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In this compilation episode, we look back on wisdom from renowned tech executives about how to build and foster great teams. Featuring insights from Fred Lee, Dan Kirsche, Jorie Sax, Steve Caudill, Christina Garcia, and Dom Scandinaro, who share their perspectives on the importance of diverse and well-structured teams. Key topics include team composition, sharing knowledge, effective scaling, fostering interpersonal relationships, and creating rich organizational culture. These leaders emphasize the significance of nurturing talent and fostering diversity to build world-class teams capable of overcoming challenges and driving innovation.(00:00) Introduction to Building Teams(01:39) Fred Lee knows that great teams will naturally build great products(02:42) Dan Kirsche on building teams with complementary skills(03:07) Jorie Sax recommendations team-driven ideation(03:42) Steve Caudill champions diverse teams(04:17) Christina Garcia on owning and communicating mistakes(05:32) Jorie Sax discusses the balance of structure and freedom(06:57) Dom Scandinaro on scaling teams and workflows(07:59) Dan Kirsche on coaching to a teammate's skillset(08:42) Jorie Sax unpacks interdepartmental communication(10:34) Christina Garcia on having a great culture(12:39) Fred Lee on cross-department connections(14:04) Dan Kirsche explains how he both challenges and supports his team(16:03) Christina Garcia reminds us to be in service of your teamFred Lee is CTO at PartsSource. Dan Kirsche is the newly promoted CTO at Chamberlain. Jorie Sax is head of United Airlines Innovation Lab. Steve Caudill is former CTO at Rand McNally. Christina Garcia is SVP of Engineering at Echo Logistics. Dom Scandinaro is CTO at Cameo.If you'd like to receive new episodes as they're published, please subscribe to Innovation and the Digital Enterprise in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a review in Apple Podcasts. It really helps others find the show.Podcast episode production by Dante32.
Fred Lee Crisman, Crisman's mysterious birth certificate, Crisman's parentage, Crisman family's anti-unionism, Guy Bannister, Crisman's military career, World War II, Korean War, US Army, US Army Air Force, US Air Force, the possibility Crisman was kicked out of Air Force reserve over Maury Island, Air Force Intelligence, UFOs, US Navy Reserve, Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI), Crisman as a military recruiter, high school, ROTC, Office of Strategic Services (OSS), Burma theater of WWII, "China Cowboys," was Crisman in special operations?Richard's YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/@StrangeAsItSeemsPodcastMusic by: Keith Allen Dennishttps://keithallendennis.bandcamp.com/Additional Music: J. Money Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Terry Christopher Carney, Sr. epitomizes the convergence of talent and purpose, and his story is nothing short of extraordinary. As the visionary founder of Platinum City Golden West Entertainment, Carney's journey from the tough streets of Los Angeles to the global stage of film and music is a testament to resilience and the transformative power of storytelling. His latest project, "Put the Guns Down: A World Epidemic," produced in collaboration with Ice-T, is not just a documentary; it's a call to action, igniting conversations on mental health and gun violence. Recognized with accolades like the TAF Dignitary Award of Supreme Excellence and the "Fathers in Hip Hop Fatherhood Acknowledgement Award," Carney's impact extends far beyond the entertainment realm, resonating deeply with communities worldwide. His upcoming film screening tour promises to amplify his message of hope and change, solidifying his status as a trailblazer in social advocacy and contemporary storytelling. Diversity in the National Security Network recently nominated him as a Special Representative Against Gun Violence Initiative, where he joins a cadre of esteemed celebrities such as ICE-T, Big Daddy Kane, Ray Mercer, and many more. Terry Christopher Carney Sr.'s story is an inspiring tale of triumph, purpose, and the relentless pursuit of social impact.Fred Lee Fred Lee was a former award winning hypnotist, magician, and US army officer. His expertise in meta-thinking and in psychology is sought after worldwide. From engaging, result generating presentations to world class consultation for major companies and celebrities, Fred is the best person to get you to optimize your problem solving needs.
Inside the mission to find Fred Lee Guest: Jack Gin, Director of “Finding Fred Lee” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Fred Lee is a professor with a joint appointment in political science and Asian American Studies. He joins Teen to talk about his observations about mass burnout, the symptoms, causes, and likely effects. Byung-Chul Han's "Burnout Society" is discussed as well as Nietzsche's notions of sovereignty and will. Part 1 of 2 -- the related bonus episode can be found on the Patreon feed. To join the Plan A Patreon go to www.patreon.com/planamag EFPA Theme: "Escape From Plan A" by Ciel (Twitter: @aerialist)
We remember longtime host of The Early Edition Rick Cluff in this special edition of BC Today, hosted by Cluff's longtime friend Amy Bell. Cluff died recently at the age of 74 following a short battle with cancer. He spent more than 40 years with the CBC, and is best remembered for his 20 years as host of The Early Edition where he helped to turn it into the No. 1-rated morning show in the competitive Metro Vancouver radio market. Guests Margaret Gallagher, Fred Lee, Michelle Eliot and Jason D'Souza join us to celebrate our friend and former colleague and our callers included Olympic gold medalist Ross Rebagliati, former CBC producer Heather Kennedy, friends, former guests and listeners from across Canada.
A great book can be life-changing. Join the co-hosts as they share 12 of their favorite "must read" books which transcend both professional and personal interest. Book List "Being Mortal" by Atul Gawande recommended by Laura "When Breath Becomes Air" by Paul Kalanithi recommended by Laura "The Little Prince" by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry recommended by Maritess John Maxwell Books on Leadership recommended by Maritess "If Disney Ran Your Hospital" by Fred Lee recommended by Laura and Maritess "The Ride of a Lifetime" by Bob Iger recommended by Maritess "Extreme Ownership" by Jocko Willink and Leif Babin recommended by Maritess "An American Sickness" by Elizabeth Rosenthal recommended by Neil "Love" by Leo Bascaglia recommended by Neil "Personhood" by Leo Bascaglia recommended by Neil "But Not the Hippopotamus" by Sandra Boynton recommended by Laura "The Nightingale of Mosul" by Susan Luz recommended by Sydney MEET OUR CO-HOSTS Samantha Bayne, MSN, RN, CMSRN, NPD-BC is a nursing professional development practitioner in the inland northwest specializing in medical-surgical nursing. The first four years of her practice were spent bedside on a busy ortho/neuro unit where she found her passion for newly graduated RNs, interdisciplinary collaboration, and professional governance. Sam is an unwavering advocate for medical-surgical nursing as a specialty and enjoys helping nurses prepare for specialty certification. Laura Johnson, MSN, RN, NPD-BC, CMSRN has been a nurse since 2008 with a background in Med/Surg and Oncology. She is a native Texan currently working in the Dallas area. She has held many positions throughout her career from bedside nurse to management/leadership to education. Laura obtained her MSN in nursing education in 2018 and is currently pursuing her DNP. She has worked both as a bedside educator and a nursing professional development practitioner for both new and experienced staff. She enjoys working with the nurse residency program as a specialist in palliative care/end of life nursing and mentorship. She is currently an NPD practitioner for oncology and bone marrow transplant units. Neil H. Johnson, RN, BSN, CMSRN, epitomizes a profound familial commitment to the nursing profession, marking the third generation in his family to tread this esteemed path. Following the footsteps of his father, grandfather, grandmother, aunt, and cousin, all distinguished nurses, Neil transitioned to nursing as a second career after a brief tenure as an elementary school teacher. Currently on the verge of completing his MSN in nurse education, he aspires to seamlessly integrate his dual passions. Apart from his unwavering dedication to nursing, Neil actively seeks serenity in nature alongside his canine companions. In his professional capacity, he fulfills the role of a med-surg nurse at the Moses Cone Health System in North Carolina. Eric Torres, ADN, RN, CMSRN is a California native that has always dreamed of seeing the World, and when that didn't work out, he set his sights on nursing. Eric is beyond excited to be joining the AMSN podcast and having a chance to share his stories and experiences of being a bedside medical-surgical nurse. Maritess M. Quinto, DNP, RN, NPD-BC, CMSRN is a clinical educator currently leading a team of educators who is passionately helping healthcare colleagues, especially newly graduate nurses. She was born and raised in the Philippines and immigrated to the United States with her family in Florida. Her family of seven (three girls and two boys with her husband who is also a Registered Nurse) loves to travel, especially to Disney World. She loves to share her experiences about parenting, travelling, and, of course, nursing! Sydney Wall, RN, BSN, CMSRN has been a med surg nurse for 5 years. After graduating from the University of Rhode Island in 2019, Sydney commissioned into the Navy and began her nursing career working on a cardiac/telemetry unit in Bethesda, Maryland. Currently she is stationed overseas, providing care for service members and their families. During her free time, she enjoys martial arts and traveling.
