Lawrence Lessing, a law professor from Harvard Law School, focuses on other creative ways to communicate to one another through a wide range of media use, collages, layers, and the use of others' thoughts, to create a more meaningful and powerful message than the one before. Lawrence refers to this process as "remixing" media, and considers it more productive when the outcome produces a meaningful message derived from references that are expressed in their original form, rather than an individual creating something completely new that only contains those individuals’ own thoughts. By using the ever growing market of digital technologies, it has allowed writers to become creators, and creators to become writers, by using layers of quotes, texts, audio, video, or pictures, that are cut and pasted together from numerous resources. Lawrence explains that these “remixes” allow better arguments to be in communication, but reminds the writers and creators that it should keep up with the cultural demands of today, and consistently match the topic or person being referenced. For example, many of the younger members of our society have been raised in the emergence of new technology every year, while the needs for “simpler” things begin to dissipate. What I mean, is that children today do not want to learn math through the use of flashcards, or timed tests. An effective way of children learning math would be through the use of animated or digital games, songs, or advanced software, due to their cultural needs of today and the environment those children have grown up in; modern. Lawrence believes that masterpieces can be created if we expand the media in use of communicational writing, and through the examples I listed above, mixing these symbolic ideas together, can create something completely new and original, leading to new ideas, and therefore creating better communication with the modern world.