Life at 30,000 feet | Richard Branson

354,626 views ・ 2007-10-13

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:25
Chris Anderson: Welcome to TED.
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Richard Branson: Thank you very much. The first TED has been great.
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CA: Have you met anyone interesting?
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RB: Well, the nice thing about TED is everybody's interesting.
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I was very glad to see Goldie Hawn,
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because I had an apology to make to her.
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I'd had dinner with her about two years ago and I'd --
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she had this big wedding ring and I put it on my finger and I couldn't get it off.
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And I went home to my wife that night
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and she wanted to know why I had another woman's big,
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massive, big wedding ring on my finger.
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And, anyway, the next morning we had to go along to the jeweler
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and get it cut off.
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So -- (Laughter) --
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so apologies to Goldie.
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CA: That's pretty good.
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So, we're going to put up some slides
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of some of your companies here.
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You've started one or two in your time.
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So, you know, Virgin Atlantic, Virgin Records --
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I guess it all started with a magazine called Student.
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And then, yes, all these other ones as well. I mean, how do you do this?
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01:29
RB: I read all these sort of TED instructions:
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you must not talk about your own business, and this,
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and now you ask me.
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So I suppose you're not going to be able to kick me off the stage,
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since you asked the question.
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(Laughter)
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CA: It depends what the answer is though.
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RB: No, I mean, I think I learned early on that if you can run one company,
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you can really run any companies.
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I mean, companies are all about finding the right people,
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inspiring those people, you know, drawing out the best in people.
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And I just love learning and I'm incredibly inquisitive
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and I love taking on, you know, the status quo
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and trying to turn it upside down.
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So I've seen life as one long learning process.
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And if I see -- you know, if I fly on somebody else's airline
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and find the experience is not a pleasant one, which it wasn't,
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21 years ago, then I'd think, well, you know, maybe I can create
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the kind of airline that I'd like to fly on.
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And so, you know, so got one secondhand 747 from Boeing and gave it a go.
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CA: Well, that was a bizarre thing,
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because you made this move that a lot of people advised you was crazy.
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And in fact, in a way, it almost took down your empire at one point.
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I had a conversation with one of the investment bankers who,
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at the time when you basically sold Virgin Records
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and invested heavily in Virgin Atlantic,
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and his view was that you were trading, you know,
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the world's fourth biggest record company
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for the twenty-fifth biggest airline and that you were out of your mind.
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Why did you do that?
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RB: Well, I think that there's a very thin dividing line between success and failure.
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And I think if you start a business without financial backing,
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you're likely to go the wrong side of that dividing line.
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We had -- we were being attacked by British Airways.
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They were trying to put our airline out of business,
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and they launched what's become known as the dirty tricks campaign.
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And I realized that the whole empire was likely to come crashing down
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unless I chipped in a chip.
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And in order to protect the jobs of the people who worked for the airline,
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and protect the jobs of the people who worked for the record company,
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I had to sell the family jewelry to protect the airline.
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CA: Post-Napster, you're looking like a bit of a genius, actually,
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for that as well.
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RB: Yeah, as it turned out, it proved to be the right move.
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But, yeah, it was sad at the time, but we moved on.
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CA: Now, you use the Virgin brand a lot
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and it seems like you're getting synergy from one thing to the other.
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What does the brand stand for in your head?
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RB: Well, I like to think it stands for quality,
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that you know, if somebody comes across a Virgin company, they --
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CA: They are quality, Richard. Come on now, everyone says quality. Spirit?
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RB: No, but I was going to move on this.
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We have a lot of fun and I think the people who work for it enjoy it.
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As I say, we go in and shake up other industries,
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and I think, you know, we do it differently
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and I think that industries are not quite the same
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as a result of Virgin attacking the market.
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CA: I mean, there are a few launches you've done
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where the brand maybe hasn't worked quite as well.
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I mean, Virgin Brides -- what happened there?
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(Laughter)
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RB: We couldn't find any customers.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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CA: I was actually also curious why --
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I think you missed an opportunity with your condoms launch. You called it Mates.
