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The infamous annual ritual of spring break—where thousands of college students head to the same warm location and go crazy—can seem like it's always been here. But it hasn't. The spring break phenomenon is a holdover from midcentury teen culture that has endured by changing, just enough, to be passed from one generation to the next. In this episode we're going from the beaches of Fort Lauderdale to Daytona, from the movie screen to the TV set, from MTV to Instagram reels, from its start to its surprisingly recognizable present, as we follow the evolving, self-reinforcing rite that is spring break. You'll hear from former MTV staffers Doug Herzog, Salli Frattini, Alan Hunter, and Joe Davola, along with John Laurie, Kaylee Morris, and Slate writer Scaachi Koul. This episode was written by Willa Paskin and Katie Shepherd and produced by Katie. It was edited by Evan Chung, Decoder Ring's supervising producer. Our show is also produced by Max Freedman. Merritt Jacob is Senior Technical Director. Thank you to Bob Friedman and Allan Cohen, producers of Spring Broke; David Cohn, Derreck Johnson, and Ivylise Simones. If you have any cultural mysteries you want us to decode, please email us at DecoderRing@slate.com, or leave a message on our hotline at 347-460-7281. Want more Decoder Ring? Subscribe to Slate Plus to unlock exclusive bonus episodes. Plus, you'll access ad-free listening across all your favorite Slate podcasts. Subscribe now on Apple Podcasts by clicking “Try Free” at the top of the Decoder Ring show page. Or, visit slate.com/decoderplus to get access wherever you listen. Sources for This Episode Koul, Scaachi. “From ‘Girls Gone Wild' to ‘Your Body, My Choice',” Slate, Dec. 13, 2024. Laurie, John. “Spring Break: The Economic, Socio-Cultural and Public Governance Impacts of College Students on Spring Break Host Locations,” University of New Orleans Dissertation, Dec. 19, 2008. Mormino, Gary R. Land of Sunshine, State of Dreams: A Social History of Modern Florida, University Press of Florida, 2008. Schiltz, James. “Time to Grow Up: The Rise and Fall of Spring Break in Fort Lauderdale,” The Florida Historical Quarterly, Fall 2014. Spring Broke, dir. Alison Ellwood, Bungalow Media + Entertainment, 2016. Thompson, Derek. “2,000 Years of Partying: The Brief History and Economics of Spring Break,” The Atlantic, March 26, 2013. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The infamous annual ritual of spring break—where thousands of college students head to the same warm location and go crazy—can seem like it's always been here. But it hasn't. The spring break phenomenon is a holdover from midcentury teen culture that has endured by changing, just enough, to be passed from one generation to the next. In this episode we're going from the beaches of Fort Lauderdale to Daytona, from the movie screen to the TV set, from MTV to Instagram reels, from its start to its surprisingly recognizable present, as we follow the evolving, self-reinforcing rite that is spring break. You'll hear from former MTV staffers Doug Herzog, Salli Frattini, Alan Hunter, and Joe Davola, along with John Laurie, Kaylee Morris, and Slate writer Scaachi Koul. This episode was written by Willa Paskin and Katie Shepherd and produced by Katie. It was edited by Evan Chung, Decoder Ring's supervising producer. Our show is also produced by Max Freedman. Merritt Jacob is Senior Technical Director. Thank you to Bob Friedman and Allan Cohen, producers of Spring Broke; David Cohn, Derreck Johnson, and Ivylise Simones. If you have any cultural mysteries you want us to decode, please email us at DecoderRing@slate.com, or leave a message on our hotline at 347-460-7281. Want more Decoder Ring? Subscribe to Slate Plus to unlock exclusive bonus episodes. Plus, you'll access ad-free listening across all your favorite Slate podcasts. Subscribe now on Apple Podcasts by clicking “Try Free” at the top of the Decoder Ring show page. Or, visit slate.com/decoderplus to get access wherever you listen. Sources for This Episode Koul, Scaachi. “From ‘Girls Gone Wild' to ‘Your Body, My Choice',” Slate, Dec. 13, 2024. Laurie, John. “Spring Break: The Economic, Socio-Cultural and Public Governance Impacts of College Students on Spring Break Host Locations,” University of New Orleans Dissertation, Dec. 19, 2008. Mormino, Gary R. Land of Sunshine, State of Dreams: A Social History of Modern Florida, University Press of Florida, 2008. Schiltz, James. “Time to Grow Up: The Rise and Fall of Spring Break in Fort Lauderdale,” The Florida Historical Quarterly, Fall 2014. Spring Broke, dir. Alison Ellwood, Bungalow Media + Entertainment, 2016. Thompson, Derek. “2,000 Years of Partying: The Brief History and Economics of Spring Break,” The Atlantic, March 26, 2013. