POPULARITY
In this episode, from a chapel service held on Tuesday 29 October 2024, Dan Wu, lecturer in Old Testament, takes a closer look at 1 Kings 22 verses 1 to 40 and the end of the reign of the Israelite king, King Ahab.He reminds us that our all-powerful God often works in ways that seem weak and unimpressive, but in the end, his ways demonstrate his complete control over everything, and point to his unstoppable plan to conquer sin and save his people.For more audio resources, visit the Moore College website. There, you can also make a donation to support the work of the College.Contact us and find us on socials.Please note: The episode transcript provided is AI-generated and has not been checked for accuracy. If quoting, please check against the audio.
In this episode, recorded at a Priscilla & Aquila evening seminar held on Friday 9 August 2024, Jane Tooher, Tom Schreiner and Dan Wu answer audience questions about complementarianism and what it means to live as men and women in community.Jane Tooher is the Director of the Priscilla & Aquila Centre, and lectures in Ministry and Church History at Moore Theological College.Tom Schreiner is the Associate Dean for the School of Theology, the James Buchanan Harrison Professor of New Testament Interpretation, and the Professor of Biblical Theology at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Kentucky, USA.Dan Wu is lecturer in Old Testament at Moore Theological College.For more audio resources, visit the Moore College website. There, you can also make a donation to support the work of the College.Contact us and find us on socials.Visit the Priscilla & Aquila Centre website to learn more about the 2025 Annual Conference and the 2025 Women's Research Conference. (Please note: registrations for both conferences will open in October.)Find out more about Jane Tooher and Graham Beynon's book, Embracing Complementarianism: Turning Biblical Convictions into Positive Church Culture.
Larry talks to Lexington Vice Mayor Dan Wu about his involvement with an annual drag show and the image it conveys. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
May is national Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage month and WUKY's award winning history series Saving Stories marks the occasion with a segment on a new oral history project that examines the challenges and achievements of Asians, Asian Americans, Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders living, working, and studying in Kentucky. Nunn Center director Doug Boyd highlights an interview with Dan Wu, a member of the Lexington City Council who describes his childhood as an immigrant from China, growing up in Lexington, and how his career took him from California to New York City and then back to Lexington. Wu also talks about his identity as an Asian American, how he finds community in Lexington, and why he decided to enter into local politics.
Jack talks about food with chef Jeremy Ashby and former restaurateur and current Vice Mayor Dan Wu. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Episode 17 | Dan Wu Our first guest of 2023 is no stranger to firsts. Dan Wu is the new Vice Mayor of Lexington, KY and in today's episode, we chat about delicious food, diversity, and planting roots where it feels right. ..... For more information on who we are and what we do at Blue Grass Community Foundation, visit us at bgcf.org - or follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok @bgcfky Our theme song, "Happy Tune, is written and performed by Brother Smith
Kruser talks to Lexington City Council hopeful Dan Wu and Bill Meck in hour 2. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Kruser talks to Dan Wu who is running for Lexington City Council about what he thinks is the most important issue facing our city. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This sermon was preached on Mission Sunday 2022. The passage is Luke 24:1-35 Sermon preached by Dan Wu on 24/07/22
This sermon was preached on Mission Sunday 2022. The passage is Luke 24:1-35 Sermon preached by Dan Wu on 24/07/22
Guest Speaker: Dan Wu, Date: 17/07/2022, Title: The Hope Jesus Brings, Bible Passage: Luke 24:1-35
#014 - Welcome to another episode of Bounty Hunter, where we believe that contributing to a DAO is the best way to find engaging and rewarding work in the new Web3 economy. In today's show I spoke with Dan Wu — Governance expert and Product Manager at Orca Protocol, which is a tool that helps DAO working groups (or as they call them - Pods) improve their ability to collaborate. Essentially, Orca wraps around your Gnosis safe (which is the most trusted multi-sig wallet right now), and it adds additional functionality like user permissions and role management. Orca wants to help DAOs find the shape and structure that works best for them by starting with working groups aka “Pods", and moving their way up to localized points of hierarchy. On today's show, we discussed: Why “Pods” are the most efficient way to get work done The difference between product management in Web3 vs Web3 Dan's hilarious TikTok account And how to avoid burnout All of that and more in today's episode. =======================
In this episodes, Tim Beilharz goes from host to guest as we share a recent episode from Moore Theological College's Centre for Christian Living podcast. Tim sat down with Dan Wu to chat about children's, family and intergenerational ministry and how the local church can equip it's members to think carefully and effectively about ministry to our youngest brothers and sisters in the church. Click on through to discover more from Youthworks Ministry Support Team and find out how Youthworks can help you have an effective youth and children's ministry in your local church. We'd love to hear from you. Send your thoughts, comments, suggestions and critiques to effectiveministrypod@youthworks.net.
