Suvarna Garge (Editor)

The Nantucket Project

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Type of site
  
Conference

Area served
  
Worldwide

Available in
  
English

Launched
  
2010

The Nantucket Project httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb5

Headquarters
  
Nantucket, United States

Website
  
www.nantucketproject.com

Key people
  
Wendy Schmidt, Bob Diamond

Experience the nantucket project


The Nantucket Project is an annual conference that takes place on Nantucket, Massachusetts.

Contents

The event is held in a tent overlooking Nantucket Harbor, offering "an intimate and relaxed setting." By bringing together leading thinkers and decision-makers, the event aims to create "a powerful distillation of ideas that will spark meaningful conversation and lead to meaningful change."

The Nantucket Project was co-founded in 2010 by Tom Scott and Kate Brosnan. The Nantucket Project's founding circle includes Scott, founder and CEO of Nantucket Nectars and creator the HBO television series The Neistat Brothers, Wendy Schmidt, President of The Schmidt Family Foundation, former Senator Bill Frist, Alicia Mullen and Jennifer and Bob Diamond, the former Group Chief Executive of Barclays.

The inaugural event was held in the fall of 2011 at the White Elephant hotel. The Nantucket Project has remained at that venue. Past speakers have included Casey Neistat, Rahm Emanuel, Eric Schmidt, Larry Summers, Meredith Whitney, Senator John McCain, David Rubenstein, Steve Case, Mellody Hobson, Peter Thiel, Craig Venter, former Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, Former Barclays CEO Bob Diamond, X Prize Foundation founder Peter Diamandis, Dean Kamen, Tony Award winner Julie Taymor, former Thomson Reuters chief executive Tom Glocer, former NBC Chairman Bob Wright, Former Patagonia CEO and Professor of Advanced Strategy™ Michael Crooke and many others.

Speakers participate in a variety of formats, which include individual presentations, panels and intimate one-on-one conversations. All speakers are directed to address the theme of each year's event. The theme of the 2011 event was "Re-Think." The theme of the 2012 event was "Collective Intelligence," or "how we can leverage technology and other advances to aggregate and amplify human intelligence." The theme for 2013 was "Seek the Truth, Endure the Consequences." The theme for 2014 was Art + Commerce, "a convergence" that conference organizers say "best defines our world today."

Gregg renfrew at the nantucket project 2016


Finance Forum

In 2013, The Nantucket Project added a one-day Finance Forum that featured some of the world's top financial minds such as David Rubenstein, Tim Draper, Andrew Ross Sorkin, Anne Finucane, Bob Diamond, David Stockman and Alan Schwartz.

Fellows Program

The Nantucket Project offers a Fellows program that provides full access to a diverse group of participants and covers the cost of their attendance.

TNP Labs

In 2014, the Project launched TNP Labs, a production and innovation laboratory. The first film released by TNP Labs, "Reclaim Democracy," explores how Lawrence Lessig's MayDay political action committee aims to revolutionize campaign finance. The film was viewed over 4 million times on Upworthy and other social media sites.

Another TNP Labs production, "Shirt," is a visualization of a Robert Pinsky poem that is read by several performers such as Herbie Hancock, Kate Burton, Nas and Pinsky himself. "Shirt" was released on The New Yorker's website in December, 2014.

In addition to its own in-house productions, TNP Labs brings "cutting-edge filmmakers to the island to create short films inspired by presentations at the event."

Julian Assange Hologram Appearance

At the 2014 Nantucket Project, Wikileaks editor-in-chief Julian Assange appeared in the form of a hologram. While Assange was physically located at the Ecuadorean Embassy in London, where he has been given asylum, a virtual representation of Assange appeared onstage with American film director Eugene Jarecki.

Jarecki wrote in The Guardian before the event, "it crosses my mind I may be abetting a crime or violating international extradition laws. But I reassure myself that, in this regard, the worldwide web remains a kind of wild wild west, and the virtual escape of a person is not (yet?) a crime."

References

The Nantucket Project Wikipedia