Ford looks to ‘interaction design’ for future dashboards

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/10/automobiles/10FACE.html?_r=2&partner=rss&emc=rss

LOOK inside the 2011 Ford Fiesta and you will see dashboard controls that have been modeled after the keypad of a cellphone. In some ways, that makes perfect sense: Ford’s market research suggested that young buyers were more attached to their mobile phones than to their means of mobility.

But by the time the new Fiesta arrived in American showrooms this summer, the phone that Ford had chosen as its model looked old-fashioned alongside the latest Apple iPhones and Motorola Droids — and so did the dashboard controls.

Those outdated buttons are a glaring reminder that mobile electronics evolve much faster than automobiles. In fact, Ford had already recognized the challenge of keeping its vehicles’ controls and instruments up to date and in 2006 began to address the situation.

Ford’s goal in establishing a set of design principles for automotive interfaces that would be consistently applied to all models was to improve what it called the cabin experience. The program was given the internal code name HAL.

The company sought advice from Ideo, the design consultancy known for developing the original Apple computer mouse and shaping interfaces for Palm and other high-tech companies. Ideo’s co-founder, Bill Moggridge, now the director of the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum in New York City, was one of the early prophets of what he called interaction design.

The guidelines that resulted from the program, a sort of universal logic for all the cars’ switches and systems, helped shape the dashboard controls in the redesigned Ford Edge and Explorer. The standards will apply to future Ford models around the world.

“We wanted to get outside the bubble,” said Jennifer Brace, a user interface design engineer at Ford. “We wanted an instruction-by-instruction DNA for vehicle interiors.”

Ideo said that its methods were built on research and making prototypes for fast feedback. Its work began with interviews of a broad cross section of people — not just seasoned drivers, but also airplane pilots and A.T.M. users. This is called ethnographic research; similar work from Ideo helped in the development of the SmartGauge in the Ford Fusion Hybrid, a display of green leaves that coaches drivers to drive more efficiently.

“We found we learned the most not from the average driver, but from the extreme cases,” said Iain Roberts, head of the interface group in Ideo’s Chicago office, who led the team working with Ford. “We want to get to the ends of the bell curve.”

Stepping beyond the focus groups and drivers that Ford had traditionally used for research, Ideo went to raw novices. Some teenagers, Ms. Brace said, had no idea what the tachometer was or why it was there. Getting rid of the tachometer had not been seriously considered by Ford.

Ideo also went to extreme experts, Mr. Roberts said. One was a member of an Internet forum of audio tinkerers pioneering the use of the MP3 format music in cars. These users had addressed many of the interface issues that concerned Ford, developing their own ways to combine audio, video and other entertainment streams.

“About six users represented 80 percent of the problems,” Mr. Roberts said. “They were early adopters of technology who put 15-inch screens on the console and huge disk drives in the trunk.”

New ideas were tested on drivers. Ideo teams quickly mocked up ideas, often using little more than sticky notes, cardboard and modeling clay.

For this project, a PlayStation 2 game console and a dashboard from an older Ford Edge were pressed into service, Ms. Brace said. For a driving simulator, the group used a projector showing the video game Gran Turismo 3. The controls — pedals and steering wheel — were worked up from controllers intended for racing video games.

The rules for design drawn from the research were so fundamental as to border on cliché: Be attentive. Be approachable. Be clear. Be connected.

But from these arose useful specifics: Just because you can doesn’t mean you should.

“When you have an eight-inch touch screen, you think of all the things you can do,” Mr. Roberts said. “But then you remember that people have to drive while doing it.”

Drawing cautionary lessons from the needlessly complex interfaces of competitors’ vehicles, the development team created guiding statements: To disappoint is worse than never making the promise. And: Unmet expectations negatively impact people’s perceptions.

Also important, according to Ms. Brace, was the idea that tried and true does exist. “Some conventions are worth respecting and don’t need to be reinvented,” she said.

For example, rather than develop a proprietary controller like the multifunction knob of BMW’s iDrive, Ford chose familiar input devices similar to those of TV remote controls and iPods.

One is the five-point controller — four directional arrows with a central button — on the steering wheel. Used on many electronic gadgets, it had roots in the points of the compass. Five-point controllers on the steering wheel are easily operated with the thumb, which lets drivers keep their eyes on the road.

A central eight-inch screen is organized around four corners and four colors: yellow-orange for the phone, green for navigation, blue for climate control and red for entertainment. There are, mercifully, large knobs for volume and fan speed.