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The infamous annual ritual of spring break—where thousands of college students head to the same warm location and go crazy—can seem like it's always been here. But it hasn't. The spring break phenomenon is a holdover from midcentury teen culture that has endured by changing, just enough, to be passed from one generation to the next. In this episode we're going from the beaches of Fort Lauderdale to Daytona, from the movie screen to the TV set, from MTV to Instagram reels, from its start to its surprisingly recognizable present, as we follow the evolving, self-reinforcing rite that is spring break. You'll hear from former MTV staffers Doug Herzog, Salli Frattini, Alan Hunter, and Joe Davola, along with John Laurie, Kaylee Morris, and Slate writer Scaachi Koul. This episode was written by Willa Paskin and Katie Shepherd and produced by Katie. It was edited by Evan Chung, Decoder Ring's supervising producer. Our show is also produced by Max Freedman. Merritt Jacob is Senior Technical Director. Thank you to Bob Friedman and Allan Cohen, producers of Spring Broke; David Cohn, Derreck Johnson, and Ivylise Simones. If you have any cultural mysteries you want us to decode, please email us at DecoderRing@slate.com, or leave a message on our hotline at 347-460-7281. Want more Decoder Ring? Subscribe to Slate Plus to unlock exclusive bonus episodes. Plus, you'll access ad-free listening across all your favorite Slate podcasts. Subscribe now on Apple Podcasts by clicking “Try Free” at the top of the Decoder Ring show page. Or, visit slate.com/decoderplus to get access wherever you listen. Sources for This Episode Koul, Scaachi. “From ‘Girls Gone Wild' to ‘Your Body, My Choice',” Slate, Dec. 13, 2024. Laurie, John. “Spring Break: The Economic, Socio-Cultural and Public Governance Impacts of College Students on Spring Break Host Locations,” University of New Orleans Dissertation, Dec. 19, 2008. Mormino, Gary R. Land of Sunshine, State of Dreams: A Social History of Modern Florida, University Press of Florida, 2008. Schiltz, James. “Time to Grow Up: The Rise and Fall of Spring Break in Fort Lauderdale,” The Florida Historical Quarterly, Fall 2014. Spring Broke, dir. Alison Ellwood, Bungalow Media + Entertainment, 2016. Thompson, Derek. “2,000 Years of Partying: The Brief History and Economics of Spring Break,” The Atlantic, March 26, 2013. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The infamous annual ritual of spring break—where thousands of college students head to the same warm location and go crazy—can seem like it's always been here. But it hasn't. The spring break phenomenon is a holdover from midcentury teen culture that has endured by changing, just enough, to be passed from one generation to the next. In this episode we're going from the beaches of Fort Lauderdale to Daytona, from the movie screen to the TV set, from MTV to Instagram reels, from its start to its surprisingly recognizable present, as we follow the evolving, self-reinforcing rite that is spring break. You'll hear from former MTV staffers Doug Herzog, Salli Frattini, Alan Hunter, and Joe Davola, along with John Laurie, Kaylee Morris, and Slate writer Scaachi Koul. This episode was written by Willa Paskin and Katie Shepherd and produced by Katie. It was edited by Evan Chung, Decoder Ring's supervising producer. Our show is also produced by Max Freedman. Merritt Jacob is Senior Technical Director. Thank you to Bob Friedman and Allan Cohen, producers of Spring Broke; David Cohn, Derreck Johnson, and Ivylise Simones. If you have any cultural mysteries you want us to decode, please email us at DecoderRing@slate.com, or leave a message on our hotline at 347-460-7281. Want more Decoder Ring? Subscribe to Slate Plus to unlock exclusive bonus episodes. Plus, you'll access ad-free listening across all your favorite Slate podcasts. Subscribe now on Apple Podcasts by clicking “Try Free” at the top of the Decoder Ring show page. Or, visit slate.com/decoderplus to get access wherever you listen. Sources for This Episode Koul, Scaachi. “From ‘Girls Gone Wild' to ‘Your Body, My Choice',” Slate, Dec. 13, 2024. Laurie, John. “Spring Break: The Economic, Socio-Cultural and Public Governance Impacts of College Students on Spring Break Host Locations,” University of New Orleans Dissertation, Dec. 19, 2008. Mormino, Gary R. Land of Sunshine, State of Dreams: A Social History of Modern Florida, University Press of Florida, 2008. Schiltz, James. “Time to Grow Up: The Rise and Fall of Spring Break in Fort Lauderdale,” The Florida Historical Quarterly, Fall 2014. Spring Broke, dir. Alison Ellwood, Bungalow Media + Entertainment, 2016. Thompson, Derek. “2,000 Years of Partying: The Brief History and Economics of Spring Break,” The Atlantic, March 26, 2013. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 10, 2025 is: imperturbable im-per-TER-buh-bul adjective Imperturbable describes someone or something marked by extreme calm; such a person or thing is very hard to disturb or upset. // The imperturbable captain did not panic when the boat sailed into the path of a violent storm. // Nothing disrupted the contestant's imperturbable focus. See the entry > Examples: "The thick heat is not letting up after a long stretch of nearly-90-degree-days, though the crowd has not seemed to notice. Instead, these thousands of people emanate a truly imperturbable energy as they get to see gospel legend Mavis Staples for free." — David Cohn, The Daily Californian (UC Berkeley), 13 Oct. 2024 Did you know? Imperturbable is a bit of a mouthful, but don't let its five syllables perturb you. Instead, let us break it down: this word, as well as its antonym perturbable, comes from the Latin verb perturbare, meaning "to agitate, trouble, or throw into confusion." Perturbare comes in turn from the combination of per-, meaning "thoroughly," and turbare, meaning "to disturb"; unsurprisingly perturbare is also the source of the English verb perturb. Other perturbare descendants include disturb ("to destroy the tranquility or composure of") and turbid ("thick or opaque with or as if with roiled sediment").
