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The menus at Chubbie's! A “New Principal is Weeny” headline! The infamous “red drink!” These are just some of many legendary props that made Boy Meets World so special, and we're talking to the man who made it all appear!! David Glazer was Prop Master for all 7 seasons of BMW and he's ready to share how all these iconic artifacts came to life. Find out how he handled the tight turnarounds and what inspired some of his most memorable contributions…like the “candy clown.” Plus, we get an unexpected update from the “Magnum PI” shirt guy - on a prop-er episode of Pod Meets World!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Brain Injury Expert and ABI Wellness CEO Mark Watson sits down with Dr. David Glazer, Medical Director at VA Polytrauma Rehabilitation Center at Hunter Holmes McGuire VA Medical Center. They discuss the impact of overall body health on the brain, what motivated Dr. Glazer to commit his life and career to brain injury, and why looking at brain injury and brain health from a preventative and holistic approach is necessary. Want to get in touch with Dr. Glazer? Check out his website (www.braininjuryanswers.com). Be sure to tune in this Friday for our next episode with Harrison Brown, Co-Founder & CEO at HeadCheck Health.
Brain Injury Expert and ABI Wellness CEO Mark Watson sits down with James Durham, traumatic brain injury survivor and president and founder of TBI One Love (www.tbionelove.com). They discuss how the environment around you changes your mindset, the ripple effect of a positive headspace, and the importance of one's interest in their own brain health. Check out the TBI One Love Podcast. Tune in for next week's episode with Dr. David Glazer.
Synopsis OK – say you were paid to listen to and promote hundreds of new classical recordings every month and travel the world to broker new deals for a major record company. The question is, “What would you do in your spare time?” Well, if you’re a composer, the answer is easy: write your OWN music, of course. Sean Hickey’s “day job” is being the Senior Vice-President for Sales and Business Development at Naxos of America, but who also finds time to create his own chamber and orchestral works. On today’s date in 2007, for example, his Clarinet Concerto received its premiere performance at Symphony Space in New York City, with David Gould as soloist with the Metro Chamber Orchestra. It’s gone on to be his most-performed orchestra work, and, in keeping with Hickey’s globe-trotting, has been recorded in the Russian Federation by another virtuoso clarinetist, Alexander Fiterstein with the St. Petersburg State Academic Symphony. The work also incorporates fragments of folk tunes from Scotland as part of the creative mix. Why Scottish themes? “They have a timeless quality of most great folk music, “says Hickey. “In the concerto’s cadenza, a fiddle tune leads headlong into a rapturous close.” Music Played in Today's Program Sean Hickey — Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra (Alexander Fiterstein, cl; St. Petersburg Academic Symphony; Vladimir Lande, cond.)Delos 3448 On This Day Births 1899 - American composer and teacher Randall Thompson, in New York; 1933 - American composer and pianist Easley Blackwood, in Indianapolis; Premieres 1845 - Lortzing: opera "Undine," in Magdeburg at the Stadttheater; 1889 - Puccini: opera "Edgar," in Milan at the Teatro alla Scala; 1917 - Debussy: Sonata No. 2 for flute,viola, and harp, at a concert of the Société Musicale Indépendante in Paris, by the trio of Manouvirier (flute), Jarecki (viola), and Jamet (harp); 1918 - Prokofiev: Symphony No. 1 ("Classical"), in Petrograd, by the former Court Orchestra with the composer conducting; 1922 - Frederick Converse: Symphony No. 2, by the Boston Symphony, Pierre Monteux conducting; 1924 - Youmans: musical "No, No Nanette," in Detroit; After stops in Chicago and London, the musical opened on Broadway on Sept. 16, 1925; 1937 - Copland: a play-opera for high school "The Second Hurricane," at the Grand Street Playhouse in New York City, with soloists from the Professional Children's School, members of the Henry Street Settlement adult chorus, and the Seward High School student chorus, with Lehman Engle conducting and Orson Welles directing the staged production; One professional adult actor, Joseph Cotton, also participated (He was paid $10); 1939 - Leonard Bernstein's first