The design that grew from the team’s work was simple. Information and controls for the car are on a screen to the left of the speedometer, while those for the driver (including the climate control, audio system and navigation unit) are on the right.

The system is intended to be flexible for the designers. The Mustang version could look sportier, while the Lincoln version, offered on the 2011 MKX, included sliders, a presumably more elegant and upmarket mode of touch control.

Part of the idea of the DNA is to make customers loyal to Ford. Given its partnerships with Sony and Microsoft, it is no surprise that Ford does not offer dedicated connections for Apple’s iPhone or iPod.

While Ford has received more attention for the voice recognition features of Sync, the automotive software developed jointly with Microsoft, its comprehensive redesign of the tactile controls is likely to have at least as much importance for drivers. The touch screen and the steering wheel buttons are now plausible alternatives to the voice controls.

Mark Zuckerberg’s Most Valuable Friend

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/03/business/03face.html?emc=eta1

EVERY Monday a bit before 10 a.m., Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook’s chief operating officer, dashes off a quick e-mail to her boss, Mark Zuckerberg. “We have a routine,” Ms. Sandberg says. “I e-mail, ‘Coming in?’ He replies, ‘On my way.’ ”

A few minutes later, Mr. Zuckerberg, Facebook’s co-founder and chief executive, walks into the company’s headquarters here, says a few hellos and heads to a conference room where he and Ms. Sandberg huddle for an hour. The two executives end the week the same way, with a closed-door meeting on Friday afternoon. They discuss products, strategy, deals, personnel — and each other.

“We agreed that we would give each other feedback every Friday,” Ms. Sandberg says. “We are constantly flagging things. Nothing ever builds up.” At a recent meeting, for instance, they ironed out a disagreement between them over the details of Mr. Zuckerberg’s pledge to give $100 million to schools in Newark.

If all of that sounds a bit touchy-feely, well, it is. Ms. Sandberg, a well-regarded Internet executive, is known for her interpersonal skills as much as for her sharp intellect. And her regular meetings with the famously introverted Mr. Zuckerberg have helped to keep one of Silicon Valley’s most unusual business partnerships working wonders for Facebook.

Indeed, for a variety of reasons, Ms. Sandberg may well have become Mr. Zuckerberg’s most valuable friend.

Since Ms. Sandberg joined the company more than two years ago, Facebook has successfully navigated one of the more perilous stages in a start-up’s life: a period of hypergrowth. Facebook’s work force has expanded sixfold, to nearly 1,800, and its global audience has multiplied by more than seven, to half a billion. Revenue, once little more than an afterthought, is expected to balloon to around $1.6 billion this year, according to estimates from Wedbush Securities. (Facebook, a private company, doesn’t disclose its revenue.)

Part of the reason for that sales growth is Ms. Sandberg’s close ties to many of the world’s largest advertisers, relationships she first developed as a senior executive at Google. Ms. Sandberg also brought stability to Facebook, which had suffered from a long period of turmoil and the departure of several executives and early employees, including the company’s other co-founders.

“One of the reasons the company is doing so well is because the two of them get along so well,” says Mike Schroepfer, vice president for engineering.

Ms. Sandberg has focused on building the business, expanding internationally, cultivating relationships with large advertisers and putting her polish on things like communications and public policy. That has freed Mr. Zuckerberg to focus on what he likes best: the Facebook Web site and its platform.

Donald Graham, the chairman of the Washington Post Company, who once tried to hire Ms. Sandberg, says that in the last two years a lot of questions about Facebook’s viability have been put to rest.

“The combination of Mark and Sheryl is the primary reason,” says Mr. Graham, who is also a member of Facebook’s board.

These days, Ms. Sandberg is also juggling another duty: mounting a defense of Mr. Zuckerberg at a time when a new movie, “The Social Network,” portrays him as an aloof and conniving student who may have stolen the idea for Facebook from others. Ms. Sandberg will have none of that.

“He is shy and introverted and he often does not seem very warm to people who don’t know him, but he is warm,” Ms. Sandberg says of Mr. Zuckerberg, her voice rising with empathy. “He really cares about the people who work here.”