Tååme, Lars Sekund, Johan Omen och Fjellström i Sekunderna slog sig ner i en husvagn på Fraggelberget och tog ett snack om scenen i Umeå, namnbytet, USA-turnén, Bloated Kat Records, Booze Cruise och låtskrivandet. Vidare till punkens infrastruktur, DIY, framtidsplaner, Luftslott och Rockstar Records, Verket, Out of Step, Heavy Lag, Teenage Bigfoot, trummisarna, Sista Brytet och Fred Lee & The Restless.
Welcome to episode 135 of Activist #MMT. Today I talk with Gabie Bond. In part two, we talk about MMT, Torrens University, climate change, and the job guarantee. In hour one, however, we talk all about music. (To be clear, this first hour has little to do with economics.) As you heard before the opening music, Gabie is a classically trained violist. (Her accompanist and partner is a classically trained pianist.) I'm a classically trained singer, and for the past year have been learning guitar. Gabie and I talk about various topics, such as how the guitar has frets and the viola doesn't, and the consequences that has on our approach to the instrument and the notes. We talk about the differences between perfect and relative pitch, and how neither of us have the former. We also share some of our own experiences learning from, and teaching others. Gabie ends by describing how and why she let much of her professional music career go in order to become an activist, something which is greatly informed by MMT and ecological economics, which she learned thanks to meeting Steven Hail and Phil Lawn. In the show notes, you'll find several links to the things we mention, plus some examples of our playing. Out of my almost 140 episodes, this is the third entirely or substantially dedicated to music. Links to the other two, with Andy Berkeley and Derek Ross, can be found in the show notes. Getting to know MMTers outside of MMT, is important. It's basically an anthropological look at the background of MMTs adherents, which provides important context on the theory and movement as a whole. I was inspired to do this by Fred Lee in his 2011 book, A History of Heterodox Economics Next month in part two, Gabie and I transition to discuss MMT, Torrens University, climate change, and a job guarantee. Gabie is CEO of Modern Money Lab, which is the owner of the intellectual property – the academic content – of the Torrens graduate program. She talks about her role in the program coming to life and in its day-to-day operations. And now, onto my conversation with Gabie Bond. Enjoy. Resources Version two of the job guarantee report by the Sustainable Prosperity Action Group. Here's an overview. Examples of Gabie's playing viola: Piece played before the opening music: Carl Stamitz viola concerto, accompanied by Alexander Hanysz Performing with the Australian Discovery Orchestra: Tuscany from 17 songs Performing with the Australian Discovery Orchestra: The Tender Land (Suite) Aaron Copland Gabie's partner is pianist Alexander Hanysz. His website, which includes music and digital art Gabie's sister Annie is a scientist and part of Scientist's Rebellion. She recently glued her hand to the front-door window of a fossil fuel company headquarters, as mentioned by Steven and covered by ABC TV and radio. Examples of my singing: Me singing Weekend In New England by Barry Manilow Me singing every part except the lead vocal, of an a cappella arrangement I wrote of slave song called Wayfaring Stranger. I created the theme of a train to represent the slave's journey from earth to heaven, where he is finally free of his suffering. - - - (Here's a link to part two. A list of the audio chapters in this episode can be found at the bottom of this post.) And now, onto my conversation with Gabie Bond. Enjoy. Audio chapters 5:25 - Hellos, summer here, winter there 7:24 - Music! 8:32 - Listened to each others' music 13:58 - Traveling by plane to rehearsal and reservations about it 15:46 - Jeff learning guitar, ambitious pieces like Maple Leaf Rag 21:29 - Learning an instrument as an adult (and teaching adults) 23:34 - Guitars have frets, violas don't 27:46 - Perfect pitch versus relative pitch 31:44 - Gabie's partner is a classical pianist, Flinders Street school of music 36:47 - Jeff playing a couple minutes of When She Loved Me on the guitar 40:18 - Jeff- finger-style versus strumming 42:36 - Why Gabie stopped being a musician and became an activist 52:31 - Do you choose to listen in your own time to the (classic) music that you play? 57:04 - Climate change and not wanting to fly- mass travel (and Levy Summer Session) 1:04:18 - Duplicate of introduction, with no background music (for those with sensitive ears)
Welcome to episode 135 of Activist #MMT. Today I talk with Gabie Bond. In part two, we talk about MMT, Torrens University, climate change, and the job guarantee. In hour one, however, we talk all about music. (To be clear, this first hour has little to do with economics.) As you heard before the opening music, Gabie is a classically trained violist. (Her accompanist and partner is a classically trained pianist.) I'm a classically trained singer, and for the past year have been learning guitar. Gabie and I talk about various topics, such as how the guitar has frets and the viola doesn't, and the consequences that has on our approach to the instrument and the notes. We talk about the differences between perfect and relative pitch, and how neither of us have the former. We also share some of our own experiences learning from, and teaching others. Gabie ends by describing how and why she let much of her professional music career go in order to become an activist, something which is greatly informed by MMT and ecological economics, which she learned thanks to meeting Steven Hail and Phil Lawn. In the show notes, you'll find several links to the things we mention, plus some examples of our playing. Out of my almost 140 episodes, this is the third entirely or substantially dedicated to music. Links to the other two, with and , can be found in the show notes. Getting to know MMTers outside of MMT, is important. It's basically an anthropological look at the background of MMTs adherents, which provides important context on the theory and movement as a whole. to do this by Fred Lee in his 2011 book, A History of Heterodox Economics Next month in part two, Gabie and I transition to discuss MMT, Torrens University, climate change, and a job guarantee. Gabie is CEO of Modern Money Lab, which is the owner of the intellectual property – the academic content – of the Torrens graduate program. She talks about her role in the program coming to life and in its day-to-day operations. And now, onto my conversation with Gabie Bond. Enjoy. Resources of the job guarantee report by the Sustainable Prosperity Action Group. Here's . Examples of Gabie's playing viola: Piece played before the opening music: Carl Stamitz viola concerto, accompanied by Alexander Hanysz Performing with the Australian Discovery Orchestra: from 17 songs Performing with the Australian Discovery Orchestra: Aaron Copland Gabie's partner is pianist Alexander Hanysz. , which includes music and digital art Gabie's sister Annie is a scientist and part of Scientist's Rebellion. She recently glued her hand to the front-door window of a fossil fuel company headquarters, as and covered by ABC and . Examples of my singing: Me singing by Barry Manilow Me singing every part except the lead vocal, of an a cappella arrangement I wrote of slave song called . I created the theme of a train to represent the slave's journey from earth to heaven, where he is finally free of his suffering. - - - (Here's a link to part . A list of the audio chapters in this episode can be found at the bottom of this post.) And now, onto my conversation with Gabie Bond. Enjoy. Audio chapters 5:25 - Hellos, summer here, winter there 7:24 - Music! 8:32 - Listened to each others' music 13:58 - Traveling by plane to rehearsal and reservations about it 15:46 - Jeff learning guitar, ambitious pieces like Maple Leaf Rag 21:29 - Learning an instrument as an adult (and teaching adults) 23:34 - Guitars have frets, violas don't 27:46 - Perfect pitch versus relative pitch 31:44 - Gabie's partner is a classical pianist, Flinders Street school of music 36:47 - Jeff playing a couple minutes of When She Loved Me on the guitar 40:18 - Jeff- finger-style versus strumming 42:36 - Why Gabie stopped being a musician and became an activist 52:31 - Do you choose to listen in your own time to the (classic) music that you play? 57:04 - Climate change and not wanting to fly- mass travel (and Levy Summer Session)...
Did you know that America is behind Asia in terms of what we know about the battery industry? Tune into this episode if you want to learn more about how KTON is bringing knowledge from Asia to America so that the US can be leaders in electrification. In today's episode with Fred Lee, CEO of KTON LLC, we answer questions such as:
This week, Jonathan is joined by Fred T. Lee Jr., Professor of Radiology, Biomedical Engineering, and Urology at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, USA. The pair discuss Lee's career path into the field of radiology, while detailing aspects of his father, the reputed radiologist Fred Lee's, career. Lee emphasises the importance of different types of treatment in cancer due to the disease's resilience and discusses revolutionary treatment techniques, including tumour ablation, histotripsy, and how he believes robots will play a role in future treatments.
