The Benefits of Being a Misfit


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This is an interview of Walter Issacson, who has written biographies of Steve Jobs, Leonardo da Vinci and others. He has useful suggestions for people aspiring to be more creative and innovative.

Grant: In closing, for an audience of students aspiring to be more creative, more innovative, are there any other tips that you would offer or myths to bust?

Isaacson: I’ll just tell you something small. The tongue of the woodpecker is three times longer than the beak. And when the woodpecker hits the bark at 10 times the force that would kill a human, the tongue wraps around the brain and cushions it, so the woodpecker can do woodpecking.

There’s absolutely no reason you need to know that. It is totally useless information, just as it was totally useless to Leonardo. But just like Leonardo, every now and then, it’s good to just know something for pure curiosity’s sake.

The complete interview

Knowledge@Wharton

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How a Pixar CFO Learned to Love the Creative Process


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Pixar is a truly unique company. Their movies are the most creative and fascinating movies coming out of Hollywood. How do they manage to do this time and again. Today’s needull is an interview of Lawrence Levy, former Pixar CFO, where he talks about his experience with Pixar and with Steve Jobs.

Levy: One of the things that I really honed and leaned at Pixar is that great work of any kind — whether it’s great creative work or great work in any industry or endeavor — requires this collaboration among competing forces. It’s the power to bring together all these disparate forces in a culture that allows for the right kind of collaboration. Great work, whether it’s films or otherwise, emerges from the right kind of culture.

The complete interview

Knowledge@Wharton

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