David Cohn, MD, described one of his goals for patients of the James. “When a patient and a family say we didn't want to be diagnosed with cancer and we didn't want to be at the James Cancer Hospital, but after this experience there's nowhere else we'd rather be and that is the end result of empathetic care and compassion in the delivery of that care,” said Cohn, the interim chief executive officer and the medical director of the James. In this episode, Cohn and John Schaffner, MBA, the director of coaching at Ohio State's Fisher College of Business, described a new coaching program for James physicians that's part of the Physician Wellness Program. This coaching focuses on compassion and helps physicians better understand their careers and goals and utilize compassion when working with their colleagues and patients. “It's not that our physicians had problems, they're exceptional, it was rather, how can we support our people so they can flourish,” Cohn said, adding this type of leadership initiative was welcomed by his team. Schaffner, who leads the James coaching program, explained his definition of empathy. “There's cognitive empathy, that's noticing someone else's emotions; there's empathetic concern, which is an emotional reaction to someone else; and this empathy plus action equals compassion.” There are currently 15 certified coaches who work with the 240 attending physicians of the James. “I love working with physicians,” Schattner said. “They're smart and ambitious, understand the idea of flourishing and they do the work.” Some of these physicians, he added, are new to leadership positions and coaching can help them communicate better and build comradery. The coaching program is new and funded through a philanthropic donation to the James. Cohn said the program is designed to help each physician be the best version of themselves they can be with the overreaching goal of delivering the best-possible care to James patients. “Everything we do is driven by the delivery of care to our patients and this is another process to help us get there,” he said.
David Cohn – Spain: Modern Architectures in History...with TRE's Anna Glowinski
Time for the Lighter Side of Sports. Today, Gresh brings up a new ESPN advertisement. ESPN is attempting to enter the sports tourism business, they want to offer a VIP tour of MLB's most famous stadiums on Memorial day weekend. Take me out to the ballparks. Private tour of Jackie Robinson museum. Meet and greet with David Cohn, Michael Kay, Buster Olney. For only $6,999 per person! "What is this? This is not a big deal. Let's go to Polo Grounds!" says Fauria.
Pelotonia is an emotional rollercoaster filled with special moments, connections, community and lots of memories. In this new episode, David Cohn, MD, joins Steve as co-host. Dave is the interim chief executive director of the James, has ridden in every Pelotonia, and has a lot of memories. “It's truly an emotional experience and I'm not hesitant to say I've cried at every Pelotonia at some point,” he said. We'll also hear from five other James physicians who participate in Pelotonia. Tim Pawlik came to Ohio State and the James a few weeks before a Pelotonia ride, and “I was blown away … the number of people riding and the number of people supporting the ride and the number of people along the side of the road.” Eric Singer is brand new at the James, recruited from a cancer hospital in New Jersey. However, the urologist knew about Pelotonia from one of his patients, a New Jersey man who rode ever year in Pelotonia. Joel Mayerson, an orthopedic oncologist, said his favorite memories are riding with patients. “It's an amazing feeling,” he said. Samantha Jaglowski was treated for a brain tumor and has some related physical issues that prevent her from riding. Instead, over the years, she has been a volunteer and a Challenger, raising money for Pelotonia. Mary Dillhoff has a rather unique way to cover the Pelotonia course: she runs. As much as 72 miles.
“We're taking a very patient-centered approach, we're putting the patient at the center of everything we do,” said David Cohn, MD, of the new James Outpatient Cancer Center that opened July 17. In this episode, Cohn, a gynecologic cancer surgeon and interim chief executive of the James Cancer Hospital, provides a detailed look at the new James Outpatient Cancer Center located on west campus in the new Carmenton District. The district also includes the Pelotonia Research Center and Energy Advancement and Innovation Center. The Outpatient Cancer Center will provide a long list of ambulatory (outpatient) treatments, including: clinical trials, screenings, digital pathology, infusions and cancer surgeries that do not require an overnight stay. “There are three goals: to create innovation, allow space for new programs and all for the expansion of our cancer program,” Cohn said. “The demand for cancer services is beyond what we've ever seen before, and we have to expand our footprint to accommodate the growing number of patients who need to be seen.” The Outpatient Cancer Center will focus on cancers that affect bone and soft tissue, blood, kidney, bladder and prostate, which are all cancers in which the treatment options have advanced to the point that outpatient care is now an option. The center will also be the location of the new proton radiation therapy facility created in partnership with Nationwide Children's Hospital. “This is really exciting, this is the next generation of cancer care,” Cohn said. “I couldn't be more proud of what will happen on July 17.”
