Podcasts about caplin

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Best podcasts about caplin

Latest podcast episodes about caplin

Connecting the Dots
Driving Improvement in Rehab with Stephen Hunter

Connecting the Dots

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2025 29:06


Stephen Hunter PT, DPT, OCS, FAPTA received his Bachelor of Arts in physical therapy from University of Utah in 1984, and his clinical doctorate in 2008. He is board certified in orthopedic physical therapy. Currently, Stephen continues to treat patients and is the director of Internal Process Control for Intermountain Health's rehabilitation services. He leads a team of 4 internal process control coordinators who work to establish a culture of quality and standardize evidence-based care across all rehabilitation disciplines and services. He is the past president of NARA (National Association of Rehabilitation Providers and Agencies). He supports research efforts including data collection and clinical implementation. Examples include investigations on Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) and low back pain (LBP) resulting in recent publications (Minick 2022, Caplin 2022) and three randomized LBP trials (Brennan 2006, Fritz 2014, Delitto 2020). He was the lead clinical author for a review publication developing a care guideline for TKA for physical therapists (Jette 2020). Link to claim CME credit: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/3DXCFW3CME credit is available for up to 3 years after the stated release dateContact CEOD@bmhcc.org if you have any questions about claiming credit.

The Truth that Heals
Ep. 92- Take Back Your Power: Reclaiming Wholeness & Overcoming Negative Mindsets w/Elizabeth Caplin

The Truth that Heals

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2025 44:00


Episode Guest: Elizabeth CaplinElizabeth Caplin is a hypniotherapist and Mindset Coach for the overwhelmes.In this episode Elizabeth shares about her struggles with leaving a toxic relationship and her path to healing, and ultimately, taking back her power.Guest Links: ElizabethCaplin.ieelizabethcaplin.ie/audio-giftIf you would like to support my channel please consider:http://buymeacoffee.com/truththath7Linktree: https://linktr.ee/truththathealspodThank you for all of your support and for helping to make this channel a reality

The Jake Dunlap Show
Moving Upmarket: Building the Process to Closing the First Deal with Bryan Caplin

The Jake Dunlap Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2024 27:54


Jake is joined by Bryan Caplin, CRO of Thoropass and a founding member of Pavilion, to discuss the intricacies of moving upmarket. With over 20 years of experience in leading and scaling high-performing revenue organizations, Bryan shares his insights on the common mistakes companies make when targeting mid-market and enterprise clients. They delve into the evolution of go-to-market strategies, the importance of cross-functional alignment, and the need for a dedicated approach to successfully transition from SMBs to larger markets. Bryan emphasizes the significance of planning, proper talent management, and the value of iterative learning in this complex but rewarding journey.______________________________________________Follow Bryan:Connect with Bryan on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bcaplin/Check out Thoropass: https://thoropass.com/______________________________________________The Innovative Seller: https://www.jakedunlap.com/the-innovative-sellerThe Innovative Seller answers the question: what will it take to innovate your sales organization for the modern buyer and consistently stay at the forefront with technology and AI?Community: https://www.jakedunlap.com/the-innovative-seller-community______________________________________________AI Unleashed: https://bit.ly/ai-unleashed-seriesAI Sales Prompt Pro: https://skaled.com/insights/ai-sales-prompt-pro/Custom GPTs for Sales: https://skaled.com/insights/custom-gpts-for-sales/______________________________________________Book Time: https://savvycal.com/Jake-Dunlap/modern-leader______________________________________________Sign up for the Modern Leader newsletter for more tips and talks from Jake:Email: https://skaled.com/modern-leader-sign-upLinkedIn: https://bit.ly/modern-leader-newsletter______________________________________________Follow Jake:LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/jakedunlapInstagram: https://instagram.com/jake_dunlap_Twitter: https://twitter.com/jaketdunlapWebsite: https://jakedunlap.com

Frau Goethe
Sprechen wir über romantische Escapes, Julie Caplin!

Frau Goethe

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2024 12:34


Das kleine Weingut in Frankreich von Julie Caplin ist der zehnte Band in der Romantic-Escape-Serie. Hattie steht mit ihrer Aufgabe, eine Hochzeit auf einem Weingut zu organisieren, vor unvorhergesehenen Herausforderungen. Die pittoreske Umgebung der Champagne, die Beschreibungen der lokalen Gerichte und eine Portion Romantik machen den Roman zu einem Lesetipp. Logisch, dass ich jetzt mal mit der Autorin über die Serie sprechen muss, oder? Die vollständige Rezension lest ihr auf meinem Blog: https://fraugoetheliest.wordpress.com/2024/05/11/hochzeitsglocken-und-ein-dunkler-weinkeller-das-kleine-weingut-in-frankreich/

GILTI Conscience
Dissecting Cross-Border Transfer Pricing Resolutions with Clark Armitage

GILTI Conscience

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2024 36:36 Transcription Available


The “GILTI Conscience” podcast team, led by partners David Farhat and Nate Carden, hosted Clark Armitage of Caplin & Drysdale for an in-depth conversation on the various methods for resolving cross-border transfer pricing disputes. Associates Eman Cuyler and Stefane Victor joined the discussion as well.

Horizon Scanning
Tax Dispute Series - USA

Horizon Scanning

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2024 31:03


What are current trends in US tax disputes? How can you reduce litigation risk? What is the Supreme Court likely to make of Moore, a case that could call into question large swathes of the US tax system?  Clark Armitage, Transfer Pricing Advisor and Member at Caplin & Drysdale, joins Dominic Robertson, Co-Head of Slaughter and May's Tax Disputes Practice, and Tanja Velling, Tax PSL Counsel at Slaughter and May, to delve into these questions and more. This is the second of six episodes in a series on tax disputes risks, their prevention and resolution. In addition to the USA, the series covers Brazil, Australia, India, Nigeria and France. Episodes are released weekly. Subscribe to the Tax News show to be notified of new episodes.

The Twinky Chronicles Podcast
S.3 E.18 Ruth Caplin: Pregnancy Loss Survivor

The Twinky Chronicles Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2024 36:03


We are joined today by Ruth Caplin; a mom, a wife, and Jesus lover! You wouldn't know it by the upbeat tone of her voice or her steadfast faith, but Ruth is a pregnancy loss survivor. In the episode, she describes the joy of having a viable healthy heartbeat at 8 weeks, but then she would lose the baby at just 13 weeks. Tune in to hear what these moments were like for her and her family! Follow Ruth on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ruthsprints/ Follow Birth Trauma Stories on Instagram:  ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/birthtraumastoriespodcast/⁠⁠⁠⁠ Follow Birth Trauma Stories on Facebook:  ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.facebook.com/BirthTraumaStoriesPodcast⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Follow Birth Trauma Stories on YouTube: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1OxPaMiWax8148LgqW_xGQ⁠⁠⁠ Follow Birth Trauma Stories on Threads: ⁠⁠https://www.threads.net/@birthtraumastoriespodcast --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cathy-garrett/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cathy-garrett/support

Lasting Impact
#6 | The Sanergy Collaborative: Ryan Caplin

Lasting Impact

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2024 30:21


Happy new year everyone! Enjoy this insightful conversation with Ryan where we talk about some of his experiences in Ghana and Kenya: the importance of education, sustainable waste management and removal, and (my personal favorite) some little-known facts about black soldier fly larvae. I learned a lot from him and I'm sure you will too.

Early Edition with Kate Hawkesby
Ian Caplin: Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment spokesperson says they want to make people more aware of authorised scams

Early Edition with Kate Hawkesby

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2023 4:34


New Zealanders lost just under $200 million to scams over the past year.   That's according to 11 of the country's largest financial institutions.   The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment has released the figure for Fraud Awareness Week.   Spokesperson Ian Caplin told Kate Hawkesby they want to make people more aware of authorised scams – where people agree to a payment.  “The scammers are getting very sophisticated and they are making things like sort of hoax sites.”  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Bloomberg Surveillance
Surveillance: BOJ Kicks Off Central Bank Decisions

Bloomberg Surveillance

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2023 35:00 Transcription Available


