Disney's Nine Old Men: A Creative Mastermind Over Decades
Disney's Nine Old Men show a different kind of mastermind: long-term creative standards, apprenticeship, shared language, and a group whose influence compounded across decades of animation.

Famous Mastermind Groups
Studies of historical mastermind groups — what they did, how they ran, what they produced.
Disney's Nine Old Men show a different kind of mastermind: long-term creative standards, apprenticeship, shared language, and a group whose influence compounded across decades of animation.
Apollo shows the mastermind principle at mission scale: a clear aim, disciplined coordination, small expert teams, and thousands of people aligned around one impossible-seeming outcome.
The Wright brothers are the small-team version of the mastermind principle: two complementary minds, disciplined experimentation, outside correspondence, and enough persistence to solve flight.
The Inklings were a literary circle around C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien. Their real lesson for modern masterminds is draft review, friendship, and serious critique in a recurring room.
The PayPal Mafia was not a formal mastermind group. It was something more durable: an intense operating room that became a startup alumni network after the company was sold.
Pixar's Braintrust is one of the clearest modern examples of a creative mastermind: trusted peers, candid notes, no formal authority, and a shared commitment to making the work better.
Andrew Carnegie sits at the center of mastermind lore. The useful lesson is not a romantic origin story - it is how coordinated specialists, a definite aim, and organized effort turn one person's ambition into a working alliance.
A source-checked catalog of famous mastermind groups in history, from Franklin's Junto and the Inklings to Carnegie's alliance, Pixar's Braintrust, and the PayPal Mafia.
What Benjamin Franklin's Junto Club was, why he created it, how the Leather Apron Club worked, and how the 24 Junto questions still translate into a modern mastermind agenda.
Fifty-six men, most of whom didn't fully agree, aligning under existential risk on one document. The mastermind lesson isn't unity — it's how a hard enough aim holds a working coalition together long enough to ship.
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