These days, it takes only seconds - seconds - for a picture, a photo, to suddenly become an international headline.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Image is an international language.
These days, headlines are trying to get you to click.
Attention spans are short. Like, eight seconds short. That's why it's necessary to grab people's attention immediately.
Headlines are so great in a sense that they can take a little bit from an article completely out of context and blow it into something it's not. Some people really only read headlines.
Now if you look at the London 'Times,' you'll find that with quite a number of the photographs, you touch them, and they turn into videos. I think newspapers come alive that way. We talk about 'papers.' We should cut out the word 'paper,' you know? It's 'news organizations.'
It is always the instantaneous reaction to oneself that produces a photograph.
The English press treated the world premiere of my first talking picture as a major event.
Video just accesses international information so much more readily.
I think international is a place that, actually, The Huffington Post and AOL have started to make moves in.
You can't expect to take a definitive image in half an hour. It takes days, often years.