Mark McCormick, TD Bank Global Head of FX & EM Strategy, analyzes the Bank of Japan's decision to loosen its grip on government bond yields. John Stoltzfus, Oppenheimer Asset Management Chief Investment Strategist, says the Fed's sensitivity has enabled the resilience of the US consumer. Aaron David Miller, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Senior Fellow, discusses the latest in the Israel-Hamas war. Stephen Stanley, Santander Chief US Economist, says the Fed has overstated the importance of the recent surge in US treasury yields. Emily Roland, John Hancock Investment Management Co-Chief Investment Strategist, says the US economy hasn't yet felt the sting of the Fed's recent rate hikes.Get the Bloomberg Surveillance newsletter, delivered every weekday. Sign up now: https://www.bloomberg.com/account/newsletters/surveillance      FULL TRANSCRIPT:     This is the Bloomberg Surveillance Podcast. I'm Tom Keane, along with Jonathan Farrow and Lisa Abramowitz. Join us each day for insight from the best and economics, geopolitics, finance and investment. Subscribe to Bloomberg Surveillance on demand on Apple, Spotify and anywhere you get your podcasts, and always on Bloomberg dot Com, the Bloomberg Terminal and the Bloomberg Business App. We are living it right now. A brief from Mark McCormick, Global Head of Foreign Exchange in EM Strategy TD Securities. Mark, and why don't you to explain to our audience why a super strong dollars from twenty twelve and a super week yen is disturbing? Well, I think of what it does is it just shows the massive divergence you have between central banks. I think one of the things that you can unpack is there are certain currencies that care about growth, there's certain currencies that care about commodities, there's certain currencies that care about different relative central bank functions. The thing that the end cares a lot about is the ten year point to look at euro. Euro cares about the two year point of the curve. More than say the ten year and if you take the combination of what we had, and this is one of the most important things going on effects is the relative terms of trade shift. Japan is also a massive importer of energy and other commodities. So you take the commodity story, you take the great differential story, and now you take the aggressive bear steepening of the US curves this summer, and you've got basically a trifective things that will weaken the end quite considerably unless the BOJ does something well to the trifecta. Let's go to Mondel of Columbia. I mentioned this with Vice Chairman Clara to the other day. He will join US folks for our special FED coverage. Look for that? Is that tomorrow? Yes, it's tomorrow. The FED meeting is too more might people have just briefed me and Mark I'm looking at that. I want to echo what I talked to Professor Clara about, which is something has to give here. When something gives, what is the instability our audiences should be worried about? Well, I think of the context of the end, what needs to give is the actual the currency itself. As you mentioned, there is a very interesting policy mix where fiscal policy is actually quite favorable in forms of in terms of growth, also inflation. You see the BOJ is expecting higher inflation to kind of be a bit more sticky, I think, than markets are looking for. And they've also basically said we don't have a cap anymore. It can go above one percent. So I think what they're trying to do is synchronize themselves a little bit, which which has been US yield rising, which would contain the weakness in the end, But this is not a policy mix that is coherent and it is no longer sustainable. So I think a big thing is what we're going to see is things are going to change. It will change abruptly, but I think the movement that we had overnight where they said there's no longer a one percent cap, is actually quite a significant change. But it will take time for this to work through the market. So again i'd say that the thing that needs to break is yields needs to be higher, yet needs to be stronger. It's just going to take more time because we also need to see a peak in the US yield story, which again is not even about the FED anymore. When we talk about the ten year yield. It's more about supply and demand for ten year bonds. This is a big mishmash. Do you have a sense of what the response mechanism from the Bank of Japan is, what the lines in the sand are, what they're sort of looking at. I mean, we were talking about some of the opacity that they put forward overnight. It's very tricky because I think obviously most central banks it's very common language. At this point, they care more about the currency movements. So the end has not been as volatile. So as you can see, we have not the report came out this morning like they did not intervene last month. So I think I don't think there's a red line per se. I think they're all kind of doing what everyone in the market's doing. They're very confused about the drivers, They're very confused about the actual themes in the market. FX has become very challenged, I think for many people. So I think the line in the sand is you're kind of thinking it's loose fiscal policy, loose monetary policy, weakest currency on record. It deviated from our longer term models by you know, magnitudes, you know, our longer term fair value model and dollar again is in one twenties. So what you're kind of looking for is like the pressure points that will cause these things to break. And again, I think a big part of it is US data needs to roll over, US yields need to come down a little bit, and the BOJ I think the one thing that we're very out of consensus on is we are looking for them to move out of NERP next year because of the wage pressure we're seeing in Japan right around the Shuto wage negoiation negotiations, we should see higher wages and as a result of you know, essentially higher wages and higher nominal rates coming up, we should see real rates in Japan move substantially in their favor versus the US next year. When you take a step back, there's a question of slowly or all at once, And you were saying it will be all at once at some point. How disruptive is this going to be at a time when so many people were talking about Japanese flows underpinning are basically suppressing yields globally and really keeping things a little bit more in sync. Yeah, I think that's a that's a big component because I think since the summer, since the BOJ let the the you know, kind of opened up the yield curve control the suppression they had on it. We have seen term premium rise across the world. We have seen the US ten year rise. So I do think that there is a blowback here that's happening slowly behind the scenes. And again, I think a lot of people will make the point that the ten year yield is now advanced above FED expectations for twenty twenty four. It's above data surprises, it's above US data trends. It's no longer reflecting the correlations we saw in July. So I do think that the BOJ and the fact that they're kind of moving out of it. Obviously quantitative tightening has a component of this as well, but the BOJ does have the ability to kick start, you know, rises in the US ten years. Well, bring up this board again on television and radio. I have to review you this. I didn't do this. Simon did this in the control and he's been reading. Michael Rosenbergen for inn Exchange. Bring up that board again here. Yeah, one fifty one week week week end two year yield finally above zero ten year yield almost one percent. Those are unimaginable numbers to pros mark. Is this going to end stochastically? I talked to Martin Feldstein about this years ago, Like Looney, let's go to Toronto Dominion Bank. Looney goes up one thirty eight, you get up to one forty two and it gets fixed. Is that where we're heading, where the system just fixes itself. No. I think the system's quite dynamic. I think that that's the interesting point. Like we brun out variations of lots of different types of tools and models and different things. We're trying to understand what's going on in the market. As I mentioned, the things that are driving a weaker yen are fundamentally based. They make they make a lot of sense. And again the commodity story behind the scene is quite quite important, especially from the handover to last year, because what it does is it eliminates the trade surplus and the trade surplus plus the current account plus the balance of payments that is FX. You know, essentially everything we talk about every day is trying to think about how do we predict the balance of payments? So for the end, I don't think any of this is stable. I think is very unstable. Equilibrium even the shorter term models that we look at that we use for trading ideas Dollar Interview one five based on redifferentials and equities and risk and these kind of things. So it's even deviated now because you know markets are looking for a trend to trade in dollar again, is the only one that makes any sense right now? Three people just drove off the Garden State Parkway. There's your Global Wall Street Brief and foreign exchange. If you only understood half of that like I did. He's Mark McCormick of TD Securities. John Solstice has been listening to this and wants to weigh out on the Bunker Remo and beyond. And I'll let you get to that, but first I want to start to say how much are you basically saying we've just a run out of time to get to that forty nine hundred mark? Yeah? Really, really is? We We had to right size our expectations. We always suggest that to do investors as they as they consider what happens when markets are are in royal and so to speak. And what we've got to consider here is the calendar is telling us that we're getting close to a year end. The average rallies are positive. You know, we get positive rallies after a dip like we've seen traditionally or historically, but it's smaller amounts and there are still lots of uncertainty that bears and nervous investors and those who are skeptics can use to take more profits out of the fabulous rally that we're still living off from the lows of October twelfth of last year. I feel like one just after another is basically coming on and saying give investors a prozac, because frankly, there is a lot of optimism. They're just not seeing it. How much can you really hinge unfundamentals if the sentiment is just so gloomy and prepared for the worst. The problem is, I think that when you're in a FED funds high cycle, it takes a while before the marketplace gets a sense that the FED is indeed not trying to destroy things, and that the FED might actually succeed at its goals. The Fed isn't it isn't infallible, but the FED has a remarkably simple a mandate essentially, you know, stable economic growth with maximum employment. Of course, what is it. A few weeks ago, I think was the daily quote on the Bloomberg was Martin Scorsese, and it was something that like simple is the best, but it's the hardest to achieve. Well, that's what happens in a FED funds hike cycle. But what happens is eventually the marketplace. And you can see it related to higher prices being accepted by consumers and business in that you were just mentioning before there's a sense, Okay, we can deal with this now and we keep moving forward. The FED has been so set in applying it's mandate that it hasn't knocked a part the resilience in the consumer, in business and the overall economy. That's just an extraordinary John Michael McKee with a brilliant idea on the Magnificent Seven. He's going back to the movie. He's looking at YOU'L. Brenner, Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson, Robert Vaughan, James Coburn, Horse Bucklets and Brad Dexter. I mean they were the Magnificent seven. What do you do with the modern Magnificent seven? Is Apple going to deliver here? And if you're going gloomy forty four hundred, do you sell your big tech Well, I'm not gloomy of four hundred at all. I'm just saying it's more realistic from here to the end of the year. Just wait until we put in our Brice target for next year. That'll be later on. Oh good, and no one's watching here, Come on compliance at opcos not watching. Give me a number. Can you pop a five thousand for next year? To do it? I got, I got compliance breeding down my back. But when we look at things are getting better and we think we're going to see competition return in a lot of spaces, and competition is when all of a sudden you've got everybody is passing on the old higher prices getting away with it. And then some guy in business or gal discovers the idea of well maybe if I give up a little bit what I get in per unit costs, maybe I can make it up big time and volume. And that'll happen across the sectors. But in the meantime, tech is empowering everything, and we don't mean it like in some kind of a moonshot, but it exists. Today. Corporations are doing better navigating very tough environments. Well, it's the financial advices. Whether it was the pandemic, post pandemic, the supply chain stabilization, the getting away from one country centricity in terms of the global supply chain. All of this technology is enabling a lot of things both for the can consumer as well as for business. And it's it's a dramatic change that combined with sensitivity by the FED communication transparency that we think is you know, the branking legacy that is still being practiced by Jerome Howell in his own way. Yeah, you know, positive effect. I keep thinking the economy is not the stock market, and this is not necessarily a stock market that's representative of the broader economy that really is maybe the Russell two thousand or the banking index, the regional Banking Index. Does your optimism bleed over to small caps, to the KBW index? Well, I'd say not necessarily to the k b W. Yet we've got to wait for the economy to show a greater sustainability going forward and not as many concerns in terms of commercial real estate and subbrime auto loans and things like that. But what we would say is when we when we look at this picture where all things are getting better, it's been led by the large caps but if we get to that point where we get to see the sustainability of the economic expansion, of becoming predominant in the picture, you're going to want to own smalls and mid caps, and you probably want to consider, for instance, we're near market cap agnostic in some ways because our goal is beyond we're intermediate to longer term investors, and the valuations are ridiculously low in many quality indices of the small caps and mid caps. Joss Dolphis thank you so much, greatly appreciating this should be a two hour conversation. I can't say enough about the work of doctor Miller. He is Aaron David Miller. He's a senior fellow the Carnegie Endowment for in an national piece. The signal is from the University of Michigan Definitive and International Relations. And he wrote a book in two thousand and eight. It was shockingly, shockingly prescient fifteen years on about the mess we're in in the Eastern Mediterranean. Aaron David Miller, thank you so much for joining us this morning. When you wrote your masterpiece in two thousand and eight, did you expect the tragedy we're living now? I expected John at an unresolved Israeli Palestinian conflict driven by a proximity problem. Israelis and Palestinians are living on top of one another, and frankly, I think it was Mark Twitter said that proximity breachs contempt and children. I figured that this conflict would endure, It would go through periods of accommodation, perhaps as it did, but also periods of conflict that we've seen. But I think I, for one, I'll put myself at the top of the list, never anticipate paid the kind of trigger to this particular phase of the Israeli Palestinian conflict. That is to say, what happened on October seven, with Hamasa's brutal and savage attack and it's wilful and intentional, indiscriminate murder of men, women and children. I did not anticipate that, and clearly, in what probably one of the two greatest intelligence failures in the history of the State of Israel, neither did the Israelis. Aaron David Miller. Robert Gates writes a piercing essay and the New Foreign Affairs magazine. I read every word of it. The former Defense Secretary and head of CIA on a dysfunctional America, a dysfunctional superpower. You are someone that straddled the line. I would say, within the politics of Washington, what's Aaron David Miller's best practice? Now for the Biden administration come to this particular crisis. Remember, we now have an archa crisis. We have a major crisis in the Middle East with the potential of escalade. Even further, if you end up with in Israeli his bull of war, You're going to see, not to mention the prospects of Iranian involvement and direct conversation between Israel and I Ran, which would lead to spiking oil prices and plunging financial markets, and even more uncertainty with respect to the global economy. You've got Russia's invasion of Ukraine, You've got tensions in the Indo Pacific. Look, I long believe you know. I'm a follower reinhold Nebe approximate solutions to insoluble problems. This is a world that cannot be resolved. That is to say, I'm not sure there is one conflict factor you could identify that had a definitive, a comprehensive solution. This is all about smart, smart management and a judicious and very balanced view of the projection of American power in air is that in fact we can, we can and effect. But no, this is not a world to be redeemed or resolved. It's want to be managed