David Cohn, the co-founder of Subtext joins host Nikita Roy in this episode to discuss the recent doomsday buzz surrounding AI, copyright challenges and how generative AI can change the way news publishers interact with their audiences. Over the past two decades David has worked at the intersection of technology and journalism, with a focus on new products, business models, audience growth, customer experience and incubating new companies. He helped pioneer crowdfunding at Spot.Us, explored mobile first news at Circa and led the charge into social video at AJ+. Today he is a co-founder of Subtext, a platform that lets news organizations, reporters and content creators text with their audience to increase audience engagement, develop new revenue or increase subscriber retention.Tune in to hear David's perspective on the potential of AI to reshape the relationship between news publishers and their audience. Thoughts or questions? You can reach us here. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
David Cohn, senior director of the AlphaGroup tech/media incubator and the co-founder and chief strategy officer of Subtext, says artificial intelligence programs like ChatGPT won't be taking journalists jobs, at least not anytime soon. But there are still vital roles for journalists to play as AI programs become more commonplace in the newsroom. Keep up with the latest news about the It's All Journalism podcast, sign up for our weekly email newsletter. Also, listen to our podcast on Apple Podcasts, Soundcloud, Audible, Amazon, or Stitcher. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Come on along as we talk to David Cohn, MD, about his journey from the ski slopes of the Pocono mountains to the surgical suites of the James Cancer Hospital. Cohn is the interim CEO of the James, the hospital's chief medical officer and a gynecologic cancer specialist. In this episode, Cohn talks about growing up in suburban Washington, D.C., his love of skiing and music (he plays the guitar, mandolin and ukulele), how and why he selected a career in medicine over one as an attorney, and the lessons he's learned from his mentors along the way. His career “was shaped by the people you meet,” Cohn said. “I found people who were committed to their profession, doing this for the right reasons and found joy in what they were doing.” These lessons, and mentors, have shaped Cohn's professional life and helped him become a leader at the James. His father's diagnosis with multiple myeloma during his residency “helped shape the way I practice medicine, just to be there for my patients,” he said. Cohn has plans to help the James continue to grow and innovate. “I know where we are today; I know where we can be,” he said. “I think I have a sense of what that path looks like, how you put the pieces along the path so we can walk on it.”
In the second last show of the year, Gabe and Stephen interview Andy Landenberger and David Cohn about the state of youth golf in Wisconsin.
More lessons than golf within golf. David Cohn joined WMN in studio to discuss that, their pro-am event, and more!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Dr. David Cohn is the chief medical officer at The James Cancer Hospital as well as the director of Gynecologic Cancer Research and the associate director of the Gynecologic Oncology Fellowship Program at Ohio State. In this episode, we'll get to know the man behind the title and "that human connection" he has to our One Goal. Learn about our One Goal. https://pelotonia.org/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
“Our cancer patients are truly remarkable,” said David Cohn, MD, MBA, FACHE, chief medical officer of The James. “The vast majority are fully vaccinated and fully boosted and that's been a key to their protection [from COVID-19].” In this episode, Cohn discusses why cancer patients are more at risk to contract COVID-19 and have more serious symptoms; the precautions James patients and their family members have taken the past two years to protect themselves; the science of the pandemic and vaccination and research conducted at the cancer center; and the safety precautions the James faculty and staff are taking to protect patients and one another. It has been a difficult two years, with more to come, “but we are centered on our patients and that's our grounding,” Cohn explained. “We're an amazing and resilient team and that's what keeps us together and moving forward every day.” Cohn also talks about how the immune system of a cancer patient can be compromised before and during treatment, which makes even more urgent that these people get vaccinated. However, there is one small group of cancer patients, those in the midst of a bone marrow treatment, who should not be vaccinated until this specific treatment is completed and they get the go-ahead from their oncologist.
“Knowledge is power,” said Sally Hughes, who was treated for endometrial cancer at the OSUCCC – James and was a participant in the Ohio Prevention and Treatment of Endometrial Cancer (OPTEC), a statewide program funded by Pelotonia. In this episode, Hughes and David Cohn, MD, the chief medical officer of the James, discuss the ongoing impact of OPTEC. In the program, women diagnosed with endometrial cancer were screened to determine if they had Lynch Syndrome, an inherited genetic mutation that greatly increases the risk for colorectal and endometrial cancer. Family members of the women who tested positive for Lynch Syndrome were then screened. “This is called cascade testing and it saves lives,” Cohn said. While Hughes did not have Lynch Syndrome, which meant her children could not have it, she tested positive for a different genetic mutation that increases her risk of breast cancer. “Because of this and my family history [of cancer], I'm now in the High-Risk Breast Cancer Program,” she said. “I go in every six months for a mammogram or MRI.” Hughes also describes how she has become an advocate for increased funding for cancer research and reducing health disparities, and she is an active member of the James Ambassadors Society and a Pelotonia rider. “Cancer had a silver lining for me,” she said. “It gave me clarity about how I want to spend the next chapter of my life.”
