Chris Anderson (TED): A vision for TED

36,764 views ・ 2008-02-01

TED


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00:13
This is your conference,
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and I think you have a right to know a little bit right now, in this transition period,
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about this guy who's going to be looking after it for you for a bit.
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So, I'm just going to grab a chair here.
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Two years ago at TED, I think --
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I've come to this conclusion --
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I think I may have been suffering from a strange delusion.
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I think that I may have believed unconsciously,
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then, that I was kind of a business hero.
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I had this company that I'd spent 15 years building. It's called Future;
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it was a magazine publishing company.
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It had recently gone public
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and the market said that it was apparently worth two billion dollars,
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a number I didn't really understand.
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A magazine I'd recently launched called Business 2.0
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was fatter than a telephone directory,
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busy pumping hot air into the bubble.
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(Laughter)
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And I was the 40 percent owner of a dotcom
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that was about to go public and no doubt be worth billions more.
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And all this had come from nothing.
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Fifteen years earlier, I was a science journalist who people just laughed at
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when I said, "I really would like to start my own computer magazine."
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And 15 years later, there are 100 of them
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and 2,000 people on staff and it was just such heady times.
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The date was February 2000.
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I thought the little graph of my business life
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that kind of looked a bit like Moore's Law --
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ever upward and to the right -- it was going to go on forever.
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I mean, it had to. Right? I was in for quite a surprise.
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The dotcom, ironically called Snowball,
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was the very last consumer web company to go public
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the next month before NASDAQ exploded, and I entered 18 months of business hell.
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I watched everything that I'd built crumbling,
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and it looked like all this stuff was going to die
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and 15 years work would have come for nothing.
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And it was gut wrenching.
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It took eight years of blood, sweat and tears to reach 350 employees,
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something which I was very proud of in the business.
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February 2001 -- in one day we laid off 350 people,
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and before the bloodshed was finished, 1,000 people had lost their jobs
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from my companies. I felt sick.
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I watched my own net worth falling
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by about a million dollars a day, every day, for 18 months.
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And worse than that, far worse than that,
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my sense of self-worth was kind of evaporating.
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I was going around with this big sign on my forehead: "LOSER."
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(Laughter)
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And I think what disgusts me more than anything, looking back,
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is how the hell did I let my personal happiness
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get so tied up with this business thing?
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Well, in the end, we were able to save Future and Snowball,
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but I was, at that point, ready to move on.
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And to cut a long story short, here's where I came to.
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And the reason I'm telling this story is that I believe, from many conversations,
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that a lot of people in this room have been through a similar kind of rollercoaster --
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emotional rollercoaster -- in the last couple years.
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This has been a big, big transition time,
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and I believe that this conference can play a big part for all of us
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in taking us forward to the next stage to whatever's next.
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The theme next year is re-birth.
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It was at the same TED two years ago
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when Richard and I reached an agreement on the future of TED.
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And at about the same time, and I think partly because of that,
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I started doing something that I'd forgotten about in my business focus:
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I started to read again.
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And I discovered that while I'd been busy playing business games,
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there'd been this incredible revolution in so many areas of interest:
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cosmology to psychology to evolutionary psychology to anthropology
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to ... all this stuff had changed.
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And the way in which you could think about us as a species
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and us as a planet had just changed so much, and it was incredibly exciting.
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And what was really most exciting --
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and I think Richard Wurman discovered this at least 20 years before I did --
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was that all this stuff is connected.
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It's connected; it all hooks into each other.
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We talk about this a lot,
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and I thought about trying to give an example of this. So, just one example:
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Madame de Gaulle, the wife of the French president,
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was famously asked once, "What do you most desire?"
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And she answered, "A penis."
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And when you think about it, it's very true:
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what we all most desire is a penis --
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or "happiness" as we say in English.
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(Laughter)
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And something ... good luck with that one in the Japanese translation room.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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But something as basic as happiness,
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which 20 years ago would have been just something for discussion
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in the church or mosque or synagogue,
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today it turns out that there's dozens of TED-like questions
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that you can ask about it, which are really interesting.
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You can ask about what causes it biochemically:
