Mitchell Berger
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
They're not really.
I think one of the things that I hope people will see from this and one of the things that I've been trying to get the message out is that the theatrical experience and the streaming experience are not inherently in conflict.
They're not cannibalistic.
They don't have to be at odds with each other.
The theatrical experience, which is something near and dear to my heart, is a unique experience that you cannot replicate in the home.
The home experience is a unique experience that you can't replicate in a crowd.
And I think there's a place for both of them.
The way I look at it is this way.
So I'm a big music fan.
I love music.
I love to perform and sing, and music's been part of my life forever.
For me, I love to sit in my car or sit at my house and listen to a great vinyl record, put headphones on and just immerse myself in a piece of music.
But I also love to go to a concert and see someone perform it live because those are two fundamentally different experiences.
When you're at the theater or at a concert or in a crowd,
the crowd becomes part of the story.
How they react, what they say, how they laugh, how everybody moves around, that becomes part of this unique experience that's a once-in-a-lifetime moment for you right then and there that you can't replicate.
That doesn't mean that you also don't enjoy it from a streaming perspective.
So for us...
Telling the story on the big screen is the first part of a journey for the title itself.
We want people to enjoy it on the big screen.