Media Mogul Donny Deutsch Talks Acting, Art and Luxury Timepieces
As you walk into Donny Deutschâs Upper East Side townhouse, trough the iron-scroll gate and down travertine stairs, you enter a room with pristine white undulating sofas that run the length of the narrow gallery space. Along the walls are monoliths to Donnyâs success â artworks worth millions: Damien Hirst, Basquiat and Warhol. But Deutsch, motivational speaker, author, advertising mogul turned creative, executive producer and now actor, is not one to indulge in the trappings of success. He thrives on challenge and risk- taking. His latest venture is a hysterically funny TV show that he stars in while also playing the part of executive producer and creative director. He plays a fictionalized version of himself in the USA Network show named Donny! It is proof he can laugh at himself. âI play a complete idiot,â he says casually. âI play a talk show host/Dr. Phil-type character, and I am supposed to be giving advice out to people when in reality I am a hypocrite â I do the same things I advise my audience not to do. Itâs a âtakedownâ on New York and its wealth, and Iâm the joke. I make a lot of fun of myself.â
Although he resides in a sleek five- floor home, purchased in 2006 when he embarked on a four-year renovation, the native of Hollis Hills, Queens, still visits his childhood house and talks fondly of his youth. He shines as he takes out an iPhone photograph of the house in the New York borough for all to see. âI love this house, but Iâm not happier today then I was then. The house felt big, and I grew up beautifully,â he says. âIâm very fortunate, but âstuffâ doesnât make you happy â itâs accomplishment that does and stuff comes after. I never aspired to this,â he adds as he gestures from his ground-floor office. âI was never driven by wealth. I was driven to accomplish â and to win â so when I give my motivational talks I always say the same thing: âDo something you are passionate aboutâ â something you love and the rest will follow. Itâs not about money, itâs about following your heart,â Deutsch continues. âIf you love something you will become great at it and the rewards follow.â
One of the rewards of Deutschâs success is his art collection, which includes, Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Richard Prince, Damien Hirst, Jenny Holzer, Keith Haring â all pop-centric works that he displays in his home. His latest acquisition is a George Condo. âYou can definitely say art is a guilty pleasure â itâs as guilty as it gets,â he says. âI started collecting in 2003 and early on I would just buy what âtalkedâ to me. But if totally up to me, I would only have bought Warhols and Basquiats. People advised me to have more variety but I was always drawn to the commerciality of those artists. Warhol is akin to advertising, and that is in my blood. I love art that is graphic and winks to the culture â works that are very positive. Itâs what I call âfiercely happy.â There is nothing better in the world,â says this art lover.
Although he talks with rapt animation about works of art, it is evident by the massive black-and-white portrait of his girls outside his office wall that family is his mainstay. Deutsch has three daughters from two different relationships ranging in age from 28 to 8 years old. His father was his mentor and the foundation to his life. âEverything good about me I got from my dad. My dad, whom I lost a couple of years ago, is my hero â the most decent, valued, thoughtful person!â he says emphatically. âAfter he stopped working at the agency he became a fine artist, and whatâs funny is when people see his work, hanging next to Warhol and Basquiat they ask, âWho is that?â They love the pieces! I got my drive from him. Even with this TV show Donny!, I feel him in it. He always said [to me], âJust go for itâ and âFollow your gut.â I was very lucky to have him as my father,â he says with great love.
His father, a creative and driven trailblazer as his son, founded the ad agency David Deutsch and Associates in 1969, and Donny as a young man took full control of it in 1989. He worked there until he sold it in 2000 but stayed on as a chairman for several more years. The showâs premiere, with its racy content, caused him to sever ties. âIt was time â there is a new generation coming up, so I thought it was a good time to go, though Iâm still an ad-guy at my core,â he says. Deutsch went on to author two books, the first was penned with Peter Knobler, called âOften Wrong, Never in Doubtâ and âTHE BIG IDEA: How to Make Your Entrepreneurial Dreams Come True from the AHA Moment to Your First Million.â He also regularly appears on NBCâs Today Show and MSNBCâs Morning Joe and he hosted CNBCâs The Big Idea with Donny Deutsch, which ran from 2004 to 2008. The satirical show Donny! is enjoying good reviews and has hit the right note with the increasingly fickle audiences. The reason why? Itâs hysterically funny, relevant and irreverent. Deutsch seems completely at ease playing the character â part of the ease may come from taping the show in his home. âWe shot the pilot and USA Network loved it,â he says. âI didnât care about exposing my home to the audience. Itâs not like Iâm exposing my kids,â whom he protects fiercely. âAs far as the intrusion, there are always 100 people coming in and out of my house during any given day. I have lots of floors to find a quiet space, so itâs really not an issue,â he notes.
