The Dreamer's Disease

The Dreamer's Disease

Almost narcotic-like when you catch it, and while nearly impossible to kick, it isn’t necessarily a bad thing. This “disease” if you will, has given rise to titans such as MicrosoftAppleFacebookGoogle and Uber, along with a host of smaller (but no less important) companies including ZirxSkiftElemental Technologies and MediaREDEF.

Having the fortitude to manage the Dreamer’s Disease, however, is what separates winners from those that… well… don’t win.

It's All In The Family

It's All In The Family

There’s been very little over the years to fill the “family gap” on prime time television. And I’m not referring to the more mindless content that we see today such as The Simpsons, Family Guy, American Idol, and its ilk. What I’m speaking to are those shows that tackle important issues, and deploy those archetypical references in service of simple, universal stories about family. Let's discuss what ABC Television has done to address this issue with shows like Blackish and The Goldbergs...

All The World's Indeed A Stage

All The World's Indeed A Stage

I've talked previously about the growing basic human need to remove ourselves at times from social media’s public stage; and our search for new apps that will offer us a means to express ourselves freely and without regret.  However our partial escape from the theater of Facebook and Twitter to what we hoped was a new digital oasis in apps like Snapchat and Secret has turned out to be a mirage. Huge and glimmering, they and others like them have failed to keep us or our moments private and safe.

Walking Between The Raindrops

Walking Between The Raindrops

If Facebook, Twitter and Instagram are the stage, then apps like Snapchat, Wickr and Confide are the new digital oasis. Places that move us from being public performers, to just being our true selves.  These apps and others like them have the ability to remove the “documentary pressure” of the web and turn it back into a regular method of conversation – one that is unavailable for third parties to hear, dissect or disseminate.  A place where we can share without scrutiny.  A place to walk between the raindrops as they say.