We need to temper the idea that this company has to have some earthshaking event every 15 minutes.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Hollywood is the perfect conduit for the urgent message about climate change. We raise awareness all the time. We routinely take a film that nobody knows about and get 80 percent of the public to know about it in just 30 days. That's called marketing. We need to harvest Hollywood for climate change awareness.
Building outrageous expectations about the next big thing - be it a personal video chatting service or venue-based photo sharing app - can create all sorts of complications when things don't go as planned.
There's a lot of noise in the world, and the Internet magnifies that energy.
Earth Day should encourage us to reflect on what we are doing to make our planet a more sustainable and livable place.
We cannot make events. Our business is wisely to improve them.
It's such a rare and rewarding thing to be in control of space and time for two hours a night, to go through a journey and take the audience along. There's nothing quite like it.
In the future, everyone will be famous for 15 minutes.
In a 24/7 news cycle, with all the shrieking, howling voices and rapid-response and instant spinning and Soviet-style disinformation-mongering, a good idea has a shelf life of about, um, six seconds.
You cannot always make such big exhibitions, because they consume too much time and energy.
Everybody has their 15 minutes, and those 15 minutes should be spent in a private limo and a private plane. It's the ultimate.