Podcast appearances and mentions of bill mcglashan

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Best podcasts about bill mcglashan

Latest podcast episodes about bill mcglashan

Prison Professors With Michael Santos
15 Bill McGlashan and Radical Transparency

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 15:33


Lesson 15: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
18 Bill McGlashan and Reading Lists

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 15:09


Lesson 18: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
7 Bill McGlashan Pharmanex Exit

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 16:22


Lesson 7: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
8 Bill McGlashan Critical Path

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 13:21


Lesson 8: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors  

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
9 Bill McGlashan TPG Capital

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 13:24


Lesson 9: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
10 Bill McGlashan Raising Billions

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 13:30


Lesson 10: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
11 Bill McGlashan Operating Companies

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 12:53


Lesson 11: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
12 Bill McGlashan and The Rise Fund

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 15:23


Lesson 12: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
13 Bill McGlashan and Reversals of Fortune

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 13:00


Lesson 13: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
14 Bill McGlashan Getting to Peace

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 16:47


Lesson 14: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors  

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
4 Bill McGlashan's Preparing

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 12:40


Lesson 4: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
16 Bill McGlashan and Being Open to Change

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 14:14


Lesson 16 Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
17 Bill McGlashan Gets Out of Prison

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 17:51


Lesson 17 Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
19 Bill McGlashan and Nonprofit Guidance

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 20:25


Lesson 19: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
5 Bill McGlashan at Stanford and Bain Capital

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 16:02


Lesson 5: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
20 Bill McGlashan and Coping with Setbacks

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 12:38


Lesson 20: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
21 Bill McGlashan and Creating Wealth

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 11:46


Lesson 21: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
22 Bill McGlashan Preparing for Challenges

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 16:34


Lesson 22: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors  

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
23 Bill McGlashan and New Questions

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 15:41


Lesson 23: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
24 Bill McGlashan and Next Steps

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 15:18


Lesson 24: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
25 Bill McGlashan's Advice

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 15:17


Lesson 25: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
26 Bill McGlashan's Conclusion

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 15:05


Lesson 26: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
3 Bill McGlashan's Early Influences

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 14:02


Lesson 3: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
2 Bill McGlashan Enters Prison

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 17:01


Lesson 2: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
1 Introduction to Bill McGlashan

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 19:03


Lesson 1: Introduction to Bill McGlashan

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Prison Professors With Michael Santos
0-Leadership-with-Bill-McGlashan