She can be just as protective of Mr. Zuckerberg in private.
Read More

TV Ratings 10/8/10

TV Ratings Thursday: Bones, Fringe, Grey’s Anatomy, Nikita Rise; Community, 30 Rock, $#*!, Big Bang, CSI, The Office, Outsourced Fall

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/10/08/tv-ratings-thursday-bones-fringe-greys-anatomy-private-practice-nikita-rise-community-30-rock-big-bang-csi-the-office-outsourced-fall/67188?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

CBS Wins Third Straight Thursday; ‘The Mentalist’ Tops Night

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/10/08/cbs-wins-third-straight-thursday-the-mentalist-tops-night/67230?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

Thursday Finals: Bones, Community, Grey’s Anatomy, Big Bang Theory, $#*! My Dad Says, The Office Adjusted Up

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/10/08/thursday-finals-bones-community-grey’s-anatomy-big-bang-theory-my-dad-says-the-office-adjusted-up/67290?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

Soap Opera Ratings: The Young & The Restless, The Bold & The Beautiful Tie All Time Low Women 18-49 Ratings

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/10/08/soap-opera-ratings-the-young-the-restless-the-bold-the-beautiful-tie-all-time-low-women-18-49-ratings/67300?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

RATINGS RAT RACE: All-Time ‘CSI’ Low

http://www.deadline.com/2010/10/ratings-rat-race-thursday-veterans-hit-the-skids-with-csi-posting-all-time-low/

TV Ratings 10/7/10

RATINGS RAT RACE: ‘Law & Order: Los Angeles’ And ‘Defenders’ Drop

http://www.deadline.com/2010/10/ratings-rat-race-law-order-los-angeles-and-defenders-drop/

TV Ratings Wednesday: Cougar Town Rises; Law & Order: LA Drops Big; SVU, Undercovers, The Defenders All Down

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/10/07/tv-ratings-wednesday-law-svu-undercovers-the-defenders-all-down/67034?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

CBS Places First On Weds In Viewers, Adults 18-49 and Adults 25-54 for Third Consecutive Week

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/10/07/cbs-places-first-on-weds-in-viewers-adults-18-49-and-adults-25-54-for-third-consecutive-week/67070?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

‘Modern Family’ is Wednesday’s No. 1 TV Show for the 3rd Week Running

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/10/07/modern-family-is-wednesdays-no-1-tv-show-for-the-3rd-week-running/67102?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

Wednesday Cable: Yankees/Twins Tops Night; South Park Top Scripted; Terriers Falls & More

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/10/07/wednesday-cable-yankeestwins-tops-night-south-park-top-scripted-terriers-falls-more/67170?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

Kraft Web Series Offers Comic Relief

Kraft Foods has cooked up a branded entertainment series that brings together several of its biggest products.

The series, dubbed “You Gotta LOL,” debuted today (Monday), and is part of the food giant’s effort to engage with consumers via its consumer relationship marketing channels. Fourteen brands are participating in the series, including Wheat Thins, Oreo, Kool-Aid, Chips Ahoy! and Jell-O. This is the first time that Kraft has brought several of its bestsellers under one initiative.

Kraft has tapped Anita Renfroe—a stay-at-home mom turned comedian—as the star of the new videos, which are light on the product integration side and heavy on the comedy side, said Julie Fleischer, director-CRM, content strategy and integration at Kraft. The food brands aren’t featured prominently in the series, although they are mentioned.

A video for Kraft’s 100-calorie Cheese Bites, for instance, opens with Renfroe challenging modern day perceptions of weight loss. “I have to say, I struggle with my weight. And any woman who says she doesn’t struggle with her weight is, in the most kind, political terms I know, ‘a lying liar,’” she says.

In another video for Chips Ahoy!, Renfroe discussed women’s obsession with chocolate. Renfroe jokes: “All females have known this intuitively for years because chocolate belongs to the four food groups that females believe in: depression, elation, ovulation and PM-ation.” At the end, all the videos direct consumers to YouGottaLOL.com.

Kraft, which worked with Meredith Corp.’s integrated marketing department on the launch, has created 18 videos altogether (two of which are holiday themed). The company plans to launch a new one each week. The videos will be promoted via Kraft’s CRM channels like Kraftrecipes.com, as well as on YouTube and Facebook.

Fleischer said the goal was to “find a way to connect with [consumers] on their own terms with something that was relevant, compelling and exciting.” Therefore, instead of focusing on actual brands, the videos offer comic insights like “the desire to be that mom that’s got it all going on,” said Fleischer. Appropriately, the target demo is women who lead busy lives.

The videos are short—about two minutes each—which fits Kraft’s audience of time-starved moms perfectly. Fleischer said Kraft is hoping the series becomes a viral hit.

