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Emergency preparedness shouldn't be viewed as an expense. It's an investment in your ability to provide your customers with goods and services no matter what happens—and ultimately, that ability will lead to the growth of your business. Al Berman, President of DRI Foundation, explains how organizations can experience the ROI of emergency preparedness through real money and hard savings. We discuss: Tips for talking to executives about the business impacts of preparedness The importance of reviewing your insurance coverage to make sure it benefits your organization Moving past a fear-based approach to business continuity to focus on competitive advantages How to measure the effectiveness of your preparedness program Email Al Berman at aberman@drii.org. The Employee Safety Podcast is hosted by Peter Steinfeld , SVP of Safety Solutions at AlertMedia.You can find this interview and many more by subscribing to The Employee Safety Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or here. Listening on a desktop and can't see the links? Just search for The Employee Safety Podcast in your favorite podcast player.
I talk with the Disaster Recovery Institute Foundation President and Chairman of the Board for the Disaster Recovery Institute International, Al Berman. Al shares his thoughts on: a) Cyber Security. b) Compliance and Regulatory issues, c) Supply Chain issues and causes, and d) the changing face of working from home...post-COVID. Al shares his many years of experience and you don't want to miss his insights.
I talk with the Disaster Recovery Institute Foundation President and Chairman of the Board for the Disaster Recovery Institute International, Al Berman. Al shares his thoughts on: a) Cyber Security. b) Compliance and Regulatory issues, c) Supply Chain issues and causes, and d) the changing face of working from home...post-COVID. Al shares his many years of experience and you don't want to miss his insights.
Sheltering in place during the COVID -19 pandemic of 2020 made it necessary to utilize other resources to bring you content for this podcast. The following is the audio from a magical night in the studios of 90.1 FM KKFI when I brought together two completely different artists who just happen to share the name Kelley/Kelly Hunt. Before this evening on March 1, 2018, these women had never meant. I've known "Piano" Kelley Hunt for over 20 years. When I first met "Banjo" Kelly Hunt a few years ago, I just KNEW I had to get them together...whether they performed at the same time or not. After this radio appearance, they have in fact become friends in music and in life…another unexpected by-product of that evening… Al Berman, "Piano" Kelly’s husband and manager, is currently acting as "Banjo"Kelly’s manager as well. And that recording project "Banjo" Kelly was talking about....it became "Even the Sparrow" nominated for Folk Alliance International's 2019 Album of the Year! I thought it could be a special evening of music and conversation. I was right. Please enjoy this special edition of the Tasty Brew Music Podcast.
First of three consecutive episodes of the program all about TV this week. Our guests: Al Berman and Ann Johnson Prum, executive producer and senior producer respectively of American Spring Live, the Nature miniseries happening next week on PBS.
Who is Al Berman: Al is a Capricorn Comedian with a Gemini rising Facebook Favorite Career Highlight: I was opening for a famous comedian. We were at a college. I was up there in the afternoon and we were filming a documentary. The filming guy got stuck in Burbank so I had to stretch my time for an extra 30 minutes. I don’t think I did any new material I just riffed for 20 minutes and there was an applause break every few minutes. Finally, the famous comedian showed up and he said, “How the hell am I supposed to follow that?” I would say that was one of my better shows. What Al learned about Wayne: How human he really was. Who is Dr. Wayne Dyer: WAYNE W. DYER was an internationally renowned author and speaker in the fields of self-development and spiritual growth. Over the four decades of his career, he wrote more than 40 books, including 21 New York Times bestsellers. He created many audio and video programs and appeared on thousands of television and radio shows Books: Click here Website: Click here. Link to get your very own Polar Jade Nephrite Jade Egg Go get your free be happier than all your friends morning routine over here --> Project Woo Woo Listen to Lisa's other podcasts at Love Bites & Honestly Lisa
First episode of the program all about TV's 12th year. Our guest: Al Berman, executive producer of Yellowstone Live, the four-part live miniseries on Yellowstone National Park happening tonight on National Geographic.
