- Patricia Allen
- Ted Allen
- Dan Barber
- Roger Boulton
- Novella Carpenter
- Christine Carroll
- Michael Chapdelaine
- Chris Cosentino
- Dickson Despommier
- Darra Goldstein
- Bruce Gutlove
- Georges M. Halpern
- Roland G. Henin
- Serge Hochar
- David Hoffman
- Greg Jones
- Chris Jordan
- Michael L. Kasavana
- Andrew Kimbrell
- Evan Kleinman
- René Koster
- Jennifer 8. Lee
- Laura Letinsky
- Tara McHugh
- Mathurin Molgat
- James Oseland
- Michael Rakowitz
- Peter Reinhart
- Tom Rielly
- Rives
- Andrea Robinson
- Ben Roche
- Michael Ruhlman
- Barry Schuler
- Andy Smith
- Bryant Terry
- Thy Tran
- Dennis vanEngelsdorp
- Benjamin Wallace
TOM RIELLY
Comedian Tom Rielly and Rives join together for end of conference wrap up.Tom Rielly is Partnership Director at TED Conferences where he is responsible for all corporate sponsorships. He also serves on TED’s executive team. Rielly is also TED’s acclaimed resident satirist, performing his unique satires of the speakers at most TEDs.
Rielly may be best known as founder and former CEO of PlanetOut, the leading gay and lesbian Internet company which accomplished three firsts: first venture investment in, first corporate financing of, and first IPO of a company serving the gay market. He also held senior sales and marketing positions at technology startups such as Acronym Media, Farallon Computing, Voyager, SuperMac Technology.
Rielly has served as Executive Producer of two films, an experimental feature about lesbian romance and the Golden Gate bridge as a suicide icon called The Joy of Life, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, and Moving Windmills, a short documentary film about William Kamkwamba, a promising young Malawian social entrepreneur, which he is currently working on expanding into a feature.
His photographs of Kamkwamba and his family have appeared in major newspapers and on websites around the world. He writes occasionally for I.D. Magazine and other publications and websites. With Karen Wickre, he contributed to Out in All Directions: A Gay and Lesbian Almanac (Warner Books).
Rielly has founded or co-founded four NGO’s: most recently Moving Windmills to work on projects in Africa (2008-), Digital Queers (1990-1995), a seminal gay and lesbian rights group in Silicon Valley, New Media Centers (1992-) and the Yale Macintosh Users’ Group (1984-).
Rielly’s myriad interests include gadgets, mentoring, filmmaking, photography, politics, lesbian and gay civil rights, comedy, public speaking, traveling and most recently rural economic development in Africa, particularly in Malawi. As a teen actor, he had a small role in the feature film My Bodyguard (1980).


