Phil Cooke is the Founder and Creative Director of Cooke Pictures in Burbank, California. Many of the largest and most effective Christian organizations in the world ask for his advice, and his ideas are changing the way people of faith use media to communicate with the culture. Christianity Today magazine called him a “media guru” and you’ve seen him on CNN, MSNBC, Fox News, and numerous national magazines. His blog at philcooke.com is a highly respected resource on media, faith, and culture and Phil’s workshops are a rare glimpse into the future of media and entertainment. His new book is “The Last TV Evangelist: Why The Next Generation Couldn’t Care Less About Christian Media… and why it matters.” Phil is also a founding partner in TWC Films, an award winning TV commercial company in Los Angeles that produced two spots that appeared during the 2008 Super Bowl.
- “Welcome to the experiment.”
- I’ve been fascinated with the way the church expresses itself to culture.
- I love people who have a great heart but do a really lousy job of expressing their faith to culture.
- We’re being bombarded with media messages.
- Between 3-5,000 per day.
- Avegare television is on 8 hours per day.
- We only sleep 6 hours, 40 minutes each day
- Media controls our lives.
- As a result… our content has become shorter.
- When the printing press was invented we became a print-centered culture.
- Books took time to write.
- It takes most people weeks or months to read a book.
- Live theater was 4-5 hours.
- Disney musicals went to 2 hours.
- Film is 90 minutes on average.
- Then, TV shows, 30 minutes.
- Web and blogs made content shorter.
- Average video on YouTube is 2 minutes long.
- :30 is the max amount of time.
- Then, email and Facebook…
- Twitter reduces our communication to 140 characters.
- We spend more time communicating.
- We manage our stuff.
- The average employee sends/receives 200 emails per day.
- Average employee spends 40% of their day dealing with email.
- Email is as addictive as gambling.
- The rush you get from hitting the “send” button is the same as pulling the slot machine.
- We spend more of our day communicating but we spend less time creating messages.
- How much do you spend creating content?
- We have cut that down.
- We live in a time suck.
- We spend a lot of time creating content that doesn’t matter.
- We’ve lost the ability to reflect.
- Media changes us.
4 Questions
- In a time disrupted world, what are you really trying to do?
- How do you deal with ambiguity? [there is no right or wrong answer] Finding the right answers is not as important as asking the right questions. Jesus told parables that He didn’t explain.
- Are you asking the right questions?
- Stop focusing on how much it will cost and when it will be ready. We let schedules and budget drive everything we do. But schedule and budget aren’t the most important thing.
Comments
- Jesus didn’t reach the world for Jesus.
- What can you do… be incredibly specific.
- If you are going to succeed you need to be an absolute expert in a narrow niche.
- How do we live in the tension of elevating the cross and our personal brands/churches.
- Don’t think in terms of these questions just applying to your church/organization… it matters as much to your church as it does to you personally.
- There’s not a lot of answers in life.
- How do you deal with ambiguity?
- Our job is not to make sure people are listening, our job is to make sure people are connecting.
- No matter how anointed your message is, if nobody is listening, you’ve failed.
- “The Gospel is the answer” is a given, but how do we communicate that to this culture?
- Half of being good at something is figuring out what you’re bad at and stopping doing that.
What Are The Right Questions?
- What do we need to stop doing?
- Who does this glorify? Who gets the credit here?
- How can we enter into what God is already doing?
- How do people want to be communicated with?
- It’s not how we want to communicate with us, it’s how they want to communicate with us.
- Are we being purposeful in what we are using?
- Just because tools are available, does it make sense for us to be using them?
- Am I wasting my time doing what I’m doing?
- We live in the tension between the culture and our audiences.
- If we’re not reflecting more and shutting our computers off more, the content we create is going to show it.
- Focus on what really matters, not what’s urgent.