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 20:40


An Open Letter from Prison Professors to All Course Participants   Hi, My name is Michael Santos. I'm the founder of Earning Freedom and the Prison Professors nonprofit. If you're working through our course, it's likely that you're going through the criminal justice system at some stage—pretrial, in custody, or on some form of community supervision. Both Bill McGlashan and I can empathize with your plight. For 9,500 days, I lived as federal prisoner number 16377-004. I am intimately familiar with challenges of living in confinement. Despite those challenges, I know the opportunities that open when a person chooses deliberate adjustment strategies. A jail or prison may or may not offer rehabilitative courses. When a person develops a self-directed work ethic, a person can work on personal development regardless of where administrators confine him or her. At Prison Professors, we develop courses that help people that want to help themselves. For that reason, it pleases me to offer our course: Lessons on Leadership: With Bill McGlashan Some may wonder why a person like Bill McGlashan would work with a startup like Prison Professors. Bill is known across the globe as one of the foremost impact investors. Why would such a man volunteer so much of his personal time to help people locked in America's jails and prisons?  To respond to that question, it may help if I offer some context. Participants will learn all about Bill and the way he thinks through the course. Before getting to the course, let me offer the backstory.   Backstory: I made bad decisions as a young man, refusing to heed the advice of teachers or mentors. Excitement of a fast crowd lured me away from productive habits. I began making bad decisions during the recklessness of youth. Those decisions turned worse in 1984, when I was 20. I began participating with a group that sold cocaine. In August of 1987, federal agents arrested me. For the next 30 years, I lived inside prisons of every security level or on some form of community confinement, including:  • High-security US penitentiaries, • Medium-security federal correctional institutions, • Low-security federal correctional institutions, • Minimum-security federal prison camps, • A halfway house, • Home confinement, • Supervised Release. • Special Parole, • Parole As I reveal in Earning Freedom: Conquering a 45-Year Prison Term, leaders taught me many lessons during that lengthy odyssey. With hopes of helping as many people as possible, I accept a responsibility to pass along lessons that transformed my life.  Even though a person may serve a lengthy term, any of us can choose to work toward reconciling with society. While in prison, I learned from many leaders. People like Bill McGlashan taught me to follow the principles of leadership: Define success, as the best possible outcome. Create a plan and prepare to overcome the challenges ahead. Put priorities in place, knowing that incremental progress would lead to new opportunities. Create tools, tactics, and resources that would help me grow, and Execute the plan every day. That disciplined adjustment strategy could help any person that wanted to prepare for a life of meaning, relevance, and dignity. It could help a person restore confidence. Regardless of what bad decisions we made in the past, at any time, regardless of where we are, we can work toward making better decisions.  I aspired to reconcile with society and to prepare in ways that would allow me to emerge successfully. A willingness to learn from leaders opened my eyes to a new philosophy. Rather than complaining about the challenges wrought by my bad decisions, I could work to make amends. Any person could do the same. In Earning Freedom: Conquering a 45-Year Prison Term, I share the entire story. On August 11, 1987, authorities arrested me. After a jury convicted me, a judge sentenced me to serve a 45-year sentence. While locked in jail, a correctional officer passed me a copy of Plato's book, The Republic, which introduced me to philosophy. I learned about Socrates and his remarkable way of looking at the world.  Reading The Republic changed my life. It helped me to realize and accept the colossal mistakes I had made as a young man. I'd been living by a bad philosophy. Rather than working to help my community, I broke the law.  Socrates (and other leaders) taught me to stop feeling sorry for myself. Leaders suggested that we change if we don't like our situation, or if we're facing a challenge. To start, we must change the way we think. From leaders like Socrates (and Bill McGlashan), I learned the power that comes when we think about other people and our community instead of only thinking about the challenges we face. We can recalibrate. We can work to earn freedom.  That change in thinking influenced a deliberate adjustment strategy. While incarcerated, I made a 100% commitment to: Pursue self-directed learning, Contribute to society in meaningful, measurable ways, and Work toward building a strong support network that would include positive role models. That three-pronged strategy made all the difference. When defining success at that stage in my life, I simply wanted to emerge with my dignity intact. I wanted to pursue a path that would open opportunities to live as a law-abiding, contributing citizen. By preparing well, no one would know that I had served a quarter century when I got out. I wanted to emerge unscathed. That strategy led to my earning a bachelor's degree from Mercer University, a master's degree from Hofstra University, getting married in prison, and opening many income opportunities that I could expand upon after release. By the time I walked out of prison, I had sufficient savings in the bank to launch my career. None of that would have been possible had I not opened my mind, and my heart, to learn from leaders.   