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I mean, couldn't you have used the Virgin brand for that as well?
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Ain't virgin no longer, or something.
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RB: Again, we may have had problems finding customers.
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I mean, we had -- often, when you launch a company and you get customer complaints,
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you know, you can deal with them.
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But about three months after the launch of the condom company,
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I had a letter, a complaint,
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and I sat down and wrote a long letter back to this lady apologizing profusely.
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But obviously, there wasn't a lot I could do about it.
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And then six months later, or nine months after the problem had taken,
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I got this delightful letter with a picture of the baby
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asking if I'd be godfather, which I became.
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So, it all worked out well.
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CA: Really? You should have brought a picture. That's wonderful.
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RB: I should have.
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CA: So, just help us with some of the numbers.
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I mean, what are the numbers on this?
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I mean, how big is the group overall?
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How much -- what's the total revenue?
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RB: It's about 25 billion dollars now, in total.
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CA: And how many employees?
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RB: About 55,000.
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CA: So, you've been photographed in various ways at various times
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and never worrying about putting your dignity on the line or anything like that.
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What was that? Was that real?
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RB: Yeah. We were launching a megastore in Los Angeles, I think.
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No, I mean, I think --
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CA: But is that your hair?
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RB: No.
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CA: What was that one?
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06:39
RB: Dropping in for tea.
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CA: OK.
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(Laughter)
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RB: Ah, that was quite fun. That was a wonderful car-boat in which --
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CA: Oh, that car that we -- actually we --
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it was a TEDster event there, I think.
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Is that -- could you still pause on that one actually, for a minute?
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(Laughter)
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RB: It's a tough job, isn't it?
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CA: I mean, it is a tough job.
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(Laughter)
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When I first came to America, I used to try this with employees as well
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and they kind of -- they have these different rules over here,
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it's very strange.
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RB: I know, I have -- the lawyers say you mustn't do things like that, but --
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CA: I mean, speaking of which, tell us about --
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RB: "Pammy" we launched, you know --
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mistakenly thought we could take on Coca-Cola,
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and we launched a cola bottle called "The Pammy"
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and it was shaped a bit like Pamela Anderson.
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But the trouble is, it kept on tipping over, but --
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(Laughter)
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CA: Designed by Philippe Starck perhaps?
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RB: Of course.
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CA: So, we'll just run a couple more pictures here. Virgin Brides. Very nice.
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And, OK, so stop there. This was -- you had some award I think?
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RB: Yeah, well, 25 years earlier, we'd launched the Sex Pistols'
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"God Save The Queen," and I'd certainly never expected
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that 25 years later -- that she'd actually knight us.
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But somehow, she must have had a forgetful memory, I think.
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CA: Well, God saved her and you got your just reward.
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Do you like to be called Sir Richard, or how?
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RB: Nobody's ever called me Sir Richard.
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Occasionally in America, I hear people saying Sir Richard
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and think there's some Shakespearean play taking place.
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But nowhere else anyway.
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CA: OK. So can you use your knighthood for anything or is it just ...
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RB: No. I suppose if you're having problems
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getting a booking in a restaurant or something,
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that might be worth using it.
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CA: You know, it's not Richard Branson. It's Sir Richard Branson.
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RB: I'll go get the secretary to use it.
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CA: OK. So let's look at the space thing.
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I think, with us, we've got a video that shows what you're up to,
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and Virgin Galactic up in the air. (Video)
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So that's the Bert Rutan designed spaceship?
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RB: Yeah, it'll be ready in -- well, ready in 12 months
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and then we do 12 months extensive testing.
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And then 24 months from now,
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people will be able to take a ride into space.
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CA: So this interior is Philippe Starcke designed?
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RB: Philippe has done the -- yeah, quite a bit of it:
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the logos and he's building the space station in New Mexico.
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And basically, he's just taken an eye
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and the space station will be one giant eye,
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so when you're in space,
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you ought to be able to see this massive eye looking up at you.
