Talk:Jeffrey Skoll

Jewish
Jeff Skoll's family was part of Montreal's vibrant Jewish community.
 * Can you provide a citation for this? Russel Harrison (talk) 03:50, 26 December 2016 (UTC)

eBay stock
We say he "remains its second-largest shareholder", but today's Telegraph Magazine says he "sold his stake in the company for $2billion". This March 2004 filing indeed shows him as the second largest stockholder, behind Omidyar. This CNN story from September 2004 says he owned 8% of the company then. This Wired article of Feb 2006 says he started Participant "after cashing out of eBay with $2 billion in his pocket". So it looks like he cached out sometime in late 2004 or in 2005 - do we have a better source as to when? -- Finlay McWalter | Talk 16:02, 26 August 2006 (UTC)


 * Ah, I see this line was in the very first version of this article, back in December 2004. MSN Money's list of eBay shareholders shows all the big owners are mutual funds and the like. As we have two sources (telegraph and wired, above) that say he sold his stock for £2B, I'll put that in the article. -- Finlay McWalter | Talk 16:35, 26 August 2006 (UTC)

Public records seem to indicate he was still a greater than 5% holder of eBay stock in 2006, worth over $2B, on top of stock that might have been sold otherwise in previous years.

Reference to PQ irrelevant
"Following the 1976 election of the Separatist Parti Québécois as the government of the Province of Quebec, like more than 400,000 other Anglo-Quebecers". This statement does not have its place in an encyclopedic article. They left because they left and that's all, everybody is allowed to move. The PQ influence implied is biased and irrelevant. The idea suggested here is that Québec would be richer now if it werent for the PQ who forced Jeff's family to leave. Wikipedia shouldn't be used for propaganda. 207.35.240.157 17:57, 20 April 2007 (UTC)

Is there any indication that the assertion is relevant? Has Skoll said anything about politics having been a factor? Joeldl 07:49, 5 May 2007 (UTC)

The flight of anglophones from Quebec before or after referendums is a well documented and statistically based event, it is a part of Canadian history that is well known.(to canadians at least) User:Justinmcl
 * Anglophones left Quebec for all sorts of reasons which in individual cases may or may not have had anything to do with the PQ's election. The factual accuracy of the assertion that they left after the PQ was elected is not in question. What is in question is whether there is any relation between the two events. It is POV to make the assumption or even to act as if it is likely that one had anything to do with the other if there is no evidence specific to Skoll. Joeldl 18:01, 7 May 2007 (UTC)

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Request to improve citations
Hello! Lindsey from the Jeff Skoll Group here. I've joined Wikipedia to contribute helpful updates to this and other Jeff Skoll-related articles. I wanted to introduce myself and let you know that I will be proposing updates/edits to correct some of the issues on this page, while also providing updates to stale info. I will come back with those proposals once they are finished. Meantime, I did spot a few sourcing issues in Early life. Here are citations to verify presently unsourced content.

Unsourced content

"The family settled in Toronto in the late seventies."
 * Citation:

"When Skoll was fourteen, his father was diagnosed with cancer which prompted him to discuss with his son how much he regretted not having had the time to do everything he had planned in life."
 * Citation:

"He paid his way through college by pumping gas…"
 * Citations:

"After graduating he backpacked around the world for several months…"
 * Citation:

"...founding two businesses in Toronto: Skoll Engineering, an information technology consulting firm and Micros on the Move Ltd., a computer rental firm."
 * Citation:

"...earn a Masters of Business Administration degree at Stanford Business School, graduating in 1995"
 * Citation:

As I find more sources to shore up other content, I will post them on this Talk page for editors. Thank you. JSG Lindsey (talk) 17:49, 6 March 2020 (UTC)

Request for Philanthropy
Hello! Lindsey from the Jeff Skoll Group here. I am proposing some starter edits for "Philanthropy". As of writing this message, "Philanthropy" contains content with no inline citations and redundant information that is better for "Honours and awards". I wrote a draft where I tried to fix these issues. Are editors available to review my draft "Philanthropy" section? I posted notes underneath the draft to explain the changes.

