I always regretted that I never had the chance to tell Dad how great I thought he was.

As a young kid I never saw myself as a drummer.

It took a thing like my father's death to make me decide that I actually wanted to pursue drumming.

I never imagined in my wildest dreams when I was 17 watching Van Halen at a Donington Park rock festival and seeing Sammy Hagar later on when I was in the United States playing that I would end up with a band of guys I bought albums of.

I think I misunderstood the following in the footsteps bit, in a few of my early drinking years. I'd take any form of being compared to Dad as flattery. So if I fell off a stool or smashed up a TV set just because I was drunk, and somebody in the bar went 'Hey, man, that was just like Bonzo!' I would be really happy.

I loved 'Rain' and its take on the Beatles. The way they used a timeline and news reel to create a mood, and crafted set changes throughout, it was stunning.

I strive to be positive. I begin every day asking myself what I can do to make this a positive day.

To play like John Bonham is the hardest thing in the world because you're not John Bonham. It's how you breathe out of your heart. It's your emotions.

There's always got to be one adult in the band, I think.

My first band, we wanted to be like Foreigner and Journey.

You know at 14, when you lose your hero - your father - that's why I hold him on such a high pedestal.

My kids still think that, you know, other kids' parents are cooler than I am.

He was just dad to me. I never really looked at him as Mr. Supergroup, John Bonham.

My dad was a regular dad. At home, he wasn't Bonzo the animal. He was a very intellectual, quiet chap - not the beast we all know.

I was into the Police. I dyed my hair white-blond and wanted to be Sting.

One of my dreams was always to play alongside my father but I never got the chance because we only had one drum kit at home.

We all have to appreciate where we come from and how wonderful our parents were.

I was thrilled to hear Mick Jones wanted me to be involved in celebrating 40 years of Foreigner. I spent three years as their drummer and had a great time.

I have lots of memories of Zeppelin. And I know the joy it gives fans when I tell them stories. I see their faces light up.

I'm English, so I can be very 'half empty.'

Are people going to be more critical because I'm a Bonham? The answer is yes.

The fan support throughout the years, and the new generation, has made Zeppelin larger than life.

I was really into motocross. I started racing when I was 10 years old and did very, very well. That was my dream, if anything, more than drumming.

You have to have a big vision and take very small steps to get there. You have to be humble as you execute but visionary and gigantic in terms of your aspiration. In the Internet industry, it's not about grand innovation, it's about a lot of little innovations: every day, every week, every month, making something a little bit better.

There's nobody who has as big of a real-time logistics network than Uber.

I think entrepreneurship is a beautiful thing.

Instant access to anything is the future. So if you need a tutor or a baby sitter or a massage or any service, it's going to be instantly available, 24 hours a day, through your phone, with one click.

I've gotten more press than any entrepreneur could dream of - certainly more than I deserve - and I've never had a public relations firm working for me.

While people are quick to praise the wisdom of the crowd, being an old-school journalist, I look at the wisdom of the crowd and know it can quickly turn into a mob mentality.

America might be a dying empire, but it's not going to die in our lifetime - and it doesn't have to die at all.

When it comes to individual bloggers, they have many choices now that include blogging for a network or going solo.

Fire people who are not workaholics.

Jon Miller would be amazing for Yahoo because he is extremely good at building display advertising businesses and buying young startups.

Imagine being 30 years old, thinking you were a media titan, and now you are labeled a 'scam artist.'

TechCrunch is the publication of record, but they're so bad and uninformed. It's insult after insult. When I play poker with other VC's, we all laugh at TechCrunch.

When I was coming up as an entrepreneur, I had to fight for everything I got, and there was no clear roadmap of how to be successful.

YouTube has made a lot of changes to support time on site - a statistic they care about. But subscriber support is lacking.

The balance of power shifts on the Internet to the individual. This is a two-way medium.

I am a huge fan of capitalism and a huge fan of entrepreneurship and changing the world with technology and with entrepreneurship. Capitalism is awesome. To me, capitalism is my religion.

The wisdom of the crowds has peaked. Web 3.0 is taking what we've built in Web 2.0 - the wisdom of the crowds - and putting an editorial layer on it of truly talented, compensated people to make the product more trusted and refined.

My mission is to grow business in Silicon Alley.

Even if you're a relatively small player in search, that can still mean a company that's worth several billion dollars.

I ain't gonna work on YouTube's farm no more.

I don't need YouTube's money. I have my own money.

The idea is that angel investors are supposed to be wealthy people supporting people who need funds, typically who are not wealthy, and don't have the ability to do it themselves.

The down market favours the small two-, three-, four-person company, not the huge company with 100 people losing half a million dollars a month.

Near-death experiences give you balance. You become more worldly. Your ideas become bigger.

I have hundreds if not tens of thousands of fans... The people who have negative things to say are typically loser-type people who are probably in some cases mentally ill.

That's one of the things I love about entrepreneurship is that if you see something that you don't like - and if you think you have a better idea - you can pursue your model.

AOL has a great collection of brands, and the question is, 'Can they innovate and scale their business?' And those are very challenging things to do. But I think they are well positioned to grow.