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And when you land, you'll be able to go back into this giant eye.
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But he's an absolute genius when it comes to design.
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CA: But you didn't have him design the engine?
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RB: Philippe is quite erratic,
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so I think that he wouldn't be the best person to design the engine, no.
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CA: He gave a wonderful talk here two days ago.
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RB: Yeah? No, he is a --
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CA: Well, some people found it wonderful,
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some people found it completely bizarre.
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But, I personally found it wonderful.
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RB: He's a wonderful enthusiast, which is why I love him. But ...
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CA: So, now, you've always had this exploration bug in you.
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Have you ever regretted that?
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RB: Many times.
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I mean, I think with the ballooning and boating expeditions we've done in the past.
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Well, I got pulled out of the sea I think six times by helicopters, so --
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and each time, I didn't expect to come home to tell the tale.
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So in those moments,
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you certainly wonder what you're doing up there or --
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CA: What was the closest you got to --
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when did you think, this is it, I might be on my way out?
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RB: Well, I think the balloon adventures were -- each one was,
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each one, actually, I think we came close.
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And, I mean, first of all we --
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nobody had actually crossed the Atlantic in a hot air balloon before,
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so we had to build a hot air balloon that was capable of flying in the jet stream,
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and we weren't quite sure,
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when a balloon actually got into the jet stream,
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whether it would actually survive the 200, 220 miles an hour winds that you can find up there.
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And so, just the initial lift off from Sugarloaf to cross the Atlantic,
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as we were pushing into the jet stream, this enormous balloon --
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the top of the balloon ended up going at a couple of hundred miles an hour,
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the capsule that we were in at the bottom was going at maybe two miles an hour,
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and it just took off.
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And it was like holding onto a thousand horses.
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And we were just crossing every finger,
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praying that the balloon would hold together, which, fortunately, it did.
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But the ends of all those balloon trips were, you know --
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something seemed to go wrong every time,
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and on that particular occasion, the more experienced balloonist who was with me
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jumped, and left me holding on for dear life.
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(Laughter)
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CA: Did he tell you to jump, or he just said, "I'm out of here!" and ...
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RB: No, he told me jump, but once his weight had gone,
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the balloon just shot up to 12,000 feet and I ...
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CA: And you inspired an Ian McEwan novel I think with that.
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RB: Yeah. No, I put on my oxygen mask and stood on top of the balloon,
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with my parachute, looking at the swirling clouds below,
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trying to pluck up my courage to jump into the North Sea, which --
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and it was a very, very, very lonely few moments.
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But, anyway, we managed to survive it.
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CA: Did you jump? Or it came down in the end?
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RB: Well, I knew I had about half an hour's fuel left,
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and I also knew that the chances were that if I jumped,
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I would only have a couple of minutes of life left.
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So I climbed back into the capsule and just desperately tried
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to make sure that I was making the right decision.
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And wrote some notes to my family. And then climbed back up again,
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looked down at those clouds again,
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climbed back into the capsule again.
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And then finally, just thought, there's a better way.
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I've got, you know, this enormous balloon above me,
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it's the biggest parachute ever, why not use it?
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And so I managed to fly the balloon down through the clouds,
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and about 50 feet, before I hit the sea, threw myself over.
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And the balloon hit the sea
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and went shooting back up to 10,000 feet without me.
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But it was a wonderful feeling being in that water and --
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CA: What did you write to your family?
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RB: Just what you would do in a situation like that:
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just I love you very much. And
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I'd already written them a letter before going on this trip, which --
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just in case anything had happened.
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But fortunately, they never had to use it.
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CA: Your companies have had incredible PR value out of these heroics.
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The years -- and until I stopped looking at the polls,
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you were sort of regarded as this great hero in the U.K. and elsewhere.
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And cynics might say, you know, this is just a smart business guy
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doing what it takes to execute his particular style of marketing.
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How much was the PR value part of this?
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RB: Well, of course, the PR experts said that as an airline owner,
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the last thing you should be doing is heading off in balloons and boats,
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and crashing into the seas.