"Philanthropy draft" Skoll is a noted philanthropist; he is a recipient of the Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy, and a Giving Pledge signatory. He has given the eponymous Skoll Foundation approximately $1 billion of eBay stock since its formation in 1999. The Foundation supports "social entrepreneurship". Skoll chairs the Foundation and as of 2020 makes grants in excess of $80 million per year. The Skoll Foundation's assets rank it as the largest foundation for social entrepreneurship in the world.

As of 2020, Skoll has been working for over ten years to help prevent pandemics and other global threats. In 2009, Skoll donated $100 million to create the Skoll Global Threats Fund to confront threats to humanity in 5 areas: climate change, water security, pandemics, nuclear proliferation, and Middle East conflict. The Fund created and spun off a stand alone non-profit entity, Ending Pandemics, that focuses on pandemic detection and response. In 2011, Skoll's film company Participant Media co-produced the film Contagion to raise awareness about the dangers posed by pandemics. He wanted the film to be scientifically sound and encourage funding of medical experts; in 2020, media coverage noted it was "shocking in its accuracy". In 2020, Skoll donated $20 million in January, and then an additional $100 million in April, to the Skoll Foundation for use in combating the covid-19 pandemic. The $100 million donation was intended to be used to assist with covid-19 testing, contact tracing, and providing respiratory devices and other medical equipment to countries that cannot afford it or lack infrastructure to support it.

Skoll is a member of the Berggruen Institute's 21st Century Council.

In 2005, Skoll financed The Gandhi Project in partnership with Relief International which created a dubbed version in Arabic of the film Gandhi. They used Palestinian voice actors and artists to make the film particularly relevant to Palestinians. With Skoll's support, it was screened throughout Palestine to promote non-violence, self-reliance, economic development, and empowerment.

Notes on draft
 * This draft changes the first sentence from "Skoll is a noted philanthropist and has been honoured many times for his generosity" to "Skoll is a noted philanthropist; he is a recipient of the Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy, and a Giving Pledge signatory. " This adds citations and attempts to show rather than tell.
 * Includes a citation for the following uncited sentence: "Skoll chairs the Foundation and as of 2020 makes grants in excess of $80 million per year. The Skoll Foundation's assets rank it as the largest foundation for social entrepreneurship in the world. "
 * Deletes the unsourced sentence: "Skoll's largest charitable donation was a $30 million contribution to the Alliance for Climate Protection Campaign."
 * Removes redundant material from the second paragraph (the content is listed under "Honours and awards" already).
 * Adds a paragraph on portions of Skoll's work, specifically pandemics
 * Adds a citation and minor copy edits to the Gandhi Project paragraph

I will come back with more proposed updates, but this is a good place to get started.

Thank you. JSG Lindsey (talk) 18:16, 29 June 2020 (UTC)


 * Penny75: I see you updated "Philanthropy". Thank you very much! It appears the citations were not carried over. Can you add the citations as well so readers can verify the content? Because of my conflict of interest, I should not edit the article myself. Thanks again for helping. JSG Lindsey (talk) 15:38, 17 July 2020 (UTC)


 * Completed by Penny75. Thanks! JSG Lindsey (talk) 15:40, 22 July 2020 (UTC)

Request for Filmography
Hello! Lindsey from the Jeff Skoll Group here. I am proposing edits to update the tables in "Filmography". As of writing this message, the most recent item in "Filmography" is from 2018, and numerous previous productions are missing. Are editors available to review my draft "Filmography" section? (Notifying Penny75, who reviewed a request above.) My draft is self-explanatory, but I am willing to discuss further if needed. I made sure to cite sources for each title I added.

