2022년 2월 16일 수요일

The story of Hitler - Hitler's close aide who is good at building property

 Contrary to the known facts, Hitler was rich with a lot of money, but in fact, he himself was not very financial mind. His stubbornness, loudness, and thoughtfulness were his weapons, and if he makes money out of this, who can't make money? The person who made Hitler rich was Max Aman, a close aide famous for his temper, and Heinrich Hoffman, a photographer, who was not a great photographer who used to do simple photography.  In 192X, when Hitler was popular at the time, Hitler was not very fond of being photographed, so he hated the tabloid attacks of tabloid and sometimes there was a quarrel between reporters and raiders who tried to shoot, shouting "Freedom of the Press" (Chase Day?) This Hoffman, as an ordinary photographer, lived close to Hitler's newspaper, and on the day Hitler went to work, Hoffman conspired and attacked Hitler. At the time, Hitler's picture was not an easy item to get, so I don't know if I thought I should give him $1,000 if he took it from a U.S. newspaper, but what would Heinrich Hoffman do alone when reporters were being overpowered by numbers? I was excitedly beaten and smashed. However, whether there is fate in the world, Hitler was interested in Hoffman, who was beaten up claiming the right to take pictures, and later Hitler met Hoffman personally and gave him the right to take pictures only after a simple discourse. For Hoffman, he was quite happy because it was an opportunity to meet his artistic needs (?), but there was a fact that his mouth was torn to the bottom of his ears, so there were quite a lot of places to get Hitler's pictures, but the photos themselves were in short supply, so if Hoffman took his photos and sold them? It's going to be awesome. Hitler's image as a popular superstar was much stronger than a politician, and soon his photos were printed and sold in newspapers, magazines, picture postcards, and even mugs. Of course, the resulting generation was fantastic. The local photographer Hoffman became a fantastic rich man, personally making personal acquaintances with high-ranking Nazi party officials, and taking pictures of high-ranking officials. But Hitler can't help but look at this chunk of money. No matter who took the picture, Hitler had the right to claim portrait rights, so Hitler was given rent there, and the amount was fantastic. The photo tax was the biggest factor in supporting his luxurious life. After the 30s, my struggle grows bigger. Hoffman's photos were immediately made and sold as sales albums, some of which sold hundreds of thousands of copies, and many of them were still frequently seen in World War II books, for example, 200,000 copies of "Hitler in Poland," and "Hitler with Youth." Among the traces that can still be found are photos of Hitler shaking hands with a young kid, sitting in a bag in front of a train bound for Poland, reviewing diplomatic documents, etc. In this popularity, Hitler received 10% of the profits, enabling a very rich life, and Hoffman was the best aide to support Hitler's life. But this close aide Hoffman was also a fairly smart (sly) person in his own way. As you know, Hitler wanted to remain a "poor" leader, so much of his wealth was registered under the name of his neighbors, and Hoffman was the one who lent the most names. Furthermore, Hitler spent a lot of money collecting paintings, when Hoffman ran around as a collection manager, and Hoffman inflated the actual price of the painting, reported it to Hitler, and took the difference, using a very good and terrifying way to fill his pockets. For example, it's by an artist named Eduard Grutzner, who Hitler liked, and Hitler personally evaluated him as a painter comparable to Rembrandt, but he wasn't actually that well-received. But Hitler was overestimating him too much. In this situation, Hoffman was not cheating on the price of the painting. For example, I'm anxious because I couldn't get a classic Pras with a market price of 10,000 won, but if anyone said it was 50,000 won, it was no different from asking me to buy it right away. Furthermore, Hitler was completely black-eyed about the price of art, and eventually Hoffman said the painting with a market value of 2,000 marks was 5,000 marks, but Hitler said, "What, Ocheon marks?" Amazing! Isn't that a free price? It's really cheap. Look at this picture here! Why do people underestimate Grutzner? Rembrandt would have drawn worse than this!! "...If you don't know, three generations suffer. Later, I didn't want to give money to Max Amang, the owner of the party's publisher who published the photo book, so I set up a separate publisher to maximize profits, so I can see how great the excellence was. Through this outstanding ability, Hoffman gained a villa and earned wealth to hear the sound of a wealthy man. And the true Daebak was waiting for you. Hitler's popularity has increased and his face has even been used for stamps. Ordinary people thought it an honor to have their face on the stamp, so they didn't think about benefiting from it, but as a money genius Hoffman, they thought of making money using portrait rights for each of these stamps, which soon burst into "the best of Hoffman-Hittler's life." The stamp price was not expensive, but there were many people to send letters. Hindenburg, who was then president of the country, was quite displeased with this strange treatment and said, "He can just let me be the 'Minister of Post Office', then you can lick my feet without bothering me."

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