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(Laughter)
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CA: They have a point, Richard.
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RB: In fact, I think our airline took a full page ad at the time saying,
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you know, come on, Richard,
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there are better ways of crossing the Atlantic.
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(Laughter)
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CA: To do all this,
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you must have been a genius from the get-go, right?
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RB: Well, I won't contradict that.
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(Laughter)
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CA: OK, this isn't exactly hardball. OK.
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Didn't -- weren't you just terrible at school?
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RB: I was dyslexic. I had no understanding of schoolwork whatsoever.
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I certainly would have failed IQ tests.
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And it was one of the reasons I left school when I was 15 years old.
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And if I -- if I'm not interested in something, I don't grasp it.
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As somebody who's dyslexic,
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you also have some quite bizarre situations.
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I mean, for instance, I've had to -- you know,
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I've been running the largest group of private companies in Europe,
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but haven't been able to know the difference between net and gross.
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And so the board meetings have been fascinating.
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(Laughter)
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And so, it's like, good news or bad news?
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And generally, the people would say, oh, well that's bad news.
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CA: But just to clarify, the 25 billion dollars is gross, right? That's gross?
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(Laughter)
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RB: Well, I hope it's net actually, having --
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(Laughter) --
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I've got it right.
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CA: No, trust me, it's gross.
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(Laughter)
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RB: So, when I turned 50, somebody took me outside the boardroom and said,
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"Look Richard, here's a -- let me draw on a diagram.
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Here's a net in the sea,
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and the fish have been pulled from the sea into this net.
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And that's the profits you've got left over in this little net,
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everything else is eaten."
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And I finally worked it all out.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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CA: But, I mean, at school -- so as well as being,
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you know, doing pretty miserably academically,
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but you were also the captain of the cricket and football teams.
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So you were kind of a -- you were a natural leader,
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but just a bit of a ... Were you a rebel then, or how would you ...
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RB: Yeah, I think I was a bit of a maverick and -- but I ... And I was,
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yeah, I was fortunately good at sport,
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and so at least I had something to excel at, at school.
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CA: And some bizarre things happened just earlier in your life.
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I mean, there's the story about your mother
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allegedly dumping you in a field, aged four, and saying "OK, walk home."
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Did this really happen?
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RB: She was, you know,
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she felt that we needed to stand on our own two feet from an early age.
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So she did things to us, which now she'd be arrested for,
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such as pushing us out of the car,
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and telling us to find our own way to Granny's,
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about five miles before we actually got there.
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And making us go on wonderful, long bike rides.
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And we were never allowed to watch television and the like.
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CA: But is there a risk here?
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I mean, there's a lot of people in the room who are wealthy, and they've got kids,
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and we've got this dilemma about how you bring them up.
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Do you look at the current generation of kids coming up and think
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they're too coddled, they don't know what they've got,
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we're going to raise a generation of privileged ...
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RB: No, I think if you're bringing up kids,
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you just want to smother them with love and praise and enthusiasm.
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So I don't think you can mollycoddle your kids too much really.
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CA: You didn't turn out too bad, I have to say, I'm ...
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Your headmaster said to you --
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I mean he found you kind of an enigma at your school --
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he said, you're either going to be a millionaire or go to prison,
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and I'm not sure which.
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Which of those happened first?
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(Laughter)
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RB: Well, I've done both. I think I went to prison first.
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I was actually prosecuted under two quite ancient acts in the U.K.
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I was prosecuted under the 1889 Venereal Diseases Act
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and the 1916 Indecent Advertisements Act.
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On the first occasion, for mentioning the word venereal disease in public, which --
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we had a center where we would help young people who had problems.
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And one of the problems young people have is venereal disease.
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And there's an ancient law that says
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you can't actually mention the word venereal disease or print it in public.
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So the police knocked on the door, and told us they were going to arrest us
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if we carried on mentioning the word venereal disease.
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We changed it to social diseases
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and people came along with acne and spots,
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but nobody came with VD any more.
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So, we put it back to VD and promptly got arrested.
