around the corner when a ticket is discovered.