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We celebrated International Women's Day by delving into the findings of the Women in the Workplace 2025 report by McKinsey & Company, in partnership with LeanIn.Org. This landmark study, now in its tenth year, provided a comprehensive analysis of the progress and challenges faced by women in corporate America. You can read the report here.Following the presentation of reported results, Christine Johnson of McKinsey & Company, facilitated an insightful panel discussion with distinguished women in the industry:Tatiana Berardinelli, Chief Human Resources Officer at ClariantAlison Jones, Chief Strategy Officer at ICISMichelle Wu, Chief Digital Data & Technology Officer at BrenntagThe panel discussion was moderated by Christine Johnson, Partner at Global management consulting | McKinsey & CompanyThis event was sponsored by Clariant.
Dr. Gary Null provides a commentary on "Universal Healthcare" Universal Healthcare is the Solution to a Broken Medical System Gary Null, PhD Progressive Radio Network, March 3, 2025 For over 50 years, there has been no concerted or successful effort to bring down medical costs in the American healthcare system. Nor are the federal health agencies making disease prevention a priority. Regardless whether the political left or right sponsors proposals for reform, such measures are repeatedly defeated by both parties in Congress. As a result, the nation's healthcare system remains one of the most expensive and least efficient in the developed world. For the past 30 years, medical bills contributing to personal debt regularly rank among the top three causes of personal bankruptcy. This is a reality that reflects not only the financial strain on ordinary Americans but the systemic failure of the healthcare system itself. The urgent question is: If President Trump and his administration are truly seeking to reduce the nation's $36 trillion deficit, why is there no serious effort to reform the most bloated and corrupt sector of the economy? A key obstacle is the widespread misinformation campaign that falsely claims universal health care would cost an additional $2 trillion annually and further balloon the national debt. However, a more honest assessment reveals the opposite. If the US adopted a universal single-payer system, the nation could actually save up to $20 trillion over the next 10 years rather than add to the deficit. Even with the most ambitious efforts by people like Elon Musk to rein in federal spending or optimize government efficiency, the estimated savings would only amount to $500 billion. This is only a fraction of what could be achieved through comprehensive healthcare reform alone. Healthcare is the largest single expenditure of the federal budget. A careful examination of where the $5 trillion spent annually on healthcare actually goes reveals massive systemic fraud and inefficiency. Aside from emergency medicine, which accounts for only 10-12 percent of total healthcare expenditures, the bulk of this spending does not deliver better health outcomes nor reduce trends in physical and mental illness. Applying Ockham's Razor, the principle that the simplest solution is often the best, the obvious conclusion is that America's astronomical healthcare costs are the direct result of price gouging on an unimaginable scale. For example, in most small businesses, profit margins range between 1.6 and 2.5 percent, such as in grocery retail. Yet the pharmaceutical industrial complex routinely operates on markup rates as high as 150,000 percent for many prescription drugs. The chart below highlights the astronomical gap between the retail price of some top-selling patented pharmaceutical medications and their generic equivalents. Drug Condition Patent Price (per unit) Generic Price Estimated Manufacture Cost Markup Source Insulin (Humalog) Diabetes $300 $30 $3 10,000% Rand (2021) EpiPen Allergic reactions $600 $30 $10 6,000% BMJ (2022) Daraprim Toxoplasmosis $750/pill $2 $0.50 150,000% JAMA (2019) Harvoni Hepatitis C $94,500 (12 weeks) $30,000 $200 47,000% WHO Report (2018) Lipitor Cholesterol $150 $10 $0.50 29,900% Health Affairs (2020) Xarelto Blood Thinner $450 $25 $1.50 30,000% NEJM (2020) Abilify Schizophrenia $800 (30 tablets) $15 $2 39,900% AJMC (2019) Revlimid Cancer $16,000/mo $450 $150 10,500% Kaiser Health News (2021) Humira Arthritis $2,984/dose $400 $50 5,868% Rand (2021) Sovaldi Hepatitis C $1,000/pill $10 $2 49,900% JAMA (2021) Xolair Asthma $2,400/dose $300 $50 4,800% NEJM (2020) Gleevec Leukemia $10,000/mo $350 $200 4,900% Harvard Public Health Review (2020) OxyContin Pain Relief $600 (30 tablets) $15 $0.50 119,900% BMJ (2022) Remdesivir Covid-19 $3,120 (5 doses) N/A $10 31,100% The Lancet (2020) The corruption extends far beyond price gouging. Many pharmaceutical companies convince federal health agencies to fund their basic research and drug development with taxpayer dollars. Yet when these companies bring successful products to market, the profits are kept entirely by the corporations or shared with the agencies or groups of government scientists. On the other hand, the public, who funded the research, receives no financial return. This amounts to a systemic betrayal of the public trust on a scale of hundreds of billions of dollars annually. Another significant contributor to rising healthcare costs is the widespread practice of defensive medicine that is driven by the constant threat of litigation. Over the past 40 years, defensive medicine has become a cottage industry. Physicians order excessive diagnostic tests and unnecessary treatments simply to protect themselves from lawsuits. Study after study has shown that these over-performed procedures not only inflate costs but lead to iatrogenesis or medical injury and death caused by the medical system and practices itself. The solution is simple: adopting no-fault healthcare coverage for everyone where patients receive care without needing to sue and thereby freeing doctors from the burden of excessive malpractice insurance. A single-payer universal healthcare system could fundamentally transform the entire industry by capping profits at every level — from drug manufacturers to hospitals to medical equipment suppliers. The Department of Health and Human Services would have the authority to set profit margins for medical procedures. This would ensure that healthcare is determined by outcomes, not profits. Additionally, the growing influence of private equity firms and vulture capitalists buying up hospitals and medical clinics across America must be reined in. These equity firms prioritize profit extraction over improving the quality of care. They often slash staff, raise prices, and dictate medical procedures based on what will yield the highest returns. Another vital reform would be to provide free medical education for doctors and nurses in exchange for five years of service under the universal system. Medical professionals would earn a realistic salary cap to prevent them from being lured into equity partnerships or charging exorbitant rates. The biggest single expense in the current system, however, is the private health insurance industry, which consumes 33 percent of the $5 trillion healthcare budget. Health insurance CEOs consistently rank among the highest-paid executives in the country. Their companies, who are nothing more than bean counters, decide what procedures and drugs will be covered, partially covered, or denied altogether. This entire industry is designed to place profits above patients' lives. If the US dismantled its existing insurance-based system and replaced it with a fully reformed national healthcare model, the country could save $2.7 trillion annually while simultaneously improving health outcomes. Over the course of 10 years, those savings would amount to $27 trillion. This could wipe out nearly the entire national debt in a short time. This solution has been available for decades but has been systematically blocked by corporate lobbying and bipartisan corruption in Washington. The path forward is clear but only if American citizens demand a system where healthcare is valued as a public service and not a commodity. The national healthcare crisis is not just a fiscal issue. It is a crucial moral failure of the highest order. With the right reforms, the nation could simultaneously restore its financial health and deliver the kind of healthcare system its citizens have long deserved. American Healthcare: Corrupt, Broken and Lethal Richard Gale and Gary Null Progressive Radio Network, March 3, 2025 For a nation that prides itself on being the world's wealthiest, most innovative and technologically advanced, the US' healthcare system is nothing less than a disaster and disgrace. Not only are Americans the least healthy among the most developed nations, but the US' health system ranks dead last among high-income countries. Despite rising costs and our unshakeable faith in American medical exceptionalism, average life expectancy in the US has remained lower than other OECD nations for many years and continues to decline. The United Nations recognizes healthcare as a human right. In 2018, former UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon denounced the American healthcare system as "politically and morally wrong." During the pandemic it is estimated that two to three years was lost on average life expectancy. On the other hand, before the Covid-19 pandemic, countries with universal healthcare coverage found their average life expectancy stable or slowly increasing. The fundamental problem in the U.S. is that politics have been far too beholden to the pharmaceutical, HMO and private insurance industries. Neither party has made any concerted effort to reign in the corruption of corporate campaign funding and do what is sensible, financially feasible and morally correct to improve Americans' quality of health and well-being. The fact that our healthcare system is horribly broken is proof that moneyed interests have become so powerful to keep single-payer debate out of the media spotlight and censored. Poll after poll shows that the American public favors the expansion of public health coverage. Other incremental proposals, including Medicare and Medicaid buy-in plans, are also widely preferred to the Affordable Care Act or Obamacare mess we are currently stuck with. It is not difficult to understand how the dismal state of American medicine is the result of a system that has been sold out to the free-market and the bottom line interests of drug makers and an inflated private insurance industry. How advanced and ethically sound can a healthcare system be if tens of millions of people have no access to medical care because it is financially out of their reach? The figures speak for themselves. The U.S. is burdened with a $41 trillion Medicare liability. The number of uninsured has declined during the past several years but still lingers around 25 million. An additional 30-35 million are underinsured. There are currently 65 million Medicare enrollees and 89 million Medicaid recipients. This is an extremely unhealthy snapshot of the country's ability to provide affordable healthcare and it is certainly unsustainable. The system is a public economic failure, benefiting no one except the large and increasingly consolidated insurance and pharmaceutical firms at the top that supervise the racket. Our political parties have wrestled with single-payer or universal healthcare for decades. Obama ran his first 2008 presidential campaign on a single-payer platform. Since 1985, his campaign health adviser, the late Dr. Quentin Young from the University of Illinois Medical School, was one of the nation's leading voices calling for universal health coverage. During a private conversation with Dr. Young shortly before his passing in 2016, he conveyed his sense of betrayal at the hands of the Obama administration. Dr. Young was in his 80s when he joined the Obama campaign team to help lead the young Senator to victory on a promise that America would finally catch up with other nations. The doctor sounded defeated. He shared how he was manipulated, and that Obama held no sincere intention to make universal healthcare a part of his administration's agenda. During the closed-door negotiations, which spawned the weak and compromised Affordable Care Act, Dr. Young was neither consulted nor invited to participate. In fact, he told us that he never heard from Obama again after his White House victory. Past efforts to even raise the issue have been viciously attacked. A huge army of private interests is determined to keep the public enslaved to private insurers and high medical costs. The failure of our healthcare is in no small measure due to it being a fully for-profit operation. Last year, private health insurance accounted for 65 percent of coverage. Consider that there are over 900 private insurance companies in the US. National Health Expenditures (NHE) grew to $4.5 trillion in 2022, which was 17.3 percent of GDP. Older corporate rank-and-file Democrats and Republicans argue that a single-payer or socialized medical program is unaffordable. However, not only is single-payer affordable, it will end bankruptcies due to unpayable medical debt. In addition, universal healthcare, structured on a preventative model, will reduce disease rates at the outset. Corporate Democrats argue that Obama's Affordable Care Act (ACA) was a positive step inching the country towards complete public coverage. However, aside from providing coverage to the poorest of Americans, Obamacare turned into another financial anchor around the necks of millions more. According to the health policy research group KFF, the average annual health insurance premium for single coverage is $8,400 and almost $24,000 for a family. In addition, patient out-of-pocket costs continue to increase, a 6.6% increase to $471 billion in 2022. Rather than healthcare spending falling, it has exploded, and the Trump and Biden administrations made matters worse. Clearly, a universal healthcare program will require flipping the script on the entire private insurance industry, which employed over half a million people last year. Obviously, the most volatile debate concerning a national universal healthcare system concerns cost. Although there is already a socialized healthcare system in place -- every federal legislator, bureaucrat, government employee and veteran benefits from it -- fiscal Republican conservatives and groups such as the Koch Brothers network are single-mindedly dedicated to preventing the expansion of Medicare and Medicaid. A Koch-funded Mercatus analysis made the outrageous claim that a single-payer system would increase federal health spending by $32 trillion in ten years. However, analyses and reviews by the Congressional Budget Office in the early 1990s concluded that such a system would only increase spending at the start; enormous savings would quickly offset it as the years pass. In one analysis, "the savings in administrative costs [10 percent of health spending] would be more than enough to offset the expense of universal coverage." Defenders of those advocating for funding a National Health Program argue this can primarily be accomplished by raising taxes to levels comparable to other developed nations. This was a platform Senator Bernie Sanders and some of the younger progressive Democrats in the House campaigned on. The strategy was to tax the highest multimillion-dollar earners 60-70 percent. Despite the outrage of its critics, including old rank-and-file multi-millionaire Democrats like Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer, this is still far less than in the past. During the Korean War, the top tax rate was 91 percent; it declined to 70 percent in the late 1960s. Throughout most of the 1970s, those in the lowest income bracket were taxed at 14 percent. We are not advocating for this strategy because it ignores where the funding is going, and the corruption in the system that is contributing to exorbitant waste. But Democratic supporters of the ACA who oppose a universal healthcare plan ignore the additional taxes Obama levied to pay for the program. These included surtaxes on investment income, Medicare taxes from those earning over $200,000, taxes on tanning services, an excise tax on medical equipment, and a 40 percent tax on health coverage for costs over the designated cap that applied to flexible savings and health savings accounts. The entire ACA was reckless, sloppy and unnecessarily complicated from the start. The fact that Obamacare further strengthened the distinctions between two parallel systems -- federal and private -- with entirely different economic structures created a labyrinth of red tape, rules, and wasteful bureaucracy. Since the ACA went into effect, over 150 new boards, agencies and programs have had to be established to monitor its 2,700 pages of gibberish. A federal single-payer system would easily eliminate this bureaucracy and waste. A medical New Deal to establish universal healthcare coverage is a decisive step in the correct direction. But we must look at the crisis holistically and in a systematic way. Simply shuffling private insurance into a federal Medicare-for-all or buy-in program, funded by taxing the wealthiest of citizens, would only temporarily reduce costs. It will neither curtail nor slash escalating disease rates e. Any effective healthcare reform must also tackle the underlying reasons for Americans' poor state of health. We cannot shy away from examining the social illnesses infecting our entire free-market capitalist culture and its addiction to deregulation. A viable healthcare model would have to structurally transform how the medical economy operates. Finally, a successful medical New Deal must honestly evaluate the best and most reliable scientific evidence in order to effectively redirect public health spending. For example, Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, a former Obama healthcare adviser, observed that AIDS-HIV measures consume the most public health spending, even though the disease "ranked 75th on the list of diseases by personal health expenditures." On the other hand, according to the American Medical Association, a large percentage of the nation's $3.4 trillion healthcare spending goes towards treating preventable diseases, notably diabetes, common forms of heart disease, and back and neck pain conditions. In 2016, these three conditions were the most costly and accounted for approximately $277 billion in spending. Last year, the CDC announced the autism rate is now 1 in 