This episode is unfinished and ongoing, an updates to this case will be included in this episode. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/buriedonthetundra/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/buriedonthetundra/support
A key part of the strategy to prevent more opioid overdoses; Seven injured in a floatplane crash near Lake Hood; More details on the mysterious death of Fred Lee
Anchorage, Alaska - A man is trying to find the DMV when he disappears. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/buriedonthetundra/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/buriedonthetundra/support
ASIAN LEVEL 9000. Boogie and Fred get into the inception of Seoul Athletic Club, the Asian American experience, dealing with our own mortality, and a whole lot more.
Fred Lee, Chief Technology Officer athttps://www.amount.com/ ( Amount), is skeptical of “culture fit.” In leading technology teams of various sizes and goals, he has welcomed team members who approach things differently, who embrace their unique perspectives, and witnessed their added value across organizations. In his cross-industry career, a fresh perspective has often served him well. In this episode, Fred shares insight into the shifting experience of banking and the industry's digital innovations. He reflects on how he has approached new roles and how getting close to the customer is essential to understanding a company's successes and failures. Fred illuminates the array of approaches to process and communication, and the importance of following through. (1:05) –https://www.amount.com/ ( Amount) (5:00) – Adapting to fit the customer (6:52) – Experience across industries (8:55) – Learning through customer proximity (11:01) – Identifying the problems (13:47) – Bringing in talent (17:03) – More process vs. less process (18:52) – Buy now, pay later (BNPL) (20:10) – Building a world-class team (25:51) – Managing a hybrid and remote workforce Fred Lee is an experienced engineer and technology executive, currently serving as Chief Technology Officer athttps://www.amount.com/ ( Amount). Previously, he served as CTO athttps://www.cars.com/ ( Cars.com), Gamut, andhttps://www.linkedin.com/company/belly/about/ ( Belly) , as well as VP of Digital Architecture athttps://www.grainger.com/ ( Grainger). Fred received a bachelor's degree from Purdue University and a law degree from Loyola University Chicago. If you'd like to receive new episodes as they're published, please subscribe to Innovation and the Digital Enterprise in https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/innovation-and-the-digital-enterprise/id1451753709?mt=2 (Apple Podcasts), https://podcasts.google.com/?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy50cmFuc2lzdG9yLmZtL2lubm92YXRpb24tYW5kLXRoZS1kaWdpdGFsLWVudGVycHJpc2U%3D (Google Podcasts), https://open.spotify.com/show/3fOSh73F3sjyK7TIMFSOc1?si=uRAeLNvjQjmbnFjzWIvMlg (Spotify) or wherever you get your podcasts. If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a review in https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/innovation-and-the-digital-enterprise/id1451753709?mt=2 (Apple Podcasts). It really helps others find the show. https://www.dante32.com/ (Podcast episode production by Dante32.)
To close our BackTable Innovation series on NeuWave, we invited Laura King and Dr. Fred Lee to speak about growing their medical device company through various stages, from Series A funding to acquisition by Johnson & Johnson. --- EARN CME Reflect on how this Podcast applies to your day-to-day and earn AMA PRA Category 1 CMEs: https://earnc.me/iNQOK8 --- SHOW NOTES In this episode, our host Dr. Bryan Hartley interviews business leader Laura King and interventional radiologist Dr. Fred Lee about growing their medical device company, NeuWave through various stages, from Series A funding to acquisition by Johnson & Johnson. This is the final installment of a three-part series about the origin, rise, and acquisition of NeuWave. Ms. King recounts her story of joining NeuWave. While she was originally tasked with performing due diligence on behalf of investors, she found that her values and passions aligned with the company and eventually became NeuWave's CEO. For her, the key pull factor was the company's identity as a “platform opportunity,” since the microwave ablation device was initially used in the liver, but could also branch out and be applied to other organs and clinical scenarios. Ms. King speaks about the difference between incremental innovation and disruptive innovation. The former is more common in large established companies, while the latter is characteristic of the startup world. She credits her business knowledge to her history of working with large companies and incremental innovation in her past, which helped her in scaling up NeuWave's disruptive innovation efforts. Dr. Lee brings up the importance of values alignment between clinical and business leadership in a startup. He shares conversations that the leaders had regarding patient safety in the first physician uses of the device. Ms. King highlights the need to listen to early adopters and integrate their feedback into improving the product; it is this effective response that will build trust and encourage clinicians to repurchase the device in the future. Finally, we discuss the acquisition process. Dr. Lee describes how venture capital investors brought not only funds, but more connections to the company. He compares the role of bankers in an acquisition to realtors in a property sale. They are both necessary to the sale of the asset and have experience fielding multiple offers from interested parties. Throughout the episode, the guests highlight their continued partnership in forming Elucent, a surgical navigation company, using the lessons learned from NeuWave. --- RESOURCES Elucent Medical https://elucentmedical.com/ NeuWave Microablation System: https://www.jnjmedtech.com/en-US/product-family/neuwave-microwave-ablation-systems Venture Investors: https://ventureinvestors.com/
We talk with electrical engineering professor Dr. Dan van der Weide and interventional radiologist Dr. Fred Lee about the lessons they learned in the early stages of founding their microwave ablation device company, including challenges with early teams and equity. --- EARN CME Reflect on how this Podcast applies to your day-to-day and earn AMA PRA Category 1 CMEs: https://earnc.me/OOv0RX --- SHOW NOTES In this episode, our host Dr. Bryan Hartley interviews electrical engineering professor Dr. Dan van der Weide and interventional radiologist Dr. Fred Lee about the lessons they learned in the early stages of founding their microwave ablation device company, including challenges with early teams and equity. This is the second installment of a three-part series about the origin, rise, and acquisition of NeuWave. The founders start by discussing the nature of their successful partnership and how each of them brought complementary perspectives to the company. On one hand, Dr. Lee has clinical experience that informs him about current medical devices and their limitations. Conversely, Dr. van der Weide has a broad-based understanding of energy and how it can be applied to medicine. Even after the acquisition of NeuWave, the two founders have continued to innovate and start subsequent new companies together. While the founders shared a common vision, they had early NeuWave experiences which taught them about team conflict. They share a salient lesson learned from hiring team members based on prior social connections instead of objective skill sets. Dr. Van der Weide warns against taking mental shortcuts and making assumptions about a person's abilities, without first examining their experience in the startup world. He also gives advice on equity apportionment, saying that vesting schedules should be based on clear milestones, instead of a pre-set percentage. Finally, we discuss NeuWave's early venture capital funding and the importance of choosing an investor that understands the vision and is willing to dedicate their honest effort to helping when obstacles arise. Stay tuned for the third installment! --- RESOURCES Elucent Medical: https://elucentmedical.com/ NeuWave Microablation System: https://www.jnjmedtech.com/en-US/product-family/neuwave-microwave-ablation-systems Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF): https://www.warf.org/ Venture Investors: https://ventureinvestors.com/
The first episode of 3-part series on the origin, rise, and acquisition of NeuWave Medical, Inc., a medical device company focused on microwave ablation. In this first installment, we interview co-founder Dr. Fred Lee about his vision for starting the company. Dr. Lee takes us through his family history that shaped his identity as an innovator. His father was involved in the development of cryoablation as a treatment for prostate cancer, which inspired him to find applications for ablation in other types of cancer. --- EARN CME Reflect on how this Podcast applies to your day-to-day and earn AMA PRA Category 1 CMEs: https://earnc.me/ToBWSN --- SHOW NOTES In this episode, our host Dr. Bryan Hartley interviews interventional radiologist and medical device innovator Dr. Fred Lee about his advancements in percutaneous radiofrequency ablation and microwave ablation, as well as the founding of his company NeuWave. This is the first installment of a three-part series about the origin, rise, and acquisition of NeuWave. Dr. Lee starts by describing how his family history shaped his clinical and research interests. His father was involved in the development of cryoablation as a treatment for prostate cancer, which inspired him to find applications for ablation in other types of cancer. Dr. Lee recognized the inefficiencies in early radiofrequency ablation probes – they needed to be periodically turned off to prevent overheating. Along with the University of Wisconsin Engineering Department, he developed electronic switches that could turn a probe off and power another one in order to maximize efficiency during the procedure. Dr. Lee also describes the tech transfer and licensing of the product, noting lessons that he learned about intellectual property along the way. Next, Dr. Lee recounts a chance encounter with Dr. Dan Van der Weide, his future co-founder. Along with their graduate students, this team built a microwave ablation probe and decided to found a company instead of licensing the product. Dr. Lee advises budding physician-entrepreneurs to invest in finding and retaining team members that can fill in their skill gaps. He also encourages innovators to have the vision to look for areas for improvement in clinical practice, even when the status quo seems like it is sufficient. Stay tuned for the second and third installments! --- RESOURCES NeuWave Microablation System: https://www.jnjmedtech.com/en-US/product-family/neuwave-microwave-ablation-systems Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF): https://www.warf.org/
Cohosts Will Beaman, Natalie Smith and Maxximilian Seijo are joined by Mitch Green (@drmitchpdx) to discuss the problems with “inflation” as a catch-all term for price changes. A heterodox economist by training who studied with the late Fred Lee, Mitch takes a disaggregated view of prices that opens up price-setting as a publicly allocated administrative power with no necessary relationship to profits or sound finance. Link to our Patreon: www.patreon.com/MoLsuperstructureMusic: “Yum” from “This Would Be Funny If It Were Happening To Anyone But Me” EP by flirting.http://flirtingfullstop.bandcamp.comTwitter: @actualflirting
Song Featured: "Don't Leave Me Lonely" by Late Night Special Collaborative Cover: "Otherside" performed by Fred Lee IV and Courtney Lynn & Quinn This week, hosts Courtney Lynn & Quinn welcome frontman Fred Lee IV of the band, Late Night Special. He chats about finding music later in life, freestyling in the recording studio, the origin story of the Shakedown Music festival, and he breaks down the story & creation behind the band's song, "Don't Leave Me Lonely." To learn more about Fred and Late Night Special, check them out on their website, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, Apple Music and Spotify. Follow Courtney Lynn & Quinn on their website, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, Apple Music and Spotify For updates and information about the podcast, follow Next Song On Deck on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook!
