June 8, 2010 9:34 AM

The Wellspring of American Creativity

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  In these early days of 2010, we at CBS News are assessing "Where America Stands." We're examining many of the problems of our time . . . and looking at any number of creative solutions. But what about creativity itself? Could we Americans ever find THAT in short supply? Our Cover Story is reported by Susan Spencer of "48 Hours":


A new idea . . . a new approach . . . a new technique . . . creative breakthroughs can come like a bolt of lightning, or in the whisper of a muse.

Or, sadly, not at all. Many of us would welcome any sign of creative inspiration.

"Creativity is the ability to give the world something it didn't know it was missing," said Daniel Pink. "Create something fundamentally new, like the iPod. You have tens of millions of people now who carry around an iPod. Eight years ago I don't think they knew they were missing an iPod."

Even without your iPod, author Daniel Pink's views may be music to your ears. A former speechwriter for Vice President Al Gore, Pink now writes about creativity, and believes we all have at least some potential.

"You have it 'cause you're a human being," Pink said. "Now when I say everybody's creative, doesn't meant that everybody is a budding Picasso or a budding Edison or a budding Toni Morrison. But the human species is defined by its ability to create."

See More Stories and Videos From CBS Reports: Where America Stands

And he thinks this country's got a pretty good track record of doing just that:

"What's happened the last 10 years that has changed the lives of people all over the world? The iPhone: USA. Twitter: Started by a guy from Nebraska. Facebook: Started by a guy from Florida who went to Harvard and dropped out."

And not just because America is a rich country with more time to think and create. Pink also credits what's been a nurturing environment.

"In this country failure is less stigmatized than in other countries," he said. "If I start a business and it fails, I don't shame my entire family, okay? In fact, the bankruptcy code in this country affords me, quote, 'a fresh start.'"

"What the American experience offers when it comes to imagination is that we're a melting pot of so many different types of people," said Walter Isaacson, who runs the Aspen Institute, a think tank in Washington. He has written biographies of two creative geniuses, Albert Einstein and Benjamin Franklin.

"You see it at the founding of our republic," Isaacson said. "You've seen that great Industrial Revolution where people were inventing the telephone, the telegraph, the light bulb, and everything else, the phonograph. You've seen the push that came because of the Internet and the digital revolution. And now we're looking for what's going to be the engine or the driver of a new creativity."

The challenge for the U.S. is how to keep up that momentum.

"You can kind of feel it in our society that there's no new burst of innovation or imagination happening," Isaacson said.

"Is it an attitudinal thing? Have we become complacent? Are we too greedy?" asked Spencer.

"I think one problem we've had is that people who are smart and creative and innovative as engineers went into financial engineering," he replied. "They decided to go Wall Street and create derivatives and hedge funds, and all sorts of CDOs that didn't really help our economy, and I think may have really hurt the economy.

"When the financial sector sucks up all or your creativity, I don't think you're going to have the most creative society," Isaacson said.

So, is the creative spirit in America less-than-spirited these days?

Certainly not at the M.I.T. Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where work is underway on more than 300 inventions - everything from stackable cars to sociable robots.

In fact, e-books, car navigation systems, even the popular video game Guitar Hero, sprang in part from research done right here.

Cynthia Breazeal is in charge of social robots research at the Media Lab: "I think I am very fortunate to be in a place like the Media Lab, where, I mean, we are brimming over with creativity. I mean, this is like the Mecca, I think!"

Her creative vision: Robots as helpers in homes . . . in five to ten years. The key, she says, is making them, well, as people-like as possible.

Take Nexi . . .

"I can tell you that I'm sad, mad, confused, excited or even bored just by moving my face," "she" said. "But I hope you can see that I'm very happy to have met you."

"Unbelievable!" exclaimed Spencer. "But in terms of feeling like there is a connection - it's amazing."

Nexie - and all other Media Lab inventions - begin with what Breazeal calls the "secret sauce" of creativity: getting people in different fields to share ideas.

