That's my sister, she took care of pictures, because I was a big collector of snapshot photography that I believed said a lot.
And those are some of the pictures that, something was good about the burnt pictures. I didn't know. I looked at that, I said "wow, is that better than the ..."
That's my proposal on Jimmy Doolitte. I made that movie for television. It's the only copy I had. Piece of it. Idea about women.
So I started to say: "Hey, man, you are too much! you could cry about this. I really didn't. I just instead said: "I'm gonna make something out of it, and maybe next year.." And I appreciate this moment to come up on this stage with so many people who've already given me so much solace and just say to TEDsters: "I'm proud of me, that I take something bad, I turn it, and I'm gonna make something good out of it, all these pieces.
That was Arthur Leipzig's original photograph I loved. I was a big record collector, the records didn't make it. Boy, I tell you: film burns, film burns. I mean.
This was 16 millimeter safety film. The negatives are gone. That was my father's letter to me, telling me to marry the woman I first married when I was 20.
That's my daughter and me. She's still there. She's there this morning, actually.
That's my house. My family is living in the Hilton Hotel in Scotts Valley. That's my wife, Heidi, who didn't take it as well as I did.
My children, Davey and Henry. My son, Davey, in the hotel 2 nights ago.
So my message to you folks, from my three minutes, is that I appreciate the chance to share this with you. I will be back. I love being at TED. I came to live it, and I am living it. That's my view from my window outside of Santa Cruz in Bonny Doon, just 35 miles from here. Thank you everybody.
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