Any person that served time alongside me could have done the same. At any time, we can choose to learn from leaders like Bill McGlashan. Sadly, the prison culture conditions people to learn from so-called “shot callers” instead. The leaders I studied taught me to think differently from the way I thought before I went to prison. I encourage others to do the same. Those who choose to pursue self-directed adjustments will find opportunities rather than challenges awaiting them upon release—as I experienced. While still in the halfway house, San Francisco State University hired me to teach as an adjunct professor. Simultaneously, I began building businesses. Together with my partners, we persuaded prison administrators, federal judges, probation officers, and even U.S. Attorneys to purchase our products and services. A successful adjustment inside eased my reentry, allowing me to begin building a career upon release. I didn't need a job. Preparations allowed me to create my own income streams. I am convinced that any person in jail or prison can use the time inside to recalibrate and open opportunities. To succeed, however, those people must accept the reality. As administrators used to tell me:  “We don't care anything about your life after your release. We only care about the security of the institution.” In such an environment, we should expect obstacles. Despite obstacles that contribute to intergenerational cycles of recidivism, we must focus on what we can do to prepare for the journey ahead. We must reject the dubious advice we receive: From the system: You've got nothin' comin'. Don't do the crime if you can't do the time. From misguided people inside: The best way to serve time is to forget about the world outside, and to focus on your reputation in prison. Mahatma Gandhi taught us that we should strive to live as the change we want to see in the world. I want to live in a world where people can always work to become better and reach their highest potential. I'm grateful to the many leaders who taught me this message. For that reason, I've devoted my professional career to sharing what I've learned from leaders.   It pleases me to share these lessons from Bill McGlashan, a genuine world-class leader. What qualifies Bill as a world-class leader?  A lot! Bill has impeccable academic credentials, with an undergraduate degree from Yale, and a graduate degree in business from Stanford. While I served decades in prison, Bill distinguished himself as a steward of capital for private equity companies, business leader, and impact investor. He launched startups that he later sold to publicly traded corporations. As a CEO, he saved hundreds of jobs by accepting the responsibility of restructuring a publicly traded company that was on the verge of failure. As a director of TPG Capital, he created stellar returns on more than $12 billion worth of funds that investors entrusted to him and his team.  Bill built a reputation as one of the world's most astute impact investors. He brought coalitions of other world-class activists, philanthropists, and leaders together, including: Bono: Singer for U2, but also founder of RED, ONE, and a cultural leader. Jeff Skoll: Founder of eBay, Participant Media, and the Skoll Foundation. Laurene Powell Jobs, philanthropist, and founder of the Emerson Collective. Mo Ibrahim, founder of Celtel and global philanthropist focused on Africa. Richard Branson, founder of Virgin Group. Anand Mahindra, Chairman of Mahindra Group from India. I did not meet Bill until the summer of 2021, eight years after I had finished my obligation to the Bureau of Prisons.  Despite having devoted his professional career to creating solutions in response huge global challenges that included solutions for climate change, extreme poverty, access to healthcare and education, Bill made a catastrophic decision as a parent. He agreed to participate in a ruse. A conman convinced him to pay an unscrupulous testing service to assist prospects for his son's admission to a university. His son didn't need the help, and he didn't know that Bill had participated in the artifice. Bill's decision led to a series of catastrophic event, proving the theorem of Scottish author Sir Walter Scott, who wrote: • Oh what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive. Authorities arrested Bill, a grand jury indicted him, and he pleaded guilty to a federal crime.  Bill and I spoke for the first time a few days before he would surrender to serve a three-month sentence in federal prison. During our lengthy conversation, I listened to Bill express his remorse and admired his eagerness to make amends. When he told me that he wanted to use his time inside to help as many people as possible, I offered some observations on what he could expect from the experience. People in jail or prison could learn from his lessons on leadership.  Bill's story was the type that inspired me to want to learn more while I served my sentence.  Knowing that others could benefit from his wisdom, I invited him to volunteer his time to create a new course with Prison Professors. Through the course, I suggested, we would help people learn the importance of pursuing self-directed learning projects. Since the prison system may not always have resources to offer educational courses, I explained, we could fill the gap. As evidenced by the video files that accompany this course, and the personal nature of the lessons, Bill volunteered to spend hundreds of hours working alongside me. Together, we developed the course.  This course offers opportunities for self-directed participants to work toward developing their vocabulary, their writing skills, and their critical-thinking skills. Those building blocks can help anyone grow. By developing those skills, I opened countless opportunities as the months turned into years, and the years turned into decades.  Bill's teachings would have inspired me while I served my sentence. They inspire me now. They make me want to learn more. We hope that you will learn from the video files, the audio files and the lessons that make up our course. Although I didn't appreciate the importance of education when I started the journey, this course would have opened my eyes to the liberty that comes with self-directed learning plans. On behalf of our entire team at Prison Professors, Bill and I encourage you to work toward reaching your highest potential.    Sincerely, Michael Santos      