FremantleMedia ready to sell slate of children’s shows

http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118025074.html?categoryid=14&cs=1&ref=verttv

A year after FremantleMedia formed a kids television division, and recruited Sander Schwartz away from Warner Bros., the production entity is ready to roll out its first slate of family shows.
At this week’s Mipcom show in Cannes, the company will offer up around a dozen shows, a mix of live-action and animated series that target preschool through high school viewers.

“My Babysitter’s a Vampire,” based on the popular kidlit series, is getting the biggest push, with the live-action comedy series bowing as a feature on Oct. 9, in Canada, before being spun off as a series next year as a “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” for the 9- to 14-year-old set. Fresh TV developed the project with Teletoon Canada. FME retains the exclusive distribution and licensing rights outside Canada, so that it can turn the property into a potential merchandising juggernaut.

Macmillan Starts Film/TV Division To Produce Book-Based Fare

http://www.deadline.com/2010/10/macmillan-starts-filmtv-division-to-produce-book-based-fare/

EXCLUSIVE: In the latest attempt by a book publisher to take the film/TV journey on books it publishes, Macmillan Publishers has launched Macmillan Films, a new shingle that will be spearheaded by Brendan Deneen. A former Hollywood development executive, Deneen will start the venture while continuing as an editor at Thomas Dunne Books. Macmillan Films kicks off with a deal with Summit Entertainment for Tempest, a manuscript by Julie Cross that is meant to be the first in a trilogy. The protagonist is a 19-year old time traveler who witnesses his girlfriend’s murder just as he jumps back two years. Stuck in the near past, he’s recruited by a shadowy government agency run by the man he thought was his father. He vows to save his girlfriend no matter the cost.

The book will be published by Thomas Dunne Books, a division of St. Martin’s Press. Deneen will be executive producer with Roy Lee. Before he became a book editor, Deneen spent 6 years as a develop and production executive for producer Scott Rudin and for Harvey and Bob Weinstein at Dimension and Miramax.

Macmillan Films joins Random House Films and Alloy Entertainment as publishing-based enterprises that generate literary properties and stay involved in some projects as they become features. Each has a different strategy. Random House Films, headed by longtime editor Peter Gethers, co-finances films in a joint venture with Focus Features. So far, RHF has teamed with Focus on Reservation Road but there are promising projects in the offing. Director Lone Scherfig just wrapped the Anne Hathaway-Jim Sturgess drama One Day, based on the David Nicholls; Brad Pitt and Darren Aronofsky just became attached to an adaptation of John Vaillant’s The Tiger, Stephen Frears will direct an adaptation of the Beth Raymer memoir Lay the Favorite, and Dreamgirls’ Bill Condon and Laurence Mark are adapting the Arthur Phillips The Song Is You into a musical.

While RHF takes on books published by the company, Alloy Entertainment comes up with the ideas for properties in-house and then makes writer-for-hire deals to see them through. Those writers often are on the outside looking in as the company has scored big deals on Gossip Girl, The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants and The Vampire Diaries. Beyond book publishers, media companies like The New York Times and Wall Street Journal have agencies brokering film and TV deals based on copyrighted articles, with those companies taking part financially. Works of big authors or top contract journalists are generally excluded from these arrangements, as they have agents who make the deal and don’t involve the publishers.

Deneen said that Macmillan Films will be somewhere in between Random House Films and Alloy Entertainment. If books come through Macmillan divisions, fine, but Deneen sees most of the properties coming from ideas generated in-house.

“We are mostly looking to develop book ideas that work both as novels and movies and TV shows,” Deneen told Deadline. “We will develop the ideas in-house, and hire writers who’ll share in the success of the projects. We will retain all rights and hopefully set them up.” Macmillan Films properties will be shopped in Hollywood by Sylvie Rabineau of RWSG.

Beyond The Tempest, Macmillan Films hatched a 6-page treatment for a submarine thriller they’ve started to shop around, as well as Grimm City, a thriller based around “a number of hard to find Grimm Fairy Tales, that’s Sin City meets Neil Gaiman,” Deneen said. Ideas and concepts need approval from Deneen’s boss, Thomas Dunne, to make sure the properties will work as books.

“It’s a new way to control intellectual property because in this changing world, he who controls IP wins,” Deneen said. “Books will always be the core business here, but if you can be attached to the movie, the videogame and the Happy Meal, why not?”