“It's not just heroics - the highest compliment one soldier can pay to another soldier is he did his job.” Larry Hama is an American comic book legend — an accomplished artist, writer, actor, and musician who's been in the business since the 1960s. Larry is also a US Army Veteran - where he became a firearms and explosive ordnance expert. Larry's actually best known to American comic readers as writer / editor for Marvel Comics, where he worked on G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero, Wolverine, Nth Man: The Ultimate Ninja, and Elektra. He co-created the character Bucky O'Hare - developed into comics, toys, and animation. And in the 1980s, Larry helped create “The ‘Nam” - arguably one of the most authentic retellings of the Vietnam war from the American perspective (for many surpassing the film Platoon). Larry's storied experience as a Japanese American, Army Veteran, comics legend, and kid from SF + NY - inform everything he's done, and why his work resonates with so many across industries. And you'll love hearing about all of his encounters with contemporaries like Gloria Steinem, Neal Adams, and even Marlon Brando. Special shout-outs to guest host Dan Wu (from NPR's “Where Y'All Really From”) and Keith Chow @ HardNOC Media who connected us with the one and only Larry Hama. This episode is sponsored by the Department of Health & Human Services, who's encouraging you and your community to make sure you've got the COVID-19 Vaccine & Booster. We can do this, together. Find vaccines and boosters near you @ VACCINES.gov LEARN ABOUT LARRY HAMA wikipedia.org/wiki/Larry_Hama facebook.com/larry.hama MENTIONS INVERSE: “I Always Wanted Snake Eyes To Be Asian” - inverse.com/entertainment/snake-eyes-gi-joe-larry-hama-interview COMIC: The ‘Nam - wikipedia.org/wiki/The_%27Nam CBR - “Larry Hama Shares a Dismaying Marvel Story About Pearl Harbor and White Privilege” - cbr.com/gi-joe-larry-hama-marvel-pearl-harbor-white-privilege-story/ PERSON: Neal Adams - wikipedia.org/wiki/Neal_Adams PERSON: Gloria Steinem - wikipedia.org/wiki/Gloria_Steinem Underground Comix: https://en-academic.com/dic.nsf/enwiki/55614 AUTHOR: wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Marryat
Special guest Dan Wu from Orca Protocol comes on the pod to explain his tweet about staking and yields. Natasha and Deana talk about the strategy for the upcoming NFT drop, and plans for pre-Permissionless facials.
Dan runs Product at Orca Protocol. Orca Protocol makes governance accessible by creating tools around a DAO's most basic primitive: people. Will and Dan met up at ETH Denver, and we catch up on Dan getting a photo with Andrew Yang, the evolution of DAO voting, how Orca protocol is helping drive meta-governance, the risks of token weighted voting, and Dan's favorite articles.Dan and Orca protocols links:Dan's twitter: @itsdanwuOrca's publications: https://orca.mirror.xyzOrca's website: https://www.orcaprotocol.orgOrca Protocol's twitter: @OrcaProtocolIn this episode we discuss:Before we get started, if you're new to DAO's, we like this article for explaining them:https://future.a16z.com/building-and-running-a-dao-why-governance-matters/Getting a photo with Andrew Yang at ETH Denver: https://twitter.com/itsdanwu/status/1495100959864745987The ReOrg podcast: https://www.reorgpod.com/How to become a PM at a web3 company: Join the discord and just start speaking, listening, and contributingJohn and JulesSimilarities and differences b/w Web2 vs. Web3 PMWhere you speak to customersTech stackDAO characteristicsHow Orca protocol helps DAO'sThe stage / type of Web3 DAOs Orca is best forTypical pods that Dan sees implementedMeta-governance committeesGrants committeeHow voting typically works.Token-weighted voting governance attackshttps://twitter.com/justinsuntronThe evolution of voting from single votes to delegates to meta-governance daosFei protocol listing on index to get listed on AAVEhttps://snapshot.org/#/index-coop.eth/proposal/QmZa8WsStWo84iz1wGCsPzuM1TJTAi4DvsP2yvhu7669CZDAO set up basics and best practicesWorking agreementsThe Ready: https://theready.com/The Ready's podcast: https://www.bravenewwork.com/podcastDan's dream person to interview: ObamaIf you liked this episode, you can find more episodes at wld.show!
Dan shows off his nerdy tattoos (including Storm Shadow) and how he creatively acquired toys as a child with no money. Later, he shows off his collection of Funko Pops and Asian American and POC action figures, as well as his cosplaying skills, before sharing his quest to hunt down various Bruce Lee collectibles.
We are joined by Charlene Buckles and Dan Wu, hosts of Louisville Public Media's Where Y'all Really From podcast, this month on Southern Fried Asian. Charlene and Dan talk about the origins of their podcast and what it means to be a Kentuckian in 2021. This episode was recorded before the devastating tornadoes that swept through Kentucky. If you would like to help survivors of the storms, please visit this resource at WFPL: https://wfpl.org/heres-how-you-can-help-tornado-victims/ Subscribe to the Southern Fried Asian podcast on iTunes, Google Play, NPR One, Spotify, and Stitcher Radio! Support Hard NOC Media on Patreon and GoFundMe. Buy merch on TeePublic! Subscribe to our YouTube channel! Also, welcome new listeners who have found this podcast because Vanity Fair named it an "essential AAPI listen!" Our official theme music is the song "Top Down" by Chops, Timothy Flu, and Mic Barz. Podcast logo by Jef Castro. Southern Fried Asian is produced by Keith Chow and Jes Vu.