if we're lucky and smart. Aaron David Miller Robert Kaplan's new book, The Loom of Time is my book of the year. It's just a sprawling treatise from Morocco all the way over to Persia, indeed on to Afghanistan as well. And what permeates Caplin's real politic is the basic idea that we have a human rights led foreign policy. Is our human rights led foreign policy at risk given what we see in the Eastern Mediterranean region. You know, Caplin's you a really smart guy. Based on my experience John working for Republicans and Democrats over a thirty year period from Jimmy Carter to Bush forty three, I don't think we have a human rights based policy. In fact, human rights democracy promotion, responsibility to protect, the intervention, to to prevent or even respond to mass killings, from the Holocaust at Cambodia to Rwanda to Dartford to Sauth, Sudan to Syria. Where has the United States been with respect to the protection of human rights. I'm not saying that that is a role we need to play and can't play all the time, but I think human rights is a factor. But based on my experience from Carter to Bush forty three, it's rarely at the top of our agenda. There's been shades of isolationism there, even off of the shock of Jimmy Carter and the Iranian hostage crisis. And I believe seventy nine, what does our new isolationism look like. I'm not sure. Well, clearly we're not there now. I mean, I think the America first notion, although I think that largely would translate into putting America last. We've got to find the right balance, John, between doing too much in the world and not doing enough. One of my former VOUSE bosses, medal In Albert, referred to the United States as the indispensable power. You know, and I remember what de gaul said about the cemeteries of France. They're filled with indispensable people. We can't be the indispensable power if indispensability means that we need to be everywhere, to everyone all the time. We have a dysfunctional political system. That's the strength, by the way repairing that is critically important for our capacity to lead, not by the what it was, Joe Biden says, not by the example of our power, but by the power of our example. There is something to that. From where you sit in international relations. Is our pentagon properly funded? And specifically does the Navy have enough ships and submarines? Probably know, and no, I suspect, even though there some will argue that our defense budget is way out of whack, It'll be fascinating to try to see how we're going to resource going forward because each of these problems I referred to what you're seeing in the Middle East right now, Russia's warview against Ukraine which seems to be forever, and the prospects of arising China in the Indo Pacific. All of these things have to be properly resourced. And that's a concern that I have, given the nature of our domestic politics. One final questionnaireon to circle back to your two thousand and eight treaties, there is a much too promised land. What should we advocate to Israel and the Palestinians in this November You know, a lot of people I respect John believe that the so called two state solution has gone the way of the Dodo. I understand the argument, but frankly, it's the least bad solution to this conflict. Israelis and Palestinians need to separate from one another through negotiations. There's no precedent that I can think of of two two national movements, one of state, a nonstate actor seeking to become a movement living happily ever after under one roof. It's Cyprus, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq. I mean, the beat goes on, so it's not it's just a hop, skip and a jump to understanding that if in fact you're going to have anything resembling a conflict ending solution, I'm choosing my words very carefully here. You really do need to have separation through negotiation, maybe into a confederation at some point, but you need to satisfy the political, territorial, emotional, psychological, and religious underpinnings of this conflict. The only thing that does that, in my judgment, is to separate through negotiation state of Israel living peacefully next door to a Palestinian polity. That to me is the only way to even begin to think about fixation. Aaron David Miller, thank you so much for the brief. Hugely valuable with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Stephen Stanley joins us at right now with Santander or US Capital Markets. You are acclaimed for analysis and GDP. How does the bond market affect your analysis? You know, I think the Fed is overstating the importance of this little backup in bonnials that we've seen over the last month. As we talked about the last time I was here, I see it maybe as a little bit more of an excuse than a reason. I think they wanted to hold off, and that provided them with a convenient reason. Financial conditions have tightened a little bit. But look, you know, as you all discuss, the economy is still rolling at this point. So I think it's wishful thinking that the last twenty or thirty basis points on the on the bonyold is going to roll the economy. But the I'll go with this easy, easy question here. It's a cliche, but unfortunately it's apped right now. Are they fighting in the last war? I think it's too soon to say that, because you know, the idea I assume what you're suggesting is well, inflation has already licked well. Dominicq constum in MISSOUI is calling it super restrictive. I got people say in the five percent reality lay on the bond market is a seven percent reality in the economy as well? Are they? Are they working now? They go to the meeting tomorrow in a restrictive milieu. I think policy is restrictive, but is it restrictive enough? I mean, until the economy actually slows down, until inflation really comes off. It's it's hard to say that, and so I think that's why that at a minimum, they're certainly going to want to keep their options open. You know, they they've signaled another pause, but Pallas certainly kept the door open to further hikes. So I'm not throw this question at you what I was asking before, which is how long can the US continue surprising to the upside with economic data and showing momentum at the same time that you see Europe running into recession coming out recession around the world a lot of pain, maybe not to be overly glib, but basically forever. Because the US is a domestically driven economy, and I think economists and particularly the FED, have systematically over the years overestimated the importance of the global economy for the US economy. We're, you know what, between ten and fifteen percent of our economy is trade, whereas for most of the other major economies it's thirty forty percent. Okay, I'll challenge that in one way, And this is something that a lot of people have been talking about, and I would love for you to push back if this is the case, people say that the international transmission transmission mechanism is the US yield is how many international buyers are going to be coming in and picking up treasuries at a time where the Bank of Japan's not going to be buying, where you're going to have or not going to be really pushing investors out of that nation's asset market. Where you have certainly around the world yields going higher and China not buying how much does apply change that narrative and create more of an international transmission mechanism than ever before. Yeah, that's an interesting angle. Actually. I think the root of the problem there, of course, is the fact that we're that we're running such large deficits. If we had a smaller deficit then this would be so much of a problem. But the fact that the Treasury is to borrow on extra to two and a half trillion dollars a year, they need demand anywhere they can get it, so that that actually does bring a good point, which is that the it feels like the international community has pulled back a little bit for various reasons, and I think you know that's that's part of it, a piece of why yields have backed up recently. Well, Mike McKey summarizes for us we've heard this twice today and surveillant Shill Moweko accent Stephen Stanley of Santandra agree the United States is a relatively closed economy. Are we an economy a fiscal stimulus thinking of refunding and all the other debates versus Europe in austerity stimulus? I mean, are we living a fiscal stimus that makes us different? Well, yeah, I mean we as Chris says, we're, as Steve says, we're a sort of closed economy. We don't have to worry necessarily about what's happening in Europe as much as Europe has to worry about what's happening in the United States. And China their biggest trading partner, and so we can stimulate the economy and we can run deficits for a lot longer. Nobody knows exactly how high or how long, but it doesn't have the same kind of effect. Interesting to note where we are with yields these days is where we were in the nineteen nineties when we were growing at four and a half percent a year. So can we live with this? I mean for now we can't, right, Steven Stanley with us, So I'm not going to go higher for longer. But just pick one of them. Are we going to go higher or are we going to go longer? Well, I think the more important thing is the longer part. You know, they may go one more time, but we're pretty to the end, so I don't think the higher part is the more important of the two right now. I think is the more important issue is how long are they going to stay? Can the American economy equilibriate through a higher nominal and real rate or almost equal calibrate? I would said yes, I think We're in the process of that. I think that in my mind, the neutral rate is you know, anywhere from fifty to one hundred basis points higher than it was before COVID. So give me a ten year real rate, which is going to be a run rate. I think it's probably you know, one to one half percent something like that. Okay, when we look right now at the data that we've getting this week, you said that the Fed seems to be looking for an excuse, and it's not really that they're so concerned about what you call this little backup and yields. So what data could make it difficult for them to use the backup and yields as some sort of excuse. Well, boy, we're really testing that right because since the September meeting, we've had a blowout payroll number, a high inflation number, stronger than expected consumer spending, and now we get a firm wage number. So you know, you're pretty much a clean sweep, and yet they're clearly going to pause. So I think it's going to have to be not so much a particular data point, but a duration of a stretch of good data. If we continue to see good data for another month or two, then I mean it just becomes increasingly compelling. So tomorrow, based on what they say and based on the economic data, what are the chances from your view, that they've got to go significantly further than currently markets are pricing. Yeah, so significantly further is a really important part of that question, because, as I said, I mean my base case, I have one more hike. But that's I mean, you know, whether they do one or not, it's not that important. But there is a scenario where inflation reaccelerates and they end up having to go multiple times. That's the I think that's the scenario that you might have in mind. I mean, to me, that's the biggest risk fact. I see that as a bigger risk than the risk that the economy slides into recession and they end up easing much sooner than people expect it. But it's at this point it's for me, it's a risk scenario, not a base case. Are Is it true you're going for Halloween? You're going to dot plot that. That's a room, right? I can't confirm you had bullered up at the tippy top of your head. There you go. Okay, I have a lot of room on my head for you dods. So do some of us is well? Also? John Ferrell, going as you'll Brunner, I don't know if you knew that one of the mania for seven John. It was good to hear Stephen Stanley with his chief US economist of Santander, Emily rolling this morning from Boston here on a Halloween. What's your biggest fear out there besides trigger treating, what's your biggest fear, Emily in this market? My biggest fear is that we're actually in a scary movie right now, but it's not over yet. You know. You think about the villain kind of being wounded but still alive, and the villain is higher borrowing costs and the wake of the FED raising interest rates in the shortest amount of time and the greatest extent in several decades here, and we really haven't felt the sting from that as far as consumers pulling back, you know, as far as earning's getting hurt by that profit margin's getting crushed. So everything's fine right now. We're sort of running to the safe part of the house as we're getting chased by this villain, but we need to remember that the movie simply isn't over yet. Oh my god, Emily, I'm just thinking about you at the sleepover with a bunch of eleven year old saying it's a scary house and the bond villain is coming to get you at some point. I'm wondering, Emily, how much we're looking at a scenario we're yield to kind of reach to a peak, and that really the uncertainty lies. And I keep harping on this, but it lies with the deficit financing and what we get tomorrow from the Treasury Department. What we got yesterday actually underwhelmed with the amount that the US would have to borrow in the third quarter, and arguably that's what's leading yields lower this morning. Yeah, certainly fears around supply have been a key to the narrative around rising bond yields, but it's not like we woke up one morning over the last few weeks and all of a sudden found out that the treasure was going to have to issue more debt. That's been a known issue. So for US, that's not really the primary reason that bond yields have picked up. It's been just this unrelenting strength in the economic data in the US, and certainly fiscal spending has played a role in that. Excess savings have played a role in that. In twenty twenty and twenty twenty one. But really it's been the strength of the data. There's something really really unusual happening in the bond market right now. One, we're facing down potentially the third consecutive year of negative returns for high quality bonds. That's never happened before in history. We're also looking at an environment where if the FED was done in July, and we can talk about that, it's really unusual to see the ten year treasure yield continuing to rise. Typically what happens is that the ten year peaks right around the same time, are just before the FED pauses, very unusual. And then finally the elusive bear steepener another very notable dynamic here that is not consistent with what we've seen in recent history. So our view is that we could be getting close here to the peak and yields. This doesn't sound like a scary story actually. Arguably, and as Gina Martin Adams yesterday was saying, this really speaks to a pain trade of more momentum of gains of a rally and risk assets. Because if yields are rising because of growth, isn't it a good and beautiful thing? Yeah? I mean, I think our standards for growth have seemed to be shifted a little bit. Yes, there's a lot of strength in the labor market, but we all know that that's lagging data and those cracks are starting to form. I think this week's going to be really critical in terms of the jobs report on Friday, initial claims, which have stayed stubbornly low. We've got to remember that that data is subject to heavy revisions, and we're seeing a lot of cracks in the consumer stories starting to emerge. There's a lot of heads out there, the resumption of student loan payments, credit card interest rates at twenty five percent right now, auto loans at seven percent, mortgage rate over eight percent. That's a challenge. How do you get out thirty six months? You're going to tell me part of a carefully managed portfolio is so look out three years, five years, years, maybe when the red SOX go above five hundred again, Emily, the basic idea here is people are scared stiff. How much cash at five x percent should they own? Versus having the courage to reach out thirty six months? Yeah, I think the critical the scary part I guess about being in cash right now is that your subject to significant reinvestment risk. Our view is that the normal relationship with the economic cycle and bond yields remarries as we head into this economic contraction into next year, and in that environment, you want to move out the curve and just really be able to capture the five six percent income that you're seeing in high quality bonds right now. I know we've been talking about this for a while. There's been these significant odd dislocations in the bond market, but if you're in cash right now, you might not get that yield next year. We have an opportunity again to lock that income stream in for years, and I think we're going to look back on this is quite an incredible opportunity to unlock the value in bonds. Thank you, Emily Rowland, John Hancock Investment Management, Boston. Subscribe to the Bloomberg Surveillance podcast on Apple, Spotify and anywhere else you get your podcasts. Listen live every weekday starting at seven am Eastern. I'm Bloomberg dot Com, the iHeartRadio app, tune In, and the Bloomberg Business app. You can watch us live on Bloomberg Television and always I'm the Bloomberg Terminal. Thanks for listening. I'm Tom Keane, and this is BloombergSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Feeling Sound Podcast
Zeeteah Massiah & Paul Caplin

