A green-light meeting is when the decision is made finally whether or not to make a given picture.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
The green-light decision process today consists of maybe of 30 or 40 people.
The green-light meeting, when I first started at Paramount, would consist of maybe three or four of us in a room. Perhaps two or three of us would have read the script under discussion.
There are always challenges to green screen.
It really annoys me when the light turns green, and you're behind somebody, and they're just sitting there looking at the light for about 15, 20 seconds.
If you don't know what makes green, you're going to try every color combination.
'Green' issues at last are attracting serious attention, owing to critically important links between the environment and the economy, health, and our security.
When I'm working with improv people, I give them the green light to just bring it and try things.
Try to rally up as many people as you can with as much information as you can to try to get it to appear in front of the right people in the organization who are the decision-makers to greenlight the project.
Light is a metaphoric thing. There is green light and red light. Then there is black light, which is mostly danger.
The way I see it, I can either cross the street, or I can keep waiting for another few years of green lights to go by.