Sure, our season's over... but we miss you already! So in this bonus mini episode, our hosts Dan Wu and Charlene Buckles reflect on season one, which ran the gamut from interpersonal decolonization to Doritos and buttermilk. We're gonna go work on season two now, so let us know what you want to hear more about at wyrf@louisvillepublicmedia.org or at whereyallreallyfrom.org. Thank you so much for being part of our inaugural season!
Living in Williamsburg, Kentucky, a town in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains with a population of 5,000, is a mixed bag for a Pacific Islander. Angelika Weaver's mom is from Kiribati, an island nation in the central Pacific Ocean (it sort of rhymes with "hear a bus," because -ti makes an s sound in the Gilbertese language that's spoken there). Angelika herself was born in Williamsburg, where everyone knows everyone else. "I do feel like I am part of the community," she tells Dan Wu, on this week's episode. "But then there will be moments in time that I will be very aware that I am different." She elaborates: Take, for example, when the George Floyd thing happened and people were very divided in this town about what that meant. Some of those instances I feel like I'm very separate from what other people believe or think, and they don't sometimes realize that I am half Asian American. I am half Pacific Islander. And so the things that they say are hurtful, but at the same time, sometimes I think they don't realize that the things that they say are hurtful, because they just see me as another Appalachian woman. "It's like the positive and the negative all rolled up together," Dan says. "Like you're accepted enough to be part of their racism." Angelika works as an advocate for victims of intimate partner violence and sexual assault in Whitley County. She says about 10 years ago, she shifted her focus from intervention to prevention, which meant broadening her scope from individual victims' situations. "If I want to get rid of domestic violence and sexual assault in a community, then I really need to look at the community as a whole," she says. "The criminal justice system is a reflection of the community it serves. And so we say things like, we don't believe women should be sexually assaulted. But we also say things like, maybe she deserved that because she was at the wrong side of town, and she was wearing a short dress." She says that kind of cultural change is slow, but it's possible. "If enough people believe in the same message, we just all have to get together with one voice to make that happen." A warning for cynics: Listening to this conversation may give you a touch of that same optimism.
The children of first-generation immigrants often have a complicated relationship with language. Some immigrant parents refuse to speak their native language around the kids, because they want them to focus on learning English. Some kids end up being de facto translators who bridge the language gap between the family and the outside world. And fluency, or the lack thereof, becomes part of the whole package of identity, and longing for a deeper connection with the family's roots. For this week's guest, Joann Lianekhammy, language acquisition has been part of her life from literally the first moment. Because Joann was born in an ESL class. That's not hyperbole. Her parents were refugees from Laos, and refugees were required to take an ESL class at Western Kentucky University, which was taught in a building called the Rock House. "One day, they're in class, and my mom starts going into labor, right then and there," she says. Her dad asked someone to call an ambulance. But baby Joann was a little too ready: My mom's like, 'No, this baby's coming,' and she pulls down her pants. My dad's like, 'what are you doing?' Because, you know, Asian culture, modesty is everything. You do not show, like, anything. He pulls her pants back up. And she was like, 'Are you crazy? I said, this is coming, the baby's coming now.' So he ended up having to deliver me right there in the Rock House, in the middle of class. And while Joann Lianekhammy first met her parents in a language class, it took them a while to really, truly communicate about some important things. In this episode, Joanne tells host Dan Wu a story she never expected to have: her coming out story.
"If Beethoven had grown up in the Bay Area in the early 1980s, he would have started a thrash band, probably." Irresponsibly wild conjecture, or another great conversation from "Where Y'all Really From?" On this week's episode, host Dan Wu talks with ethnomusicologist Donna Lee Kwon and multi-instrumentalist and composer Jon Silpayamanant about all things music. Donna Lee Kwon grew up playing classical piano, which placed her right at the center of a pervasive stereotype: "The Asian classical music prodigy," she says. She thinks of it as a variation on the model minority myth. And it comes with a lot of pressure. "If you don't live up to that, you're just like, nothing, basically. It was hard being a young Asian-American musician who did not play perfectly." Now, in her ethnomusicology classes, she debunks another myth for her students. "They've grown up in this system all their lives to believe that Western classical music is superior," she says. "That is why it's worth spending eight hours a day doing that." But she teaches her students to see music as "a window to understanding other cultures." Jon Silpayamanant sees that decentering of male European composers as part of his mission too, particularly as artistic director of Saw Peep - An Intercultural Orchestra He says music by non-Western composers is no less valuable or enjoyable just because it might challenge mainstream audiences' expectations. "Some of these traditions have existed for centuries. They're no less developed than Western classical music. There's so much out there," he says. "And I think there needs to be a narrative about that. And a narrative about how Western music, in general, has excluded all of that."
Filmmaker Naveen Chaubal grew up making movies. "For school projects, I would always try and sneak and maybe doing a video instead of writing a paper," he says. But it wasn't until college that he realized it could be more than a way to get out of writing papers. "I didn't even know film schools existed," Naveen says. "I had no idea that it was something that you studied. It just wasn't in the realm of possibility." He talks to host Dan Wu about his work, and they discover some of the parallels between art school and culinary school (the main curriculum is mostly European and the classes about Asian work are electives). His short film, "Pinball," is a modern folk story centered around an immigrant teenager who wants to participate in a school bus race at his local speedway. It's a fish-out of-water-tale that was inspired by all the time Naveen spent riding buses when he lived in Los Angeles. Naveen also worked on a documentary about Eric Garner's family for AJ+. He says films like that challenge him in different ways — as a filmmaker and as a person. "It's so hard, especially when people are recounting stories of such pain," he says. "You just want to like, put your hand on their shoulder and be a little bit more human. I'll try and kind of nod to them and like, understand that I am not hiding behind this camera. I do hear you."