The Feeling Sound Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2023 43:59


Zeeteah Massiah was born in Barbados and subsequently grew up in London.  She's been a singer for her whole life. She's had an amazing and eclectic musical journey, that's seen her both live and perform globally.  She's performed with some of the world's top artists (Robbie Williams, Tom Jones, Sting and JohnnyHallyday, to name but a few), had a number-one dance hit in America and has been in a major West End musical.  She's currently collaborating mostly with her husband, Paul Caplin, producing music that's been drawn from a wide variety of influences, such as reggae, dancehall, soul and jazz. Paul himself is no stranger to the musical limelight either.  Caplin began his musical career in his early twenties in the New Romantic group ‘Animal Magnet', and co-wrote their dance track, "Welcome to the Monkey House" in 1981.  He left Animal Magnet to become the “mastermind” behind the 1980's avant-garde pop project Haysi Fantayzee.  The group disbanded after releasing an album that went gold and three hit singles.  He then launched his own record label, “The Love Organization”,  going on to have success with the artist, Marilyn, with whom he also co-wrote his hit songs.

The Broadcast from CBC Radio
Understanding the health of caplin stocks + Why a fish harvester says he can't take over his family enterprise

The Broadcast from CBC Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2023 18:53


DFO releases stock assessment for caplin + Ryan Everard says an outdated earnings rule is preventing him - and other harvesters - from taking over family enterprises.

Talking Tax
High Hopes for IRS Funding Boost

Talking Tax

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2023 13:14


All eyes are on the IRS in 2023, as the cash-strapped agency is finally getting an $80 billion infusion, with potential big implications for the tax world. Bolstered by the additional multiyear funding in the Inflation Reduction Act, the agency plans to upgrade its outdated systems, staff up, and take bolder steps toward enforcement, aiming largely at big companies and high-wealth taxpayers. Bloomberg Tax reporter Jeff Leon talks about the prospects with Niles Elber, a tax professional at Caplin & Drysdale who has been following the developments closely. The IRS has a tall order, Elber says. He talks about how the agency might deploy the funds, and the biggest areas of need, from hiring to enforcement. Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

Tax Notes Talk
Should We Have a Robot Tax? Part 1

Tax Notes Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2022 32:41


In the first of a two-episode series, Ryan Abbott of the University of Surrey discusses his views on the tax implications of increasing automation and the need for a robot tax. For more, read Abbott and Bogenschneider's article, "Should Robots Pay Taxes? Tax Policy in the Age of Automation."In our “Editors' Corner” segment, Elizabeth Stevens, a member in the international tax practice at Caplin & Drysdale Chtd. in Washington, chats about her coauthored Tax Notes piece, “Transfer Pricing's Next Generation.”Follow us on Twitter:Marie Sapirie: @mariesapirieDavid Stewart: @TaxStewTax Notes: @TaxNotes**This episode is sponsored by the Tax Attorney Recruiting Event. For more information, visit the-tare.com.This episode is sponsored by SafeSend. For more information, visit safesend.com.This episode is sponsored by the University of California Irvine School of Law Graduate Tax Program. For more information, visit law.uci.edu/gradtax.***CreditsHost: David D. StewartExecutive Producers: Jasper B. Smith, Paige JonesShowrunner and Audio Engineer: Jordan ParrishGuest Relations: Alexis HartWe want to hear from you, our listeners! To fill out a short, two-minute survey, visit taxnotes.co/podcastsurvey.

The Broadcast from CBC Radio
Grieving mother calls for better search resources in Labrador; Grieg Seafood on plans for Bays West; Jane Adey on new season of Land & Sea; DFO giving caplin more attention

The Broadcast from CBC Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2022 21:01


Jeanette Russell calls for better search and rescue in Labrador; Grieg's Perry Power on Bays West farms; Jane Adey on the new season of Land & Sea; and Oceana responds to caplin being added to DFO 'prescribed list'

The Broadcast from CBC Radio
News from Norway's caplin symposium; Behind the scenes at Basho

The Broadcast from CBC Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2022 20:58


DFO research scientist Hannah Murphy talks caplin; Tak Ishiwata talks about the joys and challenges of running a seafood restaurant in St. John's.

