Larry Kramer

Larry Kramer
Larry Krameris an American playwright, author, public health advocate, and LGBT rights activist. He began his career rewriting scripts while working for Columbia Pictures, which led him to London where he worked with United Artists. There he wrote the screenplay for the 1969 film Women in Loveand earned an Academy Award nomination for his work. Kramer introduced a controversial and confrontational style in his novel Faggots, which book earned mixed reviews but emphatic denunciations from elements within the gay community...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionScreenwriter
Date of Birth25 June 1935
CityBridgeport, CT
CountryUnited States of America
We are thrilled to start the Rock Center and feel privileged to have it begun by someone like Arthur Rock, whose life and work have been central in creating the Silicon Valley. Our goal, like Arthur's, is nothing less than to transform corporate governance in the United States and abroad. It is imperative to restore public trust in business and to do so in a way that fuels rather than impedes growth. The resources that can be brought to bear at Stanford--in law, business, economics, and engineering--will enable us to tackle problems in new ways. And with the help and participation of the business community itself, the Rock Center can and will become a source for problem solving, new thinking, and great scholarship in this most important of domains.
We're very pleased to offer this event programming for free on the web.
The story doesn't end any more when you post it, when you put it on the TV.
At the very least we will be able to pick up very quickly what the side effects are. And this is something that standard clinical testing doesn't (offer) for several years.
We are thrilled to be bringing '60 Minutes' to an Internet powerhouse like Yahoo.
You'll see more and more becoming available on the Web, mostly in cases where networks are convinced it supports and helps the show,
We are extremely pleased with our fourth quarter results, which exceeded our expectations. We continue to see sharp increases in the number of users to the site and the number of pages read, and an even larger percentage increase in our revenue.
He's a combination of a good reporter and the host of a talk show. The concept is for him to really moderate a debate. . . . That requires asking the right questions and being persistent.
Next year, the audience will be bigger because broadband video is a maturing medium.
Most people would be surprised to find out these issue are debated as hard as they are and news organizations work as hard as they can to avoid bias.
We're looking at other shows now. We want to go gradually. We've never done this before.
News has turned into a loop. You no longer publish a story and you're done. A news story is posted or viewed, and it's the beginning of the process.
The numbers and positive feedback we have seen from our users today are extremely encouraging.
No law school is going to continue to deny the military access if it means putting the medical schools and science departments out of business.