Well if I was going to describe my audience, it's going to take longer than you'd ever expect, hundreds of years in fact, because there's many of them, all over the world.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
It takes 300 years, it seems, for the great bands to get their due.
It takes two years on the stage for an actor or an actress to learn how to speak correctly and to manage his voice properly, and it takes about ten years to master the subtle art of being able to hold one's audience.
Any architectural project we do takes at least four or five years, so increasingly there is a discrepancy between the acceleration of culture and the continuing slowness of architecture.
Personally I estimate about a third of my time is spent on author events, social media and traditional publicity.
If the only people we seek to impress are within our own ivory towers of artistic excellence or our hallowed institutions, we will find the audience is gone in 20 to 30 years. I find as I keep a broader audience in mind, I choose to sing and say more things I actually want to share and fewer things just for the sake of impressing others.
The average attention span of the modern human being is about half as long as whatever you're trying to tell them.
A show needs time to find an audience, and they're very quick to pull them off the air now.
It takes a long time to publish a book.
One day you look out and the audience consists of 65,000 people. It's like looking in the mirror and one day you realise you've gone grey.
I been getting good crowds. It only took 50 years.