The Geek In Review
Teaching (and Pressuring) Law Professors to Teach Technology - Katie Brown

The Geek In Review

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2022 48:28


For the first time ever, we have a guest co-host this week while Marlene wears her fancy sneakers around ILTACon seeking answers to our Crystal Ball question. Katie Brown, Associate Dean for Information Resources at Charleston School of Law is on a mission to increase the teaching of practical technology skills to law students. In her view, law professors "are required to educate people so that they can go out into the practice and successfully do that. And so beyond just, rule 1.1 with legal technology and having that competency, for us as law schools, I think we have an ethical obligation to be teaching legal technology." This approach needs to be embedded into the Law School's culture, because it costs money, time, and effort to do correctly. In upcoming research collected with University of Connecticut Law's Jessica de Perio Wittman, Brown and de Perio Wittman calculated that on average, law students have less than 4 classes during their entire time in law school that have some aspect of teaching them the technology skills in that topic. Brown wants to see that number rise. While in Denver at the AALL Conference, Katie not only answered our Crystal Ball question, she also persuaded Abby Dos Santos, Reference Librarian at Caplin & Drysdale, to sit down with her and have a conversation about the pipeline of technology teaching from law school to law firms. We cover both of those answers and then Katie turns the mic on Greg to ask what law students need to understand about court dockets before landing in law firms. Special thanks to Katie Brown for stepping in and co-hosting this week!! Contact Us: Twitter: @gebauerm or @glambert Voicemail: 713-487-7270 Email: geekinreviewpodcast@gmail.com Music: Jerry David DeCicca Transcript available on 3 Geeks and a Law Blog

Teleforum
Are IRS Defenses Crumbling?

Teleforum

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2022 63:34


The continuous stream of regulations and other guidance the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) must publish to inform the public how it is going to implement, administer, and enforce the frequent, numerous, and complicated changes to the tax laws, along with the high dollar stakes involved, create constant opportunities and incentives to challenge the IRS. Some contend that the IRS’s ability to defend itself against these challenges seems to be vanishing as one after another the IRS has lost a string of recent challenges to its guidance. A recent blog post summarizes some of these defeats. Our speakers will discuss them in more detail, along with what they might portend for how the Internal Revenue Service and the Treasury Department issue future guidance. Another direction to watch is at the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue: will Congress begin to do a better job drafting laws and providing instructions and guidance about how they are to be implemented, administered, and enforced? Featuring:Kristin Hickman, Distinguished McKnight University Professor and Harlan Albert Rogers Professor in Law, University of Minnesota Law SchoolGilbert Rothenberg, Adjunct Professor of Law, American University's Washington College of Law and the University of Pennsylvania's Carey Law SchoolInterlocutor: Robert Carney, Senior Counsel, Caplin & Drysdale; Adjunct Professor of Law, Georgetown LawModerator: Eileen O'Connor, Founder, Law Office of Eileen J. O'Connor PLLC---To register, click the link above

20 Minute Leaders
Ep836: Rachel Caplin | Business Development, Team8 Fintech

20 Minute Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2022 22:45


Rachel Caplin leads Business Development for Fintech at Team8. In 2019, she accidentally wrote a novel and was just shortlisted for the 2022 Vogel Literary Award, one of Australia's most prestigious literature prizes. Rachel made Aliyah to Israel in 2015 from her hometown Perth in Western Australia, sits on the Board of two non-profit organizations, and is a Fellow in the Nevo Network - an exclusive program for top-talent OIim in the Israeli tech ecosystem. 

The Quidditas Factor
Having the Plan, The Road Map and The Courage To Press On with Loren Paul Caplin

The Quidditas Factor

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2022 51:54


Loren-Paul Caplin has had a varied career in the literary and dramatic arts. His experience in film has involved him in writing and directing History of the World in Eight Minutes, producing Forbiddeb Zone, writing the original story for Lost Angels, and co-writing and co-producing Battle in the Erogenous Zone for Showtime.His plays, "Sunday's Child", "Men In The Kitchen, "A Subject Of Childhood and "City Muzik" have been performed throughout the northeastern United States. "The Presidents", a play he co-wrote, has enjoyed a national tour and an appearance on PBS. His poetry has appeared in both the Paris Review and Rolling Stone. Caplin teaches screenwriting at Columbia University, Tisch School of Dramatic Writing at NYU, and the New School University. He lives in New York City with his wife, painter Jenne van Feghen.Support the show

Talking Tax
Court Tax Regulatory Rulings Offer Early Legal Insight

Talking Tax

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2022 16:43


Recent court rulings striking down two Internal Revenue Service reporting requirements suggest the agency may need to change its procedures so that its rules will hold up in court. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit struck down a tax reporting requirement on March 3 in Mann Construction, Inc. v. United States. That decision was cited by the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee when it struck down a separate reporting requirement on March 21 in CIC Services, LLC v. IRS. The decisions come as the Treasury Department, and the IRS within it, face increasing scrutiny over whether their tax rulemaking procedures have met legal requirements. On the latest episode of Talking Tax, Melissa Wiley, Member in Caplin & Drysdale's D.C. office, and Kristin Hickman, law professor at the University of Minnesota, discuss what the decisions could signal about how courts will approach federal tax rulemaking procedures. They speak with Bloomberg Tax's Aysha Bagchi and Jeff Leon. Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

Charlottesville Community Engagement
February 28, 2022: Nonprofit group wraps unfinished Dewberry skeleton; Council upholds BAR review of apartment building

Charlottesville Community Engagement

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2022 16:39


It’s the final day of February, but 2022 still has a long way to go. In fact, after today there is 83.8 percent left before it’s time to change the yearly calendar once more. Tomorrow may be heralded by a lion, so be on the listen-out for a roar. But for now, it’s time for another Charlottesville Community Engagement, and I’m your host, Sean Tubbs.This newsletter and podcast is free to sign up for, but your paid subscription ensures this one-person operation will continue well into the future! On today’s program: A new group called Friends of Cville Downtown launches by wrapping the Dewberry structure with a muralCity Council upholds a decision made by the Board of Architectural Review One Charlottesville tax relief deadline is approaching, and the city is looking for more people to serve on advisory panelsA University of Virginia epidemiologist weighs in on what’s next with COVID First shout-out goes to a Livable Cville eventIn today’s first subscriber supported shout-out, Livable Cville wants you to know about an online presentation coming up on Wednesday, March 16 at 5:30 p.m. "Can Zoning Create a More Affordable Charlottesville?" That’s the question to be explored by Dr. Jenny Schuetz of the Brookings Institute. She’s the author of Fixer-Upper: How to Repair America’s Broken Housing Systems. The event is free but you’ll have to register at EventBrite. Pandemic update to begin the weekToday the Virginia Department of Health reports the seven-day percent positivity is now at 7.3 percent, another indicator the Omicron surge is continuing to wane. The seven-day average for new cases is now at 1,621 with 764 new cases reported today. However, the death count from the Omicron variant continues to grow with a cumulative total of 18,771. Ten days ago, that number stood at 18,016 but the VDH always stresses that it takes a while for COVID deaths to be officially recorded. The Blue Ridge Health District now has a total of 419 deaths from COVID, and that number was at 386 ten day ago. There are 26 new cases in the BRHD today. What’s next? Dr. Costi Sifri is director of hospital epidemiology at the University of Virginia Health System. He said a majority of people in the Charlottesville area are either fully vaccinated or have had COVID. “I think in the near term we can and are expecting that we will see a continued diminution of cases going forward and I think that’s likely to occur not only over the next couple of weeks but perhaps and hopefully the next couple of months,” Dr. Sifri said. However, Dr. Sifri said COVID can be unpredictable and there are many parts of the world have low vaccination rates, allowing further mutations to occur. He said the current question is how long immunity through vaccination or previous infections will last.“Will there be future differences with the virus?” Dr. Sifri asked. “Does it evolve or change to overcome some of these protective immune responses that we’ve developed? And how robust or how prolonged are those immune responses?”Tomorrow is also the day that a new law goes into effect allowing parents to opt out of school mask mandates. This morning the UVA Health System announced that the drop in case counts will result in additional visitation at the UVA Medical System. To see the details of what has changed, visit the UVA Health System.Tax relief deadline is tomorrow Tomorrow is the last day for elderly and disabled property owners in Charlottesville to apply for tax relief. “If you own and are living in your home in the city of Charlottesville, if you are over 65 years of age, or are permanently disabled, and if you have a yearly household income of $55,000 or less, and a net worth of $125,000 or less excluding the value of the home, you may qualify for tax relief under this program,” said City Councilor Sena Magill. Visit the Commissioner of Revenue’s website for more information and to find the application. Residential property is up 11.69 percent in 2022. In addition, Council has advertised an increase of ten cents on the property tax rate. City Council will be presented with the budget on March 7. Want to be on a Charlottesville board or commission?With spring here perhaps you’re looking for a fresh hobby. Why not consider being on a Charlottesville Board of Commission? There are several vacancies and Council is taking applications through March 12. Charlottesville Economic Development Authority - one openingCitizens Transportation Advisory Committee - two openingsCommunity Policy and Management Team - two openingsHistoric Resources Committee - four openingsHousing Advisory Committee - one vacancy (specifically for a member of a neighborhood association)Measurements and Solutions Group - eight openingsPersonnel Appeals Board - one opening (for a non-city employee) Region Ten Community Services Board - one openingSocial Services Advisory Board - two openingsTree Commission - four openingsVendor Appeals Board - one openingYouth Council You can apply here. Council will next make appointments on March 21. Council upholds BAR approval at 605 Preston Place The Board of Architectural Review approved what’s called a “certificate of appropriateness” to allow for an apartment complex to be built in the side yard of a 19th century structure. Council was asked to hear the appeal from neighbors who argue the city’s architectural design control (ADC) rules were not followed. At the beginning of the appeal, city historic preservation planner Jeff Werner described the project.“The project is a proposed three-story apartment building,” Werner said. “It’s located on a parcel at 605 Preston Place. The property is within the Rugby-Road-University Circle-Venable ADC district. Also on this property is Wyndhurst which is a home constructed in 1857 and it was formerly the manor house for a 102-acre farm.” The appellants sent in a 19-point letter to make their arguments. Point number two argued that the footprint and massing of the new building would not be not in harmony with the district. Werner disagreed.“To be clear, the design guidelines are intended to be flexible and flexible enough to both respect historic properties and to embrace future new design,” Werner said. Werner recommended the Council uphold the BAR’s determination. Larry Getty represented the appellants. “We actually feel the Board of Architectural Review did not really explain their decisions as to why the number of elements that Jeff Werner discussed actually do satisfy the guidelines,” Getty said. “It is totally out of place with the buildings that are on three sides of the site.” Breck Gastinger is the chair of the BAR and before he spoke he told Council a little about what the panel does. “We are made up of nine citizens of Charlottesville,” Gastinger said. “All of us are volunteers and we are appointed by City Council. We work on your behalf for the city. We’re made up of design professionals, business owners, residents of properties within historic districts.”Gastinger said BAR members must follow the guidelines as they make their determinations. He said the city’s architectural story is always changing. “Our guidelines for the BAR do not mandate particular styles of architecture or prevent new buildings from being added within historic districts,” Gastinger said. “As Charlottesville continues to grow and evolve as a city, we want to make sure it’s going to be done in a compatible way.”Gastinger said the BAR helped inform the project through multiple hearings and their approval was a unanimous 8-0 vote. Mayor Lloyd Snook said he sided with the BAR.“I was struck by the fact that some architects for whom I have a great deal respect were looking at it quite critically and praising what was being done and I would have to say that if those architects are saying good things about it, that’s a very strong recommendation for me,” Snook said. The vote to uphold the BAR was unanimous. Patreon-fueled shout-out to LEAPWhen you think of romance, you might not immediately think of energy efficiency - but the folks at LEAP think keeping your family comfortable at home is a great way to show you care during the month of love. Your local energy nonprofit wants to make sure you are getting the most out of your home all year round, and LEAP offers FREE home weatherization to income- and age-qualifying residents. If someone in your household is age 60 or older, or you have an annual household income of less than $74,950, you may qualify for a free energy assessment and home energy improvements such as insulation and air sealing. Sign up today to lower your energy bills, increase comfort, and reduce energy waste at home!Friends of Cville Downtown launches with unveiling of mural on Dewberry building It was a warm morning for this last day of February and several dozen people gathered in Central Place outside the Dewberry Hotel, an unfinished structure for which construction stopped over 13 years ago when the previous owner ran out of money. A group called Friends of Cville Downtown has raised funds to wrap the skeleton of the unfinished hotel with artwork. The official reveal was a chance to also launch the organization. Board member Michael Caplin called a “placemaking partnership” to increase economic development downtown in an inclusive manner. “Friends of Cville Downtown is raising private money to fund the costs of a campaign for Main, an array of projects that can invigorate the downtown environment with lights, art, paintings, seating, events, banners, sanitation, safety add-ons, and a rich array of events with something for everybody,” Caplin said. “We will accomplish this by working together with one another and with city government in the spirit of goodwill and common purpose.”The first project is the Music Box on Main, which is the name for the temporary installation by the artist Eric Waugh which covers all nine stories of the unfinished Dewberry. “Eric’s paintings, Jazzmaker 1 and Jazzmaker 2, were enlarged and printed on a 13-foot-wide vinyl mesh banner wrap,” Caplin said. “Ten giant rolls of wrap were carried to the roof.”Crews rappelled from the top affixed the wrap to the building, and the goal is to cover up the skeleton for at least the next year. Caplin said the work has been done in conjunction with the Dewberry Group, who even donated $10,000 to the project. “I hope you will say to yourself, ‘what wonderful thing shall we do next, and how shall we get it done together?’” Caplin said. Mayor Lloyd Snook said he welcomed the effort. “We lost sight of the fact that so many of the businesses on the Downtown Mall are operating on very thin margins and the last few years have been very tough for them,” Snook said. “To have people who have the ability to step up to make significant contributions to be able to do the kinds of things the Friends of Cville Downtown are talking about doing is really exciting. It’s exciting for the city government to know that there are going to be people out there who are able to help and willing to help.”Ludwig Kuttner is the vice chair of the Friends of Cville Downtown board. He said he wanted to take action to cover up visual blight and to restore what he described as “positive energy” to the mall.“I think people have complained about it now for over 12 yeers, and it’s ugly and there have been complaints and we just decided let’s do something about it,” Kuttner said. Caplin came up with the idea for the wrap, which includes a wrap on 2nd Street SE. He saw the black façade of the old Boxer Learning building as being like the black keys of a piano.“So I envisioned the windows white and then a swirly jazz thing at the top and I had a friend of mine photoshop it for me to see what it would like when it was done and we sent that image to the Dewberrys and said ‘would you give us permission to do this to your building?’ and Jaimie Dewberry called up and said ‘this is genius, go right ahead!’” As for the future of the Dewberry, Caplin said he was not privy to any information but that they had full permission to apply the temporary measure. “It’s now a positive element of our skyline instead of a ‘what’s happening’ element of our skyline,” Caplin said. Stay tuned for more information as it develops. What do you think? Leave a note in the comments. Support the program!Special announcement of a continuing promo with Ting! Are you interested in fast internet? Visit this site and enter your address to see if you can get service through Ting. If you decide to proceed to make the switch, you’ll get:Free installationSecond month of Ting service for freeA $75 gift card to the Downtown MallAdditionally, Ting will match your Substack subscription to support Town Crier Productions, the company that produces this newsletter and other community offerings. So, your $5 a month subscription yields $5 for TCP. Your $50 a year subscription yields $50 for TCP! The same goes for a $200 a year subscription! All goes to cover the costs of getting this newsletter out as often as possible. Learn more here! This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe

Benzinga LIVE
Stock Market Crash or New All-Time Highs?