appearance as a conductor, leading his own incidental score to "The Birds" at Harvard; 1942 - Bernstein: Clarinet Sonata, in Boston, with clarinetist David Glazer and the composer at the piano; 1948 - Vaughan Williams: Symphony No. 6, at Royal Albert Hall in London, by the BBC Symphony, Sir Adrian Boult conducting; 1973 - Bliss: "Variations" for orchestra, in London, with Leopold Stokowski conducting; 1985 - Morton Feldman: "For Philip Guston," for chamber ensemble, in New York; 1988 - Bernstein: "Missa brevis," in Atlanta by the Atlanta Symphony Chorus conducted by Robert Shaw; Others 1749 - Against Handel's wishes, in advance of its official premiere scheduled for April 27, a public rehearsal of Handel's "Music for the Royal Fireworks" at Vauxhall Gardens takes place; Reports suggest 12,000 attended, causing traffic jams on London Bridge (Gregorian date: May 2); 1829 - Mendelssohn, age 20, arrives in London for his first visit. 1863 - American premiere of J.S. Bach's Concerto for Two Claviers and Orchestra No.2 in C Major, at Dodworth's Hall in New York during a Mason-Thomas chamber music "Soiree,"with Henry C. Timm and William Mason performing on two pianos. Links and Resources More on Sean Hickey at Vox Novus
Synopsis OK – say you were paid to listen to and promote hundreds of new classical recordings every month and travel the world to broker new deals for a major record company. The question is, “What would you do in your spare time?” Well, if you’re a composer, the answer is easy: write your OWN music, of course. Sean Hickey’s “day job” is being the Senior Vice-President for Sales and Business Development at Naxos of America, but who also finds time to create his own chamber and orchestral works. On today’s date in 2007, for example, his Clarinet Concerto received its premiere performance at Symphony Space in New York City, with David Gould as soloist with the Metro Chamber Orchestra. It’s gone on to be his most-performed orchestra work, and, in keeping with Hickey’s globe-trotting, has been recorded in the Russian Federation by another virtuoso clarinetist, Alexander Fiterstein with the St. Petersburg State Academic Symphony. The work also incorporates fragments of folk tunes from Scotland as part of the creative mix. Why Scottish themes? “They have a timeless quality of most great folk music, “says Hickey. “In the concerto’s cadenza, a fiddle tune leads headlong into a rapturous close.” Music Played in Today's Program Sean Hickey — Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra (Alexander Fiterstein, cl; St. Petersburg Academic Symphony; Vladimir Lande, cond.)Delos 3448 On This Day Births 1899 - American composer and teacher Randall Thompson, in New York; 1933 - American composer and pianist Easley Blackwood, in Indianapolis; Premieres 1845 - Lortzing: opera "Undine," in Magdeburg at the Stadttheater; 1889 - Puccini: opera "Edgar," in Milan at the Teatro alla Scala; 1917 - Debussy: Sonata No. 2 for flute,viola, and harp, at a concert of the Société Musicale Indépendante in Paris, by the trio of Manouvirier (flute), Jarecki (viola), and Jamet (harp); 1918 - Prokofiev: Symphony No. 1 ("Classical"), in Petrograd, by the former Court Orchestra with the composer conducting; 1922 - Frederick Converse: Symphony No. 2, by the Boston Symphony, Pierre Monteux conducting; 1924 - Youmans: musical "No, No Nanette," in Detroit; After stops in Chicago and London, the musical opened on Broadway on Sept. 16, 1925; 1937 - Copland: a play-opera for high school "The Second Hurricane," at the Grand Street Playhouse in New York City, with soloists from the Professional Children's School, members of the Henry Street Settlement adult chorus, and the Seward High School student chorus, with Lehman Engle conducting and Orson Welles directing the staged production; One professional adult actor, Joseph Cotton, also participated (He was paid $10); 1939 - Leonard Bernstein's first appearance as a conductor, leading his own incidental score to "The Birds" at Harvard; 1942 - Bernstein: Clarinet Sonata, in Boston, with clarinetist David Glazer and the composer at the piano; 1948 - Vaughan Williams: Symphony No. 6, at Royal Albert Hall in London, by the BBC Symphony, Sir Adrian Boult conducting; 1973 - Bliss: "Variations" for orchestra, in London, with Leopold Stokowski conducting; 1985 - Morton Feldman: "For Philip Guston," for chamber ensemble, in New York; 1988 - Bernstein: "Missa brevis," in Atlanta by the Atlanta Symphony Chorus conducted by Robert Shaw; Others 1749 - Against Handel's wishes, in advance of its official premiere scheduled for April 27, a public rehearsal of Handel's "Music for the Royal Fireworks" at Vauxhall Gardens takes place; Reports suggest 12,000 attended, causing traffic jams on London Bridge (Gregorian date: May 2); 1829 - Mendelssohn, age 20, arrives in London for his first visit. 