I drink your milkshake!
What makes this line unforgettable is its perfect marriage of the ridiculous and the menacing—it's corporate rapaciousness dressed up in nursery-rhyme language, which is precisely what makes it terrifying. Daniel Plainview isn't really talking about milkshakes at all; he's articulating the logic of extraction itself, the idea that success means draining your competitor of resources until nothing remains. You hear this same language in corporate boardrooms today when firms speak of "capturing market share" or "dominating the space"—the vocabulary shifts, but the appetite for total victory persists unchanged. Anderson understood that villainy rarely announces itself with theatrical malice; more often, it wears a smile and speaks in everyday metaphors.
“When you arise in the morning, think of what a precious privilege it is to be alive — to breathe, to...”
Marcus Aurelius“Drive your business. Let not your business drive you.”
Benjamin Franklin“Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity.”
Seneca“An investment in knowledge pays the best interest.”
Benjamin Franklin