Benzinga LIVE

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2021 48:34


BENZINGA HEALTHCARE SMALL CAP CONFERENCEWednesday, September 29 - Thursday, September 30 | VirtualRegister for our FREE Healthcare Small-Cap Conference and have a chance to win 1 year of Benzinga Pro! Register for FREE hereThe Benzinga Small Cap Conference bridges the gap between Small Cap companies, investors, and traders. Learn about small cap investing with clearly defined Educational Modules, take a look at a curated group of Small Cap investment opportunities, and connect with the healthcare Small Cap audience in an intimate, virtual setting.Episode Summary:Whether to buy the dip in cryptosWhether to buy Vinco Ventures stock BBIGThe Polestar SPAC deal GGPICrypto UpdateRobert Kiyosaki TweetStocks talked about on the show:$NAKD, $BBIG, $CELH,$BABA, $GGPI, $SPY, $RGC, $NVDA, $TSLAJoin the Benzinga-Moomoo TRADING COMPETITION hereGet $50 in FREE Bitcoin when you use the code ZING on VoyagerGuests:MyMD Pharmaceuticals Chief Scientific Officer, Dr. Adam Kaplin 21:00 (NASDAQ: MYMD)Hosts:Aaron BryTwitter: https://twitter.com/aaronbry5Hot Stocks Luke JacobiTwitter: https://twitter.com/lukejacobiJason RaznickTwitter: https://twitter.com/jasonraznickSubscribe to all Benzinga Podcasts hereGet 20% off Benzinga PRO here Become a BENZINGA AFFILIATE and earn 30% on new subscriptionsDisclaimer: All of the information, material, and/or content contained in this program is for informational purposes only. Investing in stocks, options, and futures is risky and not suitable for all investors. Please consult your own independent financial adviser before making any investment decisions.Unedited Transcript Everybody happy Monday. We are back at it another day, another week, another dollar to make I'm joined by Spencer Israel. But what is going on guys? This is the power hour. This is the trade idea show. We're spreading these 60 minutes together every single day, because we want to get the idea flow going, Spencer, how are you doing today, sir?I'm well, well, I'm doing better than the Detroit lions are and that's all you can ask for. And I I'm in a good mood. It's Monday. It's a big week for us. I've been single. We get a lot of stuff. That I want to shameless, not sort of shamelessly plug, uh, here. Uh, but we'll get to all that. We'll get plug it, plug it now, and then let's get to repeat stuff.Now we're only doing Rippy stocks today only to rip your stocks. All right. Yep. All right. Uh, oh man. So much to plug. Okay. Let's start with this tomorrow. All access event, um, myself and, um, me and I, uh, going to be talking alternative investments. We talk about stocks. We talk about crypto, um, but we don't talk enough about all the other assets you can have in your portfolio, whether it's real estate, whether it's venture capital.Uh, we have a show tomorrow dedicated to alternative investments and, uh, how you can get exposure to the, the, not necessarily that you need. But that you should consider getting exposure to in some way, shape or form. So you don't just own, like, I have all your money in like the same five meme stocks or a BBG or whatever.So that'd be tomorrow from 10 to noon. I'm excited for that. I also want to plug our next small cap conference, the small cap healthcare conference, which is in two days it's Wednesday and Thursday. You can go to B, Z small cap.com to learn more about that. There's the screen a screen is up on there. So BG, small cap.com two day conference tomorrow, Wednesday, Thursday, all day nine to five.I'll be co-hosting that as well. What else did I want to plug? I wanted to plug. Oh, let's be snacks. Okay. Last thing I want to plug in and then rip the stocks stocks. Okay. Uh, for the very first time Benzinga has partnered with. We are, we are sponsoring a paper trading competition with mumo Moomoo. I'm going to put the, the, the, there is up on the screen.Okay. So here's what you gotta do to, to play ball. You open a brokerage account.You why don't I sound weird. You sound fine. To me, Spencer, you open a brokerage account through Moomoo. The link is in the description below. Okay. You fund your account with $500 and then you're eligible to participate. Well, why Albert to participate? What, what I win? Great question. First place winner in this contest gets 24 shares of Nvidia NBDA for free 24 free shares.All right, hold on. I'm doing the math on that 24 times 2 15, 15. $215 and 15 cents IDs. Yeah. Okay. Second place gets 12 shares of Nvidia for free. So it's $2,500 about right. Third place gets four shares of Nvidia and fourth place. Everyone who finishes between fourth and a hundred gets one share of this other one, P D C O.I don't know why they went random without one. They weren't Nvidia Nvidia, Nvidia PDCO, but everyone who finishes from fourth to a hundred gets PDCO one share of that for free. Um, so here's, what's going to do you click on the link in the description of this video, you open an account with Moomoo, you fund it with 500 bucks and then you two can play ball and Wayne, if you're the best paper trading winner, 24 shares of Nvidia for.All right. And if you don't know what Moomoo is, I'll pull up this food to F U T you, you might know the ticker. Uh, this is actually a Jonah Lupton favorite. Um, but this is the holding company. It's like a, like a Robin hood of China type play in a Moomoo is their break into the U S I will be joining the trading competition.So, and we, we only have links in the chat. Yeah. The link is in chat. It's in the description. We only have like a week or we have, let's see, it says you have to join by the 15th of October. So we have two, three weeks, three weeks to join. So there we go. So I wanted to plug that. I wanted to plug that's where it says right there.I want to plug that. I want to plug our event. I want to plug our, uh, our all access event tomorrow, and now I'm done employing, and now we're going to rip the stocks. And I had a couple out of the chat Spencer. We're going to do Baba. Does it mean we have crypto? Yes, I believe so. Caleb, uh, okay. Uh, we're stocks.Let's go first up on the list. Guys. If you have symbols, drop them in the chat we're diving straight in. We're going to try to five stocks, 15 minutes, three minutes, a piece, a naked brand cigarette, N a K D November alpha, kilo Delta. Uh, here is the look at the daily charts. Daily looks decent. We zoom it in to the minute charts.First time of the day. We're starting to see a, a little bit of trouble over these past few minutes. Um, Spencer, any takes there? I have an opinion. Yeah. I have an embarrassing confession to make until about a minute ago because I've heard of naked brands before. And I've heard of like, I've obviously heard of the stock because it's a, it's a high flyer.But until a minute ago, I honestly thought that this was the company that made naked juice and that's wrong. That is absolutely incorrect. That is wrong. But I. I thought this was naked. Thank you. Nope. Now that'd be a negative this entire time. This thing got to, you know, this thing went to three 50 or three 40 back in January go to their real websites.Spencer, what? Naked brains.com. I don't know. Try it. Yeah, sure. Um, yeah, this is it. Okay. So for, for, for nine months I felt naked was like, it was the juice company that they make those really strong, fruity vegetable drinks. Now that'd be a negative. That was wrong. Okay. That shows you what I know anyway. Um, they can brands, this is their actual website, so let's go to the chart.All right. So, so, so, so back to the chart, Spencer here, let me take it back over. Okay. All right. D here here's the daily candles. Okay. We're we're, we're, we're above this, this previous high that we had in there. Okay. We broke above that today. We, we got directed below. Ah, we got rejected. Below that on Friday, next previous high we're looking out for is all the way off at a bottle.My I am long and strong naked right now. My opinion is that if, if we can buck this downturn that we've seen between when the show started and right now, uh, we're, we're in a decent position to keep running. This is definitely one of those docs that gets Mimi. It gets Rippy look at this, right. We saw that hop earlier this year from like 20 cents up to $3 and 50 cents.Does it get there? I would, I would be skeptical, but if the momentum continues today, I think a dollar is absolutely insight, uh, from a pure technical basis. Yeah. A but a dollar is also like so pure technical energy to baby naked brand says energy power. You were just on the. I I'm, I'm just saying like a dollar is like, so psychologically significant that if like, okay.I would just say if I wanted to, I don't even know if you can short the stock, but if you want shorter and you could, you, you wouldn't wait till a dollar, you would go, like, I I'm sure there's a lot of people at like 99 cents is all I'm saying. Sure. Yeah. Yeah. 95. I'll take it. Okay. 95, whatever. So, and strong.I'm letting it rip today again, but between when this show started in now, what was the first sign of trouble that we've run into today? Right? These are the minute candles, uh, and we had a couple of decent size grad bars, but, but we'll see we're at 80 cents right now where we got to, uh, 80, almost 83 cents.This, uh, that was the high of the day. So. There's one, five stocks, 15 minutes. Do you want me to call it or you want to pick next? All right. Next would be Sackler day. Ticker BBI, G Vinco ventures. Spencer. You talk to the CEO or chairman of the company. I don't remember which so the view. Okay. Remind us what the company does.A Tik TOK. Uh, can I, it, it is take of India. Yeah, India and, and other geographies. Yeah. Right now we're looking at daily candles, obviously a ton of volatility over the past couple of weeks today, the stock is back in action. Up 16%, no news out on it. Um, I I'm, I'm curious. Where is everybody at with, with BB?I G if you like the stock right now, drop the one in the chat. If not drop the. And, and even for, for let's, let's just play imagination. Okay. It's Monday, we got to wake up our fingers a little bit. If you're not taking a position one way or another one in the chat, if you would buy it here, two of you would sell it here.I'm curious where everybody is at to having an opinion, too, for Spencer, I would sell it here. Um, I'm also a seller here, uh, and I'll back it up trend is your friend where we're in a downward trend for the past couple of weeks, uh, that the, the candle for today just moved rad, which means the stock is trading where below where it opened.It's still obviously above where it closed on Friday, but we're now back below where it opened. Uh, we, we have the downward momentum. Uh, we have the red candle today. We have no news, uh, that, that came out to justify the pop that took place today. And so, um, I'm also going with the. Yeah, I would be against it.If I had to pick one way or another important number on this is $8, right. That was the high that we got to add. So, uh, five 30 this morning, we are $8. So we're w we're we're, we're further off than it looks. If you only look, if you're ignoring the pre-market session, you're, you're missing the higher, the day $8 there.So I would sell BBG here and I would, yeah, this is, this is not my style. This is your style. It's not my style. I love these types of styles. We're doing Rippy stocks today. All right. We did too. But I like BBG. I don't. All right. It could be wrong on him, but, but that's the way that I'm playing it today. And chat is pretty divided on this one.We have just about as many ones as we do twos again, one was people like. Two was people don't. What about Celsius? All right. Let's, let's look at Celsius next. And then we're going to get to Baba in a second here, uh, Celsius. Uh, I'm also long and strong Celsius. If you don't know this one, it's like an alternative energy drink maker.It's like, uh, uh, basically slightly healthier energy drinks, but I'm still, I'm sure. Still not great for you. Uh, you know, uh, all, all the fundamentals continue to be strong except for the valuation ratios on this one. And what I mean by that is that sales are still flying off the shelves. The company sells inventory problems because demand has been so.The stock is very, very expensive. It's trading the teens of, of, of, of price, price to sales versus maybe like a four and a half times ratio on average for the S and P 500. Uh, that's sad. The sales growth, I think will keep the momentum alive. So I have been long and strong, uh, Celsius from the seventies.Wow. We're at, I know it's a good grade. So do you have a plan here or are you just riding the wave? I'm riding the wave baby. If momentum cracks that, then we'll hop on. Um, what does that mean? If momentum cracks, if we get so, so today we're off 5%. That's a painful day. It's the biggest loser in my portfolio was a position.It was, it was, it was a big position that one of the largest positions that I put on it grew to be larger. We're off 5% today. The, the portfolio is, is definitely bleeding from that one still green today. Thank goodness. But this is, this is the biggest, the biggest hit to the portfolio of the day. Uh, if we get another ride candle like this tomorrow, uh that's when I'll start rotating out of it.Yep. So all it'll take is, is like another, another 5% day. Yeah, yeah, yeah. We have a 1% day. Okay. Maybe the tide is turning, but if it's another day of, of rad and we're down off another 5% Obama out of it. Wow. Okay. Short pay, uh, short trigger finger. I like it. Cause, cause you've got. Yeah, exactly right. It's been several weeks.We wrote it from 70 to 95 right now. Great freaking trait. Thank you, sir. Yeah. So now he's going to wait, you know, right in 94. So let's say if Luke wakes up tomorrow and saw ceases at 90, he's done. And, and, and here's what I'll say too. Obviously we can't predict too far into the future, but this is a stock that I will absolutely look at to trade into earnings again.So it's the next earnings date is scheduled for 11, 11. Make-A-Wish Spencer. Whoa. And here's the, but it's one that, again, I'm not, I'm not saying that I would, would hit it long back into earnings, but it's one that I will absolutely look out long back into earnings. Because again, that the story is, is, is the fundamental one.The stock has the momentum right now, um, which I check out the sales growth on this. And Spencer's, this is quarterly revenue. Uh, over the past year, we went from $30 million of sales to $65 million. What is the market cap here? I said that all the fundamentals are great, except for the ratios. Okay. For a company that made 60 million mill million with an M quarter of quarter.All right. Here's my question. Is are they going to, going to come out and blame a supply chain of woes? Yeah, but they already have. Oh, they did. Okay. Revenue will still be good. They'll still blame supply chain and they'll they'll they'll beat and raise again. That's all I do. They're just beaten. Or he's beaten, raised, beaten race.Fine quarter after quarter after quarter. Oh man. I know. Look I, who am I to poopoo this you've written the wave. Great trade. The new Navy. I just ride wave valuation means nothing. When you're up in your position, when you're down, it means everything. But when you're up, it means nothing. So it's a great track.Good. Great job, man. Good job. Alright. Five stocks, 15 minutes next up on the shot pocket. Yeah, this is Alibaba's thing is, is, um, I can understand why you would look at this. Why anyone would look at this and say, oh, how could I not take a flyer? Right. It got to 1 44 this morning. I can understand the temptation for a stock that was basically $300 a year ago.It was 300 pockets. It's coming to zoom. Yeah, Spencer. So, so now we're looking at a five-year chart with, I believe monthly candles. Yes. These are monthly candles. I now brutal. It's brutal. It's brutal. Um, if you want to take a flyer, I guess I would say if you do whatever you want, but waiting the flyer on this one is with long dated calls.In my opinion, we, we, we, we looked at them briefly last week. I didn't take any action on it, but, but, but basically I think it was though one 70 calls that were about a year and three months out, 15 months out or something like 13 bucks. So, so it's definitely on my, keep an eye on it list. I think if you want to take a flyer, it's a pretty capital efficient way to do it.That's PR yes. That's probably the most efficient way to do it is, is, is leaps. Um, cause you know, you have it, you have it defined a risk and, and it's efficient use of capital and you're you, and you're not married to the next few months or because this thing could, oh, who knows where it's going to stop, but.I don't know, like part of me wants to, and part of me doesn't, I'm hands off for now, but it, gosh, does it walk? Does it look like a snack as Neil would say, right. I 1 48 here do it Spence. I I'm not going to do it, but there was a part of me that absolutely wants to do it, wants to buy this stock or, or I'll buy some long data calls or whatever, thinking about it in the chat.Uh, he sold Baba puts for one 20 expiring this Friday. Wow. Yeah, I think it's a decent trade. It can't be a highly lucrative trade. So basically as long as Bob was at one 20 or above by Friday. So it's 1 21. No, not one 20. Cause it's it's whatever he, he pocketed from, from the sale. Right. So let's say it's a dollar.It's not going to be much. No. All right. You're right. You're right. Um, all right. If anybody else has any action on Baba, put your trade in the chat long, short. I want to see where that's at. Yeah, it does. Look, I look, you guys know, I own all these Chinese internet stocks for, for years. And then I sold via the one ETF and I sold that and I'm out and Spencer five stocks, 15 minutes more on the list.One more. And then we're going to have to bring on our guest, our first guest, the one on Europe on your list. G G all right. We have a new spec deal guys. News one year chart, daily candles. This was a pre announced back and has now announced a deal. Uh, I know that we're coming off of SPACs attack. Uh, but, but this one, we, we have a little bit of a.Experienced with a company called Pollstar, which is Volvo's, uh, electric vehicles. Company has been funding. You, you test drove this car, did you not? I drove the shit out of this car. I would say Spencer. Th that's the technical term. That's the technical term. Yes, we, we got one of these vehicles at Benzinga, uh, again for fully electric car it's it's the company that, that Volvo has been funding, uh, and it was a pretty awesome ride.Uh, you know, the styling, I didn't think was like very impressive or interesting. Like we see out of a lot of these new Evie companies, uh, but the drive was incredibly smooth. The car was incredibly fast and the interior was, was great, uh, amazingly comfortable. Um, so, so I was a, a big fan of the drive experience on the book.Okay. I, I mean, I w I wouldn't know, I wasn't invited, but it looks amazing. I will say that it looks nice. And in this, the thing was fast, Spencer, I didn't even have the fast version. All these electric cars are so fast. Th the only thing, like, you know, what's wild here is like, okay, in Eve you spec the old th that's.So in an EVs back in September, that is so 20, 20. That's like, you know what I mean? Not so lucid of them, these guys are like a year late, aren't they? No, yes. So, so here, here's my, here's my take on the trade. Uh, if I had to pick one way or another, uh, and, and, and I may get into this one later today, I would pick it long.Uh, again, I think it's, it's one of those names that the vehicle is, is interesting to look at. It's headline. Um, they, they are starting to get out onto the roads, at least in a test capacity. Um, so it's a little bit further along than lucid as I believe. Uh, but if I had to pick this one for a swing trade one way or another, I would definitely think along.Wow. All right. I was surprised to see this today. I didn't, I thought we were done with the EVs facts, but I, yeah, I thought we were done with the, I guess we're not. All right. Look, we're running a little bit late here. Uh, we got to bring on our first gas. All right. All right. Let's do a Spence. All right, Dr.Adam Caplin, who has forgotten more about science than you and I were even know he's a PhD. He's also the chief scientific officer of my M D pharmaceuticals. Here we go. Dr. Caplin. Good morning, sir. Oh, no, you're on mute. Check that mute button on the bottom there. Thank you. Technical things that are difficult.Always the technical things that are tricky and. I'm doing well. And how are you, Spencer? It's a beautiful day. We finally have our fall a days here in Baltimore, so we're enjoying ourselves. Nice, nice. I have a soft spot for Baltimore. I went to the university of Maryland and so I have a soft spot for Baltimore and, and, and that state, uh, Adam, let's talk about my MD for a second.Thank you to ever put the, uh, the ticker up on the screen there. Uh, that wasn't me, uh, for those who don't know, tell us what, uh, my MBA, what you're working on. Well, we're working on two main, um, uh, drugs under development. One is my MD one and the other is superior CBD. My MD one is looking to be, um, a game changer in the area of treating auto-immune diseases and delaying aging and superior CBD is as the name implies a super new form of CBD.Explain that a super new form of, yeah. So essentially it's not a huge change to the molecule. Um, it takes one of the six member rings and turns it into a five member ring. Um, more details than you would possibly want to know, but essentially the Tran, uh, the, the outcome of that is that not only, um, so first of all, you have to understand there's two binding sites that we all have within our bodies and our brains and the immune system for any cannabinoid, meaning THC, any marijuana based drug, um, one is CBD one, the other is CBD.Sydney one is what gives you the intoxication? The high from THC and marijuana CBD too, though, is a really unique receptor. That is the brake of the immune system and has very potent anti-inflammatory effects and the ability to help preserve neurons, um, and preserve, uh, you know, the brain other under attack.So what's really unique is we first found that superior CBD bound four times more tightly to the CB two receptor, but binding isn't the isn't the key. The key is once then, what does it do? And it turns out that superior CBD when it's bound to that CB two receptor, the one that's on all the immune cells and in the brain under, uh, under attack, either epilepsy in the light.Is, um, 8,000 times more potent at activating the CB two receptor. So that's a huge difference. It really is a very potent drug at