1863 - American premiere of J.S. Bach's Concerto for Two Claviers and Orchestra No.2 in C Major, at Dodworth's Hall in New York during a Mason-Thomas chamber music "Soiree,"with Henry C. Timm and William Mason performing on two pianos. Links and Resources On Theodore Thomas Concert-going then and now
You don't need an AI platform to practice foresight. Futurists are people that make a practice of tuning that trends dial and are able to isolate signals clearly. And you can be a futurist too. In this podcast, learn how to use techniques including: SPLEET analysis, scenario planning, and second-order effects. Here to help us with our desire to predict the future are two of my colleagues. David Glazer, is the strategy and innovation practice lead at Info-Tech. Adib Ghubril, is an executive advisor at Info-Tech.
Urbancoolab's AI machine is collaborating the next wave of tastemakers from a crosswind of creative fields in including those in music, fashion, visual arts, technology, sports, food and everything in between. You might ended up picking a piece that is co-designed by machine with people such as Kiesza, Smif-N-Wessun, Command Sisters, Chris Crack, Sandy Gill or other artists. Today's guest Idris Mootee is the CEO and co-founder of Urbancoolab. He's also the former CEO and co-founder of Idea Coutour and the former global chief strategist for Blast Radius. And he's the author of Design Thinking for Strategic Innovation. Also on this episode is David Glazer, the practice lead of Info-Tech's strategy and innovation practice. Visit Urbancoolab at: https://urbancoolx.com/
Join Sal's Investment Syndicate: Click Here Unlike software startups that can scale with minimal resources, biotech startups need frequently to rely on collaborations with big strategic players to get to scale. This is an interview with one of the top attorneys in arranging such deals, David Glazer of Morgan Lewis. I learned much from David; I hope you will too. Highlights: Sal Daher Introduces David Glazer of Morgan Lewis, the Biotech Deal Wiz Why Collaborations with Strategic Partners Are So Necessary for Biotech Startups Sal Connected with David by Courtesy of Armon Sharei of SQZ Biotech; David Advised SQZ on the $1.3 Billion Roche Deal Collaborations May Last Ten or Twenty Year; Picking the Right Partner is Crucial A Strategic Partner Can Be Immensely Valuable with Dealing with the Complexities & Cost of Getting a Compound of Technology to Market Strategics Offer Clinical, Regulatory & Commercial Expertise Startups Lack “You got one partner signed up and then the dominoes start to fall, it provides a validation.” The Topics that Dominate the Discussions Between Biotech Startups and Strategic Partners The Tradeoffs Central to the Negotiations An Important Metric of Biotech Deals Is Elucidated Picking Mechanisms Determine Who Takes the Lead in Which Circumstance Reward Follows Risk in Biotech Deals “Careful what you ask for when you're the biotech company…” – The Law of Unintended Consequences Collaborations Can Give Startups the Capacity to Develop Their Own Internal Projects Resources from Collaborations Can Help Startups Mature Their Tech “I would say I spend about 50% of my time with the pharmaceutical, the strategic players, and about 50% with biotechs.” Since They Represent both Biotechs & Strategics, Morgan Lewis Has a Good Sense of What Motivates the Players and What Deals Can Get Done How Deals Go Awry Sal Daher Puts in a Plug for His Syndicate List How David Glazer Became a Biotech Deal Maker “…then in 2000, the [tech] bubble popped and I ended up spending almost all of my time working for the pharmaceutical and biotech companies back in the day.” How the Acquisition of One of His Clients Expanded David Glazer’s Network Morgan Lewis Has Afforded David Glazer the Opportunity to Do Interesting Pro Bono Work David Glazer’s Closing Advice to Biotechnology Companies Thinking About Collaborations “…I've always found it helpful to have a champion at the pharmaceutical company who is very interested in your deal.”