TV Ratings 9/30/10

RATINGS RAT RACE: ‘Law & Order: LA’ Solid In Debut, ‘Undercovers’ Takes Plunge

http://www.deadline.com/2010/09/ratings-rat-race-law-order-la-solid-in-debut-undercovers-takes-plunge/

CBS Sweeps Wednesday In Viewers, Adults 18-49 And Adults 25-54 For The Second Consecutive Week

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/09/30/cbs-sweeps-wednesday-in-viewers-adults-18-49-and-adults-25-54-for-the-second-consecutive-week/65934?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

“Late Show with David Letterman” Tops “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno” in Adults 25-54 and Is in Near Dead Heat Among Viewers

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/09/30/late-show-with-david-letterman-tops-the-tonight-show-with-jay-leno-in-adults-25-54-and-is-in-near-dead-heat-among-viewers/65923?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

‘Modern Family’ is Wednesday’s #1 TV Show in Adults 18-49

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/09/30/modern-family-is-wednesdays-1-tv-show-in-adults-18-49/65920?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

TV Ratings Wednesday: Law & Order: LA Opens Solid; Hell’s Kitchen Steady; Entire 2nd Week NBC, ABC & CBS Lineups Drop

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/09/29/tv-ratings-wednesday-law-order-la-opens-solid-undercovers-drops/65859?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

CBS Has Premiere Week’s Oldest Audience (Duh),Blue Bloods Tops ‘Oldest Viewers’ List

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/09/29/cbs-has-premiere-weeks-oldest-audience-duhblue-bloods-tops-oldest-viewers-list/65878?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

TV Ratings 9/29/10

Cable News Ratings for Tuesday, September 28, 2010

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/09/29/cable-news-ratings-for-tuesday-september-28-2010/65867?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

Tuesday Cable Ratings: Teen Mom > Sons Of Anarchy, Plus Stargate Universe, Bad Girls Club & Much More

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/09/29/tuesday-cable-ratings-teen-mom-sons-of-anarchy-plus-stargate-universe-bad-girls-club-much-more/65850?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

Tuesday Finals: Glee, No Ordinary Family, NCIS, Dancing Up; Raising Hope, Detroit 1-8-7, Running Wilde Down

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/09/29/tuesday-finals-glee-no-ordinary-family-ncis-dancing-up-raising-hope-detroit-1-8-7-running-wilde-down/65835?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

Ratings Notes for TBS, TNT, Cartoon Network, Adult Swim and truTV + DVR #s for ‘The Closer,’ ‘Rizzoli & Isles’

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/09/29/ratings-notes-for-tbs-tnt-cartoon-network-adult-swim-and-trutv-dvr-s-for-the-closer-rizzoli-isles-5/65844?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

Cable News Ratings for Saturday-Sunday, September 25-26, 2010

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/09/29/cable-news-ratings-for-saturday-sunday-september-25-26-2010/65805?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

NFL Games Top Ratings In 27 Markets In “Premiere Week”; CBS National Game (mostly Colts-Broncos) Week’s Most-Watched Show

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/09/29/nfl-games-top-ratings-in-27-markets-in-“premiere-week”-cbs-national-game-mostly-colts-broncos-week’s-most-watched-show/65801?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

CBS Wins Tuesday In Viewers And Adults 25-54 For The Second Consecutive Week

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/09/29/cbs-wins-tuesday-in-viewers-and-adults-25-54-for-the-second-consecutive-week/65796?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

TV Ratings Tuesday: No Ordinary Family Premieres Well; Glee, Hope, NCIS:LA Up; Dancing, Biggest Loser, Parenthood Fall

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/09/29/tv-ratings-tuesday-no-ordinary-family-premieres-well-glee-hope-ncisla-up/65722?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Tvbythenumbers+%28TVbytheNumbers%29

RATINGS RAT RACE: ‘Glee’ Hits High And ‘No Ordinary Family’ Has Promising Start

http://www.deadline.com/2010/09/ratings-rat-race-glee-hits-high-and-no-ordinary-family-has-promising-start/

New project from Dan Savage: It Gets Better

http://feministing.com/2010/09/24/new-project-from-dan-savage-it-gets-better/

Dan Savage (the man behind the Savage Love sex advice column and podcast) has started a new project, called It Gets Better. It was inspired by the suicide of gay teenager Billy Lucas, after he experienced much bullying.

About the project:

If you’re gay or lesbian or bi or trans, and you’ve ever read about a kid like Billy Lucas and thought, “Fuck, I wish I could’ve told him that it gets better,” this is your chance. We can’t help Billy, but there are lots of other Billys out there—other despairing LGBT kids who are being bullied and harassed, kids who don’t think they have a future—and we can help them….