In Part II of our Lung Biopsy Series Dr. Fred Lee and Dr. Christopher Beck discuss Pleural and Parenchymal Blood Patching to prevent Pneumothorax, including results of the recent JVIR article from Sept 2021. --- CHECK OUT OUR SPONSOR RADPAD® Radiation Protection https://www.radpad.com/ --- EARN CME Reflect on how this Podcast applies to your day-to-day and earn AMA PRA Category 1 CMEs: https://earnc.me/0lTQ87 --- SHOW NOTES In this episode, Dr. Fred Lee and our host Dr. Chris Beck discuss the use of parenchymal and pleural blood patches to reduce the rate of lung biopsy re-interventions. First, Dr. Lee describes why he has incorporated parenchymal blood patching at the end of most biopsies, noting that it is a straightforward procedure that only adds on a few extra minutes to the overall biopsy, and it can reduce the rate of re-intervention. Both doctors agree that minimizing the need for chest tubes can greatly improve the patient experience. Pleural blood patches are used as a salvage technique in the event of a pneumothorax. Dr. Lee walks through his process of re-inflating the lung, finishing the biopsy, and using a three-way stopcock to inject blood onto the pleural surface and along the needle track. He notes that there are other valid ways of treating intraprocedural pneumothoraces (saline, fibrin plug, etc); however, he prefers the pleural blood patch because of its liquid-to-solid clotting transition, minimal time, minimal cost, and relatively low risk. Throughout this episode, we cite data from Dr. Lee's previous publications, which are cited below. --- RESOURCES Percutaneous Lung Biopsy with Pleural and Parenchymal Blood Patching: Results and Complications from 1,112 Core Biopsies: https://www.jvir.org/article/S1051-0443(21)01202-1/fulltext CT-Guided Lung Biopsies: Pleural Blood Patching Reduces the Rate of Chest Tube Placement for Postbiopsy Pneumothorax: www.ajronline.org/doi/full/10.2214/AJR.10.6324 Pulmonary Intraparenchymal Blood Patching Decreases the Rate of Pneumothorax-Related Complications following Percutaneous CT–Guided Needle Biopsy: www.jvir.org/article/S1051-0443…6)32178-9/fulltext
We start off Part 1 of a 2 part series with Dr. Fred Lee discussing Percutaneous Lung Biopsy Technique, with tips and tricks to help your daily practice. --- CHECK OUT OUR SPONSOR RADPAD® Radiation Protection https://www.radpad.com/ --- EARN CME Reflect on how this Podcast applies to your day-to-day and earn AMA PRA Category 1 CMEs: https://earnc.me/QD39HM --- SHOW NOTES In this episode, Dr. Fred Lee and our host Dr. Chris Beck discuss tips for achieving safe and successful percutaneous lung biopsies. They start by discussing the increasing popularity of core biopsy (as opposed to fine needle aspiration), since an adequate amount of specimen is needed for genetic testing and personalized medicine. Dr. Lee emphasizes that knowing the goals of lung biopsy for each individual patient helps him decide how much specimen to collect and how the specimen should be handled. Next, Dr. Lee walks through his lung biopsy technique. He outlines the difference between conventional CT and CT with fluoroscopy. While CT with fluoroscopy can be more efficient, it poses radiation risk to the patient and the physician. To minimize radiation risks, he advises IRs to intermittently tap the foot pedal and stand lateral to the CT scanner. The doctors also discuss some of the trickiest lung regions to biopsy and ways to avoid pneumothorax. Finally, Dr. Lee comments on the choice between percutaneous lung biopsies and electromagnetic navigation bronchoscopy, noting that each procedure has different advantages and risks. He encourages interventional radiologists and interventional pulmonologists to explore these options and take evidence-based approaches. Throughout this episode, we cite data from Dr. Lee's previous publications, which are cited below. --- RESOURCES Percutaneous Lung Biopsy with Pleural and Parenchymal Blood Patching: Results and Complications from 1,112 Core Biopsies: https://www.jvir.org/article/S1051-0443(21)01202-1/fulltext
Midnight Madness Radio Episode 133 with The Liars Club, George Stackhouse, Jennifer Barrett, Jodie Louise, Interlewd, Mad Symphony, Nephila, Burnt Out Wreck, Fred Lee and the Restless, Skraeckoedlan, and Velvet Insane.
Midnight Madness Radio Episode 133 with The Liars Club, George Stackhouse, Jennifer Barrett, Jodie Louise, Interlewd, Mad Symphony, Nephila, Burnt Out Wreck, Fred Lee and the Restless, Skraeckoedlan, and Velvet Insane.
Welcome to episode 91 of Activist #MMT. Today I talk with Fadhel Kaboub about his personal story: his childhood in Saudi Arabia and Tunisia, being a parent, his love of music, and how music has become part of his parenting. Fadhel is an economics professor at Denison University in Granville, Ohio, and the president of , an interdisciplinary public policy think tank. The focus of his academic work is on how the lens of MMT can inform developing nations, which we talk about in the second half of part two. I've written to Fadhel's papers, posts, and appearances, a link to which you can find in the show notes. Today's story begins with a nine-year-old Fadhel at the center of a political drama between his two home countries of Saudi Arabia and Tunisia. When his grandparents in Tunisia fell ill, his father rushed home from his job in Saudi Arabia to take care of them. Saudi Arabia's immigration laws require foreign workers to give their employers not only their own passport, but also the passports of all their children. Unfortunately, when Fadhel's father left for Tunisia, the employer decided not to release Fadhel's passport, essentially holding the nine-year-old hostage. His family leveraged the media to shame Saudi Arabia into allowing the little boy to be reunited with his family. To this day, Fadhel has never seen his original passport. We then turn to the story of how Fadhel joined the fifth grade in Tunisia, with children who had a 3.5-year head start in learning French. This is the language spoken during half of the instruction time in the country. The overriding theme of Fadhel's story, however, is how there is no place on Earth where he is not considered an outsider or immigrant. Babies born in Saudi Arabia are only considered citizens if their father is a Saudi citizen. Fadhel's mother was a citizen but his father was Tunisian. When he moved to Tunisia, he had a Saudi accent and was unable to speak French. And now, even though a US citizen, he remains an immigrant. The experience, plus witnessing the experience of his parents and home countries, has greatly influenced and inspired not only his academic work but also his decisions as the parent of three little boys. This podcast, Activist #MMT, is dedicated half to academic concepts and half to the personal stories of how people, both laypeople and academics, came to MMT and how it changed them. The reason I believe these personal stories are so important is because it's not possible to separate the academic concepts from those who develop and promote them. This includes their personal stories: what they care about, and how they choose to use the power they have, or don't have. The idea was primarily inspired by Fred Lee in his 2009 book, , which was recommended to me by Nathan Tankus. Neoclassical economics would have you focus on only their maths and models, and not the discriminatory behavior of universities and journals, and those that back those universities, journals – and their economists. They would prefer you not look at any other discipline, such as history, culture, sociology, institutions, and especially politics. The entire neoliberal project would have you focus only on the how-are-you-gonna-to-pay-for-it question, and not the minor inconvenience of having to change the very foundation of human society, if we are not to go extinct in the coming decades. I talk much more about this concept of interdisciplinarity, in my introduction to with Richard Tye. But for now, onto my conversation with Fadhel Kaboub. This is part one of a two-part conversation. Enjoy. (By the way, my 12-year-old keeps asking to hear the story in the above highlight, over and over again. :) ) By the way number two: At the (very) end of every interview, the introduction is repeated in full but without the theme music. I started this long ago on listener request, for those who find the music irritating or distracting from what I'm saying. Resources with Money on the Left.