36 children compared to 1 in 44 two years ago. A retracted study by Mark Blaxill, an autism activist at the Holland Center and a friend of the authors, estimates that ASD costs will reach $589 billion annually by 2030. There are no signs that this alarming trend will reverse and decline; and yet, our entire federal health system has failed to conscientiously investigate the underlying causes of this epidemic. All explanations that might interfere with the pharmaceutical industry's unchecked growth, such as over-vaccination, are ignored and viciously discredited without any sound scientific evidence. Therefore, a proper medical New Deal will require a systemic overhaul and reform of our federal health agencies, especially the HHS, CDC and FDA. Only the Robert Kennedy Jr presidential campaign is even addressing the crisis and has an inexpensive and comprehensive plan to deal with it. For any medical revolution to succeed in advancing universal healthcare, the plan must prioritize spending in a manner that serves public health and not private interests. It will also require reshuffling private corporate interests and their lobbyists to the sidelines, away from any strategic planning, in order to break up the private interests' control over federal agencies and its revolving door policies. Aside from those who benefit from this medical corruption, the overwhelming majority of Americans would agree with this criticism. However, there is a complete lack of national trust that our legislators, including the so-called progressives, would be willing to undertake such actions. In addition, America's healthcare system ignores the single most critical initiative to reduce costs - that is, preventative efforts and programs instead of deregulation and closing loopholes designed to protect the drug and insurance industries' bottom line. Prevention can begin with banning toxic chemicals that are proven health hazards associated with current disease epidemics, and it can begin by removing a 1,000-plus toxins already banned in Europe. This should be a no-brainer for any legislator who cares for public health. For example, Stacy Malkan, co-founder of the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics, notes that "the policy approach in the US and Europe is dramatically different" when it comes to chemical allowances in cosmetic products. Whereas the EU has banned 1,328 toxic substances from the cosmetic industry alone, the US has banned only 11. The US continues to allow carcinogenic formaldehyde, petroleum, forever chemicals, many parabens (an estrogen mimicker and endocrine hormone destroyer), the highly allergenic p-phenylenediamine or PBD, triclosan, which has been associated with the rise in antibiotic resistant bacteria, avobenzone, and many others to be used in cosmetics, sunscreens, shampoo and hair dyes. Next, the food Americans consume can be reevaluated for its health benefits. There should be no hesitation to tax the unhealthiest foods, such as commercial junk food, sodas and candy relying on high fructose corn syrup, products that contain ingredients proven to be toxic, and meat products laden with dangerous chemicals including growth hormones and antibiotics. The scientific evidence that the average American diet is contributing to rising disease trends is indisputable. We could also implement additional taxes on the public advertising of these demonstrably unhealthy products. All such tax revenue would accrue to a national universal health program to offset medical expenditures associated with the very illnesses linked to these products. Although such tax measures would help pay for a new medical New Deal, it may be combined with programs to educate the public about healthy nutrition if it is to produce a reduction in the most common preventable diseases. In fact, comprehensive nutrition courses in medical schools should be mandatory because the average physician receives no education in this crucial subject. In addition, preventative health education should be mandatory throughout public school systems. Private insurers force hospitals, clinics and private physicians into financial corners, and this is contributing to prodigious waste in money and resources. Annually, healthcare spending towards medical liability insurance costs tens of billions of dollars. In particular, this economic burden has taxed small clinics and physicians. It is well past the time that physician liability insurance is replaced with no-fault options. Today's doctors are spending an inordinate amount of money to protect themselves. Legions of liability and trial lawyers seek big paydays for themselves stemming from physician error. This has created a culture of fear among doctors and hospitals, resulting in the overly cautious practice of defensive medicine, driving up costs and insurance premiums just to avoid lawsuits. Doctors are forced to order unnecessary tests and prescribe more medications and medical procedures just to cover their backsides. No-fault insurance is a common-sense plan that enables physicians to pursue their profession in a manner that will reduce iatrogenic injuries and costs. Individual cases requiring additional medical intervention and loss of income would still be compensated. This would generate huge savings. No other nation suffers from the scourge of excessive drug price gouging like the US. After many years of haggling to lower prices and increase access to generic drugs, only a minute amount of progress has been made in recent years. A 60 Minutes feature about the Affordable Care Act reported an "orgy of lobbying and backroom deals in which just about everyone with a stake in the $3-trillion-a-year health industry came out ahead—except the taxpayers.” For example, Life Extension magazine reported that an antiviral cream (acyclovir), which had lost its patent protection, "was being sold to pharmacies for 7,500% over the active ingredient cost. The active ingredient (acyclovir) costs only 8 pennies, yet pharmacies are paying a generic maker $600 for this drug and selling it to consumers for around $700." Other examples include the antibiotic Doxycycline. The price per pill averages 7 cents to $3.36 but has a 5,300 percent markup when it reaches the consumer. The antidepressant Clomipramine is marked up 3,780 percent, and the anti-hypertensive drug Captopril's mark-up is 2,850 percent. And these are generic drugs! Medication costs need to be dramatically cut to allow drug manufacturers a reasonable but not obscene profit margin. By capping profits approximately 100 percent above all costs, we would save our system hundreds of billions of dollars. Such a measure would also extirpate the growing corporate misdemeanors of pricing fraud, which forces patients to pay out-of-pocket in order to make up for the costs insurers are unwilling to pay. Finally, we can acknowledge that our healthcare is fundamentally a despotic rationing system based upon high insurance costs vis-a-vis a toss of the dice to determine where a person sits on the economic ladder. For the past three decades it has contributed to inequality. The present insurance-based economic metrics cast millions of Americans out of coverage because private insurance costs are beyond their means. Uwe Reinhardt, a Princeton University political economist, has called our system "brutal" because it "rations [people] out of the system." He defined rationing as "withholding something from someone that is beneficial." Discriminatory healthcare rationing now affects upwards to 60 million people who have been either priced out of the system or under insured. They make too much to qualify for Medicare under Obamacare, yet earn far too little to afford private insurance costs and premiums. In the final analysis, the entire system is discriminatory and predatory. However, we must be realistic. Almost every member of Congress has benefited from Big Pharma and private insurance lobbyists. The only way to begin to bring our healthcare program up to the level of a truly developed nation is to remove the drug industry's rampant and unnecessary profiteering from the equation. How did Fauci memory-hole a cure for AIDS and get away with it? By Helen Buyniski Over 700,000 Americans have died of AIDS since 1981, with the disease claiming some 42.3 million victims worldwide. While an HIV diagnosis is no longer considered a certain death sentence, the disease looms large in the public imagination and in public health funding, with contemporary treatments running into thousands of dollars per patient annually. But was there a cure for AIDS all this time - an affordable and safe treatment that was ruthlessly suppressed and attacked by the US public health bureaucracy and its agents? Could this have saved millions of lives and billions of dollars spent on AZT, ddI and failed HIV vaccine trials? What could possibly justify the decision to disappear a safe and effective approach down the memory hole? The inventor of the cure, Gary Null, already had several decades of experience creating healing protocols for physicians to help patients not responding well to conventional treatments by the time AIDS was officially defined in 1981. Null, a registered dietitian and board-certified nutritionist with a PhD in human nutrition and public health science, was a senior research fellow and Director of Anti-Aging Medicine at the Institute of Applied Biology for 36 years and has published over 950 papers, conducting groundbreaking experiments in reversing biological aging as confirmed with DNA methylation testing. Additionally, Null is a multi-award-winning documentary filmmaker, bestselling author, and investigative journalist whose work exposing crimes against humanity over the last 50 years has highlighted abuses by Big Pharma, the military-industrial complex, the financial industry, and the permanent government stay-behind networks that have come to be known as the Deep State. Null was contacted in 1974 by Dr. Stephen Caiazza, a physician working with a subculture of gay men in New York living the so-called “fast track” lifestyle, an extreme manifestation of the gay liberation movement that began with the Stonewall riots. Defined by rampant sexual promiscuity and copious use of illegal and prescription drugs, including heavy antibiotic use for a cornucopia of sexually-transmitted diseases, the fast-track never included more than about two percent of gay men, though these dominated many of the bathhouses and clubs that defined gay nightlife in the era. These patients had become seriously ill as a result of their indulgence, generally arriving at the clinic with multiple STDs including cytomegalovirus and several types of herpes and hepatitis, along with candida overgrowth, nutritional deficiencies, gut issues, and recurring pneumonia. Every week for the next 10 years, Null would counsel two or three of these men - a total of 800 patients - on how to detoxify their bodies and de-stress their lives, tracking their progress with Caiazza and the other providers at weekly feedback meetings that he credits with allowing the team to quickly evaluate which treatments were most effective. He observed that it only took about two years on the “fast track” for a healthy young person to begin seeing muscle loss and the recurrent, lingering opportunistic infections that would later come to be associated with AIDS - while those willing to commit to a healthier lifestyle could regain their health in about a year. It was with this background that Null established the Tri-State Healing Center in Manhattan in 1980, staffing the facility with what would eventually run to 22 certified health professionals to offer safe, natural, and effective low- and no-cost treatments to thousands of patients with HIV and AIDS-defining conditions. Null and his staff used variations of the protocols he had perfected with Caiazza's patients, a multifactorial patient-tailored approach that included high-dose vitamin C drips, intravenous ozone therapy, juicing and nutritional improvements and supplementation, aspects of homeopathy and naturopathy with some Traditional Chinese Medicine and Ayurvedic practices. Additional services offered on-site included acupuncture and holistic dentistry, while peer support groups were also held at the facility so that patients could find community and a positive environment, healing their minds and spirits while they healed their bodies. “Instead of trying to kill the virus with antiretroviral pharmaceuticals designed to stop viral replication before it kills patients, we focused on what benefits could be gained by building up the patients' natural immunity and restoring biochemical integrity so the body could fight for itself,” Null wrote in a 2014 article describing the philosophy behind the Center's approach, which was wholly at odds with the pharmaceutical model.1 Patients were comprehensively tested every week, with any “recovery” defined solely by the labs, which documented AIDS patient after patient - 1,200 of them - returning to good health and reversing their debilitating conditions. Null claims to have never lost an AIDS patient in the Center's care, even as the death toll for the disease - and its pharmaceutical standard of care AZT - reached an all-time high in the early 1990s. Eight patients who had opted for a more intensive course of treatment - visiting the Center six days a week rather than one - actually sero-deconverted, with repeated subsequent testing showing no trace of HIV in their bodies. As an experienced clinical researcher himself, Null recognized that any claims made by the Center would be massively scrutinized, challenging as they did the prevailing scientific consensus that AIDS was an incurable, terminal illness. He freely gave his protocols to any medical practitioner who asked, understanding that his own work could be considered scientifically valid only if others could replicate it under the same conditions. After weeks of daily observational visits to the Center, Dr. Robert Cathcart took the protocols back to San Francisco, where he excitedly reported that patients were no longer dying in his care. Null's own colleague at the Institute of Applied Biology, senior research fellow Elana Avram, set up IV drip rooms at the Institute and used his intensive protocols to sero-deconvert 10 patients over a two-year period. While the experiment had been conducted in secret, as the Institute had been funded by Big Pharma since its inception half a century earlier, Avram had hoped she would be able to publish a journal article to further publicize Null's protocols and potentially help AIDS patients, who were still dying at incredibly high rates thanks to Burroughs Wellcome's noxious but profitable AZT. But as she would later explain in a 2019 letter to Null, their groundbreaking research never made it into print - despite meticulous documentation of their successes - because the Institute's director and board feared their pharmaceutical benefactors would withdraw the funding on which they depended, given that Null's protocols did not involve any patentable or otherwise profitable drugs. When Avram approached them about publication, the board vetoed the idea, arguing that it would “draw negative attention because [the work] was contrary to standard drug treatments.” With no real point in continuing experiments along those lines without institutional support and no hope of obtaining funding from elsewhere, the department she had created specifically for these experiments shut down after a two-year followup with her test subjects - all of whom remained alive and healthy - was completed.2 While the Center was receiving regular visits by this time from medical professionals and, increasingly, black celebrities like Stokely Carmichael and Isaac Hayes, who would occasionally perform for the patients, the news was spreading by word of mouth alone - not a single media outlet had dared to document the clinic that was curing AIDS patients for free. Instead, they gave airtime to Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases, who had for years been spreading baseless, hysteria-fueling claims about HIV and AIDS to any news outlet that would put him on. His claim that children could contract the virus from “ordinary household conduct” with an infected relative proved so outrageous he had to walk it back,3 and he never really stopped insisting the deadly plague associated with gays and drug users was about to explode like a nuclear bomb among the law-abiding heterosexual population. Fauci by this time controlled all government science funding through NIAID, and his zero-tolerance approach to dissent on the HIV/AIDS front had already seen prominent scientists like virologist Peter Duesberg stripped of the resources they needed for their work because they had dared to question his commandment: There is no cause of AIDS but HIV, and AZT is its treatment. Even the AIDS activist groups, which by then had been coopted by Big Pharma and essentially reduced to astroturfing for the toxic failed chemotherapy drug AZT backed by the institutional might of Fauci's NIAID,4 didn't seem to want to hear that there was a cure. Unconcerned with the irrationality of denouncing the man touting his free AIDS cure as an “AIDS denier,” they warned journalists that platforming Null or anyone else rejecting the mainstream medical line would be met with organized demands for their firing. Determined to breach the institutional iron curtain and get his message to the masses, Null and his team staged a press conference in New York, inviting scientists and doctors from around the world to share their research on alternative approaches to HIV and AIDS in 1993. To emphasize the sound scientific basis of the Center's protocols and encourage guests to adopt them into their own practices, Null printed out thousands of abstracts in support of each nutrient and treatment being used. However, despite over 7,000 invitations sent three times to major media, government figures, scientists, and activists, almost none of the intended audience members showed up. Over 100 AIDS patients and their doctors, whose charts exhaustively documented their improvements using natural and nontoxic modalities over the preceding 12 months, gave filmed testimonials, declaring that the feared disease was no longer a death sentence, but the conference had effectively been silenced. Bill Tatum, publisher of the Amsterdam News, suggested Null and his patients would find a more welcoming audience in his home neighborhood of Harlem - specifically, its iconic Apollo Theatre. For three nights, the theater was packed to capacity. Hit