The pandemic has hurt many industries throughout the United States. For local news media, the COVID-19 public health emergency was nearly catastrophic. Already threatened with economic demise because of the rise of digital advertising and how consumers use free social media tools to consume news, the pandemic put further financial stresses on local news outlets by impacting advertising from shuttered restaurants, bars and small businesses. All of this came at a time, of course, when local news—with information on the immediate impact of the public health emergency, among other topics—was more important than ever. However, despite the strong challenges for local news outlets, the future may not be so bleak for the industry. Why? A growing number of nonprofit news media ventures are seeking to fill the void for quality local news efforts. Across the country, citizens are increasingly getting local news from new digital ventures focused on a specific region or city. Perhaps most important, philanthropists and major foundations are investing in these new efforts, increasing the chance for sustainability and impact and creating a new future for local news, even at this challenging time. This program will introduce viewers to two nonprofit efforts—MLK50 (covering the intersection of poverty, power and policy in Memphis), and Cityside (with the Bay Area outlets Berkeleyside and The Oaklandside)—as well as to the co-founder of a new venture philanthropy nonprofit, the American Journalism Project, created to make local sites more financially sustainable. Please join us for an important conversation on the future of local news and why the future may be in a new generation of nonprofit news outlets. Wendi C. Thomas and John Thornton will participate virtually; Lance Knobel and David Cohn will be on-stage. SPEAKERS: Lance Knobel, CEO, CItyside Wendi C. Thomas, Editor and Publisher, MLK50: Justice Through Journalism (Participating Virtually) John Thornton, Founder Texas Tribune; Co-Founder American Journalism Project (Participating Virtually) David Cohn, Senior Director, Advance Local; Cofounder of Subtext—Moderator In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we have been hosting our live programming via YouTube live stream. We are slowly reopen our building to programs with live guests and live audiences. This hybrid-program was recorded with participants in both our auditorium and via video conference on July 15th, 2021 by the Commonwealth Club of California. NOTE: This podcast may contain explicit language. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The pandemic has hurt many industries throughout the United States. For local news media, the COVID-19 public health emergency was nearly catastrophic. Already threatened with economic demise because of the rise of digital advertising and how consumers use free social media tools to consume news, the pandemic put further financial stresses on local news outlets by impacting advertising from shuttered restaurants, bars and small businesses. All of this came at a time, of course, when local news—with information on the immediate impact of the public health emergency, among other topics—was more important than ever. However, despite the strong challenges for local news outlets, the future may not be so bleak for the industry. Why? A growing number of nonprofit news media ventures are seeking to fill the void for quality local news efforts. Across the country, citizens are increasingly getting local news from new digital ventures focused on a specific region or city. Perhaps most important, philanthropists and major foundations are investing in these new efforts, increasing the chance for sustainability and impact and creating a new future for local news, even at this challenging time. This program will introduce viewers to two nonprofit efforts—MLK50 (covering the intersection of poverty, power and policy in Memphis), and Cityside (with the Bay Area outlets Berkeleyside and The Oaklandside)—as well as to the co-founder of a new venture philanthropy nonprofit, the American Journalism Project, created to make local sites more financially sustainable. Please join us for an important conversation on the future of local news and why the future may be in a new generation of nonprofit news outlets. Wendi C. Thomas and John Thornton will participate virtually; Lance Knobel and David Cohn will be on-stage. SPEAKERS: Lance Knobel, CEO, CItyside Wendi C. Thomas, Editor and Publisher, MLK50: Justice Through Journalism (Participating Virtually) John Thornton, Founder Texas Tribune; Co-Founder American Journalism Project (Participating Virtually) David Cohn, Senior Director, Advance Local; Cofounder of Subtext—Moderator In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we have been hosting our live programming via YouTube live stream. We are slowly reopen our building to programs with live guests and live audiences. This hybrid-program was recorded with participants in both our auditorium and via video conference on July 15th, 2021 by the Commonwealth Club of California. NOTE: This podcast may contain explicit language. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Everyone, and especially cancer patients, should get the COVID-19 vaccine as soon as they are eligible, says David Cohn, the James Chief Medical Officer. "Our patients have been very excited to get the vaccine, to be able to be with their families again and hug their grandchildren," he says. In this episode, Cohn explains the science of how the three vaccines work and “supplement your body's natural immune system” to prevent the virus and/or reduce the symptoms. Because COVID-19 can lead to severe complications, being vaccinated is important for everyone, and even more essential for cancer patients, who may have a weakened immune system due to their treatment. This puts them at a higher risk for serious complications.