Prison Professors With Michael Santos
6 Bill McGlashan Pharmanex Startup

Prison Professors With Michael Santos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 15:33


Lesson 6: Lessons on Leadership with Bill McGlashan and Prison Professors

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Decoder with Nilay Patel
Anand Giridharadas on the phony philanthropy of tech billionaires

Decoder with Nilay Patel

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2019 57:15


Winners Take All author Anand Giridharadas talks with Recode’s Kara Swisher in this live conversation recorded at Made By We in New York City.  In this episode: Why Giridharadas wrote the book; the Sackler family; why “giving back is a wingman of taking ruthlessly”; Mark Zuckerberg’s false image and outsized influence; Andrew Carnegie and the history of billionaire philanthropy; what should the ultra-rich do instead?; what should the government do?; the backlash to Jeff Bezos; Marc Benioff and San Francisco; the 2020 Democrats and "the primary about everything”; Bill McGlashan and the college admissions scandal; the “rise of the rest”; what about Constitutional amendments?; and why Giridharadas is grateful for Donald Trump.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Decoder with Nilay Patel
Why tech is "flunking" the diversity test

Decoder with Nilay Patel

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2019 62:31


Venture capitalist and prominent activist Freada Kapor Klein, the founder of Kapor Capital, talks with Recode's Teddy Schleifer about diversity in tech and impact investing. In this episode: In this episode: Kapor Klein’s background; her first forays into activism; why the term “sexual coercion” is more meaningful in the workplace than “sexual harassment”; holding managers accountable when they don’t live a company’s values; why did Kapor Klein and her husband Mitch Kapor become impact investors?; how to have values as a VC; being an Uber investor during the company’s discrimination scandal; how is Dara Khosrowshahi doing?; why the venture capital industry is “flunking” the diversity test; startups that widen inequality; the problem with how All Raise measures diversity; Kapor Klein’s publicly quiet supporters; what does impact investing really mean?; Bill McGlashan and the college admissions scandal; making college admissions more equitable; why Kapor Klein is optimistic about the world; and the 2020 presidential campaign. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Returns on Investment
The ‘Red Ferrari Syndrome’ and Other Lessons of Impact Investing’s Varsity Blues Scandal

Returns on Investment

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2019 27:17


The dramatic fall from grace of Bill McGlashan, co-founder and former CEO of TPG Growth and The Rise Fund, after being indicted in the Varsity Blues college-admissions scandal, Rose-Smith suggests, may say more about private-equity and alternative-investment asset management in general than about impact investing in particular. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/impact-alpha/message

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NEW TWIST RADIO
Intelligent Ignorance - College Admission Scandal

NEW TWIST RADIO

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2019 60:00


This week the team gets into the college admission scandal that dominated the headlines this week  

Hollywood Breakdown
The perks of power, the limits of power

Hollywood Breakdown

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2019 5:10


Several industry players are swept up in the college admissions scandal, including Bill McGlashan, who just resigned from TPG, an investment company with ties in Hollywood. And in other news of people trying to take advantage of a rigged system, the Charlotte Kirk debacle has now engulfed even more executives.

POLITICO's EU Confidential
Episode 31: Direct from Davos — Dutch PM Mark Rutte — Polish PM Mateusz Morawiecki

POLITICO's EU Confidential

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2018 35:22


We've got the lowdown from Davos in another special edition from the World Economic Forum. The podcast features interviews with two prime ministers — the Netherlands' Mark Rutte and Poland's Mateusz Morawiecki — as well as U.S. investor Bill McGlashan, a champion of social impact investing. Ryan Heath is your host for a show that's both the final edition of our daily Davos Confidential podcasts and the latest weekly episode in our EU Confidential series. Rutte's red lines: The Dutch PM makes clear he's not up for turning the eurozone into a "transfer union." He says he's all for more European integration if it means completing the single market but "we have to be very careful about what we want to achieve. I'm against risk sharing... And if that is what some people mean, I will very much plead against it." Brexit blues: Hear why the Netherlands "hates" the fact Britain is leaving the EU and what Rutte wants from London now. POLITICO’s Matthew Kaminski speaks to new Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki — a 49-year-old, polyglot banker — about his plans to fix Warsaw’s troubled relations with Brussels, the biggest threats to Poland and its economic successes. Firm on justice reform: "We are not weakening institutions," Morawiecki insists. "I'm absolutely convinced that we are strengthening those institutions. The judiciary system in Poland, after our reforms, is going to be more independent, more objective, more transparent, and more effective" Cabinet reshuffle: “The changes were important to actually bring some new thinking to the government. And the most important thing today is that we tried to find common ground with Europe." Russian worries: Hear why Morawiecki regards Moscow as one of the biggest threats to Poland — and why Warsaw is so opposed to the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. U.S. investor Bill McGlashan explains why he started an investment fund with Bono, why he took his family to live in India for a year and why he believes private capital is essential to tackle global social and environmental challenges. And POLITICO's Florian Eder describes the scene as Donald Trump descended on Davos. The show also doubles as the final edition of our daily Davos Confidential podcasts. You can catch up with all of the week's episodes here: https://soundcloud.com/politicoeuconfidential

KindredCast: Insights From Dealmakers & Thought Leaders
Maximizing Global Impact with TPG Growth Founder/Rise Fund CEO Bill McGlashan

KindredCast: Insights From Dealmakers & Thought Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2017 41:11


Bill McGlashan, the Founder and Managing Partner of TPG Growth and a Co-Founder - along with Jeff Skoll and U2’s Bono - of the Rise Fund speaks to his commitment to achieving positive social and environmental outcomes alongside competitive financial returns. The $2.1 billon Rise Fund is considered the largest private impact fund ever raised. His conversation with LionTree CEO Aryeh Bourkoff spans global opportunities, the value of raising up local entrepreneurs and how to harmonize one’s life’s work with one’s life. Find and rate us on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen. For more content, follow KindredCast on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook. Please read before listening: www.liontree.com/podcast-notices.html