especially hard by the epidemic and distrustful of a medical system that had only recently stopped being openly racist (the Tuskegee syphilis experiment only ended in 1972), black Americans, at least, did not seem to care what Anthony Fauci would do if he found out they were investigating alternatives to AZT and death. PBS journalist Tony Brown, having obtained a copy of the video of patient testimonials from the failed press conference, was among a handful of black journalists who began visiting the Center to investigate the legitimacy of Null's claims. Satisfied they had something significant to offer his audience, Brown invited eight patients - along with Null himself - onto his program over the course of several episodes to discuss the work. It was the first time these protocols had received any attention in the media, despite Null having released nearly two dozen articles and multiple documentaries on the subject by that time. A typical patient on one program, Al, a recovered IV drug user who was diagnosed with AIDS at age 32, described how he “panicked,” saw a doctor and started taking AZT despite his misgivings - only to be forced to discontinue the drug after just a few weeks due to his condition deteriorating rapidly. Researching alternatives brought him to Null, and after six months of “detoxing [his] lifestyle,” he observed his initial symptoms - swollen lymph nodes and weight loss - begin to reverse, culminating with sero-deconversion. On Bill McCreary's Channel 5 program, a married couple diagnosed with HIV described how they watched their T-cell counts increase as they cut out sugar, caffeine, smoking, and drinking and began eating a healthy diet. They also saw the virus leave their bodies. For HIV-positive viewers surrounded by fear and negativity, watching healthy-looking, cheerful “AIDS patients” detail their recovery while Null backed up their claims with charts must have been balm for the soul. But the TV programs were also a form of outreach to the medical community, with patients' charts always on hand to convince skeptics the cure was scientifically valid. Null brought patients' charts to every program, urging them to keep an open mind: “Other physicians and public health officials should know that there's good science in the alternative perspective. It may not be a therapy that they're familiar with, because they're just not trained in it, but if the results are positive, and you can document them…” He challenged doubters to send in charts from their own sero-deconverted patients on AZT, and volunteered to debate proponents of the orthodox treatment paradigm - though the NIH and WHO both refused to participate in such a debate on Tony Brown's Journal, following Fauci's directive prohibiting engagement with forbidden ideas. Aside from those few TV programs and Null's own films, suppression of Null's AIDS cure beyond word of mouth was total. The 2021 documentary The Cost of Denial, produced by the Society for Independent Journalists, tells the story of the Tri-State Healing Center and the medical paradigm that sought to destroy it, lamenting the loss of the lives that might have been saved in a more enlightened society. Nurse practitioner Luanne Pennesi, who treated many of the AIDS patients at the Center, speculated in the film that the refusal by the scientific establishment and AIDS activists to accept their successes was financially motivated. “It was as if they didn't want this information to get out. Understand that our healthcare system as we know it is a corporation, it's a corporate model, and it's about generating revenue. My concern was that maybe they couldn't generate enough revenue from these natural approaches.”5 Funding was certainly the main disciplinary tool Fauci's NIAID used to keep the scientific community in line. Despite the massive community interest in the work being done at the Center, no foundation or institution would defy Fauci and risk getting itself blacklisted, leaving Null to continue funding the operation out of his pocket with the profits from book sales. After 15 years, he left the Center in 1995, convinced the mainstream model had so thoroughly been institutionalized that there was no chance of overthrowing it. He has continued to counsel patients and advocate for a reappraisal of the HIV=AIDS hypothesis and its pharmaceutical treatments, highlighting the deeply flawed science underpinning the model of the disease espoused by the scientific establishment in 39 articles, six documentaries and a 700-page textbook on AIDS, but the Center's achievements have been effectively memory-holed by Fauci's multi-billion-dollar propaganda apparatus. FRUIT OF THE POISONOUS TREE To understand just how much of a threat Null's work was to the HIV/AIDS establishment, it is instructive to revisit the 1984 paper, published by Dr. Robert Gallo of the National Cancer Institute, that established HIV as the sole cause of AIDS. The CDC's official recognition of AIDS in 1981 had done little to quell the mounting public panic over the mysterious illness afflicting gay men in the US, as the agency had effectively admitted it had no idea what was causing them to sicken and die. As years passed with no progress determining the causative agent of the plague, activist groups like Gay Men's Health Crisis disrupted public events and threatened further mass civil disobedience as they excoriated the NIH for its sluggish allocation of government science funding to uncovering the cause of the “gay cancer.”6 When Gallo published his paper declaring that the retrovirus we now know as HIV was the sole “probable” cause of AIDS, its simple, single-factor hypothesis was the answer to the scientific establishment's prayers. This was particularly true for Fauci, as the NIAID chief was able to claim the hot new disease as his agency's own domain in what has been described as a “dramatic confrontation” with his rival Sam Broder at the National Cancer Institute. After all, Fauci pointed out, Gallo's findings - presented by Health and Human Services Secretary Margaret Heckler as if they were gospel truth before any other scientists had had a chance to inspect them, never mind conduct a full peer review - clearly classified AIDS as an infectious disease, and not a cancer like the Kaposi's sarcoma which was at the time its most visible manifestation. Money and media attention began pouring in, even as funding for the investigation of other potential causes of AIDS dried up. Having already patented a diagnostic test for “his” retrovirus before introducing it to the world, Gallo was poised for a financial windfall, while Fauci was busily leveraging the discovery into full bureaucratic empire of the US scientific apparatus. While it would serve as the sole basis for all US government-backed AIDS research to follow - quickly turning Gallo into the most-cited scientist in the world during the 1980s,7 Gallo's “discovery” of HIV was deeply problematic. The sample that yielded the momentous discovery actually belonged to Prof. Luc Montagnier of the French Institut Pasteur, a fact Gallo finally admitted in 1991, four years after a lawsuit from the French government challenged his patent on the HIV antibody test, forcing the US government to negotiate a hasty profit-sharing agreement between Gallo's and Montagnier's labs. That lawsuit triggered a cascade of official investigations into scientific misconduct by Gallo, and evidence submitted during one of these probes, unearthed in 2008 by journalist Janine Roberts, revealed a much deeper problem with the seminal “discovery.” While Gallo's co-author, Mikulas Popovic, had concluded after numerous experiments with the French samples that the virus they contained was not the cause of AIDS, Gallo had drastically altered the paper's conclusion, scribbling his notes in the margins, and submitted it for publication to the journal Science without informing his co-author. After Roberts shared her discovery with contacts in the scientific community, 37 scientific experts wrote to the journal demanding that Gallo's career-defining HIV paper be retracted from Science for lacking scientific integrity.8 Their call, backed by an endorsement from the 2,600-member scientific organization Rethinking AIDS, was ignored by the publication and by the rest of mainstream science despite - or perhaps because of - its profound implications. That 2008 letter, addressed to Science editor-in-chief Bruce Alberts and copied to American Association for the Advancement of Science CEO Alan Leshner, is worth reproducing here in its entirety, as it utterly dismantles Gallo's hypothesis - and with them the entire HIV is the sole cause of AIDS dogma upon which the contemporary medical model of the disease rests: On May 4, 1984 your journal published four papers by a group led by Dr. Robert Gallo. We are writing to express our serious concerns with regard to the integrity and veracity of the lead paper among these four of which Dr. Mikulas Popovic is the lead author.[1] The other three are also of concern because they rely upon the conclusions of the lead paper .[2][3][4] In the early 1990s, several highly critical reports on the research underlying these papers were produced as a result of governmental inquiries working under the supervision of scientists nominated by the National Academy of Sciences and the Institute of Medicine. The Office of Research Integrity of the US Department of Health and Human Services concluded that the lead paper was “fraught with false and erroneous statements,” and that the “ORI believes that the careless and unacceptable keeping of research records...reflects irresponsible laboratory management that has permanently impaired the ability to retrace the important steps taken.”[5] Further, a Congressional Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations led by US Representative John D. Dingell of Michigan produced a staff report on the papers which contains scathing criticisms of their integrity.[6] Despite the publically available record of challenges to their veracity, these papers have remained uncorrected and continue to be part of the scientific record. What prompts our communication today is the recent revelation of an astonishing number of previously unreported deletions and unjustified alterations made by Gallo to the lead paper. There are several documents originating from Gallo's laboratory that, while available for some time, have only recently been fully analyzed. These include a draft of the lead paper typewritten by Popovic which contains handwritten changes made to it by Gallo.[7] This draft was the key evidence used in the above described inquiries to establish that Gallo had concealed his laboratory's use of a cell culture sample (known as LAV) which it received from the Institut Pasteur. These earlier inquiries verified that the typed manuscript draft was produced by Popovic who had carried out the recorded experiment while his laboratory chief, Gallo, was in Europe and that, upon his return, Gallo changed the document by hand a few days before it was submitted to Science on March 30, 1984. According to the ORI investigation, “Dr. Gallo systematically rewrote the manuscript for what would become a renowned LTCB [Gallo's laboratory at the National Cancer Institute] paper.”[5] This document provided the important evidence that established the basis for awarding Dr. Luc Montagnier and Dr. Francoise Barré-Sinoussi the 2008 Nobel Prize in Medicine for the discovery of the AIDS virus by proving it was their samples of LAV that Popovic used in his key experiment. The draft reveals that Popovic had forthrightly admitted using the French samples of LAV renamed as Gallo's virus, HTLV-III, and that Gallo had deleted this admission, concealing their use of LAV. However, it has not been previously reported that on page three of this same document Gallo had also deleted Popovic's unambiguous statement that, "Despite intensive research efforts, the causative agent of AIDS has not yet been identified,” replacing it in the published paper with a statement that said practically the opposite, namely, “That a retrovirus of the HTLV family might be an etiologic agent of AIDS was suggested by the findings.” It is clear that the rest of Popovic's typed paper is entirely consistent with his statement that the cause of AIDS had not been found, despite his use of the French LAV. Popovic's final conclusion was that the culture he produced “provides the possibility” for detailed studies. He claimed to have achieved nothing more. At no point in his paper did Popovic attempt to prove that any virus caused AIDS, and it is evident that Gallo concealed these key elements in Popovic's experimental findings. It is astonishing now to discover these unreported changes to such a seminal document. We can only assume that Gallo's alterations of Popovic's conclusions were not highlighted by earlier inquiries because the focus at the time was on establishing that the sample used by Gallo's lab came from Montagnier and was not independently collected by Gallo. In fact, the only attention paid to the deletions made by Gallo pertains to his effort to hide the identity of the sample. The questions of whether Gallo and Popovic's research proved that LAV or any other virus was the cause of AIDS were clearly not considered. Related to these questions are other long overlooked documents that merit your attention. One of these is a letter from Dr. Matthew A. Gonda, then Head of the Electron Microscopy Laboratory at the National Cancer Institute, which is addressed to Popovic, copied to Gallo and dated just four days prior to Gallo's submission to Science.[8] In this letter, Gonda remarks on samples he had been sent for imaging because “Dr Gallo wanted these micrographs for publication because they contain HTLV.” He states, “I do not believe any of the particles photographed are of HTLV-I, II or III.” According to Gonda, one sample contained cellular debris, while another had no particles near the size of a retrovirus. Despite Gonda's clearly worded statement, Science published on May 4, 1984 papers attributed to Gallo et al with micrographs attributed to Gonda and described unequivocally as HTLV-III. In another letter by Gallo, dated one day before he submitted his papers to Science, Gallo states, “It's extremely rare to find fresh cells [from AIDS patients] expressing the virus... cell culture seems to be necessary to induce virus,” a statement which raises the possibility he was working with a laboratory artifact. [9] Included here are copies of these documents and links to the same. The very serious flaws they reveal in the preparation of the lead paper published in your journal in 1984 prompts our request that this paper be withdrawn. It appears that key experimental findings have been concealed. We further request that the three associated papers published on the same date also be withdrawn as they depend on the accuracy of this paper. For the scientific record to be reliable, it is vital that papers shown to be flawed, or falsified be retracted. Because a very public record now exists showing that the Gallo papers drew unjustified conclusions, their withdrawal from Science is all the more important to maintain integrity. Future researchers must also understand they cannot rely on the 1984 Gallo papers for statements about HIV and AIDS, and all authors of papers that previously relied on this set of four papers should have the opportunity to consider whether their own conclusions are weakened by these revelations. Gallo's handwritten revision, submitted without his colleague's knowledge despite multiple experiments that failed to support the new conclusion, was the sole foundation for the HIV=AIDS hypothesis. Had Science published the manuscript the way Popovic had typed it, there would be no AIDS “pandemic” - merely small clusters of people with AIDS. Without a viral hypothesis backing the development of expensive and deadly pharmaceuticals, would Fauci have allowed these patients to learn about the cure that existed all along? Faced with a potential rebellion, Fauci marshaled the full resources under his control to squelch the publication of the investigations into Gallo and restrict any discussion of competing hypotheses in the scientific and mainstream press, which had been running virus-scare stories full-time since 1984. The effect was total, according to biochemist Dr. Kary Mullis, inventor of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) procedure. In a 2009 interview, Mullis recalled his own shock when he attempted to unearth the experimental basis for the HIV=AIDS hypothesis. Despite his extensive inquiry into the literature, “there wasn't a scientific reference…[that] said ‘here's how come we know that HIV is the probable cause of AIDS.' There was nothing out there like that.”9 This yawning void at the core of HIV/AIDS “science" turned him into a strident critic of AIDS dogma - and those views made him persona non grata where the scientific press was concerned, suddenly unable to publish a single paper despite having won the Nobel Prize for his invention of the PCR test just weeks before. 