"Filmography draft"

Film

TV series

Thank you. JSG Lindsey (talk) 02:14, 17 September 2020 (UTC)


 * Thanks for updating "Filmography", Cinemacriterion! This is looking better. I see a few items that are still missing. Would you consider adding the productions I listed below?
 * Film
 * The Square, executive producer (2013)
 * The Unknown Known, executive producer (2014)
 * Beasts of No Nation, executive producer (2015)
 * Kingdom of Shadows, executive producer (2015)
 * The Music of Strangers, executive producer (2016)
 * Melting Ice, executive producer (2017)
 * Midsummer in Newtown, executive producer (2017)
 * This Is Climate Change, executive producer (2018)
 * City So Real, executive producer (2020)
 * Sea Fog, executive producer (2020)


 * TV series
 * Teach, executive producer (2013)
 * HitRecord on TV, executive producer (2014)
 * Human Resources, executive producer (2014)
 * ''Secret Lives of Americans, executive producer (2015)
 * America to Me, executive producer (2018)
 * Noughts + Crosses, executive producer (2020)
 * In Memoriam, executive producer (in development)
 * Thank you. JSG Lindsey (talk) 18:42, 7 October 2020 (UTC)


 * Yes! I will add those films, however, the films in development or pre-production will not be added only because Wikipedia likes to add those films and create articles for those projects when they actually begin production. Cinemacriterion (talk) 20:41, 7 October 2020 (UTC)


 * Thank you again for updating "Filmography", Cinemacriterion! Thanks also for explaining why productions in development and pre-production are not listed. That makes sense. I'll keep that in mind for future requests.


 * Thank you. JSG Lindsey (talk) 21:27, 20 October 2020 (UTC)

Request for Participant
Hello! Lindsey from the Jeff Skoll Group again. Because of my conflict of interest, I am proposing edits for "Participant" for editors to review. The live section contains content tagged as reading like an advertisement. I agree that the tone is not the most encyclopedic. The section is more focused on Participant, not Skoll specifically. I wrote a draft where I tried to fix these issues, focusing specifically on Skoll's contributions to Participant. Are Cinemacriterion, Penny75, or other editors available to review my draft "Participant" section? I posted notes underneath the draft to explain the changes.

"Participant draft"

In 2004, Skoll founded the company Participant to create films that increase public awareness of critical social issues and give audiences opportunities to get involved through education and social action campaigns. In 2005, Skoll's first Participant productions were released, with Syriana; Good Night, and Good Luck; North Country; and Murderball, together garnering 11 Oscar nominations. A year later, Skoll financed and played a key role in the creation of the environmental documentary, An Inconvenient Truth, which grew out of a slideshow developed by former U.S. Vice President Al Gore on the climate crisis. The film won the 2006 Academy Award for Best Feature Documentary. “I would never have predicted that a film like An Inconvenient Truth would impact so many people,” Skoll told Philanthropy Roundtable.

The Financial Times reported in 2009 that Participant allows Skoll to "pursue social and political causes through a mass medium. From modest beginnings, the company (which Skoll chairs, supported by a team of executives) is now a serious player." Fortune wrote the next year that Skoll’s films aren’t typical Hollywood fare, "they tackle weighty subjects such as eco-Armageddon, petro-terrorism, education reform, and women’s rights. In short they tend to reflect Skoll’s progressive, and ultimately optimistic, worldview that shining a light on the world’s problems will inspire people to band together to bring about change on a large scale. (Indeed, the name 'Participant' evokes a call to action.)"

Skoll has served as Executive Producer or Producer on nearly 100 Participant films, including Spotlight, Roma, and American Factory, and as of 2019 Participant has won 18 Oscars and received 73 Academy Award nominations. In 2020, the company received another Academy Award nomination and win for best documentary feature for American Factory.

According to the Hollywood Reporter, in 2014 Skoll funded the creation of the Skoll Center for Social Impact Entertainment at the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television, saying at the time: "I founded Participant Media in the belief that a story well told has the power to ignite positive social change. This new center at UCLA TFT is an extension of that vision, with the goal of empowering a new generation and elevating storytelling as a tool to create impact and empower people to connect to the social issues that can have a profound impact on our world." In March, 2019, Participant and the Skoll Center for Social Impact Entertainment released a report, "The State of Social Impact Entertainment," that said: "social impact entertainment — narrative and documentary film, television, theater, and emerging forms that engage audiences in solving real-world challenges — is not a fad but the future of the entertainment industry."