Sometimes you expect to talk about poetry and knitting, but you end up talking about disentangling race, love and relationships. Or at least you do if you're Dan Wu and this week's guest, Danni Quintos. Danni is an Affrilachian poet, a mom, an educator, and a knitter. She lives in Lexington. On this week's show, Danni and Dan dive into what it's like to interrogate your own personal and intimate relationships through the lens of what poet Claudine Rankine calls your "historical self." Oh, and they also talk about poetry and knitting... eventually.
It's our very first episode, so we gathered the whole team -- Dan Wu, Charlene Buckles, Nima Kulkarni, and Mae Suramek -- for a good old fashioned origin story. How did this happen? Why are we doing it? And how do we respond when people ask us, "Where are you from? No, but where are you really from?"
Asian American Pacific Islanders (AAPI) get repeatedly asked, 'Where y'all really from?' Activists Charlene Buckles and Dan Wu talk about a new podcast that tackles the question, shares the experiences of AAPI community members and aims to break through barriers to understanding.
In preparation for our upcoming series in the Book of Ezekiel, we invited Moore College professor Dr Dan Wu to open up this amazing Old Testament book with us. This was the result! There was even some Q&A at the end...
Host Renee Shaw continues her series of discussions about the increasing violence against Asian American and Pacific Islander communities with Lexington chef, restaurateur and community activist Dan Wu who frequently speaks and podcasts on social justice issues.
Honour/shame has been a dominant framework for missiologists in recent years, but Dan Wu (lecturer at Moore Theological College) offers some nuances to the discussion. reachaustralia.com.au
Most of us want to live the good life, but we’re not always sure what this means. In particular, we hear words like “wisdom”, but don’t understand how what we read in the Bible leads us to wise living. The Book of Proverbs has long been considered one of the greatest collections of wisdom literature. But how are Christians supposed to read it? Does applying it to our lives lead to moralism? Is such an old book irrelevant in our modern day and age? In this episode of the podcast, Chase Kuhn speaks with Old Testament lecturer and colleague Dan Wu about how the Book of Proverbs helps us grow in wisdom as Christians. This is Part 2—the final part—of their conversation. For a full transcript and show notes, visit https://ccl.moore.edu.au/resources/podcast-episode-055/
Most of us want to live the good life, but we’re not always sure what this means. In particular, we hear words like “wisdom”, but don’t understand how what we read in the Bible leads us to wise living. The Book of Proverbs has long been considered one of the greatest collections of wisdom literature. But how are Christians supposed to read it? Does applying it to our lives lead to moralism? Is such an old book irrelevant in our modern day and age? In this episode of the podcast, Chase Kuhn speaks with Old Testament lecturer and colleague Dan Wu about how the Book of Proverbs helps us grow in wisdom as Christians. This is Part 1 of their conversation. For show notes and a full transcript, visit https://ccl.moore.edu.au/resources/podcast-episode-054/
In episode 124 of Relate, we are joined by Privacy Counsel and Legal Engineer, Dan Wu. Dan and I chat about protective data and why it's important to build housing that fulfills peoples' basic needs. Dan is an advocate for housing policy innovation, and his passion for this subject shines through as he talks about possible solutions. We also discuss data privacy, tech ethics, and why we must have data protection in design. You can learn more about Dan by connecting with him on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/wu12345/. You can read some of his publications at: Empowerment (FastCo): http://tiny.cc/FCEmpower Housing Innovation (TechCrunch): http://bit.ly/TCHousingMapPost Data Ethics (TechCrunch): http://bit.ly/TCDataEthicsPost Data Ethics (O'Reilly): http://tiny.cc/OREthics Dan Wu is a Privacy Counsel & Legal Engineer at Immuta, an automated data governance platform for analytics. He’s advocated for data ethics, inclusive urban innovation, and diversity in TechCrunch, Harvard Business Review, and Fast Company. He's helped Fortune 500 companies, governments, and startups with ethical & agile data strategies. He holds a Harvard J.D. & Ph.D. Find more resources on cities, ethics, and innovation here or the QR code below: http://bit.ly/DWRequest --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/relate-patrick-mcandrew/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/relate-patrick-mcandrew/support
(Image: Shutterstock) The Quarantine Psyche, Part 2 | KY warned again about antibiotic overuse | Chris Begley with Dan Wu: an SOS on behalf of restaurants | New Blog "Un-Tucks" Kentucky. Interviews in order of appearance Tom Martin with Dr. Helen Boucher - Antibiotic Resistance Tom Martin with Dr. Seth Himelhoch - Part 2: The Pandemic Psyche Chris Begley with Dan Wu - Future Tense Tom Martin with Rebecca Hanchett - New blog discovers Kentucky's tucked-away gems