10 DISSENT BECOMES “DENIAL” While many of those who dissent from the orthodox HIV=AIDS view believe HIV plays a role in the development of AIDS, they point to lifestyle and other co-factors as being equally if not more important. Individuals who test positive for HIV can live for decades in perfect health - so long as they don't take AZT or the other toxic antivirals fast-tracked by Fauci's NIAID - but those who developed full-blown AIDS generally engaged in highly risky behaviors like extreme promiscuity and prodigious drug abuse, contracting STDs they took large quantities of antibiotics to treat, further running down their immune systems. While AIDS was largely portrayed as a “gay disease,” it was only the “fast track” gays, hooking up with dozens of partners nightly in sex marathons fueled by “poppers” (nitrate inhalants notorious for their own devastating effects on the immune system), who became sick. Kaposi's sarcoma, one of the original AIDS-defining conditions, was widespread among poppers-using gay men, but never appeared among IV drug users or hemophiliacs, the other two main risk groups during the early years of the epidemic. Even Robert Gallo himself, at a 1994 conference on poppers held by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, would admit that the previously-rare form of skin cancer surging among gay men was not primarily caused by HIV - and that it was immune stimulation, rather than suppression, that was likely responsible.11 Similarly, IV drug users are often riddled with opportunistic infections as their habit depresses the immune system and their focus on maintaining their addiction means that healthier habits - like good nutrition and even basic hygiene - fall by the wayside. Supporting the call for revising the HIV=AIDS hypothesis to include co-factors is the fact that the mass heterosexual outbreaks long predicted by Fauci and his ilk in seemingly every country on Earth have failed to materialize, except - supposedly - in Africa, where the diagnostic standard for AIDS differs dramatically from those of the West. Given the prohibitively high cost of HIV testing for poor African nations, the WHO in 1985 crafted a diagnostic loophole that became known as the “Bangui definition,” allowing medical professionals to diagnose AIDS in the absence of a test using just clinical symptoms: high fever, persistent cough, at least 30 days of diarrhea, and the loss of 10% of one's body weight within two months. Often suffering from malnutrition and without access to clean drinking water, many of the inhabitants of sub-Saharan Africa fit the bill, especially when the WHO added tuberculosis to the list of AIDS-defining illnesses in 1993 - a move which may be responsible for as many as one half of African “AIDS” cases, according to journalist Christine Johnson. The WHO's former Chief of Global HIV Surveillance, James Chin, acknowledged their manipulation of statistics, but stressed that it was the entire AIDS industry - not just his organization - perpetrating the fraud. “There's the saying that, if you knew what sausages are made of, most people would hesitate to sort of eat them, because they wouldn't like what's in it. And if you knew how HIV/AIDS numbers are cooked, or made up, you would use them with extreme caution,” Chin told an interviewer in 2009.12 With infected numbers stubbornly remaining constant in the US despite Fauci's fearmongering projections of the looming heterosexually-transmitted plague, the CDC in 1993 broadened its definition of AIDS to include asymptomatic (that is, healthy) HIV-positive people with low T-cell counts - an absurd criteria given that an individual's T-cell count can fluctuate by hundreds within a single day. As a result, the number of “AIDS cases” in the US immediately doubled. Supervised by Fauci, the NIAID had been quietly piling on diseases into the “AIDS-related” category for years, bloating the list from just two conditions - pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and Kaposi's sarcoma - to 30 so fast it raised eyebrows among some of science's leading lights. Deeming the entire process “bizarre” and unprecedented, Kary Mullis wondered aloud why no one had called the AIDS establishment out: “There's something wrong here. And it's got to be financial.”13 Indeed, an early CDC public relations campaign was exposed by the Wall Street Journal in 1987 as having deliberately mischaracterized AIDS as a threat to the entire population so as to garner increased public and private funding for what was very much a niche issue, with the risk to average heterosexuals from a single act of sex “smaller than the risk of ever getting hit by lightning.” Ironically, the ads, which sought to humanize AIDS patients in an era when few Americans knew anyone with the disease and more than half the adult population thought infected people should be forced to carry cards warning of their status, could be seen as a reaction to the fear tactics deployed by Fauci early on.14 It's hard to tell where fraud ends and incompetence begins with Gallo's HIV antibody test. Much like Covid-19 would become a “pandemic of testing,” with murder victims and motorcycle crashes lumped into “Covid deaths” thanks to over-sensitized PCR tests that yielded as many as 90% false positives,15 HIV testing is fraught with false positives - and unlike with Covid-19, most people who hear they are HIV-positive still believe they are receiving a death sentence. Due to the difficulty of isolating HIV itself from human samples, the most common diagnostic tests, ELISA and the Western Blot, are designed to detect not the virus but antibodies to it, upending the traditional medical understanding that the presence of antibodies indicates only exposure - and often that the body has actually vanquished the pathogen. Patients are known to test positive for HIV antibodies in the absence of the virus due to at least 70 other conditions, including hepatitis, lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, syphilis, recent vaccination or even pregnancy. (https://www.chcfl.org/diseases-that-can-cause-a-false-positive-hiv-test/) Positive results are often followed up with a PCR “viral load” test, even though the inventor of the PCR technique Kary Mullis famously condemned its misuse as a tool for diagnosing infection. Packaging inserts for all three tests warn the user that they cannot be reliably used to diagnose HIV.16 The ELISA HIV antibody test explicitly states: “At present there is no recognized standard for establishing the presence and absence of HIV antibody in human blood.”17 That the public remains largely unaware of these and other massive holes in the supposedly airtight HIV=AIDS=DEATH paradigm is a testament to Fauci's multi-layered control of the press. Like the writers of the Great Barrington Declaration and other Covid-19 dissidents, scientists who question HIV/AIDS dogma have been brutally punished for their heresy, no matter how prestigious their prior standing in the field and no matter how much evidence they have for their own claims. In 1987, the year the FDA's approval of AZT made AIDS the most profitable epidemic yet (a dubious designation Covid-19 has since surpassed), Fauci made it clearer than ever that scientific inquiry and debate - the basis of the scientific method - would no longer be welcome in the American public health sector, eliminating retrovirologist Peter Duesberg, then one of the most prominent opponents of the HIV=AIDS hypothesis, from the scientific conversation with a professional disemboweling that would make a cartel hitman blush. Duesberg had just eviscerated Gallo's 1984 HIV paper with an article of his own in the journal Cancer Research, pointing out that retroviruses had never before been found to cause a single disease in humans - let alone 30 AIDS-defining diseases. Rather than allow Gallo or any of the other scientists in his camp to respond to the challenge, Fauci waged a scorched-earth campaign against Duesberg, who had until then been one of the most highly regarded researchers in his field. Every research grant he requested was denied; every media appearance was canceled or preempted. The University of California at Berkeley, unable to fully fire him due to tenure, took away his lab, his graduate students, and the rest of his funding. The few colleagues who dared speak up for him in public were also attacked, while enemies and opportunists were encouraged to slander Duesberg at the conferences he was barred from attending and in the journals that would no longer publish his replies. When Duesberg was summoned to the White House later that year by then-President Ronald Reagan to debate Fauci on the origins of AIDS, Fauci convinced the president to cancel, allegedly pulling rank on the Commander-in-Chief with an accusation that the “White House was interfering in scientific matters that belonged to the NIH and the Office of Science and Technology Assessment.” After seven years of this treatment, Duesberg was contacted by NIH official Stephen O'Brien and offered an escape from professional purgatory. He could have “everything back,” he was told, and shown a manuscript of a scientific paper - apparently commissioned by the editor of the journal Nature - “HIV Causes AIDS: Koch's Postulates Fulfilled” with his own name listed alongside O'Brien's as an author.18 His refusal to take the bribe effectively guaranteed the epithet “AIDS denier” will appear on his tombstone. The character assassination of Duesberg became a template that would be deployed to great effectiveness wherever Fauci encountered dissent - never debate, only demonize, deplatform and destroy. Even Luc Montagnier, the real discoverer of HIV, soon found himself on the wrong side of the Fauci machine. With his 1990 declaration that “the HIV virus [by itself] is harmless and passive, a benign virus,” Montagnier began distancing himself from Gallo's fraud, effectively placing a target on his own back. In a 1995 interview, he elaborated: “four factors that have come together to account for the sudden epidemic [of AIDS]: HIV presence, immune hyper-activation, increased sexually transmitted disease incidence, sexual behavior changes and other behavioral changes” such as drug use, poor nutrition and stress - all of which he said had to occur “essentially simultaneously” for HIV to be transmitted, creating the modern epidemic. Like the professionals at the Tri-State Healing Center, Montagnier advocated for the use of antioxidants like vitamin C and N-acetyl cysteine, naming oxidative stress as a critical factor in the progression from HIV to AIDS.19 When Montagnier died in 2022, Fauci's media mouthpieces sneered that the scientist (who was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2008 for his discovery of HIV, despite his flagging faith in that discovery's significance) “started espousing views devoid of a scientific basis” in the late 2000s, leading him to be “shunned by the scientific community.”20 In a particularly egregious jab, the Washington Post's obit sings the praises of Robert Gallo, implying it was the American scientist who really should have won the Nobel for HIV, while dismissing as “
Mike talks to The Nightmare Haunted House's Michael Peters, Bella Maioli, and Alexis Williams about their upcoming production of Silent Night: a Christmas-themed home haunted house. This is a collaboration with Adam Brandon Cygan and Horror on Highland to create something unprecedented in the haunt industry. Be sure to make it out to 1314 Highland Avenue Lockport, IL on Saturday, December 7th from 5:30-8PM for this one-night-only special event that you wont want to miss! Then, we hear about the incredible history of the Joliet Prison from Historian Christine Johnson who also plays the Warden's Wife in the Thirteenth Floor Entertainment Group's production of The Old Joliet Haunted Prison. Christine and her husband have dedicated their lives to bringing people the history and information about the institution that started it all in “Prison Town”. Please go watch Project Limestone as well to learn about the history and the unfortunate recent events that have left the rest of the prison closed-off to the public including Mike and Christine. Happy Holidays everyone, and we will SEE you in 2025! Project Limestone: https://youtu.be/wW2xR-cS3s0?si=3TZ9FAWNEhUhyQCN
Frank Mathews, Administrative Director for District 4 of the Communications Workers of America (CWA), joined the America's Work Force Union Podcast to discuss the striking AT&T workers in the Southeast U.S. He also discussed a new executive order signed last week by President Joe Biden and some of the CWA's organizing wins this year. Christine Johnson, President of the United Auto Workers Local 2300, joined the America's Work Force Union Podcast to discuss a new contract for members at Cornell University. She talked about the outpouring of support members received and what the contract will mean for these workers and others with contracts set to expire this year.
Stephen Piercey, Communications Director of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 89 and Riss Krull, a member of the Amazon KCVG organizing campaign, joined the America's Work Force Union Podcast to discuss the events that led workers at Amazon's KCVG hub to go on a one-day Unfair Labor Practice strike during their organizing campaign. Christine Johnson, President of the United Auto Workers Local 2300, joined the America's Work Force Union Podcast to discuss the ongoing negotiations between Cornell University and service and maintenance workers.
May 10, 2024 Hour 2: A California surfing competition caved after initially banning a trans surfer from competing against women. According to the California Coastal Commission, sporting events in the state that do not allow transgender women to compete in the women's divisions could be shut down. Harry Crouch and Christine Johnson are suing the Fresno's Grizzlies for $5 million for holding a “ladies night” promotion that allowed females free admission to a game last year. The Ray Appleton Show Weekdays 11-2PM Pacific on News/Talk 580 & 105.9 KMJ Follow on facebook/ Listen to past episodes at kmjnow.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hour 1 UCONN won their second straight NCAA championship last night. There are rumors of Danny Hurley going to Kentucky but Boomer said that's not happening. Boomer did his Frank The Tank walk yesterday and Frank was talking about maybe Shaheen Holloway would go to Kentucky. Boomer said Kentucky is one of the most pressure-filled jobs in the country. Anthony Volpe is off to a great start this season in the field and at the plate. He homered last night against the horrendous Marlins. Jerry is here for his first update and starts highlights from UCONN's championship win over Purdue. Dan Hurley was very low key in the press conference after. We heard audio from a reporter who found John Calipari walking his dog and pushing an empty dog stroller. The Mets beat the Braves thanks to a HR by DJ Stewart and 2 HRs by Brandon Nimmo. Boomer said the Knicks cannot lose to the Bulls tonight. They have to win 3 of their last 4 games of the season. In the final segment of the hour, Gio said yesterday during the eclipse, roosters were confused by the sun going in and the sun coming back out. Some people were really into the eclipse. Gio can't believe we don't think about the sun and the moon. Hour 2 Juan Soto really seems to be enjoying his time playing with the Yankees. He's interacting with the fans, signing autographs. He almost missed the first pitch of the game while signing in right field. What other teams would be able to afford Soto? Giants, Astros and Mets seem like teams that could. He looks really happy here but he is not the type to give a discount to the team he's with at the moment. Yankee fans will pressure them to do everything they can to keep him. We then got into the Knicks as they have only 4 more regular season games before they hit the playoffs. A caller wonders if this UCONN team is the best team we've ever seen since the great UCLA teams of the past. Both Chris Carlin and Maggie Gray said Dawn Staley should be the next coach at Kentucky, for the men's team. Jerry is here for an update but first, Dan Patrick has already discussed UCONN vs the Pistons. Jerry starts with the sounds of last night's UCONN win over Purdue for their second straight NCAA championship. Brandon Nimmo hit 2 HRs as the Mets beat the Braves. Charles Barkley was not impressed with the eclipse, calling people ‘losers' for being excited. Christine Johnson of CBS was in Niagara Falls to see the eclipse and Jerry has some audio. She was very emotional. In the final segment of the hour, we talked about the playoff push the Islanders are making. Hour 3 The Mets came back down 4-0 to the Braves and won. DJ Stewart got his first hit of the season, a HR that ultimately was the game winning run. Brandon Nimmo hit 2 homeruns and had 5 RBIs. The Yankees did what they are supposed to do against a bad team like the Marlins, blasting them 7-0. Right now the Yankees and Pirates have the best record in baseball. Boomer wonders why we don't have any update on the Ohtani betting situation. A caller thinks John Sterling wasn't feeling well during Sunday's game, which is why he thinks he was off yesterday. A caller wonders if you can root against your alma mater if they're playing against the team you rooted for as a kid. Jerry returns for an update but first Gio wonders who is the best team in NY right now? Jerry starts with all the sounds from last night's UCONN win over Purdue for their second straight NCAA title. Brandon Nimmo hit 2 HRs and had 5 RBIs. Juan Soto hit a HR as the Yankees had no problem with the Marlins. Elly De La Cruz hit an inside the park HR last night. Jerry has more audio of people on the news who are way into the eclipse. In the final segment of the hour, Boomer is going to UBS arena for Rangers/Islanders. Hour 4 We talked about the Masters which starts this Thursday. Gio has a nugget for how to pick winners for the Masters. Jerry returns for an update and starts with the sounds from last night's UCONN win over Purdue to win their second straight NCAA championship. In the postgame, Dan Hurley certainly acted like he'd been there before. It certainly doesn't seem like he's leaving. The Yankees beat the Marlins no problem and Juan Soto hit a HR. The Moment of The Day involves reaction from news reporters on location during the eclipse. In the final segment of the show, Boomer is going to UBS arena tonight for Rangers/Islanders and Gio recommends the Shaq Big Chicken sandwich. NASA said they photographed what looked like a surfboard shaped object near the surface of the moon. Turns out it's South Korea's satellite.
Juan Soto really seems to be enjoying his time playing with the Yankees. He's interacting with the fans, signing autographs. He almost missed the first pitch of the game while signing in right field. What other teams would be able to afford Soto? Giants, Astros and Mets seem like teams that could. He looks really happy here but he is not the type to give a discount to the team he's with at the moment. Yankee fans will pressure them to do everything they can to keep him. We then got into the Knicks as they have only 4 more regular season games before they hit the playoffs. A caller wonders if this UCONN team is the best team we've ever seen since the great UCLA teams of the past. Both Chris Carlin and Maggie Gray said Dawn Staley should be the next coach at Kentucky, for the men's team. Jerry is here for an update but first, Dan Patrick has already discussed UCONN vs the Pistons. Jerry starts with the sounds of last night's UCONN win over Purdue for their second straight NCAA championship. Brandon Nimmo hit 2 HRs as the Mets beat the Braves. Charles Barkley was not impressed with the eclipse, calling people ‘losers' for being excited. Christine Johnson of CBS was in Niagara Falls to see the eclipse and Jerry has some audio. She was very emotional. In the final segment of the hour, we talked about the playoff push the Islanders are making.
