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Steve Jobs: Revelations from a tech giant
There was no live-in help, and no entourage. He was worth seven billion dollars, but not materialistic. And he told Isaacson in a taped interview that he had learned early on what money could do to people.
[Jobs: I saw a lot of other people at Apple, and especially after we went public, how it changed them. And a lot of people thought they had to start being rich, so they-- I mean, a few people went out and bought Rolls Royces and they bought homes, and their wives got plastic surgery, and they, and I saw these people who were really nice, simple people turn into these bizarro people. And I made a promise to myself. I said: "I'm not going to let this money ruin my life."]
Kroft: Do you have a picture of the family?
Isaacson: Oh sure.
Isaacson showed us some personal family pictures that Jobs had given him for his book, shortly before he died. It was a look into a part of Jobs' life that few people had seen.
Isaacson: This is Laurene, and that's Erin, Reed, Eve. And this is on their family vacation.
Jobs married Laurene Powell 20 years ago, a former investment banker who could hold her own with her mercurial husband.
Isaacson: And she's a great balance. He knows to pick strong people to be around him. And-- he sure did when he married Laurene.
Kroft: Now this is...
Isaacson: Reed.
Kroft: Reed.
Isaacson: His son. Reed is very much like his father, except for he has his mother's kindness. Eve is a great horseback rider. Eve, I think might some day by in the Olympics with horseback riding. Erin has a great sense of design, is a really cool kid.
His fourth child is Lisa Brennan-Jobs, the daughter Jobs had with his girlfriend, 33 years ago and neglected for more than a decade until she moved in with the family as a teenager. Isaacson said their reconciliation was important to Jobs, because his own birth parents had abandoned him.
Isaacson: He felt there was a hole. He felt something was missing.
In 1986, he began searching for his biological mother, and found Joanne Schieble Simpson living in Los Angeles.
Kroft: Did she know that her son, the son that she gave up was Steve Jobs?
Isaacson: No. But she says to him, "There's one thing I have to tell you, you have a sister. And the sister, I raised. We did not put up for adoption. And I must tell her, 'cause I've never told this." And the sister turns out to be Mona Simpson, the novelist. And Mona Simpson and Steve Jobs totally bond. Separated at birth, as they say. And then they go on a quest, a journey to find the birthfather. Especially Mona wants to find what she calls, "the lost father."
Eventually they locate Abdulfattah "John" Jandali , a Syrian American with a PhD in political science, who was managing a restaurant in Sacramento. But as Jobs tells Isaacson on tape, he decides to let Mona go meet him alone.
[Jobs: When I was looking for my biological mother, obviously, you know, was looking for my biological father at the same time. And I learned a little bit about him and I didn't like what I learned. And I asked her to not tell him that we ever met and not tell him anything about me.]
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