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"Book Review: Creativity, Inc."

12 Comments -

1 – 12 of 12
Anonymous Shane Skekel said...

Excellent review and interesting choice of a subject. Even though I lost interest in Disney and Pixar around 1998; this may be worth reading.

April 29, 2014 7:50 PM

Blogger J Caswell said...

Alvy Ray Smith, one of the original "Pixarians" refutes much of popular Pixar history while still praising Catmull. He doesn't refer to the book.

http://alvyray.com/Pixar/PixarHistoryRevisited.htm

That said, the book is an excellent illustration of the application of the principals that made Pixar great.

April 30, 2014 8:13 AM

Blogger Mark Mayerson said...

Thanks for the link, Jim. A lot of interesting material there.

April 30, 2014 8:47 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Great and honest review, thanks Mark!

May 01, 2014 11:53 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Catmull’s book is tantamount to the announcement of his retirement. Who can blame him—he helped lead Pixar to success with it’s early films. But now that the studio has seen it’s best days, he’d rather go out on top than suffer the embarrassment of failure he’s so keen on “learning from.”

Navigating the difficulties of creativity is obviously more difficult as a business grows, and that’s where this book departs from reality. Better to paint the history rose colored now than later. With his regressive and tiresome—not to mention condescending—theories on managing creativity, Catmull paints a top down/collective (read passive aggressive) approach to running a business. A system where the propagation of the {false} belief that everyone’s feelings matter, and that everyone is creative is what makes a business culture and propels success. A system where piling on management—especially management with little or no knowledge or respect for creativity—is an answer in search of a problem as it always (and apparently has at Pixar) created layers of bureaucracy that clog fluent communication and raise the costs of running a business. When the product s become secondary to the “culture” of a business, corporate culture takes hold, and creativity dies. There is no way to manage the inevitable.

Change is good, but when management itself is afraid of change, bigger, deeper problems exist. Especially in what reads like a paternalistic environment such as Pixar. While Catmull likes to refer often to the inevitability of change, the reader must remember that he’s the person making the changes—losing a lot of creatives and creative clout along the way. While he’s not avers to discussing these failures, he’s not as forthcoming at looking in the mirror to understand that the ultimate sacrifice in change must be from within. I’m not sure he’s able to do that based on his comments in this book.

As for the actual writing of the book, it comes off as an academic tome, and not particularly well written. It’s repetitive, especially after the third or fourth chapter. A strong editor might have helped shape this into something more meaningful, but as it stands it reads more like a collection of newspaper articles than a book.

I want to believe the myth he spins, but having worked in many businesses, I know for a fact that it’s just his point of view.

May 03, 2014 3:12 PM

Blogger Matthew said...

Mark, great review. I haven't read all of Creativity,inc just yet, but so far your critique of Mr Catmull's assertions is bang on. While most of his diagnostic musings & stories seem very apt, you highlight those that are glossed over with the authors own blinkers. Meanwhile Anonymous commenter #2 here seems to want to ride your coattails and submit his own muddled review. Oh well, the perils of writing on the internet. Needless to say, we appreciate the time used in forming your own paragraphs with a greater clarity. It's why we come here to read them. Thanks again for your articles.

May 04, 2014 11:36 AM

Blogger Emergent Animation said...

"I want to believe the myth he spins, but having worked in many businesses, I know for a fact that it’s just his point of view."

Nothing is anything BUT a point of view. Mr. Catmull put those beliefs into practice and has had enough success to show for it to feel they were successful, which is more than most can claim from their management experiences.

May 08, 2014 10:03 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

No. The spin is not his point of view. It's "a" point of view. It's spin. Catmull is behind the times. If he doesn't change, Disney will change things for him. Only time will tell if he's willing and able.

May 08, 2014 10:23 PM

Blogger Emergent Animation said...

There's a saying that I like to repeat often, that success has a thousand fathers but failure is an orphan. There will be many people who claim to know why the quality of Pixar's films dipped after Disney bought them out, and obviously some will blame the very management styles promoted in this book. Others will blame Disney. Who is to know for sure?

May 09, 2014 7:14 PM

Blogger Khylov said...

Freddy Riedenschneider, ladies and gentlemen.

May 11, 2014 4:47 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Too bad Ed Catmull left out the part about how he was instrumental in the creation of an illegal cartel that conspired to artificially suppressed the wages of artists, animators and other tech workers for closed to 25 years.

He belongs in prison.

July 11, 2014 10:14 AM

Anonymous Steve Schnier said...

I've read, enjoyed and recommended "Creativity Inc." to others. Politics, history and dogma aside, there are some valuable tips for those running creative businesses.

And it was an interesting read.

August 24, 2014 9:10 AM

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