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And then subsequently, "Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols,"
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the word bollocks, the police decided was a rude word and so we were arrested
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for using the word bollocks on the Sex Pistols' album.
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And John Mortimer, the playwright, defended us.
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And he asked if I could find a linguistics expert
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to come up with a different definition of the word bollocks.
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And so I rang up Nottingham University,
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and I asked to talk to the professor of linguistics.
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And he said, "Look, bollocks is not a -- has nothing to do with balls whatsoever.
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It's actually a nickname given to priests in the eighteenth century."
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(Laughter)
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And he went, "Furthermore, I'm a priest myself."
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And so I said, "Would you mind coming to the court?"
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And he said he'd be delighted. And I said --
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and he said, "Would you like me to wear my dog collar?"
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And I said, "Yes, definitely. Please."
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(Laughter)
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CA: That's great.
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RB: So our key witness argued that it was actually
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"Never Mind the Priest, Here's the Sex Pistols."
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(Laughter)
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And the judge found us -- reluctantly found us not guilty, so ...
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(Laughter)
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CA: That is outrageous.
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(Applause)
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So seriously, is there a dark side?
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A lot of people would say there's no way
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that someone could put together this incredible collection of businesses
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without knifing a few people in the back,
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you know, doing some ugly things.
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You've been accused of being ruthless.
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There was a nasty biography written about you by someone.
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Is any of it true? Is there an element of truth in it?
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RB: I don't actually think that the stereotype
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of a businessperson treading all over people to get to the top,
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generally speaking, works.
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I think if you treat people well,
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people will come back and come back for more.
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And I think all you have in life is your reputation
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and it's a very small world.
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And I actually think that the best way
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of becoming a successful business leader is dealing with people fairly and well,
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and I like to think that's how we run Virgin.
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CA: And what about the people who love you and who see you spending --
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you keep getting caught up in these new projects,
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but it almost feels like you're addicted to launching new stuff.
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You get excited by an idea and, kapow!
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I mean, do you think about life balance?
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How do your family feel about
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each time you step into something big and new?
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RB: I also believe that being a father's incredibly important,
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so from the time the kids were very young,
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you know, when they go on holiday, I go on holiday with them.
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And so we spend a very good sort of three months away together.
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Yes, I'll, you know, be in touch. We're very lucky,
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we have this tiny little island in the Caribbean and we can --
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so I can take them there and we can bring friends,
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and we can play together,
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but I can also keep in touch with what's going on.
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CA: You started talking in recent years
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about this term capitalist philanthropy.
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What is that?
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RB: Capitalism has been proven to be a system that works.
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You know, the alternative, communism, has not worked.
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But the problem with capitalism is
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extreme wealth ends up in the hands of a few people,
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and therefore extreme responsibility, I think, goes with that wealth.
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And I think it's important that the individuals,
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who are in that fortunate position, do not end up competing
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for bigger and bigger boats, and bigger and bigger cars,
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but, you know, use that money to either create new jobs
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or to tackle issues around the world.
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CA: And what are the issues that you worry about most, care most about,
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want to turn your resources toward?
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RB: Well, there's -- I mean there's a lot of issues.
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I mean global warming certainly is a massive threat to mankind
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and we are putting a lot of time and energy into,
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A, trying to come up with alternative fuels
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and, B, you know, we just launched this prize, which is really a prize
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in case we don't get an answer on alternative fuels,
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in case we don't actually manage to get the carbon emissions
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cut down quickly, and in case we go through the tipping point.
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We need to try to encourage people to come up with a way
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of extracting carbon out of the Earth's atmosphere.
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And we just -- you know, there weren't really people
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working on that before, so we wanted people to try to --
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all the best brains in the world to start thinking about that,
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and also to try to extract the methane
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out of the Earth's atmosphere as well.
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And actually, we've had about 15,000 people fill in the forms
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saying they want to give it a go.
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And so we only need one, so we're hopeful.
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CA: And you're also working in Africa on a couple of projects?
