O.K., I want to pivot the conversation just one second. I have sort of a strange MeToo question. I imagine you must have a very complicated view of Harvey Weinstein, given that you knew him for a very, very long time. How do you feel about him today?

I have not been asked this before. You know, I don’t like to be binary about people or about things. I think we’re all equal parts or varying percentages light and dark, and I think that, you know, he was a very, very important figure in my life. He was my main boss, he gave me incredible opportunity, and yet during that time we had a very fraught, complicated relationship, highs and lows. And the postscript to that chapter of my life is where it gets extremely complicated for me because information came to light about who he was and how he was behaving that I didn’t know during my already very difficult time with him, so I’m not sure. I’m not sure how I feel.

Final question. Tell us what’s going on with this: There seems to be some kind of back-and-forth that you’ve been having with Jeff Bezos. I know that he’s one of the few people who you’ve been trying to reach for a very, very long time, and I gather that he’s ghosted you, and I don’t really understand what’s happening.

Yeah, yeah. You know, you win some, you lose some. You know, I had reached out to him. Look, I’ve learned so much by being brazen and reaching out to people and saying, ‘Could I have a conversation with you? Would you mentor me?’ So he was one of the people who I reached out to, and he never really wrote me back. I tried a couple times, and then I told this story, I think in The Wall Street Journal, and then he emailed me back and he said it’s Jeff, and The Wall Street Journal tells me that you would like to get in touch with me, so that there began our very brief conversation because after that, yeah, not so much.