Welcome to episode 91 of Activist #MMT. Today I talk with Fadhel Kaboub about his personal story: his childhood in Saudi Arabia and Tunisia, being a parent, his love of music, and how music has become part of his parenting. Fadhel is an economics professor at Denison University in Granville, Ohio, and the president of the Global Institute for Sustainable Prosperity, an interdisciplinary public policy think tank. The focus of his academic work is on how the lens of MMT can inform developing nations, which we talk about in the second half of part two. I've written a post filled with links to Fadhel's papers, posts, and appearances, a link to which you can find in the show notes. Today's story begins with a nine-year-old Fadhel at the center of a political drama between his two home countries of Saudi Arabia and Tunisia. When his grandparents in Tunisia fell ill, his father rushed home from his job in Saudi Arabia to take care of them. Saudi Arabia's immigration laws require foreign workers to give their employers not only their own passport, but also the passports of all their children. Unfortunately, when Fadhel's father left for Tunisia, the employer decided not to release Fadhel's passport, essentially holding the nine-year-old hostage. His family leveraged the media to shame Saudi Arabia into allowing the little boy to be reunited with his family. To this day, Fadhel has never seen his original passport. We then turn to the story of how Fadhel joined the fifth grade in Tunisia, with children who had a 3.5-year head start in learning French. This is the language spoken during half of the instruction time in the country. The overriding theme of Fadhel's story, however, is how there is no place on Earth where he is not considered an outsider or immigrant. Babies born in Saudi Arabia are only considered citizens if their father is a Saudi citizen. Fadhel's mother was a citizen but his father was Tunisian. When he moved to Tunisia, he had a Saudi accent and was unable to speak French. And now, even though a US citizen, he remains an immigrant. The experience, plus witnessing the experience of his parents and home countries, has greatly influenced and inspired not only his academic work but also his decisions as the parent of three little boys. This podcast, Activist #MMT, is dedicated half to academic concepts and half to the personal stories of how people, both laypeople and academics, came to MMT and how it changed them. The reason I believe these personal stories are so important is because it's not possible to separate the academic concepts from those who develop and promote them. This includes their personal stories: what they care about, and how they choose to use the power they have, or don't have. The idea was primarily inspired by Fred Lee in his 2009 book, A History of Heterodox Economics: Challenging the mainstream in the twentieth century, which was recommended to me by Nathan Tankus. Neoclassical economics would have you focus on only their maths and models, and not the discriminatory behavior of universities and journals, and those that back those universities, journals – and their economists. They would prefer you not look at any other discipline, such as history, culture, sociology, institutions, and especially politics. The entire neoliberal project would have you focus only on the how-are-you-gonna-to-pay-for-it question, and not the minor inconvenience of having to change the very foundation of human society, if we are not to go extinct in the coming decades. I talk much more about this concept of interdisciplinarity, in my introduction to episode 81 with Richard Tye. But for now, onto my conversation with Fadhel Kaboub. This is part one of a two-part conversation. Enjoy. (By the way, my 12-year-old keeps asking to hear the story in the above highlight, over and over again. :) ) By the way number two: At the (very) end of every interview, the introduction is repeated in full but without the theme music. I started this long ago on listener request, for those who find the music irritating or distracting from what I'm saying. Resources Fadhel's 2018 interview with Money on the Left.
Midnight Without a Moon by Linda Williams JacksonThat summer was a hot one, just like all the others in Mississippi. Yet Rose Lee was used to the heat, even if she never got USED to it. It just was. But that July, she and her brother Fred Lee got bad news, news that they should have seen coming but didn't. Their mother, who had married a man to take care of his younger children, was moving to Chicago, without them. Not that they had seen their mother much since she'd married Mr. Pete, but still, now she was moving to Chicago, without them, and didn't seem to have any issues with it. Of course, she'd already left them with her parents, Papa and Ma Pearl, about seven years ago, so why should she start acting like a mother now? Still Rose is terribly hurt by the fact that her mother is showing she obviously doesn't care about either her or Fred.And after that big hit, they just keep coming. The summer turns out to be one shock after another, and all of them are unpleasant and show how different some of her own family feel about events happening in and around Mississippi. When horror strikes close to home, Rose feels like her connection to Mississippi and home is slipping away.Recommended for grades 7 and up due to authentic use of language.
In today's episode with Simon Philip Rost, Marketing Executive for GE Healthcare's Digital Health and AI Portfolio at GE Healthcare you will learn1. How the pandemic affected GE's marketing strategy and 4 key takeaways driving their future success2. GE's magic formula for developing digital opinion leaders and creating successful social media content3. What GE's sales strategy and cooking have in common and their momentous sales reps training organizationAbout SimonSimon stands out with over 15 years of international experience in Strategy Consulting, Global Program Management, General Management, Marketing and Sales as well as his authentic and open-minded nature. His education includes an MBA from IE Business School, NYU Leonard Stern School of Business and a Master's degree in International Marketing & Communications from ESCP Europe. Simon completed his studies and consulting work for blue chip companies, SMEs and private equity funds at international locations such as Germany, USA, India, UK, France and Spain. He is also deeply committed to volunteering and mentoring projects, and in his spare time, he very much enjoys biking.About GE HealthcareAs a leading global innovator in medical technology and digital solutions with $18 billion in 2020 revenue, GE Healthcare enables clinicians to make faster, more informed decisions through smart devices, data analytics, applications and services, powered by its Edison Intelligence platform. With more than 100 years of experience in the healthcare industry and approximately 50,000 employees worldwide, the company operates at the centre of an ecosystem working toward precision health, digitizing healthcare, increasing productivity and improving outcomes for patients, providers, health systems and researchers around the world.About the host SammySammy is Managing Partner and founder of SAWOO. SAWOO helps companies with Social Marketing and Lead Generation to leverage the power of LinkedIn in a sustainable way. No spam, no bots but building real Human 2 Human connections between you and your B2B buyers.ShownotesFind Simon on LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/simonrost/)Simon's company GE Healthcare (https://www.gehealthcare.com/)Simon's favorite business books: If Disney Ran Your Hospital by Fred Lee (https://www.amazon.de/-/en/Fred-Lee/dp/0974386014) Virtual Selling from Jeb Blount (https://www.amazon.de/-/en/Jeb-Blount/dp/1119742714/ref=sr_1_2?dchild=1&keywords=virtual+selling&qid=1626610033&sr=8-2)Simon's favorite business leaders: Simon Sinek, Founder and Visionary of Simon Sinek Inc. (https://www.linkedin.com/in/simonsinek/) Eric Topol, Physician-Scientist, Author and Editor (https://www.linkedin.com/in/eric-topol-md-b83a7317/)
WA golfer who is in red hot form spoke about his big win from the weekend and his career so far
Rounding out the week in style as Goss spoke with Subi coach Beau Wardman, WA golfer Fred Lee and Golf WA CEO Gary Thomas and jockey Ryan Hilll while also covering off on Euro 2020, Sean Darcy's contract extension and more
This month host Matthew Ablan speaks with Fred Lee from the band Late Night Special. The discuss Fred's musical background, the bands evolution, the songwriting process and what's ahead for them in 2021. You can find the band on Facebook and listen to them on Youtube.