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neuroscience, serotonin, all that stuff.
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You can ask what are the psychological causes of it:
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nature? Nurture? Current circumstance?
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Turns out that the research done on that is absolutely mind-blowing.
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You can view it as a computing problem, an artificial intelligence problem:
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do you need to incorporate
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some sort of analog of happiness into a computer brain to make it work properly?
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You can view it in sort of geopolitical terms
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and say, why is it that a billion people on this planet
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are so desperately needy that they have no possibility of happiness,
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and whereas almost all the rest of them,
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regardless of how much money they have -- whether it's two dollars a day or whatever --
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are almost equally happy on average?
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Or you can view it as an evolutionary psychology kind of thing:
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did our genes invent this as a kind of trick
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to get us to behave in certain ways? The ant's brain, parasitized,
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to make us behave in certain ways so that our genes would propagate?
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Are we the victims of a mass delusion?
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And so on, and so on.
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To understand even something as important to us as happiness,
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you kind of have to branch off in all these different directions,
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and there's nowhere that I've discovered -- other than TED --
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where you can ask that many questions in that many different directions.
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And so, it's the profound thing that Richard talks about:
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to understand anything, you just need to understand the little bits;
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a little bit about everything that surrounds it.
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And so, gradually over these three days,
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you start off kind of trying to figure out,
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"Why am I listening to all this irrelevant stuff?"
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And at the end of the four days,
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your brain is humming and you feel energized, alive and excited,
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and it's because all these different bits have been put together.
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It's the total brain experience, we're going to ...
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it's the mental equivalent of the full body massage.
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(Laughter)
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Every mental organ addressed. It really is.
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Enough of the theory, Chris. Tell us what you're actually going to do, all right?
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So, I will. Here's the vision for TED.
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Number one: do nothing. This thing ain't broke, so I ain't gonna fix it.
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Jeff Bezos kindly remarked to me,
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"Chris, TED is a really great conference.
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You're going to have to fuck up really badly to make it bad."
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(Laughter)
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So, I gave myself the job title of TED Custodian for a reason,
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and I will promise you right here and now
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that the core values that make TED special are not going to be interfered with.
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Truth, curiosity, diversity, no selling, no corporate bullshit,
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no bandwagoning, no platforms.
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Just the pursuit of interest, wherever it lies,
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across all the disciplines that are represented here.
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That's not going to be changed at all.
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Number two: I am going to put together
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an incredible line up of speakers for next year.
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The time scale on which TED operates is just fantastic
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after coming out of a magazine business with monthly deadlines.
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There's a year to do this, and already --
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I hope to show you a bit later --
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there's 25 or so terrific speakers signed up for next year.
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And I'm getting fantastic help from the community;
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this is just such a great community. And combined, our contacts
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reach pretty much everyone who's interesting in the country, if not the planet.
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It's true.
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Number three: I do want to, if I can, find a way
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of extending the TED experience throughout the year a little bit.
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And one key way that we're going to do this is to introduce this book club.
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Books kind of saved me in the last couple years,
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and that's a gift that I would like to pass on.
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So, when you sign up for TED2003, every six weeks you'll get a care package
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with a book or two and a reason why they're linked to TED.
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They may well be by a TED speaker,
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and so we can get the conversation going during the year
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and come back next year having had the same intellectual, emotional journey.
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I think it will be great.
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And then, fourthly: I want to mention the Sapling Foundation,
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which is the new owner of TED.
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What Sapling's ownership means is that all of the proceeds of TED
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will go towards the causes that Sapling stands for.
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And more important, I think, the ideas that are exhibited and realized here
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are ideas that the foundation can use, because there's fantastic synergy.
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Already, just in the last few days,
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we've had so many people talking about stuff that they care about,
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that they're passionate about, that can make a difference in the world,
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and the idea of getting this group of people together --
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some of the causes that we believe in,
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the money that this conference can raise and the ideas --
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I really believe that that combination will, over time, make a difference.
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I'm incredibly excited about that.
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In fact, I don't think, overall, that I've been as excited by anything ever in my life.
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I'm in this for the long run,
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and I would be greatly honored and excited
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if you'll come on this journey with me.
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