On this episode, Adam and Nelson discuss with Oli Katz and David Cohn camp North Star and Camp Nebagamon, and realize together that the two camps have a lot more in common than they might have realized. Whether it be the traditions, the food, or the fun games they play at the Camps, it sure is obvious that no matter what camp we go to, it will always be meaningful to us. Keep the Fires Burning!
Texting our friends is normal, getting texts from news outlets is unusual. But this is how US journalists are keeping their most loyal readers engaged with covid-19 and furlough updates
En NotiPod Hoy El futuro del podcasting está “en la gran mesa”, según David Cohn, jefe de ventas de Megaphone quien afirma, que estos son tiempos interesantes en el negocio de los medios y el podcasting. DPA lanza un kit con micrófono para hacer entrevistas presenciales a distancia. Poco a poco el audio se ha convertido en uno de los ganchos para atrapar nuevos usuarios en los medios de comunicación. Ejemplo de ello es que ahora las noticias leídas por sus propios autores, ganan peso en los grandes medios. El podcasting se ha convertido en un medio pegajoso en Canadá que se ubicó ligeramente por delante de Estados Unidos. Joe Rogan se muda a Texas donde no solo está construyendo su nuevo estudio de podcasting, sino que tiene una participación importante en Onnit Labs Inc., una empresa que vende alimentos y suplementos nutricionales, equipos de fitness y artículos deportivos. Cómo hacer crecer la audiencia de pódcast en poco tiempo. Luis Ramos, creador de uno de los podcasts independientes más populares en el mundo de habla castellana narra cómo ha conseguido más de 12,000 descargas al día, 50,000 suscriptores en su lista de correos y más de 60,000 seguidores en YouTube en dos años. Glosario de publicidad de podcasts. En el mundo de la publicidad en podcasts existen un montón de términos, acrónimos y frases comunes que son importantes conocer. En este artículo de RedCircle se explican. Pódcasts recomendado La pandemia al derecho. Es un nuevo pódcast creado por la Escuela de Derecho y Gobierno del Politécnico Grancolombiano para despejar las dudas jurídicas más comunes en medio de la pandemia. Algunos de los temas que han tratado son: La responsabilidad médica en la pandemia, El arrendamiento de los establecimientos comerciales en la pandemia y La unión marital de hecho en la pandemia.
OSUCCC – James Chief Medical Officer David Cohn, MD, MBA, describes how the new James Cancer Diagnostic Center is providing immediate and safe access to cancer diagnoses during these challenging times. Cohn explains the benefits of detecting cancer in its early stages, the importance of screenings and how James experts are working to ensure that underserved populations in central Ohio and beyond receive the care and treatment they deserve in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.
It's All Journalism host Michael O'Connell talks to David Cohn and Mike Donoghue of The Alpha Group about how COVID-19 has sped up technology-based evolutions that were already starting to take shape and how newsrooms will need to keep those changes coming when things return to "normal." Keep up with the latest news about the It's All Journalism podcast, sign up for our weekly email newsletter.
Screenings for breast cancer, colorectal cancer and cervical cancer, as well as elective surgeries, can now be scheduled at The James. Chief Medical Officer David Cohn, MD, MBA, explains why it's important to schedule screenings that were put off during the pandemic, and provides details about safety protocols at The James.
Join us for S2:EP35 of the Sports Philanthropy Podcast as David Cohn, First Tee of SE Wisconsin sits down with our host Roy Kessel
Me (Roniel Bencosme) and my co-host (David Cohn) break the seal on our first episode (episode 0). We select our podcast name... LUCKY TO LEAD, we share who our leadership influences are, and we discuss what makes them special. We look forward to learning more about each other and each of our guests.
The COVID-19 pandemic impacts everyone, especially cancer patients and the larger medical community. David Cohn, MD, the chief medical officer of The James talks about how the Ohio State doctors have adapted, including the postponement of many elective surgeries and the conducting of some visits via video or phone.
In this bonus episode, Pelotonia President and CEO Doug Ulman talks with Dr. David Cohn, Chief Medical Officer at The James Cancer Hospital. Dr. Cohn answers questions from our community about COVID-19, things that we can be doing to help and his favorite memories from ride weekend. To learn more about Pelotonia’s response to the coronavirus, visit Pelotonia.org/RISE.
Chief Medical Officer of The James, Dr. David Cohn, shares the measures the hospital is taking to help overcome the COVID-19 Pandemic. Learn more by visiting: https://cancer.osu.edu/
Cancer science is complicated, but David Cohn, MD, The James' chief medical officer, breaks it all down during this easy-to-understand conversation. Learn about cancer cells, how they grow and spread and its different stages. Also, Cohn explains some of the ways cancer is treated — surgery, radiation, chemotherapy and immunotherapy — and how those treatments work in the body. Finally, learn how we all can help create a cancer-free world through accepted prevention practices.