(Image: Shutterstock) The Quarantine Psyche, Part 2 | KY warned again about antibiotic overuse | Chris Begley with Dan Wu: an SOS on behalf of restaurants | New Blog "Un-Tucks" Kentucky. Interviews in order of appearance Tom Martin with Dr. Helen Boucher - Antibiotic Resistance Tom Martin with Dr. Seth Himelhoch - Part 2: The Pandemic Psyche Chris Begley with Dan Wu - Future Tense Tom Martin with Rebecca Hanchett - New blog discovers Kentucky's tucked-away gems
Dan Wu is a Privacy Counsel & Legal Engineer at Immuta, an automated data governance platform for analytics. He's advocated for data ethics, inclusive urban innovation, and diversity in TechCrunch, Harvard Business Review, and Fast Company. He's helped Fortune 500 companies, governments, and startups with ethical & agile data strategies. Dan obtained a PhD in Social Policy and Sociology from Harvard Kennedy School, his doctorate work looked at the inter-sectoral collaboration for sustainable housing. Dan is passionate about how affordable housing can be advanced by technology and law.His extensive research centres on inclusive cities and data strategy and has been widely published within academia and outside of it. Dan has been a guest speaker at Asian development Bank, the Global UNESCO Forum, AI World, All Tech Is Human and more. For the past two years, Dan has been a privacy counsel and legal engineer at Immuta, New York, where he focuses on data and AI regulations and governance and combines law and tech to help companies navigate regulatory environments and accelerate ethical analytics. Find more resources on cities, ethics, and innovation here.Rosalie Post is fellow anthropologist and advisor in the housing sector in the Netherlands. Her research interests too centre on the topic of sustainable housing and its governing mechanisms. She currently works for a consultancy firm that collaborates with municipalities on policy advice on housing projects. In today's episode Rosalie and Dan reflect on the concept of ideal city and the ways we can use technology to achieve it. Dan points out that despite its benefits, technology can easily obscure its many disadvantages. We have not yet managed to accommodate the voices that lack resources and are excluded from the participation. Can AI generated data substitute those voices and if so what are the ethical ways to do that? How much progress has been done in making cities more inclusive in the last 60 years? Dan, Rosalie and Corina dive into a reflective exchange of cases famous in the history of city design and governance - from the ideologically-focused emergence of Brasilia to Taiwan's response to SARs. Lastly, Dan shares stories and initiatives that have helped cities move in the right direction and reflects on the way forward.Mentioned in Podcast:Zencity, https://zencity.io/aboutOscasr Niemeyer, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscar_NiemeyerJames Holston, The Modernist City: An Anthropological Critique of Brasilia, https://www.amazon.com/Modernist-City-Anthropological-Critique-Brasilia/dp/0226349799Le Corbusier, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_CorbusierJane Jacobs, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_JacobsRobert Moses, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Moses Social media:Dan' s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wu12345/Rosalie's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rosalie-anne-post-66007b134/
Imagine this. You have Covid-19. You’re running out of breath. You’re inside a hospital emergency room getting a blood transfusion. Suddenly this happens. There’s a leak somewhere. Your bodily fluids spew and splash all over the bed sheets, some of the droplets land on the exposed skin of the emergency physicians and nurses risking their lives to save you. Is this an impossible scenario? No. The lack of PPE (Personal Protective Equipment) for healthcare workers dominated headline news earlier this year, and continues to be a challenge for some hospitals around America. In Part 4 of Season 5 True Colors: “Protecting Frontline Doctors & Nurses”, I talked with Dr. Alicia Lu about the risks she faced as an Emergency physician in New York hospitals. Not only did she feel helpless and frustrated, so did her partner Dan Wu. Together, they came up with an idea. It’s called the “1000 frontline suits” campaign. Dr. Alicia Lu is a New York City based Emergency Physician. Dan Wu is a Privacy Counsel & Legal Engineer at Immuta, an automated data governance platform for analytics. He holds a Harvard J.D. & Ph.D. Music used: One in a Billion Theme Song by Brad McCarthyOn the Clock by Pictures of the Floating World Gemini by Josh Woodward Driving Through Tunnels by Daniel Birch Malachite by Andy G. Cohen First Day of Spring by David Hilowitz Marimba on the Loose by Daniel Birch Dreaming Days by Ketsa True Colors - a Season 5 Special Series - is about the color of one’s character in a time of crisis. In this 10-part podcast series, we have expanded our focus beyond Asians to include the African American experiences in Episode #1 and Episode #3. We want to include you in this conversation. To send us your comments or stories, email us @ info@oneinabillionvoices.org Or go to our Facebook page or our website at OneinABillionVoices.org under “Pitch a Story.” Share your thoughts? Pitch us a story? “One in a Billion” connects Asians and Americans through storytelling, one person at a time. Subscribe to “One in a Billion” below: PRx | iTunes | SoundCloud Support Us? One in a Billion podcast is produced by One in a Billion Productions Inc - a non-profit media productions. (501c3). Support us! Donate.