In 2019, on behalf of Participant, Skoll and Participant CEO David Linde accepted the newly created TIFF Impact Award from the Toronto International Film Festival; in 2020 the award was renamed the Jeff Skoll Award in Impact Media and was awarded to Mira Nair.

Notes on draft
 * This draft changes the name of the section from "Participant Media" to "Participant", as the company is currently known. This also matches the naming convention used on the Participant_(company) article
 * Removes promotional wording
 * Focuses on Skoll's role at Participant
 * Uses reliable sources, whereas the current section heavily relies on IMDB
 * Removes many of the films mentioned in the live article, as Skoll's productions are already listed in "Filmography"

Thank you. JSG Lindsey (talk) 18:08, 28 October 2020 (UTC)


 * I would be interested in updating! Is there anything specific you would like to be added? Cinemacriterion (talk) 21:20, 2 November 2020 (UTC)


 * Hello, Cinemacriterion! In theory, I think the draft that I included in my initial post here could replace the live article's existing "Participant" section. I tried my best to keep the content neutral, citing independent sources, but you may think some of the wording needs to be edited for the live article. For the sake of clarity, I will post it again here in a collapse box.

"Participant draft"

In 2004, Skoll founded the company Participant to create films that increase public awareness of critical social issues and give audiences opportunities to get involved through education and social action campaigns. In 2005, Skoll's first Participant productions were released, with Syriana; Good Night, and Good Luck; North Country; and Murderball, together garnering 11 Oscar nominations. A year later, Skoll financed and played a key role in the creation of the environmental documentary, An Inconvenient Truth, which grew out of a slideshow developed by former U.S. Vice President Al Gore on the climate crisis. The film won the 2006 Academy Award for Best Feature Documentary. “I would never have predicted that a film like An Inconvenient Truth would impact so many people,” Skoll told Philanthropy Roundtable.

The Financial Times reported in 2009 that Participant allows Skoll to "pursue social and political causes through a mass medium. From modest beginnings, the company (which Skoll chairs, supported by a team of executives) is now a serious player." Fortune wrote the next year that Skoll’s films aren’t typical Hollywood fare, "they tackle weighty subjects such as eco-Armageddon, petro-terrorism, education reform, and women’s rights. In short they tend to reflect Skoll’s progressive, and ultimately optimistic, worldview that shining a light on the world’s problems will inspire people to band together to bring about change on a large scale. (Indeed, the name 'Participant' evokes a call to action.)"

Skoll has served as Executive Producer or Producer on nearly 100 Participant films, including Spotlight, Roma, and American Factory, and as of 2019 Participant has won 18 Oscars and received 73 Academy Award nominations. In 2020, the company received another Academy Award nomination and win for best documentary feature for American Factory.

According to the Hollywood Reporter, in 2014 Skoll funded the creation of the Skoll Center for Social Impact Entertainment at the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television, saying at the time: "I founded Participant Media in the belief that a story well told has the power to ignite positive social change. This new center at UCLA TFT is an extension of that vision, with the goal of empowering a new generation and elevating storytelling as a tool to create impact and empower people to connect to the social issues that can have a profound impact on our world." In March, 2019, Participant and the Skoll Center for Social Impact Entertainment released a report, "The State of Social Impact Entertainment," that said: "social impact entertainment — narrative and documentary film, television, theater, and emerging forms that engage audiences in solving real-world challenges — is not a fad but the future of the entertainment industry."

In 2019, on behalf of Participant, Skoll and Participant CEO David Linde accepted the newly created TIFF Impact Award from the Toronto International Film Festival; in 2020 the award was renamed the Jeff Skoll Award in Impact Media and was awarded to Mira Nair.


