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    • Hope Invites – Tsutomu Uematsu
    • The Power of Connections – Akiko Naka
    • How to Create New Ideas – Shinpei Takahashi
    • Reasons For Religion – A Quest For Inner Peace
    • The Asset of Time – Hidetaka Nagaoka

    Creating a successful small company is hard. Creating a successful small company that independently develops rockets to send satellites into space is harder. Uematsu-san had a dream from a young age of building airplanes and rockets. Everyone told him to stop dreaming, and to just study like everyone else. He wasn’t smart, he didn’t have money, and...

    Naka-san discusses the difficulties of finding a job you love and pouring everything into what you want to do. At 24, she had an elite job at Goldman’s Sachs in Japan. However, she gave it up to pursue her own dreams of what she believed in. No one starts out passionate about something. They go through one option at a time, until they find out what...

    Takahashi-san works at a toy development company. He takes you through his thought process on how to create new toys that you’ve never seen before. He was frequently questioned by his supervisors whether there was data to show if his new toy ideas would work. His search for data resulted in nothing but failure. Instead he decided to play Shiritori....

    Matsuyama-san was born and raised in a Buddhist temple, attended catholic school growing up, and discovered the way religion plays a confusing but important role in Japan. Japanese people celebrate holidays of all different religions unrelated to their own. He compares it to Japanese food (和食) and how there is no main dish. Every dish has it’s own ...

    How should you use your limited time? Nagaoka-san deals with people all the time who say they want to achieve their dream, but just keep repeating that same line, never actually doing it. When they fail, they say it’s because they are too different from the people that could succeed. They provide a long list of excuses: lack of money, experience, c...

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    • A powerful way to unleash your natural creativity by Tim Harford | TED Talk. “To do two things at once is to do neither.” Harford begins with this quote, but quickly contradicts it by asserting that people should actually strive to do “two things at once—or three or even four.”
    • An astronaut’s story of curiosity, perspective and change by Leland Melvin | TED Talk. When he was five years old, Melvin watched Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin’s historic moon landing on a black-and-white TV set with his family.
    • How kids can help design cities by Mara Mintzer | TED Talk. Mintzer, an urban planner, presents the problem at the beginning of her talk: “Our society routinely makes decisions without consulting a quarter of the population.”
    • Do schools kill creativity? by Sir Ken Robinson | TED Talk. Sir Ken Robinson explains that kids are inherently creative and unafraid to be wrong. However, as we grow into adults, we learn to fear being wrong, because both corporate and education systems stigmatize mistakes.
  2. In this very funny talk, Norwegian television producer Thomas Hellum shares how he and his team began to broadcast long, boring events, often live -- and found a rapt audience. Shows include a 7-hour train journey, an 18-hour fishing expedition and a 5.5-day ferry voyage along the coast of Norway. The results are both beautiful and fascinating.

  3. The power of introverts. In a culture where being social and outgoing are prized above all else, it can be difficult, even shameful, to be an introvert. But, as Susan Cain argues in this passionate talk, introverts bring extraordinary talents and abilities to the world, and should be encouraged and celebrated. 1. 2.

  4. Feb 7, 2024 · 4. Akira (1988) 3. Rashomon (1950) 2. Spirited Away (2001) 1. Seven Samurai (1954) Whether it’s samurai epics, intimate family dramas, or fantastical anime, the diversity of Japanese cinema ...

  5. Aug 18, 2023 · Watch here to learn about what kind of motivation can be most effective in inspiring change. 4. The power of vulnerability. No. of views: 51,851,713. In one of the most popular TED talks ever, Brené Brown, author of Daring Greatly, argues that the ability to feel connected is what makes us feel alive.

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