Blockbuster Quotes

Quotes tagged as "blockbuster" Showing 1-5 of 5
Zoran Žmirić
“Kako se postaje otac domovine? Tako da se narodu jebe majka!”
Zoran Žmirić, Blockbuster

Kailin Gow
“About 20 years ago I told an Exec to tell her friend, an Exec at a big entertainment company that they should develop a video library where anyone can pull up a film or tv show when they want to, from home. This was before Video On Demand. Before Netflix went streaming. Before Amazon Video and Hulu. That entertainment company I told about my vision for a VOD-type of service to was Blockbuster. But because I was a very young Executive, a woman, and Asian; they didn't listen. Look where Blockbuster is now. - Don't take Good Advice for Granted. Futurist - Kailin Gow”
Kailin Gow

Christian Baloga
“Never allow carping critics to deter you from success. Instead, silence them with it.”
Christian Baloga

“I didn’t need a girlfriend when I had Blockbuster.”
Paul Scheer, Joyful Recollections of Trauma

Chris Anderson
“Today we’re not so much fragmenting as we are re-forming along different dimensions. These days our watercoolers are increasingly virtual; there are many different ones; and the people who gather around them are self-selected. Rather than being loosely connected with people thanks to superficial mass-cultural overlaps, we have the ability to be more strongly tied to just as many if not more people with a shared affinity for niche culture.

Although the decline of mainstream cultural institutions may result in some people turning to echo chambers of like-minded views, I suspect that over time the power of human curiosity combined with near-infinite access to information will tend to make most people more open-minded, not less.

As much as the blockbuster era seems like the natural state of things, it is, as we’ve seen, mostly an artifact of late-twentieth-century broadcast technologies. Before then most culture was local; in the future it will be affinity-based and massively parallel. Mass culture may fade, but common culture will not. We will still share our culture with others, but not with everyone.”
Chris Anderson, The Long Tail: Why the Future of Business is Selling Less of More