"It's not just about multiple sciences and multiple engineering," she said. "It's like you've got designers and artists and musicians. I mean, we're all under the same roof."

And if the key to working under the same roof is getting along, then creative types may have a leg up. Psychiatrist and creativity specialist Dr. Nancy Andreasen says creative people often have similar personalities.

"They're not just curious about what they do, they're curious about all kinds of things," Dr. Andreasen said. "They're adventuresome. They push the envelope. They are rebellious. They have a sense of humor."

"I want to meet one of these people someday, they sound terrific!' Spencer laughed.

And they have one more thing in common: The structure of their brains, which Dr. Andreasen recently started studying.

"I've only done a smallish number, but what I have found so far is that, yes, people who are highly creative do have different patterns of activity in their brain, a much more highly developed capacity to see relationships, to make associations."

Americans seem to agree the country could use more creative minds. A CBS News Poll found that about one in four (24%) thinks our education system needs it the most, while another 26 percent points to health care, and 28 percent says alternative energy.

Read the Complete Poll

But to keep thinking big as a country may require a new attitude toward those really creative souls among us.

"The beauty of our founding generation, founders of our country, was that they loved science," said Isaacson. "And nowadays, when people are a little bit wary of science, they don't realize it's beautiful. They don't realize a mathematical equation is just the Good Lord's brushstroke for painting something in physical reality."

"We need to celebrate people - not people who try to get into balloons to go on reality television and not people who lose, you know, 300 pounds on a television show," said Pink. "We need to celebrate the inventors and the scientists and the creators in this country."

So that, when the lightning strikes, or the muse whispers, someone will answer the call.


For more info:
MIT Media Lab
danpink.com
Walter Isaacson (The Aspen Institute)
nancyandreasen.com

Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 40 Comments
by atmvaeth1 April 28, 2010 5:24 PM EDT
I have high hopes for our creativity as Americans, but like some of the other comments I also hope the inventor has some legal sense about them to be able to navigate the hoops they will need to jump through to protect their creation...
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by NationalsFan January 31, 2010 5:27 PM EST
Did we miss something or did the Quick Draw crew only include 48 states in the Census piece? Where is Alaska and Hawaii on their map?
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by pdxdave January 12, 2010 4:08 PM EST
How to Make a Business Leave Your State (or Country) in Three Easy Steps

If you have the proper attitude toward business (that is to say, outright hostility), then here is what you can do to make them leave your state or country:

Step 1. Claim that big businesses don't pay their "fair share" of taxes because they pay a smaller percentage of ONE kind of tax (income tax) than middle class individuals. As you spend millions in advertising to convince voters of this, claim that any money spend by businesses to counter your claims is "proof" that they have waaaaay too much money and should be paying that money (and more) in taxes.

Step 2. Ignore the fact that during the normal course of conducting business, they pay boatloads of taxes and government fees on a wide range of goods and services, and provide orders to smaller local companies and workers that allow THEM in turn to pay taxes on goods and services.

Step 3. Empower unions to virtually shut down businesses if they don't pay grossly higher wages and benefits than the prevailing market.

Now, watch businesses flee like Bambi from a forest fire. And when they are gone, complain bitterly that those businesses which YOU forced out are robber barons who stole jobs from your community.
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by us_1776 January 14, 2010 2:51 PM EST
What part of "98% of the wealth in this country is held by less than 1% of the people in this country" don't you get. Big corporations are just the tool along with bribes to legislators to make sure that only the thin layer of top executives take home the lions share of all the wealth that this nation produces.

