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What Would Ted Lasso Do?: How Ted's Positive Approach Can Help You (Ted Lasso Books)

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Read another article about Popular Comedy-Drama Ted Lasso Season 3 Does ‘The Richmond Way’ Exist in Book Form? The series follows Ted Lasso, an American college football coach, who is unexpectedly recruited to coach a fictional English Premier League soccer team, AFC Richmond, despite having no experience coaching soccer. The team's owner, Rebecca Welton, hires Lasso hoping he will fail as a means of exacting revenge on the team's previous owner, her unfaithful ex-husband. In the episode, Ted must spend a day with Trent Crimm, a reporter for The Independent who questions his leadership, as a favor to Rebecca preventing a photograph from being published. The book is written by one of the characters in the show who joins the Richmond FC as their biographer. During the time that the author is in the show, he experiences a new way of life that he hasn’t seen anywhere. Firstly, the final game of the season is nail-bitingly won by Richmond after going 2-0 down, giving them a chance at possibly winning the league. More importantly, we get a lovely moment of celebration from the team, including Colin kissing his boyfriend, Michael on the pitch.

p.44 – Jason Sudeikis was an established working comedy actor. But he was never quite the breakthrough star until Ted Lasso made him one at 45 years old in 2020. There is a poster in Ted’s office in the show that reads: Gradarius Firmus Victoria. Slow and Steady Wins the Race. Optimists saw bad times as blips, small moments to forget about like Ted’s goldfish moment. […] Optimists didn’t personalize any failures either. If an unfavourable outcome occurred, they imagined it must be because of outside influences. Communicate and fit people into your daily routine– Ted begins every day with “Biscuits with the Boss.” When he started this routine with Rebecca, the team owner, she wanted nothing to do with it. But Ted insisted saying “we can’t be good partners if we don’t know each other.” This means getting to know people by being curious and asking questions and really listening to the answers. p.23 – Psychologists believe that one of the greatest benefits of being curious is that it not only gives us the power of knowledge, but it also leads to emotional well-being. Study after study has found that being curious makes us more content, strengthens our relationships, makes us more creative, it leads to higher levels of achievement, and it even helps us survive.The Richmond Way’ frequently surfaces within the Ted Lasso series, serving as a descriptor for a distinct philosophy and approach to life. Through plausibly real and difficult situations on the TV show, we see how Ted turns negatives into positives, adversity into acceptance, selfish behavior into self-aware behavior. He ensures we understand that it’s how we react to difficult situations that can make a difference between coming out smiling or not. I always felt bad for the boom guy or gal [on set],” Sudeikis says, Hollywood preened and gleaming in front of a so-unreal-it-might-as-well-be-greenscreen view of New York’s Hudson river. “It’s like, they’re holding that microphone up. And this is not easy to do. If you and I held our arms up like this …” and then we both hold our arms up in the air for about a minute while he talks about his years doing improv in Chicago, and he’s right, it isn’t fun. It isn’t fun at all.

Mads Lennon of FanSided wrote, "The third episode of Ted Lasso Season 1 sees the somewhat curmudgeonly reporter from The Independent, Trent Crimm, return in full-force for a personal profile of the coach himself. Much to Rebecca's chagrin, the profile doesn't wind up being as negative as she'd have hoped." [7] Daniel Hart of Ready Steady Cut gave the episode a 3.5 star rating out of 5 wrote, "Episode 3 reveals Ted's coaching skills trying to shine through as he has an entire town to prove." [8] The more that I watch the show, the more I hear Ted speaking to me and showing me what a good leader is. I have found myself trying to remember quotes or writing down some of the management lessons I gleaned from the show. Without giving away too much, here are 15 lessons I learned from Ted: He is, in particular, impressed by the management style of the protagonist of the show, Ted Lasso. In the final episode of the finale, the author presents the book to Ted who changes its title from The Ted Lasso Way to The Richmond Way.In other words, if we think we’re capable of something, it’s possible we really are. But if we don’t think we’re capable, we won’t even try. Ted Lasso’s Season 3 finale reminded us of Ted’s impact on those around him — the Lasso Effect! Since arriving at Richmond, he’s given characters courage, and reminded the team of the importance of second chances and that positivity and belief conquer all. No character has been impacted more than Roy, whom we’ve seen transform from an unbreakable stone wall to a caring leader, one who’s more accepting and transparent with his emotions, a point reiterated in the finale, where Roy finally went to therapy with Dr. Sharon ( Sarah Niles). Roy truly reflects the power of the Lasso effect and Richmond needs that in their coach — someone who can follow in the footsteps of Ted. Sophia, Gissane (July 15, 2021). "Ted Lasso 1×03 "Trent Crimm, The Independent" Review". Marvelous Geeks Media . Retrieved March 8, 2023.

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