Why this site, and not a startup of my own?
Because I am a comedy writer, not an entrepreneur.
The business plan that is the basis of this site took shape because I want to develop a sitcom that showcases the best ways to leverage the Internet to expand educational and economic opportunity, and it turns out that producing this sitcom is inseparable from launching the markets-maker described in the plan, not least because:
- launching a markets-maker costs money
- raising money from investors is easier if the marketing plan is good
- a sitcom is an ideal centerpiece of a marketing plan (e.g., a plan for operating marketing as a profit center)
Ideally, this site will become popular, and many entrepreneurs will discover — and then pursue — the markets-making opportunity.
To these entrepreneurs: when you are looking to staff your writers’ rooms, I’m, you know, around…
By extension, to ladies who want to co-write episodes of the sitcom previewed in this site’s header: the show’s full premise is here; a pilot treatment is here; my email address is shown above, in the right margin. A very fun misadventure could await…
More about my education and work experience (from a previous version of the business plan, written before I conceded that I cannot be a comedy writer and an entrepreneur):
Upon entering Colgate University in 1984, my consuming aspiration was to become a humor essayist in the James Thurber mold. Toward this end, I settled on a three-step plan for developing a comic persona:
- Identify the value I want to serve most.
- Serve that value.
- Mine the experience for comedy.
The plan also features two corollaries:
- The more pro-social my value is, the more likeable my comic persona will be.
- The more effective I am in the service of this value, the more likeable my persona will be.
Once enrolled at Colgate, I became increasingly aware that many people do not enjoy maximum opportunity to realize their full potential. Toward improving on this, I concentrated in political science and economics. What I learned prepared me to recognize the Internet’s potential to expand educational and economic opportunity, which I did in 1992. Since then I have immersed myself in the research and design work that has given rise to this business plan. Along the way, I completed coursework at Stony Brook University commensurate with a B.S. in computer science; co-founded a medical software company, Medicine Rules, specializing in diagnosis support (for which the company received an Innovation Award from the National Institutes of Health); and served as the Director of Digital Services at Metropolitan Telecommunications, a telephone company and ISP based in New York City.
Needless to say, the male lead of the sitcom described in the plan is based on my comic persona.