activating the OD the break for the immune system and preserving neuron, neuronal function of the brain. What exactly is going on here? You have, you have, uh, studies, uh, you have two drugs in the pipeline.You have studies going. What is the status of those? Where are you in the regulatory? Yeah. So that's a great question. With superior CBD, we are doing the preclinical studies. It's the newer kid on the block for us. And, um, we are currently undergoing all of the, uh, regulatory toxicology studies and safety studies were about a year from being able to get that into humans.Um, my one has already completed its phase one studies. And this year we plan to start two studies, one looking at aging and the other, looking at COVID-19 to treat inflammation and, and to slow aging down. All right. So we're still early days in this. Process for the superior CBD, where early days for my MD, when we're getting into phase two sorority, looking at treatments for aging, and COVID-19 in humans this year, we're going to start to two of those studies.So we're much further along it's, it's, uh, a molecule that we've been working on a much longer. How long have you been working on it? Um, it has been roughly four years. I should tell you, I joined the company a year ago. So, um, you know, I most familiar with the stuff that's happened since then, but, but it has been, uh, working on, we've been working on it for four years.So we have the safety, uh, the toxicology studies and all of those. Uh, and do you have, I guess you're, you're getting into phase two right now. Uh, do you have an idea of when, of when that could start even, even end the, the. Yeah. So there's two trials. One is that COVID-19, um, you know, it's obviously still going on, which really dramatic about COVID 19 is that it's the inflammation that causes all the trouble.And so my NB one is, has both good effects on blocking inflammation and bringing it down and slowing aging. I'm happy to talk about a very exciting study that's under review right now, um, out of a major academic institution, but, um, so the first thing, the COVID 19, it turns out that that inflammation has effects on the brain, including brain fog and depression, post COVID.These are very common up to 50% of people will have, um, a post COVID depression due to the inflammation and this brain fog that often goes along with it. So we are studying the ability of my to treat that, and that will be a second. Uh, treatment trial. So because it's only six weeks, we should be able to get everybody enrolled, um, this year and have the results in the first quarter of next year.The second study is on aging and that study will be a six month trial. So we started this year. Um, it's going to be probably a fourth quarter of next year that we'll have the results. Alright, so I have, uh, two, two trial results, one in the first quarter, one probably around a year from now. Yeah, that's that's I think that's a reasonable assessment.Can I tell you about the, the aging, uh, the result out of this, a major academic institution what's really remarkable is that currently the best treatment that has been seen in animals to extend the lifespan of animals in terms of a drug is rapid myosin. So this study using my MD was comparing my MB to rapid myosin and rapid myosin plus Metformin, but that.Complicate things and what happened, but you have to understand finding a drug that can actually delay aging is so critical. So this study took mice that were the human equivalent of 60 years old and treated them until they were the human equivalent of 90. And essentially being on meant that you were four times, 400% less likely to die.If you're on the, my MD than if you were on the rapid myosin. And that's a huge impact, highly statistically significant. And we think we're working towards an understanding of how this actually works. The critical thing, Spencer though, is it didn't just extend the lifespan. It, these mice retain their. And their cognition.So it's not just a drug that could, if it works in humans, like it works in mice, uh, extend the human lifespan. It could slow aging. So it's not like we're all just going to get old and demented, we're all going to lead longer, more productive lives. If it doesn't humans would it doesn't matter. All right.Well, we'll know more regardless. Uh, next year, Adam Kaplan is the chief scientific officer of my MD to grim YMD, we'll know more from the one trial and in Q1 and then the, the, the longer trial, uh, in, in, in Q4, hopefully next year, Adam, thanks for coming today. Thank you so much, but if you're always a pleasure to work with you and right.I see a bee producer. AB is he here? I just saw him. I just saw him producer. AVRC you lurking. I see you lurking. Uh, while he's getting his stuff together, let's just do a real quick. Crypto update because, uh, I oh, there is. I heard my name. Yeah. Hey, how's it going? Tell the people why you leave today. Um, so I was just at a press conference at, uh, the Detroit golf club for the rocket mortgage classic.Uh, they were announcing that rocket mortgage is extending their sponsorship of the tournament, um, through 2027. So some exciting news, just have one question. Will Phil Mickelson be at the next one? I don't think so. Based on last time he, uh, some Detroit writer did not make him happy. Yes. Yes. Anyway, wait, I just want to do a quick, quick crypto update then we'll go to our next, get our next guys.Cause that same here real fast. AB why did you bother different crypt? They want a Friday, cause I did not. I kind of a. Uh, I just didn't. I know, but, uh, Spencer, so I'm in a couple fantasy football leagues where we're talking about, well, really just one. We were talking about like putting our pool for the league into crypto and we were texting this weekend, like, oh, now would be a good time to throw it, you know, in a theater.We want, we want to throw it in something that really has a chance to like double in the next six months.Okay. Hey, however you figure that out. You let me know. Okay. Got it. Yeah. I'll let you know how it goes. Uh, whether it's Towanna, uh, eith I dunno, BTC. Those are the three that I on Cardona. I dunno. Um, but here let's you go to a charter for a second and then we'll, and then we'll go to our guests. Yeah. So, so we had that sell off on Friday and it happened, like, you can see there that we actually closed, you know, about halfway between, uh, the high and low of the day in Bitcoin.And so, uh, we kind of came back so fast. It, I kind of feel like I missed my chance, so I didn't, I didn't do anything basically. In summary, I did nothing on Friday. I thought about it. I talked about it and I did nothing. It's the same thing, right? Charts are identical thought about it. Did nothing. I want to know if anyone bought more.I should have, I, I, I always regret not buying more. Every time I regret not, I think on, on some different brokerages now you can set recurring buys. So like, I don't think it would be dumb to set. I should've just dollar cost average. I don't know how, I don't know how to set it up though. Maybe I, I, what brokerage are you using?Yeah, I'm using Coinbase. Is that, is that bad? I don't know. I mean, I'm sure on Coinbase, I know Robin hood, they just like enabled recurrent investments into crypto. So I'd imagine Coinbase. So you can too, um, since obviously Coinbase is more crypto focused than the only reason I use Coinbase is cause I literally just like did eeny meeny, miny, Moe.I was a guy one like, yeah. There's no special reason why, why I use it. It was, it was a spontaneous thing. I didn't think about it. I didn't do any research. I didn't think about it at all. I just did it. Um, anyway, speaking of crypto and buying it, you can get $50 in Bitcoin for free. All you gotta do is download the Voyager act.Fund your account with a hundred dollars, make your first trade and use the offer code zing that Z I N G it's up on the screen that will get you $50 in Bitcoin for free. The crypto updates that we do are brought to you by Voyager. I should, maybe I should just, I should probably switch off Coinbase. I, I have no allegiance to them at all.Even if you go to Voyager. Yeah. I don't know. I don't know because I swear, I don't know how to use that app at all. Anyway. Uh, okay.AB it's 1247 and we didn't get to any of your stocks that I don't know what you, what you have on your, yeah, I've got a couple of things, Spencer. So first of all, um, you know, if you notice the title of this video stock market crash or new all time, and you're wondering, uh, you know, what's sad about, so over the weekend, um, the real Kiyosaki, I hope I'm saying that, right?I saw this tweet tweet on Twitter. He made a big waves in the fin twit community. This is the author of rich dad, poor dad, which is a very popular book among investors. Um, full disclosure. I have not read it. Let me know in the chat, if you think like, oh, B you must read this book. Or if you're like, oh, you've, you've made it this far without reading it.You don't need to. Um, you know, so anyway, he, he tweeted giant stock market crash. Come in October. Why treasury and fed short of T-bills gold, silver Bitcoin may crash to cash best for picking up bargains after crash, not selling gold, silver Bitcoin yet have lots of cash for life after stock market crash stocks, dangerous.Careful. So this caught a lot of headwind among the investors. Um, you know, uh, this guy Kiyosaki, he's known for kind of making some hot takes on Twitter regarding Bitcoin. Yeah. I never met him. I don't know him. I've also never read his book, but I will say this. He has made these calls before. This is not the first time that he has come out and well, I'm glad you mentioned that Spencer.Cause I was just going to bring up this in the replies and someone essentially like super imposed some of his tweets over the S and P 500. So dating back to 2011, um, you know, he's been calling for a crash like periodically, uh, I'm an actor and actually here, let me try to zoom in a little bit. So you guys can see Spencer.I don't know if you can make this full screen. So here, um, this one in 2018, he's he retweeted an article, I guess essentially saying that a biggest crash has come in and to his credit, there was a strong dip, uh, kind of like directly after that, but nothing really of a crash. And the only time he was ever somewhat vindicated was here in the COVID crash, which of course, uh, you know, an obvious factors playing into it.Other than just, he said the crash is beginning on April 17th. It was already over by. Oh, no. Yeah. He's yeah. Crash only beginning, April 17th and the, and the markets from then, you know, went way higher than the previous levels before the COVID. So, you know, to say he's been wrong numerous times and calling this out would be kind of an understatement.Someone else on Twitter, you know, said, if you listen to him, your returns would be 0% since 2012, because, uh, I guess 2012 was the first time he recommended kind of going all cash. Um, so I don't know. So it's, I mean, it's one of those things to me, that guys like this, that, that keep calling for a crash eventually they'll say, Hey look, I was right.But it's like, yeah, but you were wrong for 10 plus years and you missed out on all these gains, you know, from the spy. Yeah. Christian gala Gallagher, and the Chad saying he will be right eventually. I mean, yeah. If I keep saying, Hey, the, you know, the market's going to be down every day. Eventually I'll be right.I, if you call for the world to end one day, the world's going to end. You're going to be right. It's just a question of, are you alive? Yeah, right. Um, so, so I, you, so the title of this video, again, I made it stock market or new all time, high stock market crash, or new all time highs. Spencer, we've talked about this before.You and I are both on the side that we will see new all-time highs before the end of the year. That's not saying we're, you know, Betty don't, you know, whatever. We're just, if we had to pick, will there be new all time highs or will there not be we're on the side that we think there will be? So, yeah, I have a bet on with joy and the bet is referring to the S and P 500 specifically, which I actually don't know how great I feel about that because the more I look at the spa or the S and P 500, the more I realize, not that I haven't known this, we've all known this obviously, but the spy really is just, it's just six stocks, right?It's it's it's fat man. Right? F a T M a N. Right? It's Facebook, apple, Tesla, Microsoft. Alphabet, Amazon Netflix, right? Those right. I got there, right. Fat man. Yeah. Fat, M a N uh, seven, seven stocks. And whatever those seven stocks do is going to be whatever the S and P does. Uh, w w let's just do a quick, let's just do a quick, um, let me go here we go.Want me go to ETF, db.com and we can, excuse me, let's do some quick math in our heads. All right. No, not in our heads. Yeah. In our heads. Okay. Uh, let's let's add up these, these holdings. So apple is six plus six. We'll call it 12. Uh, we'll call that 16. Uh, we'll call that 18. We'll call that 20, uh, oh, wait.It's actually, um, Yeah, it's alphabet for cause there's two share classes, but, uh, uh, so call it 22, call Tesla. We'll just call it 20. You want to call it 25? Ian we'll call it twenty-five even actually the end in fact, man could be Nvidia. We'll call it 20 or so. So 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 stocks are 25% of the S and P give or take.Um, it's not exactly, obviously. Um, and so it's, whatever those six are going to do is whatever the spine is going to do, basically. Right? So a day like today, where like you could say the market is up Mo there was way more green than there is right today. And yet the spies on the red, because those six stocks are not.But if you look at the IWM. I have a great day. Wow. I'm looking at Tesla right now up about two and a half percent, almost at $800. I feel like Tesla has quietly, um, you know, gotten back up to $800, maybe a little bit absent with some of the attention that Tesla has gotten in its previous runs, maybe, cause it's just been kind of a steady climb to 800 over the past, uh, you know, four months or so, as opposed to it being up 10% every day or whatever.But, uh, I mean the chart looks insanely good right now. Congratulations. Hertz comes and says that was as best day all year. That's great. Um, so anyway, to bring it full circle, I do have a bet on that thing that says, we'll get the essence, a new all-time high in the S and P by the end of the year. Um, but it's really what it comes down to is whatever those six docs do is what it's, what the SOP is going to do.So I, I'm going to try and wean myself off of the S and P um, it's hard though, to just use it as your gauge, but. I'm still balling. You're saying you don't think it's a effective gauge because it's so heavily weighted among those. Yeah. I mean, we talked about, we've been talking about this for months. I'm pre-market prep, but it's hard to change to change your behavior.And I did recently, not recently, like a year ago, I think I changed the weightings in my, this is like super, like, I don't know, not narrative, you're not wonky, but this is just like, this is super boring, but I changed the weightings in my 401k to be 75. I have two funds, a small cap and a large cap, and I made it to be 75% small cap, 25% of large cap.Wow. Yeah. Um, what was the thought process going into that? Originally? It was flipped and then I, I realized, no, I want to play with the other way. Small caps is a historically outperformed and well large caps. It's this it's really not, it's not even large cap. Six mega caps. And I was like, I don't want these six docs.So essentially, I mean, obviously, you know, you said small caps, like historically tend to over-perform, but I think over the last, like 10, 15 years though, you know, the apples, the Google Facebook have just had ridiculous returns compared to the small cap. So you're saying essentially you're betting on that.There'll be a, kind of like a reversion to the means and the small caps got to catch up with these big guys eventually. Yeah. I mean, there, there is data. Hold on a sec. I'm trying to find the page where I, uh, where I, I favorite thing, I kind of agree because it's like, look from 2000 to now 2021 for the past 21 years, the best investments have been, you know, Amazon, apple, Google.And I think it's like time now that we start looking. Forward to the next, um, you know, what will be the next, the best investments of the next 20 years? Maybe it, maybe it is still apple, Google, whatever, but I think we might, you know, get some new, um, see, I just don't know. What's what are the most innovative companies out there right now, um, that are going to be more that are going to be able to grow at the pace that apple, Google?I don't know. So when I say historically small caps outperform, I'm not referring to the last decade. The last decade, large, you guys know this large caps, dominate, dominate, dominate, dominate annual, um, gain of call we'll we'll call it temporary. We just round up, but call it 10%, right? Just 9.8% annualized gains, huge small caps around 8.9%.Uh, but if you go back like 20, 30, 40, 50 years, small caps have the edge, if you go back further. So I, I don't know the answer to your question AB um, But maybe, maybe it's the group of stocks that's been like that we're like rallying, like crazy. And I've been beaten down this year. Saw someone mentioned DocuSign.DocuSign is actually held up, rotate that stock's just so expensive. I feel like, I don't know. That's the problem is he, these stocks like, like you, you might love a zoom or DocuSign or a, I don't know, a Roku or a square, but they're just, I think let's think about it this way. So the companies, the mega caps that have grown over the past 20 years so much, you know, whether we're talking apple, Microsoft, Google, um, they're they were kind of in emerging markets in a way.So you think about it like apple, like smartphones. When smartphones became popularized, apple was in a position to put out the iPhone and become the most popular smartphone smartphone. So I think if we look at like, what markets do we expect to continue to grow? So, you know, we've seen it with EVs where like a lot of these companies, like you said, just got super expensive and then now are, are getting beaten down.I think there will be kind of winners and losers out of those. Like, I don't think every single Evie stock that ran back and who's going to pick the winner. Not me, not me. Probably Warren, probably, maybe no. Warren, you think Warren Buffett's in a bind and Eve stocker you're out of your mind? Not now. Well, Spencer.He, one of his biggest holdings is in a BYD, which is an Evie company. Second of all, I think once he is able to identify like the companies that make money, these Evie companies don't make money. Well, like I said, he's a big investor in this BYD Evie company, so he's got to believe in it somewhat. Um, yeah.Thank you, Chris. Backing me up in the chat. Uh, I think he'll, he'll recognize be able to recognize which one of these companies will be able to make a bunch of money. Um, other emerging markets that I could see coming in the next 20 years, I think there's a lot of, um, things in the medical field that will be big, whether that's tele-health, whether that's, uh, and I'm not just talking like biotech companies that make different drugs.I I'm saying like companies that will kind of like revolutionize health. Uh, so I've already made these calls in my portfolio. I've already made these calls. Okay. Here are your big ones. This is my portfolio. Okay. Let me make the names bigger so you all can see, okay. I've already made these sector. I like making sector wide calls.Okay. I've got cannabis. I've got cyberspace. I've got 5g. I've got e-sports. I have a very, very, very small piece of space. I literally have got like, probably like 10 chairs of space of, of UFO. Right. Very small. Okay. I've got a biotech. I've got this, uh, the, um, uh, SRV, R it's it's a, it's a data center REIT.It's basically just like, it's a read that owns data centers and server centers. Okay. Love it. Everyone needs data. Now, whether you're in the sports gambling industry, whether you're in healthcare, everyone needs, everyone needs. Yep. I've got blog. I've got the blockchain ETF, a little bit of that. I've got clean energy PBD.I've got small cap industrials and the, and these are the calls that I'm making. And for a lot of the year, it's been pretty brutal to be in e-sports. For example, it's been horrible, but I don't care about this year in e-sports. So I've made my calls, cannabis, cybersecurity, e-sports 5g biotech server. Ah, small cap industrials and clean energy.That's what I've got a Christian there's two BYD is there's Boyd gaming. Um, which is what I think you're referring to. There's also someone through the ticker in the chat it's on the OTC, since it's based out of China, it's like BYU DDF, I believe. Um, it is a Chinese Evy battery maker, or maybe they make cars too.I don't know either way Burke share, uh, and Warren buffet holds a significant stake in there. So, um, might be wanting to check out, but Spencer, we are wrapping out of time. I'm going to see if Neil is ready. Um, oh yeah, shout out and Verso win a year of Benzinga pro entered one a year. Benzinga pro if you sign up for our healthcare conference, that is starting on Wednesday.Um, if you go to BZ, small cap.com, you can sign up for free and, uh, yeah. Enter to win a free year. Benzinga pro yeah. I have a last thing to plug again. Just as a reminder, check out the Benzinga Moomoo trading competition. AB probably has no idea what this is, but that's okay. He's not paying attention. Uh, so click on the link in the description.First place gets 24 shares of Nvidia for a free second place gets 12. Yeah, it's, that's a lot of money. Five grand, man. Am I allowed to participate yet? It's yes. Click on the link in the description. I already have some shares of Nvidia, but for opening an account or Moomoo funding with the $500 and you are eligible to, to participate in the Moomoo and Benzinga us paper trading competition.Uh, the last day to enter is October 15th and it ends on the 29th. So the link is in description. It's also in the chat and don't say, didn't warn you because I do. I warned you. There we go. All right. That's a wrap for power hour today. Let's get Neil going on, get technical, everyone smash that like button and, uh, we'll see.Y'all later. It's the green today. Everyone. It's a green, it's a green day.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/zingernation-power-hour/exclusive-contentAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