Women in Chemicals partnered with Christine Johnson and Kun Lueck from McKinsey & Company for an exclusive deep dive into the latest Women in the Workplace report – the most extensive study of women in corporate America. Explore the findings, HR policies, and effective diversity, equity, and inclusion practices.Following the presentation of this years' results, Christine will facilitate an insightful panel discussion on the actual experiences of women in industry featuring industry powerhouses:- Lee Polance, Vice President, Global Technology, Engineering Adhesives at H.B. Fuller- Cathy Budd, Chief Procurement Officer at Dow- Jennifer Matuszak, Director Global Marine Freight at Vinmar International
Episode 49: Author and Publisher Pamela McColl joins the podcast for a special Holiday Episode to discuss her book Twas The Night - The Art and History of the Classic Christmas Poem in celebration of the bicentennial of the iconic poem “Account of A Visit From St. Nicholas” by Clement Clarke Moore on December 23, 1823.During our conversation, Pamela discusses her journey in art and history and how it led to a personal ten-year project researching and curating a book on “Twas the Night Before Christmas.” Expanding on the poem's theme, we talk about its impact on the spirit of the Holiday Season and how its message of kindness and generosity has stood the test of time. For more information, please visit twasthenightbook.com and follow Pamela on Instagram at twasthenight_artandhistory for the latest news and updates. This marks the 49th episode of The Crown City Podcast and the last for 2023. Thank you all for your love and support and I will see you next year! The featured music on the podcast is courtesy of Pasadena's own The Nextdoors. As a special gift for Hannakuah, Mika and Russell released the beautiful original Hebrew version of their featured song “All the Right Here” - “Tamid K'Rovim.” Please visit nextdoorsmusic.com and follow them on social media for more information and updates on their live shows. Finally, a special thank you to Christine Johnson from San Marino Toy & Book Shoppe. Please support them and all small businesses this holiday season. To support the podcast, please subscribe, leave a review on your favorite podcasting app or sponsor us at www.thecrowncitypodcast.com or www.patreon.com/thecrowncitypodcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today's guest was Christine Johnson from Greyhound Rescue and Rehabilitation. Over the years a lot has changed at racetracks including the treatment of greyhounds. With only two remaining racetracks in the country there are fewer dogs for adoption. Greyhounds have special needs and potential adopters need to understand their unique qualities to see if you are a fit for them and if they are a fit for you, For more information go to greyhoundrescuerehab.org
HER Story: Mallee Botanist, Hilda Eileen Ramsay here II We chat with artist Christine Johnson about her exhibition inspired by the work of botanist Eileen Ramsay.NO Seismic testing in Otway Basin here II The Gunditjmara-led Southern Ocean Protection Embassy Collective (SOPEC), with the support of allies and local groups in the South West have called a rally against seismic blasting on October 22, 2023. We speak with Zoe Brittain Deakin University. Marine Science Phd candidate and protest organiser.Pro-Palestinian Protest Coverage:Sydney Rally here II Palestine rally 15th Oct Peter Slezac Ramia . Michelle Burking . Mehreen Faruqui recorded by Vivien Langford for 3CR in Sydney,Elbit Systems Out of RMIT here II The Israeli company Elbit Systems, the biggest arms company in the world, has a partnership with RMIT. Protestors called for Elbit out of RMIT.Pine Gap here II The entrance to satellite surveillance facility Pine Gap, was shut down on Thursday morning by a community protest, disrupting the facility's role in the ongoing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza. We speak with spokesperson Dr. Shoshana Rosenberg,Coburg Speak Out here II Some voices from the Coburg rally held on Thursday called by Merri bek councillors Sue Bolton and Monica Harte where 1000 people gathered to call for a free Palestine.Medics Against Bombing of Hospital in Gaza here II Doctors and nurses gathered on the steps of the State Library to mourn their colleagues who died in the bombing of a hospital in Gaza.
Host: Candace O'Donnell Guests: Dottie Giersch, Christine Johnson Description: Do you like to waltz, tango, clog or line-dance? You can do them all in the Willow Valley Dance Club. Residents Dottie Giersch and Christine Johnson talked to Candace O'Donnell about when, how, and why these dance classes were formed. Christine and Dottie shared the similarities and differences between each type of dance, and why learning how to change weight on both feet is essential to each. The overall message of this podcast: Get out there and dance, everybody! It's FUN!
They say there is power in numbers. That's a statement that the Grand Legacy Group lives by. The 8-person-led craft grow is set to launch operations in Illinois soon. Pulling off that feat took a number of like-minded people to pool their finances and network to build the company. As they wait for the last few hurdles they must clear before officially launching, they are still trying to find ways to impact the community around them. CashColorCannabis Podcast had the chance to host two of the owners, Christine Johnson and Darade Collins. The two spoke about how the group came together, creative financing, having good friends and why your network is important, S.A.F.E banking, and more. Listen to our full episode now. Issue #3 of CashColorCannabis Magazine is available now! Featuring interviews with "Waiting On the Plug" writer Richelle Scott, Executive Director of the New York State Office of Cannabis Management Chris Alexander. That's not all. We also spoke with some budding cannapreneurs about the NBA allowing players to invest in cannabis brands and later, took a look at unionization coming to cannabis. Get your print copy here Support the show
Tonight we have more answers to your questions with insect scientist Christine Johnson! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Today our friend Jasmine is here with YOUR bug questions for insect scientist Christine Johnson! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The Crossing: Sermons and Services from the National Cathedral
“On the mountaintops, God's glory is revealed again by the transfiguration of Jesus. Before his disciples, Jesus was changed. He shone like the sun, he was beautiful, some may say his melanin was poppin'. Transfiguration means a complete change of form or an appearance into a more beautiful spiritual state. When I read the passage, I thought, 'this is what we do at HBCU's.' We, by our faith, and strength, and hope, participate with God in the transfiguration of each of our students, and in the process we are changed.” Dr. Christine Johnson McPhail preaches on the relevance, roles, and future of HBCU's. She draws upon biblical ideas and lessons to illustrate how HBCU's give hope, and how they do the work that needs to be done as examples of God's work.
Faith: Going the Distance
For the second year in a row, Women in Chemicals partnered with our sponsor BluePallet to celebrate International Women's Day! Listen as Christine Johnson and Kun Lueck from McKinsey present the findings and a subsequent discussion on the latest Women in the Workplace report. Women in the Workplace is the largest study of women in corporate America. This effort, conducted by McKinsey in partnership with LeanIn.Org, analyzes the representation of women in corporate America, provides an overview of HR policies and programs—including HR leaders' sentiment on the most effective diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) practices—and explores the intersectional experiences of different groups of women at work.
Summary:Christine Johnson joins your host James Avramenko for a very special episode of Friendless! Christine is a director and stage manager, and a cancer survivor. They discuss their history surviving theatre school and her journey through being diagnosed first with MS and then with a brain tumour.Links to what we discuss:Sign up for the Friendless Substack (just scroll down a little to the signup form)Buy Friendless A Coffee! Support the showIf you like this show and want to support it why not Buy Me A Coffee or visit the Friendless Linktree to sign up for the newsletter, get free downloads, and so much more!
Co-Hosts: Dale & Christine Johnson Willow Valley residents Dale and Christine Johnson take an insider's look and converse about the various social aspects of living at Willow Valley Communities. They touch upon the social aspects of the dinning venues, clubs, classes, concerts and much more. The health benefits of social interaction among the elderly is also discussed.
In this episode, I talk with Christine Johnson, Executive Director of the Sparks Heritage Museum. This museum has everything from excellent exhibits, to a brand-new research center, a fun shop, and a meeting space. If you love history, listen to this fun podcast and plan a visit soon to the Sparks Heritage Museum on Pyramid and Victorian in Sparks.
Tonight we have more answers to your questions with insect scientist Christine Johnson! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Today our friend Jasmine is here with YOUR bug questions for insect scientist Christine Johnson! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Tonight we have more answers to your questions with insect scientist Christine Johnson! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The Nebulae SystemInterview with S. Christine S.-JohnsonIn this episode of Faith and Family Fellowship, Dallas interviews a special guest, S. Christine S.-Johnson, author of "The Nebulae System".ABOUT THE BOOKChat receives a phone call from the hospital, only to learn that his wife has been a victim of the most common crime these days: identity theft. Her microchip was cut out of her hand during a robbery at a store. Chat's wife, Jessica, is a picture-perfect citizen behind whom he can easily hide his Christianity, but he soon realizes she needs Jesus as well. Her sole focus is on adopting a “chipless” child from among the children surfacing in society without any record of their existence or their parentage.Find your Copy of The Nebulae Systemhttps://www.amazon.com/Nebulae-System-S-Christine-S-Johnson-ebook/dp/B07Q1YKRXM/ref=sr_1_1?crid=7B38YC2H1TBW&keywords=The+Nebulae+system+Christine+Johnson&qid=1647917674&sprefix=the+nebulae+system+christine+johnson%2Caps%2C150&sr=8-1Thank you for listening and supporting the 'Faith and Family Fellowship PODCAST SHOW'. We are excited to connect with each of our listeners on our various platforms. Below are just some of the ways you can not only connect with us but also support our various Christian Ministry projects around the world.Support the show (https://cash.app/$laymedownministry)Connect with the show on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/faith.family.fellowship.podcast)Connect with Pastor Chris Buscher (https://www.facebook.com/cmbuscher87)Connect with Dallas O. Monticue (https://www.facebook.com/dmonticue)Connect with Lay Me Down Ministries (https://www.facebook.com/LayMeDownMinistries)For Marketing and Publishing needs, Buscher's Social Media Marketing LLC (https://www.facebook.com/buscherssmm)
The Nebulae SystemInterview with S. Christine S.-JohnsonIn this episode of My Life Now, Dallas interviews a special guest, S. Christine S.-Johnson, author of "The Nebulae System".ABOUT THE BOOKChat receives a phone call from the hospital, only to learn that his wife has been a victim of the most common crime these days: identity theft. Her microchip was cut out of her hand during a robbery at a store. Chat's wife, Jessica, is a picture-perfect citizen behind whom he can easily hide his Christianity, but he soon realizes she needs Jesus as well. Her sole focus is on adopting a “chipless” child from among the children surfacing in society without any record of their existence or their parentage.Find your Copy of The Nebulae Systemhttps://www.amazon.com/Nebulae-System-S-Christine-S-Johnson-ebook/dp/B07Q1YKRXM/ref=sr_1_1?crid=7B38YC2H1TBW&keywords=The+Nebulae+system+Christine+Johnson&qid=1647917674&sprefix=the+nebulae+system+christine+johnson%2Caps%2C150&sr=8-1Thank you for listening and supporting the My Life Now podcast show. We are excited to connect with each of our listeners on our various platforms. Below is the best way you can not only connect with us but also have an opportunity to be featured on our Podcasts.For Marketing and Publishing needs, Buscher's Social Media Marketing LLC (https://www.facebook.com/buscherssmm)
Today is something a little bit different. We're not just not just me, it's not just one other person, we actually have three of us. And what I wanted to do was get into some real life examples of people actually creating content. We have two agents, different parts of the country doing video, and they both been doing it for about over six months. And we want to see exactly what happened, what their experiences were and all that.Christine Johnson got into Real Estate to be able to give back. Christine and her husband also invest in homes to flip or rent as well as help others find investment properties. Joel Sandman is also an agent who, prior to his career in real estate, spent over a decade in the golf business serving as a PGA Golf Professional and also worked in commercial construction. These past careers allow him to help and serve others at the highest level. Three Things You'll Learn in This EpisodeWhy video is so necessaryReal Results from real clientsTips and tricks from people who have been through it beforeResourcesChristine JohnsonJoel SandmanReal Estate Marketing DudeThe Listing Advocate (Earn more listings!)REMD on YouTubeREMD on InstagramTranscript:So how do you attract new business, you constantly don't have to chase it. Hi, I'm Mike Cuevas to real estate marketing. And this podcast is all about building a strong personal brand people have come to know, like trust and most importantly, refer. But remember, it is not their job to remember what you do for a living. It's your job to remind them. Let's get startedWhat's up ladies and gentlemen, welcome another episode of the real estate marketing, dude, podcast, what we're gonna be doing today is something a little bit different. We're not just not just me, it's not just one other person, we actually have three of us. And what I wanted to do was get into some real life examples of people actually creating content. One of the things that happens, especially once you get started and you're creating videos, is that you're like, how long is this chick going to take the work? Right? Like, um, you get impatient. And a lot of time, even with me too. Like, I'm, I'm in a process of actually launching my YouTube channel here in San Diego, now that I'm a licensed real estate agent again, and I'm gonna fucking dominate it. But I'm already myself growing impatient, because it does take time, and nothing is going to happen overnight. You have to just be patient with it. This is almost videos like, I don't know, it's like the tortoise and the hare type story. The whole thing with that tortoise won the race because he was just consistent over time. And then the hair kept trying to take all these different shortcuts, and over time, the tortoise won. That's the exact same way that I want you guys to approach video. So what we have today is we have two agents, different parts of the country doing video, and they both been doing it for about over six months. And we want to see exactly what happened, what their experiences were and all that. And if you guys have any questions, you can also read them in and maybe we'll have them back on the show. So without further ado, we're going to go ahead and introduce our guests, Mrs. Christine Johnson and Mr. Joel Sandmann. Joe, why don't you go ahead and tell Brian about who the hell are you wet mark? And let's start with there. And then we're gonna meet Christine, too.All right. Yeah. Appreciate it, Mike. I'm Joel Sam. And I'm out here in a little town in North Carolina called Winston Salem. And I had been kind of creeping on your stuff for probably about a year before I actually called you. Just curious about it. Cuz I'm, you know, burned by some marketing stuff in the past that didn't work. And I was very hesitant to get on video. But now that I have in kind of dialing in my brand, I'm full steam ahead.Their roadmap is again, a little addicting. Yeah, I mean,the thing that I thought before that I wasn't going to have anything to talk about. And now it's I need to actually organize what I need what I want to talk about because there's so much and you got to stay on a on a plan.Good. And then we got Mrs. Christine Johnson down in San Antonio, Texas. Christina wants to say hello to everyone and tell them who you are, what you're doing, where you come from.Alright, hey, everybody. I'm Christine Johnson. I am. I've been in San Antonio for about three years, and I came from the Maryland area. So when I came here, I didn't even think I'd be considering real estate started to invest in some homes and flip houses. I decided to get my real estate license so that I could show myself the houses and not have to rely on somebody else to show me these little Junkers I kind of felt bad that they were I was wasting their time. And so I got into that and then kind of took it on as a job as well. So I'mreally like one of those sellers, one of those buyers who just uses the agent to get in the door and then you never call them again and you just call the listing agent directly up. No, I didn't even know. No, I did not do that. Because we have to we have to kick your ass off this podcast right now. No, but um, so Christine is an organist for a little bit of time now, man my over a year, I think. Right? Yeah. And you know, you were new to your market. So I wanted to give people a couple different different things. You're brand new into that market and video, what was your hesitation at first before you got started.So I was never big and I'm still slacking very much on social media. I don't post a lot I was always just the kind of creeper behind the scenes and I was fearful to put myself out there to show I wasn't one of those people that was like I'm not gonna show my family or anything like that. I just never I just didn't. So coming out of my shell that way was really hard for me. And so when I got into real estate I realized you know, you gotta at least people need to see your you out there. You can't just hide behind it. So I have a degree in editing, film editing, surprisingly enough, is very old degree. So that's dated. But I I was like, you know, I know that video that I did so many research, so much research. I mean, you name it. I did it and Of course, I had been listening to your podcast. And finally I was like, Alright, I'm gonna hit that button and make that demo call. And so um, yeah. And it's been with with you guys ever since then. SoI'm very glad you've done you have we become good friends and even both you guys I like the conversations we have offline. But so I want to start the beginning because I think you guys can share a lot of insight into people who are just thinking and let's start with the first thing that I said. And I'm going through this right now. Like, it's like, Alright, I want things to happen. Like yesterday, most real estate agents are actually like, hi, Dee personalities. And I want to talk a little bit about different types of content. So, first thing is Joel, we'll start with you first. You started creating content, you get your first video out there, Christine YouTube. Actually, remember when you guys first posted you guys were nervous as shit. You guys are like, Oh, I don't know what people are gonna say. You remember that? Oh, yeah. And I'm dude, I'm the same way. Like people like Mike, you're getting nervous to do but if I do a controversial one, I'll get pretty nervous except I post this. Should I not post it? Should I do this? Should I do that? And I'll even get nervous. But that's part of being human. You guys, we had a client a couple weeks ago, and she was nervous to post that first video. She's like, not going to post it. I'm like, dude, just post the damn video. And I do it. While I'm on the call there. By the time we get off share, he has 2530 comments. But why is that? What the hell were you so nervous about? Because if looking back in hindsight, would you ever be nervous again?Well, I mean, I think we most people would agree in life, right? Like, the scariest thing in life is, is the uncertainty like what will happen? Yeah, you know, even if you know, something bad is gonna happen. If you kind of know the outcome, it's alright. So you know, you're afraid of being judged this than the other. But I think for me, you know, I kind of experienced it a little bit been in real estate for a couple years before getting started with this, that I don't have to be for everybody. It's that's okay. Like, my personality is gonna work great for some and it's not going to for others. And but you know, that is kind of scary. putting yourself out there. Especially, you know, as you get more into developing your own brand, people really get to know you. And you don't want to get a big portion of people that may not use you. I guess that would be a concern.How about you, Christine?Okay, um, I'm sorry. Can you repeat that question?What was it when you're starting? What were you so hesitant about like it? Would you ever look back at that again, and be like, Dude, I was like, worried about like, so stupid.Yeah, so I would, I would definitely do it again. 