The show is his latest endeavor in his journey to live his life with unwavering gusto. âWhen you look at the arch of my career â starting with the ad agency where I was creating 30-second content for consumers, to the TV shows where I had to do a lot of improv â but still talking to consumers. With Donny! I actually think itâs the easiest forum because itâs not live,â he says. At 58 years old, Donny Deutsch feels immensely grateful for being able to embark on this new challenge and even more grateful that it is being well-received. âTo do something that still keeps me on my toes and keeps it fresh â thatâs what itâs all about,â he says enthusiastically. âPeople have said to me, âI so admire you for putting yourself out there, and keep pushing,â he recalls. âBecause most successful people are in what I call âthe pillow of success.â You have to look at risk in a different way [in order to move to the next level]. I could even say there is no risk [in trying something new]. If your ego is intact, you are no worse off than if a project doesnât work. People are so stuck in their lanes and are afraid of failure, but that is really the only failure [not failing]. In my motivational speeches I always talk about embracing failure. If you can, reinvent [yourself] âthat is real luxury!â
Clearly, itâs the pursuit that motivates Deutsch. Evolving and growing comes with the territory. To that end, this creature of habit is taking a new tack when it comes to travel. Although he takes yearly jaunts to St Barthâs and Miami, heâs recently fascinated with travel to far-flung destinations. âNext on the docket is more international travel,â he says. âIâm working on that.â An African safari may be his next adventure for this endlessly curious man.
The stylish Deutsch also counts himself as a watch aficionado with 25 watches in his collection. âI love Roger Dubuis and vintage Rolexes â those are my current favorites. Iâve got a bunch of Panerais and a Pateks, but Iâm really into vintage Rolexes lately,â he says. He also includes a vintage 1962 Mercedes in his collection of indulgences. âI love the car, but my toys are really art and watches,â he notes.
Deutschâs life philosophy is part and parcel to his hard- driving nature to live life to its apex. Heâs made smart business choices, which includes acquiring important art.
His thoughts on the buying and collecting of art take the long-term view. âThe top of everything is always going to do well. A friend of mine said something interesting when he returned from Rome. He said, âI wasnât looking at the currency, I was looking at art which survived hundreds and even thousands of years.â What he noted was that art and real estate retains its value in a civilization. It doesnât mean year in and out there will be an increase, but over time, art and real estate holds its value.
You still need to be careful collecting art because people search for that emerging artist that will turn $100,000 into a million, and it often doesnât happen that way,â he says definitively. âI always say, âI canât afford my own art.â Itâs this wonderful highclass problem, but I would never pay today what my art is worth. Itâs 20 times the value of what I paid 12 years ago. When things get rocky in the market itâs one of the first things that takes a hit. Itâs a long-term investment.â
Itâs evident that Deutsch is a clever businessman, invests wisely and enjoys the fruits of his varied successes. But with the premier of Donny! he has embarked on new territory, and for Donny Deutsch, that is already a win.
DONNY DEUTSCH ON COLLECTING WATCHES
When did you start collection watches?
When I was a young boy my mother gave me a watch that her grandfather gave her. I took it to a little league gameâ put it in my mitt and then lost it. When I graduated college I got a Rolex Daytona [for graduation] and since then I have been buying watches. I love them all, from vintage Rolex to modern Roger Dubuis watches . I also love my Patek Philippe Aquanaut Reference 5167A-001, which I think is simple, beautiful and elegant.
Your art collection is very colorful and out there but your watches are very understated and simple. How come?
Iâm a uniform guy. I like to keep it simple with what I wearâ I usually wear jeans and a t-shirt or dark suits. Iâm basic in terms of my style and I carry that into my watches. Yes, my art is colorful and loud but most other things I buy are more understated.
How do you pick your watches?
Iâm a visual personâIâm the same with art. I never started buying with an advisor, I always bought what spoke to me and Iâm the same with watches. I thought this Roger Dubuis is one of the most time beautiful pieces out there. I like big watches! I was buying Panerai before anyone wasâpeople literally stopped me on the street. No one knew what it was! I just buy watches that speak to me.
When did you start looking at vintage watches?
There still quite new to me. I just find them handsome. These are not super-expensive but I fell in love with them. They are classic, beautiful and simple. I like to accessorize with different bands and lately I like âroughâ bands. Itâs fun what you can do with unique bands that change up the feel and keep it fresh.
Do you go to the watch auctions?
No I donât. I have around 25 watches. Once in a while Iâll sell a piece of art but watches are very personalâI never sell them. I just rotate wearing them. Iâve never been to Switzerland [to look for watches]. Iâm the same way with artâ Iâm not one of these people who roam studios looking for art and I donât follow convention with watches. Iâm never going to be wearing the âwatch du jourâ. I just see what I like and go for it. It could be inexpensive or expensive but I go with my gut. Also if everyone is wearing a particular watchâ Iâm not interested in it. That is what style is.
Are there any watches on your wish list?
Iâm going to treat myself to something special soon but there isnât one thing Iâm honing in on at the moment.
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