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RB: Yes, I mean, we've got -- we're setting up something called
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the war room, which is maybe the wrong word.
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We're trying to -- maybe we'll change it -- but anyway, it's a war room
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to try to coordinate all the attack that's going on in Africa,
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all the different social problems in Africa,
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and try to look at best practices.
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So, for instance,
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there's a doctor in Africa that's found that
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if you give a mother antiretroviral drugs at 24 weeks, when she's pregnant,
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that the baby will not have HIV when it's born.
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And so disseminating that information to
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around the rest of Africa is important.
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CA: The war room sounds, it sounds powerful and dramatic.
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And is there a risk that the kind of the business heroes of the West
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get so excited about -- I mean, they're used to having an idea,
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getting stuff done, and they believe profoundly
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in their ability to make a difference in the world.
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Is there a risk that we go to places like Africa and say,
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we've got to fix this problem and we can do it,
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I've got all these billions of dollars, you know, da, da, da --
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here's the big idea. And kind of take a much more complex situation
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and actually end up making a mess of it. Do you worry about that?
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RB: Well, first of all, on this particular situation, we're actually --
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we're working with the government on it.
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I mean, Thabo Mbeki's had his problems with accepting
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HIV and AIDS are related, but this is a way, I think,
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of him tackling this problem and instead of the world criticizing him,
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it's a way of working with him, with his government.
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It's important that if people do go to Africa and do try to help,
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they don't just go in there and then leave after a few years.
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It's got to be consistent.
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But I think business leaders can bring their entrepreneurial know-how
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and help governments approach things slightly differently.
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For instance, we're setting up clinics in Africa
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where we're going to be giving
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free antiretroviral drugs, free TB treatment
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and free malaria treatment.
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But we're also trying to make them self-sustaining clinics,
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so that people pay for some other aspects.
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CA: I mean a lot of cynics say about someone like yourself, or Bill Gates,
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or whatever, that this is really being -- it's almost driven by
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some sort of desire again, you know, for the right image,
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for guilt avoidance and not like a real philanthropic instinct.
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What would you say to them?
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RB: Well, I think that everybody --
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people do things for a whole variety of different reasons
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and I think that, you know, when I'm on me deathbed,
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I will want to feel that I've made a difference
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to other people's lives.
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And that may be a selfish thing to think,
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but it's the way I've been brought up.
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I think if I'm in a position to
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radically change other people's lives for the better,
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I should do so.
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CA: How old are you?
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RB: I'm 56.
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CA: I mean, the psychologist Erik Erikson says that -- as I understand him
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and I'm a total amateur -- but that during 30s, 40s people are driven by
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this desire to grow and that's where they get their fulfillment.
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28:22
50s, 60s, the mode of operation shifts more to the quest for wisdom
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and a search for legacy.
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I mean, it seems like you're still
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a little bit in the growth phases,
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you're still doing these incredible new plans.
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How much do you think about legacy,
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and what would you like your legacy to be?
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RB: I don't think I think too much about legacy.
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I mean, I like to -- you know, my grandmother lived to 101,
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so hopefully I've got another 30 or 40 years to go.
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No, I just want to live life to its full.
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You know, if I can make a difference,
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I hope to be able to make a difference.
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And I think one of the positive things at the moment is
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you've got Sergey and Larry from Google, for instance,
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who are good friends.
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And, thank God, you've got two people
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who genuinely care about the world and with that kind of wealth.
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If they had that kind of wealth and they didn't care about the world,
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it would be very worrying.
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And you know they're going to make a hell of a difference to the world.
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And I think it's important
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that people in that kind of position do make a difference.
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CA: Well, Richard, when I was starting off in business,
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I knew nothing about it and I also was sort of --
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I thought that business people were supposed to just be ruthless
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and that that was the only way you could have a chance of succeeding.
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And you actually did inspire me. I looked at you, I thought,
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well, he's made it. Maybe there is a different way.
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So I would like to thank you for that inspiration,
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and for coming to TED today. Thank you.
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Thank you so much.
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(Applause)
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