Changing the Media Landscape: What Makes Audience and Community with discussants Chris Sacca, Chris DeWolfe, Daniel Glickman. Jerry Murdock moderates the discussion.
Some of the most inspired and provocative thinkers, writers, artists, business people, teachers and other leaders drawn from myriad fields and from across the country and around the world all gathered in a single place - to teach, speak, lead, question, and answer at the 2006 Aspen Ideas Festival. Throughout the week, they all interacted with an audience of thoughtful people who stepped back from their day-to-day routines to delve deeply into a world of ideas, thought, and discussion.
Bio
Christopher DeWolfe
Christopher DeWolfe is the co-founder and CEO of MySpace.com, the popular social networking website and “next generation portal.” Previously he was the president of ResponseBase Marketing LLC, its Internet direct marketing company, and the CEO of ResponseBase LLC, a predecessor business. He was also the vice president of marketing at Xdrive Technologies, Inc., a provider of software and service for presenting, storing, and sharing of information via the Internet, and vice president of marketing at FBBH. He graduated from the University of Washington with a degree in finance and from the University of Southern California with an MBA in marketing.
Michael Eisner
For more than four decades, Michael Eisner has been a leader in the entertainment industry and is currently the host of CNBC's "Conversations with Michael Eisner."
He began his career at ABC, where he helped take the network from No. 3 to No. 1 in prime time, daytime, and childrens' television with such landmark shows as Happy Days; Barney Miller; Rich Man, Poor Man; and Roots.
In 1976, he became President of Paramount Pictures, leading the studio to become No. 1 in box office and profitability in both theatrical movies and network television production.
In 1984, Eisner assumed the position of Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of The Walt Disney Co. and, in the ensuing 21 years, transformed it from a film and theme park company with $3 billion in enterprise value into a global media empire valued at $60 billion.
He has now begun his own company, called Tornante -- Italian for hairpin turn, which is what he is now taking -- as he begins the "next act" of his remarkable career.
Dan Glickman
Dan Glickman became chairman and CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America in 2004.
Prior to that, he was director of the Institute of Politics at Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government.
From 1995 to 2001, he served as the United States Secretary of Agriculture. Sec. Glickman also served for eighteen years in the US House of Representatives, representing the 4th Congressional District of Kansas. He was a member of the House Agriculture Committee, the Judiciary Committee, and the Science and Technology Committee. In addition, he chaired the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.
A former trial attorney at the US Securities and Exchange Commission, he was a partner and senior advisor to the law firm of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld in Washington, DC.
Jerry Murdock
Jerry Murdock is a Managing Director and the co-founder of Insight Venture Partners. Since Insight's inception in 1995, he has played a leading role in defining the company's investment strategy and has been primarily responsible for the development of many of the firm's portfolio investments. Mr. Murdock currently serves as a director of Quest Software (NASDQ:QSFT), CallWave Inc. (NASDQ:CALL), Peace Software, Dorado Software, KWI Inc., Digital Harbor and In-Fusio. Previously he served as a director of Click Commerce (NASDQ:CKCM), Convergent Group (NASDQ:CVGP), McKinley (acquired by Excite) and SeeBeyond Technology Corp (NASDQ:SBYN). From 1988 to 1995 Mr. Murdock was a founder and director of the Aspen Technology Group. Mr. Murdock graduated with a degree in Political Science from San Diego State University and subsequently worked at the Georgetown Center for Strategic & International Studies (now known as CSIS) where he was a contributor to the export competitiveness project.
Christopher Sacca
An accomplished venture investor, private equity principal, company advisor, entrepreneur, and public speaker, Chris manages a portfolio of over two dozen consumer web, mobile, and wireless technology start-ups as well as an array of mature enterprises through his holding company, Lowercase Capital. Among his representative investments is Twitter Inc., where Chris was one of the first investors and works with the company every week as a strategic advisor.
Previously, Chris served as Head of Special Initiatives at Google Inc. In that role, among other responsibilities, he founded and headed up the alternative access and wireless divisions. His most visible projects include Google's 700MHz and TV white spaces spectrum initiatives, the company's groundbreaking data center in Oregon and Google's free citywide WiFi network in Mountain View, CA. Chris also spearheaded many of Google's business development and M&A transactions and was on the founding team of the company's New Business Development organization.
The Wall Street Journal cited Sacca as "possibly the most influential businessman in America" and he was also recently recognized as a Henry Crown Fellow of the Aspen Institute, annually selecting 20 of the world's most promising leaders and public servants under the age of 45. In addition, Chris serves as an Associate Fellow of the Said Business School at Oxford University. Chris regularly appears on television, radio, and in print and has been featured in Business Week, Fortune, Fast Company, and on CNBC, BBC, CNN, FOX, and NPR as an expert in the realms of entrepreneurism, venture capital, and disruptive technologies.
In parallel with his frequent keynotes at technology industry events, Chris is perennially hired by many of the world's largest companies, financial institutions, universities, and even some governments to speak about innovation, workplace design, and business strategy in a digital era. Back home, Chris is a fixture in the Silicon Valley startup community, and his reputation for fruitful and fun collaborations with early stage companies earned him a 2009 TechCrunch Crunchie Award nomination for Best Angel Investor and he was named as one of the top 10 angel investors in the country by Business Week.
Chris graduated cum laude from Georgetown University Law Center where he was a member of The Tax Lawyer law review and was honored as the school's Philip A. Ryan and Ralph J. Gilbert Memorial Scholar. He also graduated cum laude from the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University and was an Edmund Evans Memorial Scholar as well as a Weeks Family Foundation Scholar. During his studies, Chris attended university at each of Universidad Catlica del Ecuador in Quito, Ecuador, University College Cork, in Cork, Ireland, and the Universidad Complutense in Madrid, Spain.
Long before that, beginning in 6th grade, Chris attended the State University of New York at Buffalo for six years of graduate-level mathematics classes wearing thick glasses, awkward braces, and knowing the entire time that technology and computers would be passions of his for life.