 * Let me know what you think of it. Thank you. JSG Lindsey (talk) 22:45, 2 November 2020 (UTC)


 * Penny75: Thank you so very much for updating Participant! It appears the citations did not carry over. Can you add the citations as well so readers can verify the content? Because of my conflict of interest, I should not edit the article myself. Thanks again for helping. JSG Lindsey (talk) 19:09, 12 November 2020 (UTC)

: Request for Philanthropy and Investing
Hello! Lindsey from the Jeff Skoll Group again. Because of my conflict of interest, I am proposing edits for "Philanthropy" and a new section on Skoll's impact investing for editors to review. The live "Philanthropy" section is stale, so my draft looks to freshen it up. While there is some overlap in the causes that are supported in Skoll's philanthropy and investing, they are not the same, so I have also created an "Impact investing" section draft. Are Cinemacriterion, Penny75, or other editors available to review my draft "Philanthropy" and "Impact investing" sections?

Philanthropy draft Skoll is a noted philanthropist; he is a recipient of the Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy, and a Giving Pledge signatory. He has given the eponymous Skoll Foundation approximately $1 billion of eBay stock since its formation in 1999. The Foundation supports "social entrepreneurship". Skoll chairs the Foundation and as of 2020 makes grants in excess of $80 million per year. The Skoll Foundation's assets rank it as the largest foundation for social entrepreneurship in the world.

As of 2020, Skoll has been working for over ten years to help prevent pandemics and other global threats. In 2009, Skoll donated $100 million to create the Skoll Global Threats Fund to confront threats to humanity in 5 areas: climate change, water security, pandemics, nuclear proliferation, and Middle East conflict. The Fund created and spun off a stand alone non-profit entity, Ending Pandemics, that focuses on pandemic detection and response. In 2011, Skoll's film company Participant Media co-produced the film Contagion to raise awareness about the dangers posed by pandemics. He wanted the film to be scientifically sound and encourage funding of medical experts; in 2020, media coverage noted it was "shocking in its accuracy". In 2020, Skoll donated $20 million in January, and then an additional $100 million in April, to the Skoll Foundation for use in combating the covid-19 pandemic. The $100 million donation was intended to be used to assist with covid-19 testing, contact tracing, and providing respiratory devices and other medical equipment to countries that cannot afford it or lack infrastructure to support it.

In addition to fighting pandemics, Skoll has made addressing climate change a top priority for his filmmaking and philanthropy and a key focus of the Skoll Foundation, which in addition to its own efforts, joined other foundations to create Climate Nexus, a kind of "rapid response team" on the climate crisis.

Skoll is active in "collaborative philanthropy" and has joined with other philanthropists and foundations to pool resources that then flow to non-profits focused on addressing specific issues at scale. In 2017, Skoll, joined with philanthropists Richard Chandler, Bill and Melinda Gates, Romesh and Kathy Wadhwani, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the founding director of the Giving Pledge, Olivia Leland, to create Co-Impact, a philanthropic funding collaborative seeded with $500 million, whose "specific aim is to fund organizations that are addressing health, education and economic opportunity in low-to-middle income countries," according to Barron's.

Similarly in 2018, Skoll, TED founder Chris Anderson, Richard Branson's Virgin Unite, and other funders launched The Audacious Project, a philanthropic funding collaborative with an initial investment of $250 million for "audacious ideas" that deliver "impact at scale". Some of the first recipients of funding from The Audacious Project included the Environmental Defense Fund, Sight Savers, and The Bail Project.

Skoll has funded the creation of academic centers at two universities. In 2003, Skoll funded the creation of the Skoll Center for Social Entrepreneurship at Oxford University's Said Business School. The Center is a research center, hub for innovators, and host of the annual Skoll World Forum on Social Entrepreneurship. Called the “Davos for the nonprofit set” by Forbes, Skoll World Forum participants have included leading thinkers from South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu to former U.S. Vice President Al Gore. In 2019, Skoll also funded the creation of the Skoll Center for Social Impact Entertainment at the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television. The center is dedicated to promoting social change through entertainment and the arts.