Today’s Coaching Through Stories episode features former VA Secretary, Robert “Bob” McDonald. Dr. Eric Bean is also joined by guest co-host, University of South Carolina President, Robert “Bob” Caslen. Learn how McDonald placed character at the heart of culture change to deliver Veterans with consistent, high-quality experiences and achieve sales metrics as the CEO at The Procter & Gamble Company. Listen to this episode and get the dose of depth and inspiration you need! McDonald is credited with rescuing the VA from the brink and transforming the VA culturally to provide better and faster care for the nation’s veterans. Prior to serving as the VA Secretary, McDonald led Procter and Gamble (P&G) and significantly impacted their product portfolio, “expanded the marketing footprint by adding nearly one billion people to its global customer base, and grew the firm’s organic sales by an average of three percent per year.” Caslen is a retired Three-Star Lt. General who served 43 years in the U.S. Army and as the former Superintendent at West Point. He is the current President of the University of South Carolina and a co-author of the phenomenal book entitled The Character Edge: Leading and Winning with Integrity. Episode Highlights: How McDonald got far in his career and what he is working on McDonald’s purpose in achieving more in his life and career What happened earlier that drives McDonald to strive What McDonald believes in and what he thinks is most important looking back Why McDonald thinks that character is an essential trait of leadership McDonald’s encounter with non-driven employees and how he deals with them What the Leaders Developing Leaders Program is McDonald’s principles and values that drive his leadership philosophy McDonald’s role in transforming the culture of VA and the process he went through How the Leaders Developing Leaders Program impact cultural change in VA What challenges McDonald encountered and the strengths he draws on How McDonald focuses on character development on the senior level leadership The annual McDonald Leadership Development Conference How to strike a healthy balance between fostering positive relationships and keeping sight of priorities and goals McDonald’s recommended books Three Key Points: Character is an essential trait of a leader as well as integrating it in the organization. Having the purpose and driving values to the leaders and employees are the foundation of high-performance organizations. Understanding culture and the situation you are in and having a principle-based culture are keys in transforming an organization. Quotes: “I think it’s a shame that too many people waste their time reacting rather than leading to where you want to go.” “Character is defined as putting the needs of the organization above yourself.” “If your ambition is for yourself, chances are you are not going to win in the long term. If your ambition is for the organization, you stand a much better chance of winning.” “Choose the harder right rather than the easier wrong.” “Purpose and values are the foundation of any high performance in the organization.” “In the sense you are taking initiative based on the values, you’re guided by the values, you are not guided by the rules.” Taking the quote from Theodore Roosevelt’s The man in the arena: “Basically, it’s easy to be the man in the arena. But if you are the man in the arena, you are getting the bloody nose, you’re getting knocked down, you get up again… Who’s better? What Leads to a more fulfilling life? The person standing outside of the arena throwing the stones or the person in the arena constantly getting up? You know you gotta apologize one or twice, I’d rather be in the arena. I think it leads to a more fulfilling life.” “As you grow within the company and as you train on culture and purpose and it’s all written down, then you’re promoted based on that.” “I stopped the military culture that had developed in VA. No more tent cards, no more standing up with my come in the room, no more calling me secretary. I am Bob and I want to have an ultimate relationship with you. So intimate that when something goes wrong you’ll tell me it goes wrong.” Resources Mentioned: The Character Edge: Leading and Winning with Integrity If Disney Ran Your Hospital by Fred Lee 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen Covey Leaders by Stanley McChrystal The Fifth Discipline by Peter Senge The Westpoint Way of Leadership by Larry Donithorne Man’s Search for Meaning by Victor E. Frankl Link: Robert McDonald Website
Welcome to episode 65 of Activist #MMT. Today is part two of my two-part conversation with third-year MMT activist Hannah Judson. In part one, Hannah described her journey to MMT and her just-begun MMT-informed sociology PhD program at Stonybrook University in Long Island, New York. Today we talk about a very different topic, which is mental illness and anxiety, and how these things are seen through and informed by MMT. Hannah and I both experienced a traumatic event in our childhood which will remain with us for the rest of our lives. She describes how she came to terms with this, how she manages it today, and how her Christianity influences her anxieties as well as her politics. We share MMT as a lens through which to see the world, our situations, and ourselves. I end by telling my own story. Regular listeners will not be surprised to hear that I have been strongly influenced by Fred Lee’s 2006 book, A History of Heterodox Economics – which coincidentally was recommended to me by Hannah’s now-housemate and MMTer, Nathan Tankus. The intellectual and academic concepts of economics are only half the picture. The other half is what Lee calls community history: the personal history and behaviors of those who develop, support, and benefit from those academic concepts. The assumptions, maths, and models of neoclassical economics cannot be separated from the century of discrimination endured by those who dare to call it wrong. In the same vein, the decades of genius comedy by Bill Cosby cannot be separated from the terrible crimes we now know that he has committed. It is not possible to draw a conclusion until one looks at the entire picture. Despite growing up with his comedy, I have decided to not listen to him again. The clearly-good work that I have done, including this podcast, my large set of , and many other things, cannot be separated from my own behavior and the consequences that it has caused. I have certainly committed no crimes and have always done the best that I could. I am also deeply ashamed of how some of my behavior has affected others, and especially how it has pushed away exactly those who I wish to work with and become closer to. I would also be lying if I said that I was not profoundly sad for the many opportunities lost and for how long it will take to even reach the starting line once again. This conversation with Hannah was one of the more important personal milestones I’ve experienced. I thank her for the space and support that I needed in order for it to happen.
Welcome to episode 65 of Activist #MMT. Today is part two of my two-part conversation with third-year MMT activist Hannah Judson. In part one, Hannah described her journey to MMT and her just-begun MMT-informed sociology PhD program at Stonybrook University in Long Island, New York. Today we talk about a very different topic, which is mental illness and anxiety, and how these things are seen through and informed by MMT. Hannah and I both experienced a traumatic event in our childhood which will remain with us for the rest of our lives. She describes how she came to terms with this, how she manages it today, and how her Christianity influences her anxieties as well as her politics. We share MMT as a lens through which to see the world, our situations, and ourselves. I end by telling my own story. Regular listeners will not be surprised to hear that I have been strongly influenced by Fred Lee’s 2006 book, A History of Heterodox Economics – which coincidentally was recommended to me by Hannah’s now-housemate and MMTer, Nathan Tankus. The intellectual and academic concepts of economics are only half the picture. The other half is what Lee calls community history: the personal history and behaviors of those who develop, support, and benefit from those academic concepts. The assumptions, maths, and models of neoclassical economics cannot be separated from the century of discrimination endured by those who dare to call it wrong. In the same vein, the decades of genius comedy by Bill Cosby cannot be separated from the terrible crimes we now know that he has committed. It is not possible to draw a conclusion until one looks at the entire picture. Despite growing up with his comedy, I have decided to not listen to him again. The clearly-good work that I have done, including this podcast, my large set of MMT resources, and many other things, cannot be separated from my own behavior and the consequences that it has caused. I have certainly committed no crimes and have always done the best that I could. I am also deeply ashamed of how some of my behavior has affected others, and especially how it has pushed away exactly those who I wish to work with and become closer to. I would also be lying if I said that I was not profoundly sad for the many opportunities lost and for how long it will take to even reach the starting line once again. This conversation with Hannah was one of the more important personal milestones I’ve experienced. I thank her for the space and support that I needed in order for it to happen.