This episode is a collaboration with the Bluegrass Activist Alliance, with BGAA leader Julie Martinez joining Aaron Viles and Nate Orshan to cohost as they interview Atomic Ramen's owner Dan Wu and progressive political strategist (and one-time Democratic nominee for Senate) Sellus Wilder. We've also got MMRC Treasurer and Research Director Doug Price, following MItch's NRA money, with a little bit of Russian spycraft thrown in. Join the Mitch McConnell Retirement Committee (MMRC), an all-volunteer group of activists from central Kentucky committed to educating Kentucky voters about how Mitch McConnell's dangerous agenda threatens our commonwealth, on our weekly podcast, #MoscowMItchMonday. The Mitch McConnell Retirement Committee #MoscowMitchMonday Support our campaign! https://secure.actblue.com/donate/mmrc2020 Facebook Live - Mondays at 7pm https://www.facebook.com/MMRC2020/live/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MMRC2020/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/CommitteeMitch Instagram: http://instagram.com/mmrc2020/ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRmA-EhvIxXTe3UcmCpTayA Medium: https://medium.com/@MMRC/ Website: http://retirementformitch.com/ Live and Post Production by www.couchfiremedia.com
A solid data strategy can prevent your company from running aground and turning a huge opportunity into a horrible mess. Dan Wu is our guest on this episode of the Georgian Impact Podcast. Dan is a superstar commentator in the privacy and data governance space. He's leveraging his Ph.D. in Sociology and Social Policy and his law degree to help protect people and their data. Dan believes that the best way to do that is through data strategies formed by cross-functional teams that include input from governance, analytics, marketing and product departments. You'll hear about: What we can learn from the botched launch of the Apple Credit Card Why every company needs a data strategy How regulation, like the Algorithmic Transparency Act, could add protections for consumers and accountability for business Offensive vs. defensive data strategy – HBR Article Where responsibility for inaction leading to data breaches should lie Data risks businesses face, including biased algorithms, sharing data with the wrong people, 3rd party data breaches, insider incidents, and technical mistakes Why data ethics need to go beyond what's strictly legal in order to establish and maintain trust. AI Now's 2019 report that touches on ethical inequality risk factors in AI Who is Dan Wu? Dan Wu is the Privacy Counsel & Legal Engineer at Immuta, a leading automated data governance platform for analytics. He writes about purposeful data strategy on TechCrunch and LinkedIn. He holds a J.D. & Ph.D. from Harvard University.
Message from Dan Wu on April 26, 2020
Message from Dan Wu on April 19, 2020
The CivicLex Radio Hour is back!!! ...Sort of. CivicLex has launched a new program focused on bringing together people to discuss the impacts of COVID-19 on our community in a way that is safe for everyone. While primarily a video service, we're distributing the recordings from the Town Halls via video on the web, and via audio on our podcast feed. This CivicLex Digital Town Hall features Alexandra Canada from A Cup of Common Wealth, Dan Wu from Atomic Ramen, and Rebecca Self of Foodchain discussing the impact of the COVID-19 health crisis on the Local Food Service Economy. For more information on this episode's guests, visit the links below. ### Links ### A Cup of Commonwealth: http://acupofcommonwealth.com Atomic Ramen: http://www.theatomicramen.com CivicLex: https://civiclex.org Foodchain: http://foodchainlex.org LEE Initiative: https://leeinitiative.org/#lex
In this episode I talk with the Culinary Evangelist, Lexington chef Dan Wu of Atomic Ramen at the Barn at The Summit. Dan and I discuss his time on Master Chef Season 5--getting an insiders look--the career path that led him to pursue ramen, the trailblazing doors that have opened to him, and the value of taking chances, plus why Dan vowed never to open a restaurant. Dan also discusses his current project BelongLex. Follow Dan Wu at:http://www.theatomicramen.com/https://www.instagram.com/atomicramen/The Culinary Evangelist Podcast Archive:https://culinaryevangelistpodcast.wordpress.com/BelongLex:https://www.instagram.com/belonglex/ Follow Eat Kentucky at:https://www.instagram.com/eatkentucky/https://www.facebook.com/eatkentucky/https://twitter.com/eatkentuckyEmail with questions at eatkentucky@gmail.com If you're looking to buy or sell a home in the Lexington area, download Alan's free real estate app: http://app.kw.com/KW2FBU3WQ
Is a smart city more about people or technology? What would a smarter New York City look like? How can we ensure that a smart city is not a nightmare for privacy? In this episode of IBM thinkLeaders podcast, we are joined by Mike Barlow (coauthor of Smart Cities, Smart Future, managing partner at Cumulus Partners) & Dan Wu (Privacy counsel and legal engineer at Immuta). We talk sensors, optimization, and the need for greater civic engagement when building smart cities. We also get into whether smart cities will usher in a Utopia or Dystopia, and how smart cities may reinvent democracy. Connect with us + the guests: @IBMthinkLeaders @ImmutaData @mike7pilot “For me, a smart city is about thinking about the process of making smarter decisions and more capacity. And that includes not only physical technological infrastructure but also, and a lot of people forget this, it's the scientific and civic infrastructure. How we make decisions.” -Dan Wu “I would define smart cities as places that use digital technologies, and this is key, 21st-century marketing techniques to communicate with citizens, to engage with citizens and to inspire higher levels of citizen engagement in the ongoing development of public policy. This is absolutely essential. In other words, they have to be democracy incubators. We have to reinvent democracy and grassroots participation in the city.” -Mike Barlow BIOS Mike Barlow is an award-winning journalist, prolific author, and business strategy consultant. He is the author of Learning to Love Data Science (O’Reilly 2015), and co-author of Smart Cities, Smart Future (Wiley 2019), The Executive’s Guide to Enterprise Social Media Strategy (Wiley 2011), and Partnering with the CIO (Wiley 2007). He is also the author of many articles, reports, and white papers on numerous topics including AI, machine learning, IoT governance, ambient computing, predictive maintenance, advanced data analytics, and digital transformation. Over the course of a long career, he was a reporter and editor at several respected suburban daily newspapers, including The Journal News and the Stamford Advocate. His feature stories and columns appeared regularly in The Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, Miami Herald, Newsday, and other major US dailies. He has written extensively on data science topics for O’Reilly Media and other publishers. Dan Wu is the privacy counsel and legal engineer at Immuta. Immuta lets companies share data safely and quickly -- to accelerate ethical analytics and protect trust. All without writing code, the platform helps companies restrict who can access data, apply privacy-protecting algorithms, enable purpose restrictions, and audit processing. Wu received his JD/PhD from Harvard, with a research focus on urban innovation. He’s privacy counsel and legal engineer at a data management platform for artificial intelligence. Through this work, he’s engaged with governance and IT personnel of large multinational companies on data governance and published pieces in Dataversity, Tech Pro IT, and Healthcare Business Today.