Rise Up
Rise Up: AAPI Excellence, Episode 4, Dory Caplin

Rise Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2021 26:46


In Episode 4, we feature Dory Caplin, CEO/Founder at Dream Team Concepts and Cofounder of IQ4AGILE. We talk about learning to pivot in workforce development, how agile concepts meet best practices in the higher ed industry, and the growth mindset and importance of education and work ethics in the Asian community. Rise Up: AAPI Excellence is a podcast devoted to celebrating the experiences, challenges, and successes of the Asian, Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander community. *Stock music provided by wolfgangwoehrle, from Pond5

Geaux Play Esports
(S2E9) - Special Guest Alan Caplin of JCap's Foundation

Geaux Play Esports

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2020 39:06


12/17/16 Jared recorded,“I hope you enjoy the story of J Cap.” “I just want people to be happy, No matter what.” Jared JCap Caplin. “Sometimes life turns out different than you expect. Even if your life isn't very good right now, it can always get better.”JCap is Awesome!!!At 19 years old Jared Caplin created J Cap's Foundation for Disabilities as a 501c3 Non-profit organization. His mission was to inspire and help people.01/13/2020 JCap & I named this year Vision 2020/Impact 2020. 01/15/2020 The torch was passed.. Impact 2020 Mission: “Make Somebody's Day -Everyday Like it's the Only Day.”Consider the Impact of an army of individuals - gamers, youth, adults and business owners, doing the little things. One act of kindness “Everyday” that “makes Somebody's day” like it is “the Only day.” One little act x 1000, 10,000 100,000 1 million: THE POWER OF JCAPISAWESOME.ORG

The Muay Thai Podcast
Muay Thai Podcast #043 – Bernard Caplin

The Muay Thai Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2020 52:14


 In today's podcast, I chat once again with Bernard Caplin from Chok Magazine. Subscribe to the Muay Thai Podcast HERE ... Read more

caplin muay thai podcast
The Muay Thai Podcast
Muay Thai Podcast #041 – Bernard Caplin Chok !! Magazine

The Muay Thai Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2020 27:27


In today's podcast, I chat with Bernard Caplin from Chok Magazine Subscribe to the Muay Thai Podcast HERE Subscribe to ... Read more

magazine chok caplin muay thai podcast
The Sales Hacker Podcast
79. How to Successfully Navigate Major Transition w/ Bryan Caplin of Andela

The Sales Hacker Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2019 49:01


This week on the Sales Hacker podcast, we talk to Bryan Caplin, CRO of Andela.  Bryan recently left Axiom as GM and Head of North American Sales and Marketing of Axiom to join Andela as CRO. He talks us through that transition—knowing when was the right time to leave, his criteria for evaluating a new company, and what he did in the first 30, 60, 90 days as a new executive.

The Photo Brigade Podcast
130 - George Kalinsky - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2017 67:05


On this episode Robert Caplin chats with George Kalinsky, official photographer for Madison Square Garden. One of the institutions of "The World's Most Famous Arena” is not just the venue, but George, the house photographer himself, who has celebrated his 50th Anniversary covering over 10,000 events over the years. He's been the team photographer for The Knicks and has seen some of the most iconic moments in sports, politics, music, and religion. He has endless stories of friendships with the likes of Frank Sinatra and Mohammed Ali. We talk about his unconventional entrance into the world of photography which led to his life-long position at The Garden, his background as a designer, his exhibits and more. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast!

The Photo Brigade Podcast
129 -Melissa Golden - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2017 45:07


On this episode Robert Caplin chats with Atlanta-based photographer Melissa Golden. As a return guest on the podcast, this was Melissa's first since we've begun video podcasting, so it's extra exciting to not only share her fun stories of covering everything from celebrity portraiture, DC politics, forest fires and more, but we get to see her work too. We talk about her career path and the importance of networking both online and in person to keep her name at the top of editors lists. We also talk about how she works with a photo agency and how it benefits her on both the journalistic and commercial side with negotiation and administrative work. We learn her 5-year goal and also get her advice to youngsters who hope to start a career in photojournalism. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast!

The Photo Brigade Podcast
128 - Alex Scott - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2017 42:44


On this episode Robert Caplin chats with Alex Scott, a talented freelance photographer and photo editor for ABCNews.com. He made his way to NYC as a photographer but has ended up in the world of photo editing as his career has developed him which has inspired while working directly with some incredible photographers. We talk about his personal projects and travels and the importance of building trusting relationships with subjects and how to work with different communities and cultures. We talk about his background at university both in journalism as an undergrad to graduate school for photography at Missouri to find a clear vision for himself. While editing nearly full time, he's been working on an ongoing personal project outside his apartment doors documenting his own NYC neighborhood. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast!

The Photo Brigade Podcast
127 - Smita Sharma - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2017 38:17


On this episode Robert Caplin chats with Smita Sharma, a photojournalist and documentary photographer based in both New York and India, about covering gender and human rights issues. We talk about how she started he career by working for newspapers in India before coming to Manhattan to attend a short course at the New York Film Academy, which subsequently led to her applying to the International Center For Photography, where she learned from the perspectives and experiences of her fellow students via critiques and their life experiences. We talk about the importance of workshops she's attended, general networking, and working with a group of her peers as a member of the Koan Collective. We also discuss her career path and how she's navigated the world of freelance photography since going professional in 2013, to the point where she's now been published by various international publications including CNN, The Washington Post, New York Times, BBC, among many others. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast!

The Photo Brigade Podcast
126 - Eric Thayer - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2017 35:07


On this episode, Robert Caplin talks with Eric Thayer about his work covering the 2016 US Election since the primaries, his time with Donald J. Trump, and covering the refugee crisis around the world. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast.

The Photo Brigade Podcast
125 - Harry Benson - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2016 92:23


On this episode, Robert Caplin chats with the one-and-only Harry Benson, who initially rose to fame alongside The Beatles, having covered their inaugural trip to the United States in 1964. They talk about his legendary career working with world leaders and celebrities, as well as capturing crucial historical moments. They also discuss the new documentary "Harry Benson: Shoot First" chronicling his epic career. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast.

The Photo Brigade Podcast
124 - Michael Zagaris - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2016 43:48


On this episode Robert Caplin chats with Rock & roll photography legend Michael Zagaris about his career documenting the greats in music as he toured with the Rolling Stones, The Who, kicked it with Jerry Garcia, Eric Clapton, Peter Frampton, David Bowie and scores more! They talk about his just released book “Total Excess” chunk full of his music archives and also discuss Michael's 40+ years as the team photographer for both the San Francisco 49ers and Oakland A's and all the crazy stories in between! Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast.

The Photo Brigade Podcast
123 - BP Miller - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2016 43:48


On this episode Robert chats with BP Miller about his career in photojournalism, their recent expansion to San Francisco with Scott Strazzante and what it has to do with putting photojournalists back to work. They also talk about his working for charitable organizations and giving back to the industry that has treated him so well. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast.

The Photo Brigade Podcast
122 - Limor Garfinkle - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2016 36:19


On this episode Robert chats with Limor Garfinkle, a New York-based photographer originally from Israel. They talk about how photography saved her life and how she got into the photography business only 5 years ago and fully supports herself taking pictures. They also talk about her new portrait series and give a first look. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast.

The Photo Brigade Podcast
121 - Luke Copping - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2016 41:06


On this episode Robert chats with Buffalo-based editorial and commercial Luke Copping about his career and business sense while serving on the national board of ASMP and juggling his many clients. They talk about his charitable work taking pictures of adoptable pit bulls from a local rescue shelter, look at his work, and much more. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast.

The Photo Brigade Podcast
120 - Mohammed Elshamy - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2016 51:23


On this episode Robert chats with Mohammed Elshamy, a 22-year-old Egyptian photojournalist based in NYC who covers some of the world's most dire events such as the Ebola epidemic in West Africa, Boko Haram attacks in Nigeria, the political unrest and street violence in Egypt, the European refugee crisis, the armed rebellion in South Sudan, and much more. They discuss his career path and the physical and mental toll (PTSD) this sort of coverage has on photographers who document such issues. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast!

The Photo Brigade Podcast
119 - Anthony Geathers - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2016 58:06


On this episode Robert chats with Brooklyn-based photographer Anthony Geathers. They talk about Anthony's career path, serving two combat deployments in the Marine Corps to Afghanistan as a machine gunner before attending the School of Visual Arts and beginning his freelance career shooting sports and athletic portraiture. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast!

The Photo Brigade Podcast
118 - David Goldman - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2016 49:08


On this episode Robert chats with David Goldman, a Brooklyn-based photographer who specializes in topics around human rights, marginalized people, and maternal health.They talk about his background shooting celebrities and rock stars in LA, his career path, and much more! Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast!

The Photo Brigade Podcast
117 - Kerri MacDonald - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2016 64:34


On this episode Robert chats with The New York Times Social Media Photo Editor Kerri MacDonald about her career path and all things social. They talk about the importance of maintaining an active social presence and how she built, maintains, and launches all the NY Times accounts. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast!

The Photo Brigade Podcast
116 - David Geffin - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2016 58:16


On this episode Robert chats with his good friend, business partner, and stellar fashion photographer and DP David Geffin about what's going on in the industry, how to stay inspired, and what it takes to transition careers for those who want to take their photo and video work to a more professional, income-generating level!

The Photo Brigade Podcast
115 - Dorie Hagler - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2016 45:35


On this episode Robert Caplin chats with photographer Dorie Hagler, a documentary storyteller. They talk about her career path and background as a newspaper photographer in New Mexico and her various projects including photographing in prisons and her ongoing portraiture project “me&Eve”. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast! 

The Photo Brigade Podcast
114 - Cameron Michael - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2016 38:53


On this episode Robert Caplin chats with his friend Cameron Michael, a commercial photographer, Director of Photography, and Advanced Motion Control Timelapser. They talk about Cameron's career path, some of his super cool projects (that he's allowed to speak about), and much more! Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast.

The Photo Brigade Podcast
113 - Jonah Markowitz - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2016 47:05


On this episode Robert chats with documentary photographer/filmmaker Jonah Markowitz about his documentary projects, portrait work, his background in air pollution research before his transition into photography, his grant with View Find, life as a freelancer, funding long-term projects, his feelings on multimedia and social, the importance of empathy in documentary work, and recognizing the lack of diversity and privilege of storytellers in the industry. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast.

The Photo Brigade Podcast
112 - Kevin Larkin - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2016 44:32


On this episode Robert chats with his long lost photo editor Kevin Larkin who worked the New York Times Picture Desk while Robert interned over a decade ago. They talk about Kevin's career path as both a photographer and editor, his move to Dubai to start a newspaper, and his transition back to freelance photography back in the US.

The Photo Brigade Podcast
111 - Shin Woong-jae - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2016 51:29


On this episode Robert chats with South Korean photographer Shin Woong-jae about his long-term project documenting the devastating effects from production of semiconductors in electronics to the health of humans and electronics. They also discuss his career path from marketing and brand management to his studies at ICP, and becoming a full-time photographer living and working in New York whilst traveling the world working on self-generated projects. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast!

The Photo Brigade Podcast
109 - Gary He - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2016 42:57


On this episode Robert Caplin chats with Gary He, a friend and fellow photographer based in Brooklyn, New York. They talk about Gary's career path, when they both interned in NYC in 2005, and about his newest venture into app development. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast! 

The Photo Brigade Podcast
107 - Andrew Renneisen - Photo Brigade Podcast

The Photo Brigade Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2016 38:40


On this episode Robert Caplin chats with photographer Andrew Renneisen who specializes in documenting conflict, race, and ethnic and social issues domestically and internationally. They talk about how he started out, his internships, business, and about his upcoming move to Nairobi, Kenya where he will be represented by Getty Images Reportage. Sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode of The Photo Brigade Podcast!