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Jimmy Buffett’s Remarkable Triumphs Beyond Music Remain Unknown to Many.

Jimmy Buffett:⁢ More Than Just a Beach Bum

Jimmy Buffett celebrated ⁢slackers before the ⁢word existed, even ‍though he was⁤ hardly one himself.

“Wastin’ away‌ again in Margaritaville,” went the chorus to his most ⁢famous song, which became an international singalong. But Buffett was actually an astute, ambitious, aggressive businessman.

A statement posted ⁢to‌ Buffett’s official website and social media pages announced his⁢ passing on Friday at age 76. ⁤The statement did not ⁤say ⁢where Buffett died or ​give a cause. He rescheduled concerts in May and ‌acknowledged he had been ‌hospitalized ​for an unspecified illness.

Buffett built an empire based largely on Caribbean-flavored ​pop that celebrated the ⁢Florida ⁢Keys, sunshine and nightlife. His ​name became synonymous with a laid-back‌ subtropical party ‌vibe, and ‍his fans were known as ‍Parrotheads.

But behind⁣ the laid-back ⁣exterior, Buffett was an admitted workaholic. He expanded into novels, ‌nightclubs ⁣and many other ventures. ⁢At one time ⁤his⁢ estimated annual income⁤ was ⁣more than $40 million, and his ​revenue sources extended far⁤ beyond a musician’s typical business model of album sales, concert tickets and⁣ souvenir T-shirts.

He landed ⁤at‌ No. 13 in Forbes’ ⁤America’s Richest Celebrities in 2016 with a net worth ⁢of $550 million.

The title of Buffett’s most‍ popular song​ showed up on restaurants, clothing, booze ​and casinos.⁣ He became involved ⁤in such⁢ products as Landshark Lager,⁣ the Margaritaville and Cheeseburger in Paradise restaurant chains, boat⁣ shoes, salsa, hummus, tortillas, dips, tequila and blenders. The Margaritaville ⁤cafe on the Las Vegas strip​ was said to be the top grossing restaurant in the nation.

Buffett was chairman of Margaritaville⁢ Holdings based in Palm Beach, Florida.⁣ He had a restaurant⁤ and a ‍casino in‌ Vegas, a casino ⁤in ​Mississippi and a hotel in Pensacola Beach, Florida, ​but the exact scope of his empire ⁤was a secret. ⁢Margaritaville Holdings LLC didn’t disclose‌ its finances, and he usually declined interview requests.

Along with hit songs, Buffett wrote best-selling novels. In 2008 he was ⁣ranked⁤ by ⁢Vanity Fair as No. 97⁤ on a list of the ⁢100 most ⁣influential people in⁣ the world, and his⁢ fan ⁣base was ​broad ⁤and loyal.‌ Even when he ⁣was ⁣in his 60s,⁢ his concert tickets fetched more than $100.

“I’m ⁢not about to ⁢apologize for being a ⁢good businessman,” Buffett told The Washington Post in 1998. “Too many people in music‍ have ruined their lives ⁤because they⁤ weren’t. I’m not ⁤a great singer, and I’m only ⁣a so-so guitar⁣ player. I started running⁤ the band⁢ years ago because ‍nobody else could,⁢ and I turned out to be good at this stuff. There’s never been any grand plan to this thing. I’m making it up as I go ​along. … Just trying ‍to ⁤work the system while maintaining my ’60s anarchic soul.”

Buffett could be more intense than his ⁢songs and stage persona suggested. He was injured in‌ 2011 when he fell ‌face-first off ‍the stage while‍ performing in‌ Australia and struck his⁣ head, knocking him unconscious. He was released from the hospital the next day.

An ‌avid Miami Heat‍ basketball fan,⁤ Buffett caused friction at a 2001 ⁣game when he cursed⁤ at‌ referee Joe Forte⁣ from his‌ courtside ⁢seat. Forte ejected him.⁣ The Heat moved Buffett and ‍his son to‍ another section.

When then-Heat coach ​Pat Riley asked Forte if he knew the man he had⁣ ejected, Forte didn’t recognize the name. ​He⁤ asked ‍if Forte had‌ ever been⁣ a Parrothead. “He thought I was insulting him. He wanted to give me a technical,” Riley said.

Buffett was born on⁣ Christmas Day, 1946,⁣ in Pascagoula, Mississippi. He⁢ once said he arrived‌ in ⁣the Keys driving a​ 1946 Packard ​in about 1970. He​ found his musical niche ⁣during‌ that decade with breezy, island-influenced⁣ party tunes. The tone was set with a popular song in 1973, “Why Don’t We Get Drunk?”

He became a ‌pop star in 1977, when ⁣“Margaritaville” cracked the Top 10. The song has ⁣provided a soundtrack to countless happy hours in ‌the decades since.

Buffett’s 1992⁢ collection titled “Boats, Beaches, Bars, and ‌Ballads” became​ one of the best-selling box sets⁤ ever and his annual summer ⁣concert tours with his‌ Coral Reefer ⁣Band became⁣ major ⁣events, drawing ⁢thousands of Parrotheads⁣ who would dress up in Hawaiian shirts, ‌leis, funny hats ⁢and other mellow ⁤party accessories. Some ⁤would follow⁤ Buffet’s tour from ​city to ⁣city.

“We were ‌the social network⁢ before there was a social network on the Internet,” ⁣Buffett ‍told the Dallas Morning News in 2012. “They ‌had something in common; they shared things. They started⁢ dressing up because they were listening ⁤to the‍ music. It was the common bond.”

Business success soon eclipsed record sales.⁢ According to Buffett’s ‍website, ​the first Margaritaville opened⁤ in ⁣Key West, Florida, in 1987. The chain grew to 16 outlets⁢ and Harrah’s Entertainment, Inc., teamed up with Buffett to develop the ⁣$700‌ million⁢ Margaritaville‍ Casino & ‌Resort in Biloxi, ​Mississippi, near​ where he was raised.

Regardless of his‍ commercial achievements, Buffett’s legacy will be, in his words, “helping people forget their troubles for a couple of ​hours.”

The singer told the⁢ Baltimore ⁣Sun in 1999 that his optimistic view of life brought fans to the humor ⁣and escapism in his work. And that was⁣ okay, ⁢because there already was ​enough serious‍ material in the world.

“I was the​ life of ⁣the party,” Buffett said.

The Western Journal has reviewed⁤ this Associated Press story and may have altered it prior to publication to ensure that it meets our editorial standards.

The post Most⁤ People Don’t Know​ About Jimmy Buffett’s Massive ​Success Outside of ⁣Music appeared​ first on The ⁤Western ⁢Journal.



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