Treat yourself to a steamy bowl of ramen, courtesy of Dan Wu, the man behind Atomic Ramen. He pays homage to his humble college diet of packaged noodles, punched up with fresh vegetables or whatever’s in the fridge. The self-described comic book nerd has a lot to say about growing up as the son of Chinese immigrants in the South. Now, he’s reclaiming his identity as a Kentuckian, wielding superhuman strength and soup stock. Atomic Ramen is located at The Summit at Fritz Farm in Lexington, KY. See behind-the-scenes photos on Instagram and Facebook. Skillet’s theme song is by Podington Bear and our ad music is by Ketsa Music.
Listen to the latest episode of the startup investor podcast; "The Art of Startup War" with Brian Mach Mahon from Expert Dojo. His guest today is Dan Wu from the company Fox Rothschild. Expert Dojo connects entrepreneurs and startups with advisors and investors. For startup training, pre-accelerator program and investors, visit www.expertdojo.com.
In this episode with Dan Wu, we discuss: Not letting being perfect prevent you from starting. Being the biggest version of yourself. The value of knowing people. Seizing opportunity while it last. Working at different restaurants to learn. Doing well by doing good and tying your brand to other brands that are doing good. Being a skilled chef not being nearly enough to run a successful restaurant. Knowing that everyone struggles in the beginning, and you're not alone. Helping those who are just getting started. Rotating everyone through all the stations so the team grows. When people go to bat for you, how you can't screw it up. Your restaurant brand being an extension of your personal brand. Building a narrative while building your brand. Using Kickstarter to promote opening. Strategy for finding investors. Let your people figure it out on their own before interjecting. Originating from China, when Chef Dan Wu was eight years old he moved to the United States. After graduating college, Wu ate his way through San Francisco and New York. In 2014 Chef Wu managed to find himself on Masterchef. After Masterchef, he started his own podcast the Culinary Evangelist, which ultimately lead to opening his own restaurant Atomic Roman located in Lexington, KY. Show notes… Favorite Success Quote or Mantra. "Don't let perfect be the enemy of good." Today's Sponsor Gusto- "The best payroll, benefits, and HR for the small business owner." It is time to let Gusto do the heavy lifting. Sign up today, and once you run your first payroll you'll get 3 months FREE on Gusto. Click Here to get started bentobox- Bring your restaurant's hospitality online with BentoBox. Get in touch to learn more and save up to $1500 on initial setup when you mention Restaurant Unstoppable. Click Here to get started Knowledge bombs Which "it factor" habit, trait, or characteristic you believe most contributes to your success? Going big. What is your biggest weakness? Discipline to now do too many things. What's one question you ask or thing you look for during an interview? Where do you want to be in X years? What's a current challenge? How are you dealing with it? Staying focused by maintaining interest. Share one code of conduct or behavior you teach your team. See it from the customers point of view. What is one uncommon standard of service you teach your staff? Not nickle and diming people Share an online resource or tool. Google Youtube What's one piece of technology you've adopted in your restaurant and how has it influence operations? Square T-sheets If you got the news that you'd be leaving this world tomorrow and all memories of you, your work, and your restaurants would be lost with your departure with the exception of 3 pieces of wisdom you could leave behind for the good of humanity, what would they be? Don't be perfect be the enemy of good Just do it and always do it better the next time. do well by doing good. Good. Contact Info Instagram: @Atomicramen Facebook/Atomicramen Thanks for Listening! Thanks so much for joining today! Have some feedback you'd like to share? Leave a note in the comment section below! If you enjoyed this episode, please share it using the social media buttons you see at the top of the post. Also, please leave an honest review for the Restaurant Unstoppable Podcast on iTunes! Ratings and reviews are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated! They do matter in the rankings of the show, and I read each and every one of them. And finally, don't forget to subscribe to the show on iTunes to get automatic updates. Huge thanks to Dan Wu for joining me for another awesome episode. Until next time! Restaurant Unstoppable is a free podcast. One of the ways I'm able to make it free is by earning a commission when sharing certain products with you. I've made it a core value to only share tools, resources, and services my guest mentors have recommend, first. If you're finding value in my podcast, please use my links!