In 2005, Skoll financed The Gandhi Project in partnership with Relief International which created a dubbed version in Arabic of the film Gandhi. They used Palestinian voice actors and artists to make the film particularly relevant to Palestinians. With Skoll's support, it was screened throughout Palestine to promote non-violence, self-reliance, economic development, and empowerment.

Skoll is a member of the Berggruen Institute's 21st Century Council.

Impact investing Skoll was one of the earliest proponents of socially responsible investing, now called "impact investing", through which he invests in for-profit companies whose mission is to deliver both social impact and financial returns. In 2001 he created Capricorn Investment Group "on the premise of socially responsible investing" and the firm now oversees more than $5 billion in client assets and another $3.5 billion in partnership with other organizations. According to Forbes, a "significant portion" of Capricorn's assets "has been put to work backing mostly private companies that are in some way aiming to help the environment and combat climate change". Capricorn's early investments included electric carmaker Tesla, Inc., battery technology developer QuantumScape, and air taxi developer Joby Aviation. Other investments include private equity fund Encourage Solar Finance to promote rooftop solar installations in India.

In 2016, Skoll, along with U2 leader singer Bono and investment firm TPG, cofounded The Rise Fund, a $2 billion social-impact fund with "a series of strict metrics by which to measure social impact", according to The New York Times. The "biggest private-equity fund investing for impact", according to Barron's, Rise's investments fall across seven sectors, including agriculture, education, and healthcare, and since 2017, "Rise has invested in more than 25 growth-stage companies that are making a measurable positive social and/or environmental impact".

Thank you, JSG Lindsey (talk) 18:04, 23 November 2020 (UTC)


 * I'd be open to adding this! Cinemacriterion (talk) 19:08, 23 November 2020 (UTC)
 * I just added this to the page, I linked some of the people with Wikipedia pages, but did minor word changes. Is there anything else you would like to be added? Thanks. Cinemacriterion (talk) 20:37, 23 November 2020 (UTC)


 * Thank you for updating "Philanthropy" and adding "Impact investing", Cinemacriterion! Can you make "Impact investing" its own section instead of a subsection of "Philanthropy" since impact investing is not philanthropy?


 * Thank you. JSG Lindsey (talk) 20:16, 2 December 2020 (UTC)

Request for Honours and awards
Hello! Lindsey from the Jeff Skoll Group again. Because of my conflict of interest, I am proposing additional honors, awards, and recognition for the "Honours and awards" section that I hope editors will review. Are Cinemacriterion, Penny75, or other editors available to review if any of these are appropriate for the article?
 * Producers Guild of America's Visionary Award (2009)
 * Huffington Post's "Ultimate Game Changer in Entertainment" among the world's top 100 game changers (2010)
 * Environmental Media Awards Corporate Responsibility Award (2010)
 * The Paley Center for Media's "Salute to Excellence" (2011)
 * James C. Morgan Global Humanitarian Award (2011)
 * John W. Gardner Leadership Award (2012)
 * Career tribute at the Gotham Independent Film Awards (2012)
 * Jefferson Award's S. Roger Horchow Award for Greatest Public Service by a Private Citizen (2015)
 * Ernest C. Arbuckle Award for excellence in the field of management leadership (2015)
 * Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy (2017)
 * The Hollywood Reporter 100: The Most Powerful People in Entertainment in 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019.
 * Forbes America's Top 50 Givers (2019)

Thank you, JSG Lindsey (talk) 16:03, 15 December 2020 (UTC)


 * I oppose to turning the article into a directory of Mr. Skoll’s accolades and awards. These belong more in a CV than in an encyclopedic entry. Ferkijel (talk) 22:19, 1 April 2021 (UTC)

¡Viva Maestro!
Hello! Lindsey from the Jeff Skoll Group here. Are editors available to add a new entry to the "Filmography" table? Jeff Skoll is executive producer of ¡Viva Maestro! (2021). I will not edit the table directly because of my conflict of interest.

Thank you. JSG Lindsey (talk) 20:03, 3 March 2021 (UTC)


 * ✅ Ferkijel (talk) 12:00, 30 March 2021 (UTC)