How do you deliver the highest-quality patient care while maintaining efficiency? Dr. David Cohn, physician and chief medical officer at The James Cancer Center at The Ohio State Wexner Medical Center, discusses best practices involved with designing, sustainable empathetical care. Cohn further explains how enrollment in Fisher's Executive MBA program is helping him understand how to build effective healthcare strategies.
Editor's Choice Paper: Genomic heterogeneity in peritoneal implants: A differential analysis of gene expression using nanostring Human Cancer Reference panel identifies a malignant signature Editorial Paper: Not All Peritoneal Implants Are Created EqualHosted by: Dr. David Cohn, Deputy Editor Featuring: Dr. Cohn, Dr. Fauceglia, Dr. Shih
Editor's Choice Paper: "Genomic heterogeneity in peritoneal implants: A differential analysis of gene expression using nanostring Human Cancer Reference panel identifies a malignant signature" and Editorial Paper: "Not All Peritoneal Implants Are Created Equal" Hosted by: Dr. David Cohn, Deputy Editor and Featuring: Dr. Cohn, Dr. Fauceglia, Dr. Shih
It's All Journalism Producer Michael O'Connell is joined by The Alpha Group's David Cohn and Mike Donoghue. They talk about Subtext, an SMS-based platform the co-created that allows journalists to talk directly with their audience without being bothered by trolls. Keep up with the latest news about the It's All Journalism podcast, sign up for our weekly email newsletter.
At this point I feel like I am in the very beginning stages of an extended anthropological study at St. John's High School. Ronnie began playing lacrosse when he was a sophomore in high school in Westchester NY. Ronnie did not plan on playing lacrosse after his high school career ended. However, when he was a junior at Ithaca College we walked on to the lacrosse team and earned a spot for the next three years. Ronnie picked up the coaching bug when he returned to his hometown after college and began to serve his old community. Ronnie landed in Houston four years ago. He very quickly got hooked up with David Cohn and helped round out the staff at St. John's along with Kyle Dowd. I don't know how you can listen to these St. John's coaches and not get fired up.
David grew up near Baltimore Maryland and played his high school ball at Gillman. After a successful high school career he attended the United States Naval Academy and played lacrosse all four years. After his career at the Naval Academy he served our country in the United States Navy. It is in the Navy where he first coached at the youth level while he was stationed in California. David spent some time as a volunteer coach at NAPS where the coaching bug really caught hold. He subsequently coached at Furman as the program was starting there and later at the United States Air Force Academy. This interview was a blast. Between David, conducting the interview on Caven Field and the soundtrack from the girls field hockey practice it was just all around cool. This is one of those interviews where I felt like I added very little to the content. David is the real deal and we should all take some time to understand how he is growing young men at St. John's and what we can take from him back to our teams.
Advance Publications is one of the world’s largest media companies. It owns Conde Nast, home to magazines like The New Yorker and Vogue, as well as dozens of newspapers across the U.S. It even has a majority stake in Reddit. A few years ago, it launched Alpha Group, an incubator meant to launch brand new tech products and grow them into fully functional companies. Rather than acting like a traditional media company, Alpha Group takes a much more expansive view as to what constitutes a 21-century media company, and its products span a wide range of functions, from a social polling app to a Facebook chat bot. I sat down with David Cohn, a senior director at Alpha Group, to talk about how the company comes up with new product ideas and what it’s like to try to launch multiple tech companies from scratch.
On today’s show Troy, Erin, and Archana are talking about The Brigantine’s new concept Ketch Grill & Taps, South Park’s Fernside courtesy of some of San Diego’s top talents, and the US Grant’s soon-to-debut Prohibition era-themed bar inside the downtown hotel. Our guest is David Cohn of Cohn Restaurant Group, the man behind San Diego staples like Island Prime, Coasterra, Corvette Diner, Bo-Beau, The Prado, Tacos Libertad, and more. He talks about what it was like to launch in Hillcrest in less vibrant times, how he met CRG executive chef-partner Deborah Scott, and what’s changed about those plastic straws at Corvette.
Should a patient newly diagnosed with cancer seek a second opinion? Dr Cohn, chief medical officer of the James, takes us through this stressful and difficult time ... and provides answers and insight to this important question.
David Cohn, Mike Hammes, Damon Hack, and Andy Spaulding join Chuck.
The Ohio Prevention and Treatment of Endometrial Cancer (OPTEC) initiative is a statewide program funded by Pelotonia. It provides genetic testing and precision cancer treatment to about 700 Ohio women diagnosed with endometrial cancer. About 61,000 women are diagnosed every year with endometrial cancer and about 17 percent will die. The goal of OPTEC is to change the standard of care, identify at-risk people and save a lot of lives.
Chuck talks with David Cohn, Fred Beehymer, BJ Maloy, and Mary Lopuzsynski.
