 I'm Sarah Backhouse, founder and host of Future 360. Future360.tv is an online video network dedicated to clean technology. We cover cutting-edge clean tech innovation and disruptive business models. Everything from green-building technologies out of Silicon Valley to waste-to-energy technologies and remote parts of the country. So my journey from camera to LA started when a friend of mine found an advertisement for a Japanese-speaking researcher for a television show which ended up being a show called Beyond 2000. That random serendipitous moment led to my career in television. Started in Sydney and then moved to the bigger TV market of London and then the kind of mothership of media Los Angeles. Semantically, I've moved from mainstream TV to covering sustainability and now clean tech and it's so lovely that California is a leader globally in this field so it makes sense that I'm here. It takes a certain something to make it in this city. So everyone that's here is very ambitious, very driven. Right now is a really exciting time to be here. There's a whole wave of innovation in the tech space and media space and incubators like the one we're sitting in right now are sprouting up across the city. So it's a really exciting city to be living in. I did a Bachelor of Economics and Japanese Studies. I vividly remember that walk from the Copeland building to Asian Studies building which I must have done four times a day for four years. There are so many great memories. I co-edited the student newspaper Warowning. So I remember kind of late night deadlines and then the thriller, the newspaper coming out the next day. The current students, I would really encourage them to find their sweet spot. If you think about three circles, one represents your passion, one represents your skill and one represents what the market opportunities are. When those three things align, that's called your sweet spot and once you find that, I think you'll find a very fulfilling, sustainable career. My advice to students will be, if you can't find that, create it. In a really short space of time, I've got to meet some really interesting smart alumni that I had no idea were living in the US and apart from reconnecting, it's been great to network and there's already been opportunities to collaborate. It's so easy to get involved. It's a world of possibility and one that I think everyone should be curious enough to explore.