Michael Rubin, a former Netflix and Adobe executive, is an educator, entrepreneur, and photographer.[1]
Rubin graduated from Brown University with a degree in neuroscience in 1985. The story of his college application was syndicated,[2] and he was on the cover of USA Today on December 20, 1984.[3][4]
From 1985 until 1994, he worked in Silicon Valley and Hollywood, Los Angeles, designing new editing equipment and editing feature films and television shows. He has a number of credited editorial roles in TV and film -- including Bernardo Bertolucci's The Sheltering Sky.[5] Rubin has taught video post-production internationally and has written books on editing for professionals and consumers.[4][6]
He created AFI's first academic online course for Fathom, a joint venture including Columbia University and the AFI, "Introduction to Digital Video" in 2001[7] From 1993-2008 he was CEO of Petroglyph Ceramic Lounge, pioneering the contemporary ceramics industry,[8] opening six studios in Northern California.[4][9] From 2005-2017, he held senior product positions at tech companies and other startups.[10] He was Director of Product at Netflix from 2006-2008 and Senior Innovator at Adobe from 2013-2017 where he was awarded a patent on digital audio interfaces in 2017 [11][4]. He founded Neomodern in 2017, a bricks-and-mortar photographic printing + framing business in San Francisco,[12] which closed in 2020. He currently is a fine art photographer, and teaches photography workshops[13], notably with the Santa Fe Photographic Workshops.
Rubin wrote, Defending the Galaxy in 1982, the first comprehensive book and satire on video games.[14] for which he was given a Twin Galaxies Videogame trading card #1603 in 2013.[15] In 1984, he wrote and published the humorous Computer Gardening Made Simple under the pen name Chip DeJardin. In 1990, he wrote the first edition of Nonlinear, which popularized the term “nonlinear editing”[16] and was used in film schools and in Hollywood, and released three additional editions until 2001. He wrote The Little Digital Video Book for amateur videographers in 2001; the book's second edition came out in 2008.[4] He also wrote three editions of iLife books for the Apple Training Series. In 2005 he authored Droidmaker: George Lucas and the Digital Revolution.[17][6]
Rubin is the director of The Rubin Collection, a large family collection of 20th-century photography, frequently on display at Neomodern in San Francisco (2017-2020) and now in Santa Fe, New Mexico.[12] As a high school student, Rubin was taught by Jerry N. Uelsmann in the darkroom and photographic effects in Gainesville, Florida [13][4].
Rubin married his Petroglyph co-founder Jennifer (Kurtz) Rubin in 1994 (divorced in 2013) with whom he shares two children. His siblings are artist Gabrielle Rubin-Israelievitch and screenwriter Danny Rubin [4].
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