100 times again. Um, I remember that day. Like, it was yesterday, though, when I was, you know, when you fear the comments, and for someone that doesn't post on Facebook, I was like, Oh, God, no, I have to tend to Facebook and I have to look and it was like, people were so responsive. And now they're like, where's your videos? Because, you know, I haven't seen any and I'm like, they're there. You just have to go to the YouTube channel. And and, you know, I get really busy sometimes, so I haven't had a chance to put as many out there. But, but yeah, I think it's a good thing. And I think if you're not doing it, you should be doing it because once you do it once, then it just becomes easier each time you do it and now I mean, now I just videotaped myself I don't even help so our encouragement, you know, so and I just talked to my camera it's easy.One of the guys Oh, I was just gonna say once you you know, Do this a few times you start getting in the flow of like, God I hate the way that I sound on camera. Like once you get over that you can kind of relax a little bit. I think people start reacting your videos way more to like your personality is actually starting to come out you know, see that you're not reading or anything like that yetwe've just you know, that's that's normal to you guys. I mean, it's part of the the progression like first time you do anything, you're nervous, including riding a bike, get on an airplane going on a roller coaster, but do people stopped doing it? No, they seek that thrill. And truthfully what's really happening within the industry today is that people are if you're not marketing the people that you already know no other note that you've used in the past somebody else is and video is really just more about attention and whatnot. I want to bring up jokes Joe said something about putting yourself out there and he was really nervous about this but Joe you put out a you did you in a lot like you we you put yourself on a video. Do you mind if I share that story right here? Yeah, go for me. So Joel, put out a video he created a you get back out. I'll let you share the story and why you did it. But yeah, Joel, in the past used to be an alcoholic. And he came out and told his database that so many people would not have the balls to do that. And I haven't even talked to you to see how received that was that in detail or whatnot. But why don't you tell everybody what you did with that what you're thinking with it and sort of how that came about?Yeah, so I'm, you know, still a recovering alcoholic. Now I've got a little over eight years of sobriety. And as you're mentioning now I, I'm pretty grateful just to kind of be here, you know, to, to have been able to get married to have kids and to just experience life. And so yeah, I did a little bit of a video on my story and how I kind of got I got carried away with it, and how I've been able to, you know, at least in my eyes, be have a pretty successful life now. And like, it's, it's all right, like, none of us are perfect. You know, we've all got shit in our closets that other people don't know about. And you can come out the other side. But you know, I talked to Mike about it before I, you know, did this, like, Is this too much? And Ken encouraged me to do it. You know, people always ask you real estate, what's your what's your income goal? You know, what are you hoping to make this happen the other, I've kind of pivoted my business now to where, on every transaction, we get back a percentage of the commission, and I don't have an income goal anymore. Now I have a charitable goal. You know, my goal is to be able to give $20,000 of my commission every year to charity or more. And, you know, right now, we're on pace to exceed that this year.1000 church on Sunday. And, you know, like the, when you give your offering up, we go through a tidy thing. And those stories, man every single day up my tide when I got home on Sunday, because of that. And I do think that when you give, you always give back, I just think it's the way the world re rewards you. I say that as a Christian. But, folks, I've seen it happen in so many different people's businesses. Tell. You have a reason, though, why you're doing that is because you wanted to bring awareness to a program, about how you give back and talk about specifically what that program does, like you're raising money, but what's the cause behind it?Yeah, so we kind of came up, you know, my show name is driving triad, because I've got a background as a golf professional before real estate. But my program is thriving triad, I take 5% of every commission that I earn. And that goes back to it's the client's choice that they have a charity that they really like, but if they don't either give it back to the United Way here. Davidson County, because I do a lot with substance abuse and addiction and mental health crisis, because depression was a big part of my issue as well. And then also to the Mental Health Association in Forsyth County, that kind of leaned into that and joined on the board of both of those nonprofits and trying to, you know, do a little bit of good within the community when I can and use what, what, you know, little platform that I have for good.What was your response? When you posted that? Like, did you get any comments? Are you getting clients because like, that's, that's serious stuff, man. Like, you get it that's hard to do for somebody, I commend you on doing it. But my guess is that it went well. But tell me if it went bad, I'm super curious. So what happened?No, no, like, great. You know, I had some people that I hadn't talked to in quite a while reached out to me that kind of going through their own struggles as well meet up for coffee lunch, and a couple of people have started their own journeys to sobriety not not because that obviously they've already been thinking about it, but they have somebody they can confide in that they know they don't have any judgment from. And you know, as far as my business in that it's it's not been an issue like said you do business with people, you know, like and trust. And when you have common factors. If you have something in common with somebody, especially as deep as that other people who've struggled with addiction and depression and things like that. There's just that instant connection that you know, you're going to, you're going to jive well together and it just goes that much easier. But it's it's been great. I had some past clients reach out to me as well just kind of offers support and things like that. And so it's not a good thing. People will nevernot cheer on a champion and a comeback kid you guys it's a story of every movie that exists. Don't be scared to embrace your faults, strengths and weaknesses and expose them to the world because that authenticity is what people want when they're hiring anyone that's going to represent them for the most expensive, maybe even most stressful transaction will ever do in your lifetime. Christine, I remember your one of your favorite videos I saw you do was the one that you went off the wall in front of a fireplace. You just told her how it was. And again, Christine, you start at the beginning you're trying to have a little struggle with scripting but he got more and more comfortable. When did you start you got this new your search results like lightning roll? Can you a little bit No. When did that start happening? Why don't you talk a little bit more about that.I don't know I don't I noticed it on my like my video that I just I'm getting ready to release. Yep, I was like Huh, I guess I don't know. I think you'd like to hear it out. I did and I I just I think because The script was coming from personal experience, I think when it comes when it's not something that I am uncomfortable with, like, let's say you're doing certain neighborhoods or something that's, that's great. But like, I don't know, that neighborhood, as well as I know, my own neighborhood, or, you know, the one that I just did the whole fake Bernie thing, I made it all completely up. But that's, that's why I think it came so naturally, was because it's my opinion of where I live in the surrounding areas of what I was talking about. Same with my little, you know, Christmas thing and from my fireplace that came so naturally, because it's things that I think about every time somebody gives me that gift, I'm like, man, does anybody else get these silly things? And so yeah, I mean, I think I think it's when it's more natural, it's just becomes more camera.Yeah, I think you hit on the head, you have to do stuff you're excited about otherwise, it's not gonna last period. And anything you do, it's not like a video thing. But you have to, there's so many different types of videos you can create. You're right, you can't just do it, just to check a box, you got to do it, because you're actually excited. And when you are that authenticity shines out from when you guys look, keep it with you. When you started with videos, how long until you know, people started talking? Months wise, weeks wise, it happened quickly, what did you see? What's the difference? We'll start from the beginning. Sorry, Christine.I'll say I started seeing I started getting contacted within maybe six was like six months. And then like when it happened, I got like three people all at once that were all people from out of state. And it was crazy, because they were huge leads, and I've since closed on them. And then it comes to kind of waves and then you know now lately with the market, I get a lot of people wanting to rent, just because they, you know, can't buy right now. But so the calls come in like waves and was super exciting when I got my first call from somebody from Maryland. And so I helped that family of you know, 10 move here and relocate. And it was pretty awesome. And we stay in great contact. So. So yeah.You don't accidentally find someone from Maryland. Like it's not how it was just a perfect example of how you attract like, people. When you got the couple from Maryland, you got us to go to breweries together.Oh, I talked to them all the time. Yeah, we don't go anywhere because they had little kids and like everything. But But yeah, we talk all the time.Joe, how about you?Yes, I'm just just getting past six months right now and got my first offer accepted from a YouTube lead just two days ago. But I've been working with quite a few and getting getting people you know, accustomed to the meeting with people that come here for the weekend. So I probably have seven or eight active buyers that I'm working with right now from from YouTube. But I would say right, immediately, I'd say maybe two months after I started doing videos, I started getting a lot of comments from different people within the industry here that hey, I see all your videos you're doing around town, they're really cool. I love how you're putting the city in a in a positive light. And I started getting more referrals from my sphere. I've never been this busy in the winter ever. You know, I've kept consistently between eight to 10 places under contract since November, which is much much busier than I normally am.Great point. When you're creating the content, this is the biggest thing we see is like people you don't distribute it without a point. Like no one's gonna see the videos. And so like, a lot of times I see like a lot of people will say, alright, I'm just gonna do YouTube. And if you don't get views on YouTube, then it didn't work. Well, the way the content you create on YouTube will determine whether or not you get views on YouTube. Not that it's YouTube. Like you have to create content people search for on there. But regardless of what you guys are creating, you're always putting in front of your ongoing networks. And if you focus on building your brand and your channel at the same time and not just one or the other, you double dip exactly like that. Christina, you're new to your area. Right? You were new to San Antonio, you said three years ago. Yep. So you didn't have quite a referral network to go into you're much like what I'm going to be dealing with here. All my friends here in real estates, I can't really sell them houses. I'm gonna go I'm gonna have to go cold Legion like and I'm gonna have to go all in on the YouTube side of things. So tell me about what happened. And as you start to develop new friends and family new people, you building the list, you nurture them, are you getting referrals? Tell me what's happening with that?Yes, um, so yeah, so obviously it didn't have any friends didn't have a sphere didn't have any of that. So everything was pretty much you know, busting my butt to do stuff, you know, by Lee not buy leads, but lead gen all that sort of stuff. But once I got into the video, things started to really kick off putting the videos out on Facebook. Right there people remember Oh, hey, you know you're doing the real estate I forgot. You know, you're so brave. I can't believe you're doing that a lot of realtor friends of mine, from even college that are just getting into real estate, say that, you know, I need to do that video stuff. And then like, you know, my husband, my husband works with the military, I get a lot of military referrals. You know, we're very close with military. And now I've built friendships, I've built relationships in my neighborhood, I'm very involved in my neighborhood. Ladies Night, you know, I'm always at ladies night, every single every single week, not even thinking about real estate stuff, but we're always they're always talking about it, you know, asking me like, so what's latest gossip? You know, it's so and so I heard yourself in their house. And so I'm like, I'm not saying anything, you know, kind of those type of things. But, um, but yeah, they're really starting to roll in now. So it's really cool.He is like, you gotta keep building the list, though. And even for you guys, like you guys can't stop building those lists, because you hit your own glass ceiling. Everyone's always like, oh, I want to do more and more deals will double your database. It's very simple. The more people who know how you do the more referrals in a business for you to get because 80% of them are gonna use the first person they meet with. So it's either gonna be you or somebody else. And if you're keeping your content in front of them, yeah, you get that little people tend to look up to you like a celebrity status is different. You feel it when you're meeting with people. And they'll be like, Oh, I seen your videos, and you're already they already like you because of it. You don't know what it is. Have you guys felt that? Sorry. I call like the unfair advantage. And you feel like they think that you're like, dude, I'm just a fucking human being like, What the hell are you talking about? I'm fine. Like, I just shot a video, bro. Like, chill the fuck out. I had a girl.Yes, it happened to me.I had a girl asked me for my autograph right before COVID hit. I was doing a an event in. In South Florida two weeks before the pandemic hit. I was doing a lot of speaking at that time before the pandemic came. But she came up and she goes, I get your autograph. I'm like, give me your autograph. Like that is just insane. And that's what happens to a lot of the content. There's a dude out here. He's an exp. Guy's name's Kyle whistle, shout out to Kyle whistle. He's been doing video forever. But the way that he heard him say something that really stuck out, he says, my videos are like my employees because they're always on 24/7 working for me. So when you have your content sort of everywhere, people you don't know who's watching them. And folks, it's not the number of views that people who watch your videos all the time. So often I see Realtors gauge the success of a video campaign by how many views they get, which they're really doing is they're engaging the success of their campaign by how much their egos been stroked. And there's a major difference in that. And it's my strategy. So important period. If you don't have like, You got to be excited about it. You got to know why you're doing videos. But know the different types of videos to create for that. That's the number one thing I see so many agents. Why is it my real estate content getting 300,000 views on YouTube? Because it's fucking boring. I'm sorry. Right? Does it mean that video is not worth doing but it there is you have to take that stuff into consideration. Real Estate content, I got a ton of it. My least engaged stuff. Even my video marketing contents, my least engaged stuff. Right? The Matrix video we did was funny, it was fun. That thing rocked because we did something a little bit outside the box. But I just talked about, hey, here are the top three tips to do video marketing. Sorry, most people are checked out. So it's not it's not just in real estate. It's in my business. Anytime you talk about work with the people you serve, you're sort of being checked out.Well, yeah, I