Today I talk with one of the original developers of MMT, (Twitter/@. Mat is a professor of economics at the University of Missouri Kansas City, or UMKC which, according to Sam Levey, who was my first-ever guest and is also a UMKC economics PhD. student, is where MMT was born. Mat is also research director for the Global Institute for Sustainable Prosperity and research associate for the at Bard College. In this first of a five-part episode, Mat and I first talk about how he grew up in Philadelphia, where I also grew up and still live near. He attended Temple University in North Philly and earned a bachelor’s degree in what was originally called Pan African Studies but came to be known as African-American studies. According to Mat, quote, "everything seemed to keep coming back to economics." He says he also decided on economics because economists and their theories "affects peoples lives” in a more immediate sense than other subjects. Although all subjects are important in their own way, there is a reason, he says, that every countries’ leaders have economic advisers. Mat then talks about his long career as a heterodox economist and professor, and the difficulties he experienced and witnessed among the heterodox community, substantially due to the lack of support from (and benefit to) those in power. The infighting and factionalism he describes is similar to the concepts in his 1999 paper regarding Abba Lerner, called "Functional Finance and Full Employment." In it, he talks about how the artificial scarcity of jobs and funding imposed by the central government and currency issuer, causes bad behavior and decisions by workers and unions, in an effort to protect their artificially limited jobs at all costs. This understandably results in discrimination against the most disadvantaged. As Stephanie Kelton describes it, it is a cruel game of musical chairs. Mat calls Fred Lee an important figure in promoting and supporting a "big tent" for Post-Keynesians, in order to address some of these concerns. (This interview was Fred Lee's book, A History of Heterodox Economics.) One of the primary examples Mat gives of discrimination by neoclassicals is how heterodox economists were told that if a concept could not be modeled or expressed in math, then it wasn’t really economics. I see this as a tool to make economics inaccessible to the general public, and also as a way to take the real world, which is complicated, difficult, and beautiful, and reduce it to meaningless numbers and formulas. This is not unlike focusing on a child’s report card or standardized testing grades and ignoring the child himself. This intentionally myopic view of the world obviously ignores real world suffering and also makes it very easy to justify not alleviating it. Resources (Paul Davidson) 2004 book by Virgil Henry Storr, 2015 by New School's Mike Isaacson, "" 2011 paper by Mat Forstater, regarding Byard Rustin, called "" (The latter half of the title is indeed the same as the below Lerner paper.) Papers written by Mat (unless otherwise stated) that I read in preparation for this interview: 1999: : Some excellent insights from Abba Lerner, as it relates to the MMT-designed job guarantee (which is MMT proposed solution to Lerner's goal of always balancing full employment while avoiding inflation). 1999: (): The many reasons why the private sector cannot achieve (or maintain) full employment, and why only the public sector can (and must). 1999: (here is the same paper, but ): The only thing that can cause people to spend more (recycle their savings) is an injection of new money by the federal government – that is, deficit spending. 1999, with Warren Mosler: 2002: : A more technical look at the unique advantages the federal government has over the private sector, regarding achieving and maintaining full employment. 2005: 2005 with Warren Mosler: (One of the to those interested in learning more about MMT.) 2012: , a chapter from the...
We expand the scope of our WNC circle to welcome Free Lee of the Charlotte band, Late Night Special! Genre: Pop rock All music is used with artist's permission. https://latenightspecial.net/ https://latenightspecial.bandcamp.com/
As University Advancement teams world-wide fast tracked online it feels like everyone is a digital engagement expert. For years the profession has been trying to figure out the best way to use social media and active communication to engage alumni and donors. So, now with this new way of digital working as different regions move in and out of restrictions, it is time to ask – are we really doing it? Join Jayden Worts, Virtual Engagement at UWA (Perth, WA) and Fred Lee, Director Alumni Engagement University of BC (Vancouver, Canada) for an in conversation. Shared learnings from Australia and Canada will be discussed and ideas for how our work will carry on during, and following lockdown.
This snippet comes from Money On The Left with Nathan Tankus, called Inflation and the Politics of Pricing, at around the 41 minute, 30 second mark.
SERI Gloves were designed to be sanitized on the go. They are made with 100% hydrophobic polymer, meaning the gloves do not absorb water. They feel like a second skin for everyday use in public and are intended for light duty tasks. Because of COVID-19, hygienic awareness is at an all time high, and SERI Gloves offer the perfect solution to prevent the spread of germs. Additionally, the company values philanthropy. They plan on donating their first lot of inventory to assist in fighting COVID-19.
In this very special episode I took two interviews I had with Fred and took out most of the Fantasy Football stuff to get just to the interview. The first is just me and Fred doing an interview and the second was with Will who was in town. If you already listened to the "Interview with Fred Episode" feel free to skip to minute 21 for the second episode. Cheers everyone :)
In this very special episode I took two interviews I had with Fred and took out most of the Fantasy Football stuff to get just to the interview. The first is just me and Fred doing an interview and the second was with Will who was in town. If you already listened to the "Interview with Fred Episode" feel free to skip to minute 21 for the second episode. Cheers everyone :)
Economist Benjamin Wilson joins Money on the Left to discuss heterodox approaches to place, participation, and the politics of university finance. Associate professor of economics at SUNY Cortland, Wilson received his interdisciplinary Ph.D. from University of Missouri, Kansas City (UMKC), where he took courses with some of the leading lights of heterodox economic theory, including Stephanie Kelton, Mathew Forstater, and Fred Lee. In both his research and his pedagogy, Ben combines his commitment to local democratic participation with a deep, MMT-driven understanding of social provisioning to create some of the most compelling community currency projects ongoing today. We chat at length with Ben about the intellectual, historical, and practical frameworks for these projects, which intervene in spaces ranging from the college classroom to the state and regional levels. We also talk with Ben about our collectively authored #Unis4All university currency project, which derives from many of the principles of Wilson's previous work to argue that college and university systems ought to leverage their considerable provisioning capacities in order to reject austerity and provide for the health and welfare of all in their communities. You can read more about this proposal on Monthly Review Online and at Public Seminar.Check out some of Wilson's important papers:"An Interdisciplinary Narrative: Oncology, Capital & Solidarity," American Review of Political Economy, 2018. "A Dirigisme Approach to a Monetary Policy Jobs Guarantee and the Green New Deal," Available at SSRN, 2019."Housing, Health & History: Interdisciplinary Spatial Analysis in Pursuit of Equity for Future Generations," Intergenerational Responsibility in the 21st Century, 2018.Theme music by Hillbilly Motobike.* Thanks to the Money on the Left production team: Alex Williams (audio engineering), Richard Farrell (transcription) & Meghan Saas (graphic art).
This snippet comes from a not-yet-released episode with UK activist Andrea Grainger – although I'm the only one who speaks. (Since the episode has not yet been edited, it's impossible to give a timestamp of where it comes from, but it will likely end up in the middle of part two.) Fred Lee's book, A History of Heterodox Economics.
Reviewing Michael Moore & Jeff Gibbs’ recent film Planet of the Humans, hosts Will Beaman & Maxximilian Seijo reject and historicize the film’s advocacy for population control. By connecting reductive affirmations of scarcity in both Marxist ecological thinking and the film, with reference to Malthusianism, degrowth movements, Patricia MacCormack’s Ahuman Manifesto, and the late great heterodox microeconomist Fred Lee, they ultimately affirm a non-zero-sum environmental justice framework of social reproduction that centers agency at all levels of human-environmental relation.
Fred Lee and Na-Rae Kim, professors of Asian American Studies from the University of Connecticut-Storrs, check-in with each other and our series host Tri Vo. They discuss historical moments—including the H3N2 pandemic of the 1960s, the Vietnam War, and the internment of Japanese Americans during WWII—that have shaped the sinophobia of the COVID-19 crisis. Looking even further into the past, they share the stories—and acknowledge the missing stories—of their grandparents and great-grandparents in Korea, Taiwan, and Southeast China. Finally, they share their hopes for the memory of our current moment and the future of Asian America. Join the Green Card Voices podcast community and hear more from Na-Rae and Fred by becoming a Patron at https://bit.ly/ForOurGCVNeighbors Share Fred and Na-Rae’s conversation online—using the #LoveYourAsianNeighbors hashtag—and tell us your story of raising the voices, whether it’s your own or another’s voice, of Asian Americans. Learn more about Fred and Na-rae’s scholarship at UConn’s Asian American Studies institute at https://asianamerican.uconn.edu. UConn’s Asian and Asian American Studies Institute, or AAASI, is proud to launch an arts initiative to respond to the challenges and concerns faced by all of our college students during the COVID-19 pandemic. Check out the courageous work from AAASI students at the following webpage: https://asianamerican.uconn.edu/illustrated-profiles/ Discussed this week: “Virus X and Ending the Forever War,” Jason Oliver Chang “Coronavirus and America’s Vietnam Syndrome,” Long Bui Dangerous Crossings, Claire Jean Kim Parable of the Talents, Octavia Butler ABOUT THIS SPECIAL SERIES: As we continue to live in the middle of the COVID 19 pandemic, cases of xenophobia and race-based hate crimes targeting Asian American communities have escalated in an alarming yet not unprecedented manner. To combat the harmful rhetoric being spread and inflicted on our neighbors, Green Card Voices has launched #LoveYourAsianNeighbors campaign. In this special podcast series, we highlight the lived narratives of Asian Americans overcoming difficulties, finding abundance in the face of scarcity, and taking action towards a better future.