Might Help, Can't Hurt! Conversations with Leaders, Doers, and Friends
In this episode I'm in conversation with David Glazer, founder of the Google Genomics team and an engineering director at Verily Life Sciences, where he helps life science organizations accelerate and scale their work with big data. He is a PI for the Data and Research Center of the NIH All of Us Research Program, serves on the NIH Advisory Committee to the Director, and is a member of the Steering Committee for the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health. (He's also my brother and better at explaining things than pretty much anyone I know!) We explore how to navigate the extraordinary amount of data swirling around the current pandemic, along with more abstract questions like how to think about hard things, making sense of big and small numbers, and how to explain complex things in surprisingly simple ways.
COVID-19 has created supply chain pain in many ways. First of all, lockdown meant that some manufacturers weren't able to produce. That created a lack of supply for certain industries. Second, because of panic buying by consumers, there were huge demand spikes for certain products. Remember when you couldn't seem to find toilet paper to buy anywhere? And now that we're likely facing a deep, long recession, supply chains face continued and prolonged uncertainly. Some will see production spike. Others will grind to a halt. No matter what the case, supply chains need to become more resilient. It turns out blockchain could help with that. Here to explain why is David Glazer, the digital and innovation practice lead at Info-Tech Research Group.
CEO of Trend Hunter, Jeremy Gutsche, discusses his new double-sided book, Create The Future & The Innovation Handbook. Top trends are discovered in the 2020 Trends Report with David Glazer of Info-Tech. Plus, Dan Bowden of Aō Air reveals facewear that will save you from pollution. In Socially Speaking, Facebook doesn't need you to like it (and what that really means).
Eighty-nine percent of private equity executives expect a correction within 1-2 years, according to BDO's Tenth Annual Private Equity PErspective Survey. Yet private equity funds have a lot of dry powder to deploy. How are expectations for a correction affecting deal composition and timing? In this episode, Jon Tenan, director at Lazard Middle Market, and David Glazer, director at Gladstone Investment, join BDO's Todd Kinney to share their take on the changing dynamics of private equity deal making.
The Internet giant Google has set its sights on revolutionizing how researchers store, analyze, and share genomic data. The company recently entered into an agreement with the Broad Institute that allows it to integrate Broad’s Genomic Analysis Toolkit into Google Genomics. We spoke to David Glazer, director of engineering for Google, about its Google Genomics platform, the opportunity it sees in genomics, and what it’s doing to help researchers turn vast amounts of data into actionable information. This interview originally aired August 2015.
The Internet giant Google has set its sights on revolutionizing how researchers store, analyze, and share genomic data. The company recently entered into an agreement with the Broad Institute that allows it to integrate Broad’s Genomic Analysis Toolkit into Google Genomics. We spoke to David Glazer, director of engineering for Google, about its Google Genomics platform, the opportunity it sees in genomics, and what it’s doing to help researchers turn vast amounts of data into actionable information.
Platform Love: Getting Along - Panel Panelists: David Glazer - Director of Engineering, GoogleJeff Hansen - General Manager, Services Strategy/Live Mesh, Microsoft CorporationDave Morin -Senior Platform Manager, Facebook David Recordon - Open Platforms Tech Lead , SixApartMax Engel, Head of Data Availability Initiative, MySpaceModerator: Marc Canter - CEO, Broadband Mechanics