mean, like, they've already done a transaction with you at this point. Like they don't need to the market update every week. They want to know what else cool is going around on around town like and, you know, I think that's a good strategy for anybody to if you want to get to talk to you know, places that you know are popular in town already offer to give them some free publicity, right? Like you're already a fan of theirs, you're trying to take their fans and convert them into your fans as well. You know, get this restaurant that you love in town that has 10,000 followers on Facebook. Oh, you know go there all the time. You know the owner go talk to him. Yeah, you can get him get her or him on video and talk about how awesome they are and don't even talk about anything about yourself because you're associated with them then and people are gonna like you because we have the same favorite spot.What do you guys like doing the most out of your personally? What do you what kind of content do you like creating most Joel then we'll go to Christine next.I don't know. I mean, like I have a bunch of stuff I wanted to do and you kind of kept me in check and said like, hey, you know, stay on this YouTube plan first to go ahead and get your regional terms knocked off. And that's been huge, because I really didn't want to do that like pros and cons of the three different cities around me but those have done really well. I've enjoyed now bringing on a team member being able to banter back and forth with him a little bit because that puts us both at ease. But I'm I'm looking forward to Getting out more. Now, once we have our local area knocked down on the YouTube stuff, getting out and talking to people within the community about people that are doing good things, you know, just kind of bring positivity to the area.I like business owner interviews personally. So like, that's where a lot of if you're looking to build like a local audience, like you'll meet the business owners, brewery owners, like I'm gonna do a lot of breweries, because I just want the relationships, you know, I just want to go in there and get free beer, invite my friends, maybe have a client party there and all that. And at the same time, once you start nurturing those people, we've seen people like literally hijack clients from other agents doing that. They say hijack meaning, like they don't use that other agent anymore. It's because you're creating TV commercials, but those videos aren't going to perform on YouTube. So a lot of people won't do them. It's a totally different strategy, guys. Christine, what do you tend to gravitate towards? What do you like?Well, you know, me, I'm the shot type trying to get out there. Also green screen, so don't get it twisted people. I still can't get in front of everybody. Um, you know, I'm in huge in the brewery industry. And so weI've been begging Christine to get up, give me some brew tours. I'm gonna do it. I'm gonna do it. I'm not your deal. Christine. If you come up to San Diego, I'll take you to a brewery and we'll shoot a tour together. And then I'll train you. I'll train you at the same time. And we'll go ahead and do I'll give you a San Antonio. Welcome San Diego, we'll do the San brewery tour only under the one condition. Two weeks within the time that that video publishes. I want to see your footage in our folders on your own movie tour.I will call my friends that are brewers right now that own these breweries and I will seeyou Burke's hold you guys hold it. I call them forks. Forks. You folks heard it here first. Sorry. Had a little tongue twister there. What else would you guys say for you know what else is struggle wise over overcome wise like what else do you guys think you could share that anybody else would? Maybe questions you get think challenges you've overcomeit guess you know first like you may not even really want to reach out to somebody see if they want to talk to you on video cuz you're like, ah, you know, haven't really done anything yet. Listen, like it's your you're genuinely trying to help them. It helps you in return great. But as long as you're genuine in your requests, like, hey, you know, I love your spot. Can you want to talk about it? Most people even if they know you're not getting 1000s of views will say yeah, man, come on. Let's do this. You'll never know anything until you ask. Yeah, take that first step.Yeah, what do they have to lose? You're giving them free publicity? Exactly. Yeah,most most businesses are in and once you do a couple, like they'll come out to you trust me, they'll reach out to you. But it is easier once you have the first one or two business owner interviews because once they see I'm like shit, that looks pretty good. And then like, yeah, I will do that on my on my, on my business. What they don't want is like the first time when you don't have content business owner might be like, what are we really gonna do? The things are gonna really put something together. Is it gonna look legit? You know, and they're a little worried cuz I waste my time. I'm busy. But um, yeah, it you're right, it does. Once you have a couple of gifts, everything gets easier. But that's how anything goes. Once you do a little bit of anything, everything gets a lot easier. I like it guys. What do you guys gonna do next? How many are you currently doing per month? And Christine, you're doing like, you're averaging like one a month, one to month, not creating 10 to 20 videos a month.I was I was doing really good. And then I you know, the content gets dry. Right? So you gotta you know, it's hard to write, keep writing, you kind of rewrite the same things in different ways. Like you said, that's how you got to do it. I get it. But I was trying to gear towards like, where I like to where I think there's not a lot of content out there, which I need there needs to be is where I live in right outside of San Antonio. Yeah, it's a huge area people coming in. So I'm going to start focusing on that area and see how how things change for me.She's located in the northern suburbs, right by Bernie, Texas, correct?Yeah, I'm in Bernie Texas. Yep.So if you guys have reloads. I know half of the state of California is moving over that way. So feel free to contact Christine. She'll put her info on the show notes. And I'm sure we'll plug it at the very end here. Joe all by yourself, what are you gonna do next?Now I'm now that springs flowing around and grass is green it up? I'm actually I want to talk to you about delving into my golf background a little bit more. And doing some you know, some people are gonna think it's goofy shit, right? But talk about things that are fundamental to your, you know, tying in fundamentals for your golf game into the home buying process, you know, starting up good foundation, things like that, you know, find ways but also want to do like top three golf course communities in and around Winston Salem, Greensboro. because, you know, that's completely subjective, right? There's going to be in my eyes like what golf courses do I love to play where what neighborhoods do I like to I don't probablydo good on YouTube too. It's just golf, golf community tours that you can literally do. So here I made a deal with myself last night, I was up till 3am. So I have these big bags under my eyes. I was one working on my funnel, but to I couldn't shut my brain off. And once a month, I get into like this weird stage where I just stay up on that and can't sleep. So I'm just thinking about different things. So why part of the reason I had that anxiety was because I was like, I really because my YouTube channel is not fucking kicking, I don't have enough content, right? I told you, we were just talking about this pisses me off, I'm like, I need to get business yesterday, I've only been licensed for 10 days, and I'm pissed off already. So I got a, I made the commitment to myself last night, I'll make it on the podcast. And I'm gonna start publishing all of the content, just like I publish my other content. And I'm going to go and do a ton of tours and brewery tours. And I've committed in my head to have my own content a two to three per week. For my real estate business, it's a lot. But I'm going to perform a case study I myself live as a brand new agent with no business, no friends, no family, no aunts and uncles, no past clients, and no market. I don't know anyone in but real estate people. And if my gut is correct, within 12 months, I'll have a team of 10 people. The only way that's going to happen is you're consistent communication to the same audience and brand over time. That's it. Video is just a way to meet people online without having to meet them in person. And if you're an introvert, that's like the best fucking thing of both worlds.Yeah, I think that's actually something that it's funny, you bring it up like I am. And I'm definitely not the most outgoing person out there. And my wife is a hermit. So we really don't get out. I wouldn't say like I would not is is the golf course. And in video now, that's where I meet people. And then the other thing I want to tie in like, but the two things that I enjoy doing most outside of work is golf, and hanging out with my kids, like so places that I enjoy playing and play golf. And where do I like taking my kids? Like, where's a good place? The family places around town?Work? I like it. I like it, Christine. Yes. We'll get you we'll get you outdoors. Whatever that that first video, we'll post it here, we'll send out to our clients to we'll send it out to the email. So make sure you guys subscribe the show here. And you'll be seeing Christine doing her first business interview. But here's the thing is that you have it doesn't matter. The answer doesn't matter. Joel's not writing either as Christina, neither mine on what our strategies are what's right is you have to do something you're excited about. Right, and then do it consistently. Agree, mine is going to be very San Diego transplant like and I'm just going to tell my story of my five year journey here, which will be really authentic. And I know I'll connect with people that way. That's how I could create content. What I can't create content on is the cost of living. Because even though I've licensed I don't know the cost of living entirely like I did in Chicago, Chicago, I could name off top my head, but I'm getting new brand new market. So be interesting to see where the next 12 months takes us. Folks, I appreciate your guys's time, I think you guys gave people a lot to think about you guys have any other closing thoughts you want to mention. I'll start with Christine first.I would say if you been thinking about it, and then you just need to do it because it's well worth it in might make you feel comfortable if teams amazing. So I have zero regrets. And I have no plan on leaving.I appreciate that. But folks, it's not whether you do in me or not. This isn't a buy my shit pitch even though if you want to I will take your money, however, and I love your business, but get on it. Like it doesn't matter what you do with video. But like I said before, if it's not you somebody else's marketing and infiltrated your network on a daily basis, many times depending on your market, it's in the form of huge ibuyers Discount companies and big Wall Street companies have a lot more money than you. And your personal brand has never been more important because without one you won't last in the damn business. Joel, you're up?Yeah, I would. I would say the same thing. I wish I had started this when I first got into real estate four years ago. You know, I wish I'd done it from day one. But I will say I'm gonna go ahead and teach your own horn even if you don't want me to. I think that you've done this before, right? You were a real estate agent. You're getting back into it again. He understands how to do it. If you're thinking about doing video like this team's extremely easy to work with. And I don't even have to run Facebook ads. I do it all for me now. I like you're going to get busy if you start doing this and you need people like Mike and his team to help you get it out there.I appreciate that. And like I said didn't need another plug but I do appreciate that Dude, this isn't rocket science video makes you more popular with the more attention that your brand has, the more people you're going to track. There's someone in your market right now, regardless of where you're at, you're on the treadmill, wherever you're doing. And there's some dude in your market or some chick in your market and you're like, What the hell is that dude, or that chick doing that? You guys probably have this person in your brain like, how how's that gonna kill me? Like he's crushing me right now. Or she's crushing me. They're a moron. The only difference between them in any of us or any of you listening right now is that they have more attention than your brand currently does now doesn't make them smarter, better, bigger or better. They just have more attention, aka popularity. That's all video is don't approach it with Legion. Second, you do. The second you will not last long term. If you approach it in the long term. Tortoise versus hare analogy we presented today it'll always work. Folks want to go ahead and if you guys have clients or referrals, Winston Salem, Greensboro and there's another one there that try it on Greensboro, high point, high point. Okay, so Joel, you go first and then Christine, you go next, tell them where your sights are, they could contact you. If you guys do need any relocation clients, you couldn't be in better hands. They do a lot of these already serving these types of people from the YouTube channel so they know exactly what they're doing. And I'm sure you guys would welcome the referrals if you want to go ahead and plug your stuff right here.Absolutely. If anybody has anybody moving to the triad area of North Carolina, Greensboro, high point, Winston Salem especially, would love to help them Joel Sam man phone numbers 336-582-9210 And website is Sandman Realty and C as in North carolina.com.Cool Christine floors yoursall right. Anybody relocating needs any help I also specialize with the military PCs assignments, things like that. In the San Antonio surrounding areas, Bernie any any area around there? You can find me I my website. Yes, but you can mostly find me on like Instagram at C Johnson 1006. Or you could call call or text me at 443-878-7772Cool. Thanks, guys. And thank you for listening another episode of the real estate marketing dude podcast. Make sure you subscribe, leave us some more reviews and connect with us on social and like you heard today. Get on video guys. I mean, I don't care if you do it with me or anyone else but I'm just telling you, personal brand is the most important thing we have. It's the only thing that we have that as a survives any type of correction or any type of a market that we survive in because real estate's always being transacted. But what type of real estate is being transacted will differ as the market changes. So thank you guys for listening and make sure you connect with us on social YouTube. I got this tick tock started a few videos back again it started again in April we're delayed but I'll have that up to appreciate you guys love you have a good one. Peace we thank you for watching another episode of the real estate marketing dude podcast. If you need help with video or finding out what your brand is, visit our website at WWW dot real estate marketing do.com We make branding and video content creation simple and do everything for you. So if you have any additional questions, visit the site, download the training, and then schedule a time to speak with the dude and get you rolling in your local marketplace. Thanks for watching another episode of the podcast. We'll see you next time.
Christine Johnson is the Vice President of Innovation and Economic Development for the Miami-Dade Beacon Council. She has a passion for innovation economies and digital transformation and holds a BA from Notre Dame of Maryland University. Her work is focused on supporting the entrepreneurial landscape by fostering community growth through brokering relationships and leveraging resources. Christine has been involved in building and enhancing community ecosystems for more than ten years. She is the Strategic Advisor for Miami's Creative Industries initiatives and was selected as one of Miami's Most Influential and Powerful Black Professionals for 2020 by Legacy Magazine. Today, Christine shares how she is driving innovation and encouraging Miami's thriving ecosystem through her work at the Miami-Dade Beacon Council. She reveals how her passion for creativity and exploration naturally led her to the technology industry and why making it happen and network power is essential. She highlights the tweet that started the tech revolution in Miami and how the city is attracting some of the biggest names in the tech world. We discuss what Miami-Dade County is doing within its cities to become some of the best Smart Cities in the country and how the unique combination of mindsets in Miami is driving innovation. We discuss how the tech boom is changing the culture and transforming the county's workforce and which technology has created the most significant change. Christine also shares what the future holds for Miami and shares her advice for other leaders that want to become part of the Smart City Movement. “It's that immigrant grit that really drives innovation here. There's a different type of hustle combined with a unique twist of a balance. There's a hustle, and there's time made for the cafecito.” - Christine Johnson This week on Girls in Tech: Christine's work of driving innovation at the Miami-Dade Beacon Council How Christine's passion for exploration and creativity led her to the technology industry How Christine created the opportunities to get to where she is today The power of network and making it happen The tweet that started the tech industry revolution in Miami How Miami created an impromptu tech week The strategies the city of Miami is using to attract tech companies How the cities in Miami-Dade County are becoming some of the top Smart Cities in the US The powerful combination of mindsets in Miami that is driving innovation and opportunity The various ways that technology is transforming the workforce and economy of Miami The technology that is causing the biggest change in the county How the tech boom is changing Miami's culture What Christine predicts for the future of Miami Advice for other leaders that want to be part of the Smart City movement Resources Mentioned: Refresh Miami Tech Gateway Connect with Christine Johnson: Miami Dade Beacon Council Miami Dade Beacon Council on LinkedIn Miami Dade Beacon Council on Instagram Miami Dade Beacon Council on Facebook Miami Dade Beacon Council on Twitter Christine Johnson on LinkedIn Christine Johnson on Twitter Inspiring Girls in Tech...One Conversation at a Time Thanks for tuning into this week's episode of Girls in Tech. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave a review wherever you get your podcasts. Apple Podcasts | TuneIn | GooglePlay | Stitcher | Spotify Be sure to share your favorite episodes on social media to help us reach more listeners, like you. Join us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn. For more exclusive content and information, visit our website.