I've known comedian Al Berman since I started comedy. He had come from an east coast upbringing, a NY punk scene and a background of addiction. Came to L.A., got clean, joined the comedy scene. He now still dabbles in comedy and has just started a podcast, his "Sober Man Podcast" which you can find on iTunes or Google Music. Listen, enjoy, subscribe, rate us on iTunes! LINKS Al Berman: TWITTER: @AlBermanComic Felipe Esparza: FACEBOOK: www.Facebook.com/FelipeEsparzaFanPage TWITTER: @FunnyFelipe INSTAGRAM: @FelipeEsparzaComedian www.felipesworld.com Rodrigo Torres: TWITTER: @RodrigoTorresJr INSTAGRAM: @RodrigoTorresJr TUMBLR: RodrigoTorresJr.Tumblr.com Lesa Esparza (Producer, editor, "What's Up Fool?" podcast) TWITTER: @WhatsUpFoolPod Voodoo Glowskulls (they do our theme song) www.VoodooGlowskulls.com Ernesto Yerena (he designed our podcast logo) INSTAGRAM: @ernestoyerena #Comedy #StandUpComedy #LatinoComedian #Chicano #PunkMusic #GeorgeLopez #GabrielIglesias
MediaVillage's Insider InSites podcast on Media, Marketing and Advertising
EB Moss: This is E.B. Moss and I’m here with Al Berman for some Insider InSites, spontaneously ON site at the Nat Geo kickoff party for Earth Live. Al is the Executive Producer for this and is the mastermind behind setting up 50 cameras all around the world in [12] countries. Tell us about this! Al Berman: Yes, we have at least 50, and by the time we go on air will probably have more. We’re at 14 manned locations, over 50 locations total, and we’re doing something that’s never been tried before. We’re around the world, not in cities where you have technical infrastructure, where you have internet, no. We’re in the nether lands of the world where the wildlife is. So we went after the wildlife and then figured out how to get the signal from wherever we are back to New York, where we have our studios and our hosts – Jane Lynch and Phil Keoghan – and Chris Packham, our animal expert. So it’s been a technical challenge, a creative challenge, and just lining up the very best photographers in the world that’s been a challenge too. EB: What were the origins? How did it come about? Al: I originally approached Nat Geo and suggested we do two or three places live – safari, under the water with sharks, and Tim [Pastore, head of original programming for National Geographic Channel] had the vision. He basically said, “How about we do the whole world?!” So, I looked at him and I said, “Okay. How long do you want it? How much money do you want to spend?, bah bah bah”, and we pounded fists and that was it and the deal was born that day, almost two years ago. EB: Amazing. So this is live...on...? Al: All live July 9th here, July 10th in Europe and Africa and the other 172 countries where it will be broadcast. EB: That is a feat of coordination – thanks to technical know-how and great people?! Al: What we said is, “We don’t know how to put this together,” but we do know how to hire the best people to figure this out so we hired the best live director, Glenn Weiss, who’s won 13 Emmy Awards. We hired the best technical manager, Gail DePoli, who won probably more than that, the best line producers, and we said, “Okay, here’s a challenge and let’s figure it out.” And so even now, a couple of weeks out from the broadcast we’re still trying to figure stuff out! But by the time July 9th rolls around we’re going to have a kick-ass show. EB: So, do you have a sense of what you’re going to capture live from the Earth? Al: We know some of the things we’ll find. For example, we’ll have a scout plane with a receive dish over Fredericks, Alaska looking for humpback whales which are always there this time of year. A boat containing scientists with a drone will approach them and fly the drone right over the humpback’s blowhole. When the humpback exhales, the snot will fall on the lens, the drone will come back to the boat and its DNA will be analyzed. EB: Amazing. Al: We know we have a Golden Eagle in Oregon that will have a tiny little camera and transmitter on its head. We will watch it as its soaring and measure its speed as it plunges at almost 200 MPH, and we’ll see the bird’s eye view. That we know we have. Now, if a storm comes in that could mess things up. There are certain things we expect to find others we don’t know. EB: Animal sex? Al: Animal sex -- we’re hoping for that once each half hour over the course of the two hour broadcast. Other things we just don’t know. In Maasai Mara, we will have tracked every pride in the Maasai Mara in Kenya. We’ll be out there with three vehicles with cameras that can shoot at night so it looks like daylight. We’ll have the very best camerawoman in the world – Sophie Darlington who knows all these lions by name and we hope, and expect, to get them on the hunt and maybe get a kill but we just don’t know. EB: I understand this will take place in all the time zones around the world and so animals will be doing different things at different times as well… Al: Exactly, so It’s the middle of the night in Kenya; it’s dawn at the coast of Thailand, and it’s low tide, because of the full moon. It’s the lowest tide of the month and these Macaque monkeys are on the rocks at the edge of the shore and start smashing clams on the rocks and start eating the clams. They don’t know people so they’re not afraid and people can walk right up and watch this behavior. One of the reasons we’re doing this broadcast July 9th is because it’s the full moon closest to the summer equinox, so it’s the longest day with a full moon. EB So Phil Keoghan just walked by, we're at the kick-off event for this on Nat Geo, and Jane Lynch is another US based host. Phil obviously is used to traveling all over the world, what are your expectations for the host? What will Jane and Phil be doing? Al: Phil keeps saying "give me more, give me more, I want to get up to speed on everything." Phil has been everywhere and so he's going to take us everywhere. EB: Excellent. Al: Jane is fascinated by just about everything, so that fascination and that sense of humor will be an important part of the broadcast. Then we have another pure animal expert who has a tremendous amount of television experience. He's been on Jimmy Fallon and others; his name is Chris Packham, he will know the number of vertebrae in every mammal that we're seeing. EB: Well everybody knows that. Al: They certainly will after this airing. EB: Al, is there an environmental angle to this? Is there a cause overlay to the show? Al: Good question, we discussed this very early on and we decided no. This is to simply show everybody the wonder of wildlife around the globe. Whatever conservation message they may want to take from that, that's up to them, but we are not pushing any environmental cause. EB: Okay well hopefully it will inspire people either way. Thank you so much Al Berman, we're really looking forward to Earth Live, live, and a brand new kind of reality show. Al: A brand new kind of animal documentary. So it's much more than a reality show, it’s capturing the world live, and the fact that technology has evolved to allow us to do that is remarkable. EB: Thank you so much Al Berman, Executive Producer of Earth Live, coming up on Nat Geo July 9th, in real time! Al: Thank You.