John Landgraf of FX, Eric Schrier of Disney

The TV Mayor has advice on how to survive in these rough waters of industry: Never stop learning. FX owner John Landgraf looked cautiously at the direction of the entertainment industry as he spoke on the Walt Disney Company studio lot in Burbank on Thursday.

Director Paris Barclay is hosting a chat with Landgraf and Disney TV Studios head Eric Schrier, who asked Landgraf to give viewers some reasons to remain optimistic. Landgraf is a measurement: “It will still be here,” he said. Barclays then asked, does this mean that there will be a place in the New World Order?

"I don't know all of us," Randgraf said. "I can't speak for everyone in person. I can tell you that my own strange strategy is just getting better and better. Most days of my career were loopholes, not windshields. What happened that day, or failed, or failed every day... but what I'm saying is, what can I learn? Production, can you learn more?

Landgraf said it took a long time - he considered himself a "late bloom" of the business, and once he hit him in his 40s and 50s, he was confident in his figure. He added: "I know this won't make you feel hopeful, except that the point is that we live in a world of such short-term success and short-term growth." "Honestly, there are 5,000 years of human intelligence and anthropologists saying, 'Currently, don't focus on what's ahead of you." I mean, in the present, you have to nurture your efforts, courage, courage, dedication.

He also noted that it is sometimes difficult to deal with the fact that some people succeed overnight due to luck, while others take years to find their own big break. "The world is not fair," he said. "You have to say, 'Do I want to live in a fair world?' What I want to say is, I want to sit in the world with pain or want to live in the world, which is what some people need.

As for the business itself, Schrier sounded more optimistic - pointing to successes like ABC's "high potential" and TV storytelling speeches, as well as shows like "Bears" and even the successful performance of "Bluey" by the kids. “How do you tell stories in different and unique ways?” he said. "In fact, it's actually easier to get than media history. So, in the process of being able to deliver these media economically. So, I'm really excited. It's really important to have great creativity and storytelling."

Barclays noted that he is currently working on the project he first started to create in 1986 about the Vietnam War: "I believe you keep moving forward until you get it right," he Saud. "It's the same thing as this industry. It's going to be different in a few years, and I think it's actually going to get better because the weird times in the world create great art. So I think you come in at a frightening moment, but you probably really should be optimistic about the possibilities of art.

Throughout the conversation, Barclays asked Landgraf and Schrier to discuss what they were looking for in a good tone and TV show. The executives talk about the early days of the FX brand and how their team at Cabler built it into hits like Shield, Nip/Tuck, American, Always the Sunshine of Philadelphia, and until now, there are more – so far, “Shogun,” “Shogun,” “Bear,” and so on.

As for what’s next, Schrier is bullish comedy: “I think the comedy will be big right now because we need to laugh,” he said. "The world is a little heavy. But the history of your movies and TV, the biggest hits are the things you least expect.... We're always looking for stories that can tell innovation, and a new way to tell this story."

Landgraf is eager to find a program that might work for FX: “I would love to have a program that is deep enough humanistic that it fits in the FX brand,” he said. "I envy 'Peter'. I like "ER," and I think it's a masterpiece of storytelling and humanism, but I would say that most programs don't get there because they are self-inclusive and they try to be in a limited position, so they act great. Usually, that's what I'm going to say. My answer is, if I really feel like there might be a great TV show, I'll follow you in any rabbit hole."