Achieving an equitable distribution of the profits is not what drives jobs out of the country. What drives jobs out of the country is bribes to legislators that let the corporate behemoths maintain corporate headquarters here while sending all operations overseas.
by tiktin January 11, 2010 10:02 PM EST
I'm not surprised that this assertion was made by a former aide to Al Gore. A hundred years ago you could be a Thomas Edison and make great inventions. Today, however, simple ingenuity is no longer enough. The technological world has become more complex so that major innovations require high degree of technical training and sophistication. That kind of training is no longer being produced by American Universities, so it is likely that the major advances of the future will come from other countries, such as China and Korea.
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by lmitchell09 January 11, 2010 2:10 PM EST
I'm upset that I can't see this video clip from Sunday. As a teacher, I wanted to share the piece with my students. They respond more positively to video than print.
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by jocrobro January 12, 2010 12:44 AM EST
I agree with you completely. This piece and others that Sunday Morning produces are very well done and great to use in the classroom. However, the vast majority of them are not available in the video format. I'd say this shows a serious lack of desire to use existing technology and a lack of interest in furthering "a wellspring of creativity" among your viewers and the students of our country... I'd say "practice what you preach" and make the entire series available online in video. My experience tells me that CBS lags far behind the other networks in this regard!!
by donlmorgan January 18, 2010 4:43 PM EST
I couldn't agree more. Something has turned today's students off to Science & Engineering. Videos like this are sorely needed.
by Dr Abel January 11, 2010 8:59 AM EST
Bravo- Wellspring of American Creativity should be a seed to grow bigger better TV programming-much needed. Just think if all the human creativity was unleashed- currently the most wasted resource.
A standing applause to you all at CBS Sunday Morning.

Janice Abel, Cedar Falls, Iowa
Reply to this comment
by ss433 January 11, 2010 7:59 AM EST
Uncle Sam
That's who I am
Been hidin' out
in a rock-n-roll band!

-"U.S. Blues" by The Grateful Dead describing the True Creative Uncle Sam, instead of the a-holes who ran the country around the time the song was written.
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by GreatDepression January 10, 2010 9:18 PM EST
Why invest $Trillions into Innovation when all the production jobs from that innovation are OutSourced? All the Innovations since 1776 have already been OutSourced. Only Foreign workers benefit from our Investments and Innovations.
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by porcine_aviator January 10, 2010 7:55 PM EST
The wellspring of creativity didn't dry up.

It's just that institutions are failing the innovators, as they become more and more entrenched in their status quo mentality.

Furthermore, it's harder than ever for the "little guy" to take his idea to the world. Investors are more timid than ever. Lawyers abound behind every nook and cranny, ready to tie up every new invention with an endless slew of lawsuits.

Asa society, we have traded common sense and the exploration spirit with bureaucracy, big government, big business, and an epidemic of being too pantywaisted to fend for ourselves.
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by erb0087 January 10, 2010 10:18 PM EST
"Lawyers abound behind every nook and cranny, ready to tie up every new invention with an endless slew of lawsuits."
================================================

Patent lawyers actually encourage invention by protecting the rights of the inventors.

A tragic example from the past was Charles Goodyear, the first American to vulcanize rubber.

His invention was stolen by others, and he spent much of his life and wealth battling over it.

In 1898, almost four decades after his death, the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company was founded and named after Goodyear by Frank Seiberling.
by erb0087 January 10, 2010 10:25 PM EST
"Furthermore, it's harder than ever for the "little guy" to take his idea to the world."
===========================================

Actually the Internet has made it easier than ever.

A clever writer can start a blog for free and reach many millions now, if he does it right. (There are technical challenges, of course, like making sure the blog is picked up by search engines like Google and Bing.)

That wasn't true 20 years ago.
by erb0087 January 10, 2010 7:37 PM EST
Scooter Libby's one and only novel (but that's one more than most people have written) is "The Apprentice."

According to the description of the book by St. Martin's Press:

"The Apprentice takes place in a remote mountain inn in northernmost Japan, where a raging blizzard has brought together wayfarers who share only fear and suspicion of one another. It is the winter of 1903, the country is beset with smallpox and war is brewing with Russia.

In the flickering shadows of the crowded room, the apprentice, charged with running the inn during the owner's absence, finds himself strongly attracted to one of the performers lodged there. His involvement with the mysterious travelers plunges him headlong into murder, passion and heart-stopping chases through the snow."

(Just then, Valerie Plame breaks the door down and busts the lot.)
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