Glen McGregor, CTV News; Marco Mendicino, Public Safety Minister; Scott Aitchison, Conservative MP; Rachel Blaney, NDP MP; Christine Johnson, Champ & Associates; Stephanie Levitz, the Toronto Star; Emilie Nicolas, Le Devoir; and Nik Nanos, Nanos Research.
Christine Johnson has worked as an Associate Professor with a specialty in TV Production for The State University of New York for fourteen years and at Western Kentucky University for two years. Before her academic work, Christine was a Producer/Director in the TV industry for over fifteen years, producing live sports entertainment programming worldwide, first for WWE and then for AOL/Time Warner. In addition, Christine had several other opportunities, producing packages for: The Jay Leno Show, Extra, and the feature film “Ready to Rumble: starring David Arquette and Oliver Platt. During her tenure at The State University of New York, she produced two video projects in conjunction with the Geology Department that was recognized and distributed to conservatories nationwide. In addition, she ran the University Television Station for 12 years. In the summer of 2015, she had the privilege of working as a Field Producer with the Les Paul Foundation for their red carpet event, “The Les Paul 100th Anniversary Celebration," at the Hard Rock Café in Times Square. The project and Christine were awarded a Bronze Telly. (https://vimeo.com/133774005) She has served as an advisor to the National Broadcasting Society Chapter for nine years, and during that period, her students won over 80 Regional and National Awards. In addition, Christine served as Marketing Director for the National Office of NBS and, in 2014 and 2018, was awarded "Professional of the Year." Christine has established and continues a trusted relationship with various recruiters/department heads of different national television companies throughout the years. As a result, many of her students have benefited and secured positions with these production companies as full-time employees or interns. Education MFAReinhardt UniversityIn progress (Creative Writing) MATexas Christian University2003 (Media Arts) BSTexas Christian University1988 (Radio/TV/Film) Teaching and Research Area Basic and Advanced TV ProductionField Production Television Station ManagementTelevision Station Operations ProducingDirecting @thechristinejohnson @ihaveathingforshoes www.marlanasemenza.com Audio: Ariza Music Productions Transcription: Vision In Word Marlana: Christine Johnson has an impressive resume and TV production, producing live sporting events, packages for the Jay Leno Show extra and a feature film. She was also a field producer for the Les Paul 100th anniversary celebration, serves on the National Broadcasting society chapter board, among other things, and has helped many students go on to have careers in the industry. Welcome, Christine! Christine: Thank you, Marlana. Marlana: So, here's the thing, a lot of people think TV production, movies, all that kind of stuff, it's got to be a glamorous world, is it? Are you going to burst our bubble? Christine: I'm going to burst your bubble, it's glamorous that you get to travel. But unfortunately, my travel kind of was hotel, arena, airport. There were occasionally, we got to go in early, I would go into like San Francisco early so I can visit my friend Allison, and my brother lives there at the time. So, there were like some perks to it, but two productions very hard, very long hours. We're talking 12 to 15 hour days, and you know, you're crawling around on the floor. Well, in my case, if you're at an arena, like you're crawling around trying to find places to shoot. So, it's definitely not glamorous, I can kind of sum it up the way my mom used to say to me, why don't you ever buy nice clothes? Because I crawl around on the floor and get dirty while I'm not. So, I'm not getting nice clothes. Marlana: When you first started out, what about the industry surprised you? And were there stuff that you weren't really prepared for? Christine: I would say the majority of it, I...
Karlifornia sits down with former producer for the WWF and WCW; Christine Johnson to remember 20 years of WCW Nitro & WCW's fall taking us through her times as a producer in the professional wrestling industry. Presented by the WZWA Network - the Insiders Edge Podcast is covering our Unsung Heroes in professional wrestling to the household names leaving no stone unturned. SOCIALS: DISCORD: https://discord.gg/jMqeqGv INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/wzwanetwork FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/TheWZWANetwork TIKTOK: https://www.tiktok.com/@wzwanetwork TWITCH: https://twitch.tv/wzwanetwork TWITTER: https://twitter.com/WZWANetwork YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/WZWANetwork
Karlifornia sits down with former producer for the WWF and WCW; Christine Johnson to remember 20 years of WCW Nitro & WCW's fall taking us through her times as a producer in the professional wrestling industry. Presented by the WZWA Network - the Insiders Edge Podcast is covering our Unsung Heroes in professional wrestling to the household names leaving no stone unturned. SOCIALS: DISCORD: https://discord.gg/jMqeqGv INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/wzwanetwork FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/TheWZWANetwork TIKTOK: https://www.tiktok.com/@wzwanetwork TWITCH: https://twitch.tv/wzwanetwork TWITTER: https://twitter.com/WZWANetwork YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/WZWANetwork
Christine Johnson is the Vice President of Innovation and Economic Development for the Miami-Dade Beacon Council. She has a passion for innovation economies and digital transformation and holds a BA from Notre Dame of Maryland University. Her work is focused on supporting the entrepreneurial landscape by fostering community growth through brokering relationships and leveraging resources. Christine has been involved in building and enhancing community ecosystems for more than ten years. She is the Strategic Advisor for Miami's Creative Industries initiatives and was selected as one of Miami's Most Influential and Powerful Black Professionals for 2020 by Legacy Magazine. Today, Christine shares how she is driving innovation and encouraging Miami's thriving ecosystem through her work at the Miami-Dade Beacon Council. She reveals how her passion for creativity and exploration naturally led her to the technology industry and why making it happen and network power is essential. She highlights the tweet that started the tech revolution in Miami and how the city is attracting some of the biggest names in the tech world. We discuss what Miami-Dade County is doing within its cities to become some of the best Smart Cities in the country and how the unique combination of mindsets in Miami is driving innovation. We discuss how the tech boom is changing the culture and transforming the county's workforce and which technology has created the most significant change. Christine also shares what the future holds for Miami and shares her advice for other leaders that want to become part of the Smart City Movement. “It's that immigrant grit that really drives innovation here. There's a different type of hustle combined with a unique twist of a balance. There's a hustle, and there's time made for the cafecito.” - Christine Johnson This week on Girls in Tech: Christine's work of driving innovation at the Miami-Dade Beacon Council How Christine's passion for exploration and creativity led her to the technology industry How Christine created the opportunities to get to where she is today The power of network and making it happen The tweet that started the tech industry revolution in Miami How Miami created an impromptu tech week The strategies the city of Miami is using to attract tech companies How the cities in Miami-Dade County are becoming some of the top Smart Cities in the US The powerful combination of mindsets in Miami that is driving innovation and opportunity The various ways that technology is transforming the workforce and economy of Miami The technology that is causing the biggest change in the county How the tech boom is changing Miami's culture What Christine predicts for the future of Miami Advice for other leaders that want to be part of the Smart City movement Resources Mentioned: Refresh Miami Tech Gateway Connect with Christine Johnson: Miami Dade Beacon Council Miami Dade Beacon Council on LinkedIn Miami Dade Beacon Council on Instagram Miami Dade Beacon Council on Facebook Miami Dade Beacon Council on Twitter Christine Johnson on LinkedIn Christine Johnson on Twitter Inspiring Girls in Tech...One Conversation at a Time Thanks for tuning into this week's episode of Girls in Tech. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave a review wherever you get your podcasts. Apple Podcasts | TuneIn | GooglePlay | Stitcher | Spotify Be sure to share your favorite episodes on social media to help us reach more listeners, like you. Join us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn. For more exclusive content and information, visit our website.
Toast had its initial public offering this week that could value the restaurant-tech company at more than $16 billion [source]. Toast is a point of sale software for restaurants. Aftership is a software company we recently started utilizing for DermWarehouse. This helps us track and gather information between when we ship products and when they are delivered. DermWarehouse is starting a subscription box. A subscription box is going to help get more new products into customers hands, which should increase our profitability. I'm a big hockey fan. The NHL recently had their media day in Chicago. This is where the biggest stars from each team come to Chicago for two days for media promotion [see photos]. Learn how this event got me thinking about content creation. If you want to learn more about Search Engine Optimization, I wrote a blog on the 40 Top SEO's to follow on Twitter. I love this tweet from Christine Johnson on the importance of following up. Changing your title tags and meta descriptions across your website is low hanging fruit that can lead to a nice uptick in SEO rankings. I'll tell you how the Negro League Baseball Museum changed my perspective on storytelling. The Media Captain drastically improved its process for proposal creation. We use a great software called Proposify.
In this episode, Ken Bond discusses restorative practice with Anne Gregory, Christine Johnson, Stephen Dickerson, and Derek Piccini. For more about the New Jersey Department of Education, visit https://www.nj.gov/education. You can find work that Anne Gregory referenced at this link.
Empower Radio Speaker - Evangelist Christine Johnson Topic - "God Grace, Faith, and Blessing in your Life" Tune in. be Blessed Only on Luv Radio Network www.LuvRadioNetwork24.com
Tonight we have more answers to your questions with insect scientist Christine Johnson! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Christine Johnson, Empowerment Radio Speaker - Evangelist Christine Johnson Topic - "Stepping Out of Your Comfort Zone" Tuesdays at 7pm Est Luv Radio Network www.LuvRadioNetwork24.com https://luvradionetwork.com/christine-johnson
Christine Johnson, Empowerment Radio Guest Speaker - Elder Terri McLendon Topic - " B.O.S.S. Up* Luv Radio Network www.LuvRadioNetwork24.com
When you think you have reached your last... Topic - "God Still Provides" Christine Johnson, Empowerment Radio Luv Radio Network www.LuvRadioNetwork24.com https://luvradionetwork.com/christine-johnson
Today our friend Jasmine is here with YOUR bug questions for insect scientist Christine Johnson! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Tonight we have more answers to your questions with insect scientist Christine Johnson! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Christine Johnson, Empowerment Radio Guest Speaker - Michael Devon Alston Topic - Part 2 The Tabernacle Christian: What is Outside of your Temple? Luv Radio Network
Christine Johnson, Empowerment Radio Guest Speaker - Michael Devon Alston Topic - The Tabernacle Christian"What is in your Temple"? Only on Luv Radio Network https://luvradionetwork.com/christine-johnson www.LuvRadioNetwork24.com
Empowerment Radio Christine Johnson Special guest: Guest Speaker - Michael Devon Alston Topic: "Stay Committed to the Assignment" Luv Radio Network
Christine Johnson is the Vice President of Innovation and Economic Development for the Miami-Dade Beacon Council. She has a passion for innovation economies and digital transformation and holds a BA from Notre Dame of Maryland University. Her work is focused on supporting the entrepreneurial landscape by fostering community growth through brokering relationships and leveraging resources. Christine has been involved in building and enhancing community ecosystems for more than ten years. She is the Strategic Advisor for Miami's Creative Industries initiatives and was selected as one of Miami's Most Influential and Powerful Black Professionals for 2020 by Legacy Magazine. Today, Christine shares how she is driving innovation and encouraging Miami's thriving ecosystem through her work at the Miami-Dade Beacon Council. She reveals how her passion for creativity and exploration naturally led her to the technology industry and why making it happen and network power is essential. She highlights the tweet that started the tech revolution in Miami and how the city is attracting some of the biggest names in the tech world. We discuss what Miami-Dade County is doing within its cities to become some of the best Smart Cities in the country and how the unique combination of mindsets in Miami is driving innovation. We discuss how the tech boom is changing the culture and transforming the county's workforce and which technology has created the most significant change. Christine also shares what the future holds for Miami and shares her advice for other leaders that want to become part of the Smart City Movement. “It's that immigrant grit that really drives innovation here. There's a different type of hustle combined with a unique twist of a balance. There's a hustle, and there's time made for the cafecito.” - Christine Johnson This week on Girls in Tech: Christine's work of driving innovation at the Miami-Dade Beacon Council How Christine's passion for exploration and creativity led her to the technology industry How Christine created the opportunities to get to where she is today The power of network and making it happen The tweet that started the tech industry revolution in Miami How Miami created an impromptu tech week The strategies the city of Miami is using to attract tech companies How the cities in Miami-Dade County are becoming some of the top Smart Cities in the US The powerful combination of mindsets in Miami that is driving innovation and opportunity The various ways that technology is transforming the workforce and economy of Miami The technology that is causing the biggest change in the county How the tech boom is changing Miami's culture What Christine predicts for the future of Miami Advice for other leaders that want to be part of the Smart City movement Resources Mentioned: Refresh Miami Tech Gateway Connect with Christine Johnson: Miami Dade Beacon Council Miami Dade Beacon Council on LinkedIn Miami Dade Beacon Council on Instagram Miami Dade Beacon Council on Facebook Miami Dade Beacon Council on Twitter Christine Johnson on LinkedIn Christine Johnson on Twitter Inspiring Girls in Tech...One Conversation at a Time Thanks for tuning into this week's episode of Girls in Tech. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave a review wherever you get your podcasts. Apple Podcasts | TuneIn | GooglePlay | Stitcher | Spotify Be sure to share your favorite episodes on social media to help us reach more listeners, like you. Join us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn. For more exclusive content and information, visit our website.
Retreats that are Pirate themed? That and other crazy retreat stories with our guest Christine Johnson. Learn more about CSC Retreats at catholicterps.org Subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts or Spotify to never miss an episode!
Ep 7:BUGS! BUGS! BUGS!!!! We got bugs to show you and bugs to warn you about. Blythe loves a chill roach and Madelyn admires aphids as feminist heroes. Jaboukie Young-White, Bennet Ferris, and Harris Mayersohn scramble around and are generally freaky-deaky but also tell jokes. Plus scientist Christine Johnson from the AMNH with expertise on parasites and their hosts, with a specialization on slave-maker ants. Madelyn Freed and Blythe Roberson host. Recorded at Union Hall September 15, 2017 as part of the Eugene Mirman Comedy Festival. Live sound and recording by Chris Medrano. Edited by Shannon Manning for Good Orbit. Original poster by Hallie Bateman (@hallithbates)
Download the free PDF “The Process of Transformation” by Dave Buehring. Visit http://discipleship.org/lionshare to get your free PDF. The following audio comes from the National Disciple Making Forum by Discipleship·org. The theme was “Relationships,” and Lionshare hosted a track called “Making Disciples in the Generations and Vocations.” Connect with Discipleship.org: https://twitter.com/disciplesforum https://www.facebook.com/discipleshipforum Relevant Links: Lionshare website: http://www.lionshare.org/ Dave Buehring on Twitter: https://twitter.com/davebuehring Lionshare on Twitter: https://twitter.com/lionshare_org