There's been a lot of talk recently about the impact of 'Guilt and Shame' on our understanding of ourselves and where we stand with God. Dan Wu has been studying these issues in depth and joins us live on 'The Pastor's Heart'Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/thepastorsheart)
Three new food business leaders from the new food hall, The Barn at The Summit (at Fritz Farm) gather in the studio to talk about what they are doing: Florence Marlowe of Whiskey Bear, Josiah Correll of Pasture, and Dan Wu of Atomic Ramen. Get to know new food entrepreneurs in Lexington.
This interview is with The Rev Dr Dan Wu. Listen as we talk about his journey to faith, Chinese culture, racism within Australia and much more.
Dan Wu grew up with one foot in an Asian “honour/shame culture” and the other foot in a Western “guilt culture”. So he was more than a little interested when he read that the Bible was supposedly a “shame culture” book and that we Westerners misread it from our “guilt culture” perspective. The result was a fascinating journey of scholarship into the meaning of honour, shame and guilt in the Bible. In this episode of the CCL podcast, we talk to Dan about “honour”, “shame” and “guilt”, and how a fresh understanding of these three closely related ideas helps us understand not only the whole story of the Bible, but whole story of our Christian lives—whichever culture we happen to be from.
Sequential Spirits goes Atomic! We are joined by chef Dan Wu, and artist Bryce Oquaye, to talk Ramen, art, and collaboration.
Southern SAWG's annual conference and trade show brings E.D. Steve Muntz and grower Jane O'Tiernan to the studio to talk about the acclaimed sustainable ag group's practical, positive impact on growers. Culinary Evangelist Dan Wu follows to describe some of the food-language intrigues of the Chinese Lunar New Year (Year of the Rooster).
It's beautiful, isn't it? What's going on? This is Project Podcast Pres. Dan with a semi-recent recording we did about 3 weeks ago, I'm stepping up game and doing a reboot, after that long hiatus where I went on a journey far off into the east to explore the depths of the earth and to discover myself. Some call me a modern day hippie (Peace, Dude!), but I don't smoke marijuana due to fear that I will become the shadow of Amy Winehouse's career. To soon to bust out that joke? Well sue me. [Don't, just send me a complaint on the Club's e-mail (bottom of post)]Anyways this podcast will talk about:Result of A.hill's football game w/ Westmont (We lost, surprised?)Spirit WeekHomecoming shizahas well as other stuffSo... LISTEN! (Please)Dan WuProjectPodcast7@gmail.com
Hello people who still read this blog, whom are really awesome people of the everlasting world. If there is anybody who exists who still visits this, BIG APPLAUSE. Anyways, pushing myself to quit being a lazy president who lounges around at home all day playing Skyrim and indulging in sweet Doritos and whatnot, I bring you ANOTHER RECORDING, this is a while back and a lot has happened since then, but please give this a listen. I also would like to apologize for the long delay, but here it is... (Click on the Title Text)In this Podcast we discuss:Homecoming Football Game Great news from our Volleyball Team!Halloween stuff...Prospects on the iPhone4SNews from our Solar Panels concerning a giant truckDia De los Muertos eventCAHSEEObama stuff about troops and etc...And some stuff about the Antibullying show.Dan WuProjectPodcast7@gmail.com
This is kind of like a posting marathon. Sorry for much of the delays, but for anybody reading this post I would like to thank everybody who has stayed with us through the delays... If there is anybody. Since this is basically a thank you post, I would like to thanks our few dedicated members who've stayed with me since the opening of this Podcast Experiment... This is kind of a (REALLY) late thanksgiving post. So here's the new recording for the Podcast of November 8th, 2011. Thank You! ;DThis Podcast is about:A hair in my lunch...Results of Senior Night Football against GundersonSome info on Volleyball and X CountryRobbery in France!Prom Pre-sale info (kind of late... I know.)Dan WuProjectPodcast7@gmail.com
Now that we are up to date with releases now. This week would be Dead Week, which means that teachers around the school would focus on teaching and preparing their students for final for next week, which will be the last week before Winter Break (WHOO!). But the nice folks on the ASB Cabinet have decided to turn this all around and make this something positive, which is known as Alive Week. Meaning that everyday for the entire week, there is a study hall type of thing, complete with snacks going on in the Cafeteria for the entire week. Not only is this Alive Week though, but it is also Spirit Week, so students from each class wears apparel that matches the theme for each day of the week to measure our school spirit. Click the title above to listen to the podcast (The [Click Here!] thing).This Week's Podcast contains:Alive Week ThemesResults of last week's Soccer gameTrack&Field NewsThe tragic accident on Monterey RoadUploading files onto the server with a slow upload speed is a pain...Dan WuProjectPodcast@gmail.com