“A toast to the restaurant community, especially in California…My toast is that we all find a harmonious relationship, keep each other safe and keep each other profitable.” - Sara Stroud “When you open a restaurant it’s like having a heart attack. You recover, but you’re never quite the same.” - David Cohn, Owner of Cohn Restaurant Group, San Diego Debi catches up with Sara Stroud, co-owner of Carnitas Snack Shack in San Diego. In this episode, they discuss whether you can teach hospitality, bosses good and bad, wages and tips in the restaurant business and the cutest pig in San Diego. Sara Stroud is the co-founder and Director of Brand Management of Carnitas' Snack Shack. Growing up in Illinois, Sara began working in the restaurant industry at the age of 15. Working at a small Washington DC batch bourbon/cigar bar in 1999, she decided to move out West to San Diego where she worked for the Cohn Restaurant group, managing Kensington Grill and Cucina Urbana restaurants, as well as Wine Steals. In 2011, Sara Stroud partnered with her now husband, Chef Hanis Cavin, to open Carnitas’ Snack Shack, their first joint venture in the North Park neighborhood of San Diego. The “Snack Shack,” as it’s affectionately called, serves up thoughtfully-sourced, pork- centric American cuisine and local craft beers in a fun, no-fuss environment. Over the years Sara and Chef Hanis (and Carnitas–their pet pig!) have earned the respect of their colleagues through hard work, creativity, and dedication to their community. Inspired to share their passion for food and life with more people, the king and queen of pork launched a Snack Shack on the Embarcadero waterfront in Spring 2016, offering a full bar program and panoramic views of the San Diego harbor.Find more about Sara’s Snack Shack’s at the link below and email here directly at sara@carnitassnackshack.com https://carnitassnackshack.com “I love DC, it’s perfect ‘cause it’s just that little bit south of the Mason Dixon Line, the weather is not as brutal…I like the people, I LOVED the culture.” - Sara Stroud
Innovation Rising Episode 14: David Cohn of Regroup Therapy and Bob Saunders of OCA Ventures (Part 2) In this week’s special interview I am rejoined in the studio by 3 guests to discuss digital innovation in healthcare around Behavioral Health: David Cohn, CEO, Founder of Regroup Therapy, Bob Saunders, General Partner at OCA Ventures, and my co-host for this episode, Neil Patel, President and COO of Healthbox. This is part 2 of a 2-part interview with Bob and David! Make sure to go back and listen to Part 1 if you missed that episode! In the interview, we discuss: How having OCA and Bob as an investor has been helpful to David and some examples Lessons David would share with other entrepreneurs about making a deal with large customers and factors that led to that success David’s lessons learned from deals that didn’t go through David’s thoughts on the advantages of starting a company in Chicago that most entrepreneurs overlook Bob and OCA Venture’s outlook on the advantages of investing in the midwest that most investors don't think about Where Bob sees the intersection of Behavioral therapy and digital health space heading in the future Connect with David: LinkedIn Twitter Connect with Bob: LinkedIn Learn more about Regroup Therapy Website Twitter Learn more about OCA Ventures Website Twitter Connect with Healthbox Follow us on Twitter Subscribe and leave a review in iTunes Have guest suggestions or topic ideas for the podcast? Send them to us at ideas@healthbox.com Listen to his episode on iTunes, SoundCloud, or Libsyn
In this week’s special interview I am joined in the studio by 3 guests to discuss digital innovation in healthcare around Behavioral Health: David Cohn, CEO, Founder of Regroup Therapy, Bob Saunders, General Partner at OCA Ventures, and my co-host for this episode, Neil Patel, President and COO of Healthbox. This is part 1 of a 2-part interview with Bob and David so make sure to listen to part 2 next week! In the interview, we discuss: David’s background and where the idea for Regroup come from Why David chose a “health system/provider model” over the direct to consumer model Bob’s background and specific focus at OCA Ventures What attracts Bob to investments in the Behavioral Health space How Bob approaches being involved with the companies he invests in What David was looking for in an investor The advantages about starting a company in Chicago that most entrepreneurs overlook Connect with David: LinkedIn Twitter Connect with Bob: LinkedIn Learn more about Regroup Therapy Website Twitter Learn more about OCA Ventures Website Twitter Connect with Healthbox Follow us on Twitter Subscribe and leave a review in iTunes Have guest suggestions or topic ideas for the podcast? Send them to us at ideas@healthbox.com Listen to his episode on iTunes, SoundCloud, or Libsyn
Interview from July 9, 2009 with David Cohn, the Founder of Spot.us. Spot.Us is a nonprofit project pioneering “community funded reporting.” Through Spot.Us, the public can commission journalists to do investigations on important, and perhaps overlooked stories. David is a journalist turned entrepreneur who has written for Wired, Seed, Columbia Journalism Review and The New York Times. While working toward his master’s degree at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism, Cohn worked as an Editor at newassignment.net, which focused on citizen journalism and ways news organizations could explore the social web. He recently became a contributing editor at NewsTrust.net, a non-profit media literacy tool and news filter, and is the editor-in-chief at Broowaha, an expanding citizen journalism network.You can read a transcript of the interview on my blog, Have Fun * Do Good.