JASON WISHNOW is the filmmaker behind TEDTalks, the Peabody Award-winning video series watched over one billion times (even in outer space).
Working at the intersection of film and emerging technologies, Wishnow, Director of Film and Video at TED from 2006-2012, has been called an "online-video virtuoso" (New York Times, 2009), the "enfant terrible of digital film" (The Guardian, 2000), and one of the ten most influential digital filmmakers of 1999 (RES Magazine).
Prior to joining TED, Wishnow founded one of the first film websites, The New Venue, in the mid-'90s, an entire decade before YouTube. In 2000, Wishnow organized the first handheld/mobile film festival, The Aggressively Boring Film Festival, named after the technical limitations of its time.
As a director, Wishnow's short films and videos have played on television, in museums, and at over 100 film festivals worldwide including Sundance, Seattle, São Paulo, Hong Kong, and RESFEST. Wishnow's most recent projects are We Are All Radioactive (2012), a crowd-funded, bilingual, episodic documentary series about surfers and fishermen rebuilding coastal Japan after the 2011 tsunami and nuclear meltdown.
He is currently developing narrative film and television projects to direct, and privately consulting about digital media strategy.