Text ‘bulletproof’ to 345345 to stay in the know about all things Bulletproof, and buy the book HERE! Bulletproof Dental Practice Podcast Episode 144 Hosts: Dr. Craig Spodak & Dr. Peter Boulden Key Takeaways ● Introduction ● Hygienists’ Patient Rapport & Relationships ● Collections Growth in 2019 ● Evolutions in Hygiene ● Purposeful, Passionate Hygiene ● Our Performance Benefits Our Patients’ Experience ● Bulletproof Hygiene ● Summit 2020 ● Growth Mindset References If Disney Ran Your Hospital by Fred Lee Summit 2020 Patrick Bet-David Interview with Kobe Bryant Tweetable Position Versus Mission A Rising Tide Floats All Ships There is No Such Thing as Coasting If You Like Where You Are, You Still Have To Grow Leaders Grow Other Leaders
Welcome to episode nine of Activist #MMT. Today I talk with ninth year MMT activist and London resident, Christian Reilly. Christian is a standup comedian and musician, and the creator and co-host of MMT Podcast, along with my recent guest, Patricia Pino (parts one and two). In this two-part episode (this is part two), Christian and I first talk about Christian himself: his comedy, how he got there, who inspired him, and the nature of his standup. He describes how his fiancé won a modest but important victory for England’s disabled population. We also discuss how Christian discovered MMT, the concepts of libertarianism and anarchism, how UBI and its flaws can be boiled down to its essence, and how the government sets the floor for not just jobs but also the value of money. We also briefly touch on my experience originally introducing MMT to Graham Elwood in June of 2018, and Christian’s current MMT introduction show which is a work in progress. Most importantly, however, we talk about the concept of permission marketing. Permission marketing, an idea originated with Seth Godin, is the idea of maximizing the impact of your hard work and core message by preparing your audience for it. This means properly introducing its concepts, and providing background and context before presenting the work itself. It also means getting to know your audience – and critically, letting them get to know you. This is a bit of a life lesson for me. I have always had confidence in my work as a singer, activist, writer, and MMT-er. At the same time, I have always felt a struggle getting my work to be listened to. My flaw was thinking that “if I only work even harder, if only my work was even better, then surely more people would listen to it.“ I now realize that I have, to a significant degree, not gotten that permission from my audience, and instead have neglected them by diving even deeper into my work. This is also true with those you work with. If you don’t get to know your colleagues and let them get to know you, your work will never be shared or built upon, and you won’t be asked to build upon theirs. I choose for my podcast to be not just about MMT, but about the MMTers themselves. If Christian and I had only discussed the academic concepts of MMT, we never would have encountered this topic and I would not have had this realization – a realization that will have a direct impact on my relationship with MMT. In addition to being the truth, this is MMT’s (and all of heterodox is) trump card: understanding the non-intellectual, non-academic concepts that provide the background and context, in which the academic concepts exist. This is the lesson I take from Fred Lee’s 2009 book, A History Of Heterodox Economics (which I am currently halfway through): That the community history of economics is actually more important than its intellectual history. MMT will succeed because it is relaxed and flexible and can see – and adapt to – the world around it. Mainstream neoclassical economics can rely exclusively on its flawed intellectual concepts because, despite the world melting around them, it serves the powerful and therefore preserves themselves. Although that brute force and white knuckling may work for them, at least a little while, it does not work for MMT and heterodox. And for the first time, I realize that it definitely does not work for me. Patron-only bonus: Patron remix For $5-and-up patrons, there is a "patron only remix" of this interview available only to you. It contains audio files (spliced in) that for copyright reasons, can never be released to the public. However, it sounds so amazing, I can't not share it! So welcome to a new patron-only bonus feature (for $5 patrons and up) that I'm calling "patron remixes." If I didn't have to worry about copyrights, what would this episode sound like? Here's your answer! Enjoy. Other resources Study regarding how the free market causes inequality (Graham Elwood discusses it). Would You Like To Buy An O? Tom Waits' Better Off Without a Wife from his album, Nighthawks at the Diner. #LearnMMT For an overview of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) with many reliable sources to learn more, here is a good place to start: On the web: My layperson intro with many expert sources listed at the bottom. On Twitter: My massive pinned tweet with expert sources and layperson tutorials. On Facebook: Follow this podcast :) The pinned post contains the above web-article. Please become a monthly patron of Activist #MMT We shouldn't have to beg, but we do have to beg. So it's not *that* we beg, but *who* we beg. I am choosing to beg you, my listeners, to financially support this show. $1 patrons are very much appreciated. Every little bit helps. Thank you. $5 patrons get exclusive access to episodes (generally) four days before they are released to the public, and exclusive "patron only remixes". $10 patrons get much earlier access to episodes – sometimes weeks in advance. To be clear, all episodes of Activist #MMT are free for all, forever. Patrons only get the opportunity to hear them before the public. Take a listen. If you like what you hear, thank you for considering becoming a patron of Activist #MMT (here: https://www.patreon.com/activistmmt). ✌️, ❤️, and #MMT
Welcome to episode eight of Activist #MMT. Today I talk with ninth year MMT activist and London resident, Christian Reilly. Christian is a standup comedian and musician, and the creator and co-host of MMT Podcast, along with my recent guest, Patricia Pino (parts one and two). In this two-part episode (this is part one), Christian and I first talk about Christian himself: his comedy, how he got there, who inspired him, and the nature of his standup. He describes how his fiancé won a modest but important victory for England’s disabled population. We also discuss how Christian discovered MMT, the concepts of libertarianism and anarchism, how UBI and its flaws can be boiled down to its essence, and how the government sets the floor for not just jobs but also the value of money. We also briefly touch on my experience originally introducing MMT to Graham Elwood in June of 2018, and Christian’s current MMT introduction show which is a work in progress. Most importantly, however, we talk about the concept of permission marketing. Permission marketing, an idea originated with Seth Godin, is the idea of maximizing the impact of your hard work and core message by preparing your audience for it. This means properly introducing its concepts, and providing background and context before presenting the work itself. It also means getting to know your audience – and critically, letting them get to know you. This is a bit of a life lesson for me. I have always had confidence in my work as a singer, activist, writer, and MMT-er. At the same time, I have always felt a struggle getting my work to be listened to. My flaw was thinking that “if I only work even harder, if only my work was even better, then surely more people would listen to it.“ I now realize that I have, to a significant degree, not gotten that permission from my audience, and instead have neglected them by diving even deeper into my work. This is also true with those you work with. If you don’t get to know your colleagues and let them get to know you, your work will never be shared or built upon, and you won’t be asked to build upon theirs. I choose for my podcast to be not just about MMT, but about the MMTers themselves. If Christian and I had only discussed the academic concepts of MMT, we never would have encountered this topic and I would not have had this realization – a realization that will have a direct impact on my relationship with MMT. In addition to being the truth, this is MMT’s (and all of heterodox is) trump card: understanding the non-intellectual, non-academic concepts that provide the background and context, in which the academic concepts exist. This is the lesson I take from Fred Lee’s 2009 book, A History Of Heterodox Economics (which I am currently halfway through): That the community history of economics is actually more important than its intellectual history. MMT will succeed because it is relaxed and flexible and can see – and adapt to – the world around it. Mainstream neoclassical economics can rely exclusively on its flawed intellectual concepts because, despite the world melting around them, it serves the powerful and therefore preserves themselves. Although that brute force and white knuckling may work for them, at least a little while, it does not work for MMT and heterodox. And for the first time, I realize that it definitely does not work for me. Patron-only bonus: Patron remix For $5-and-up patrons, there is a "patron only remix" of this interview available only to you. It contains audio files (spliced in) that for copyright reasons, can never be released to the public. However, it sounds so amazing, I can't not share it! So welcome to a new patron-only bonus feature (for $5 patrons and up) that I'm calling "patron remixes." If I didn't have to worry about copyrights, what would this episode sound like? Here's your answer! Enjoy. Other resources Study regarding how the free market causes inequality (Graham Elwood discusses it). Would You Like To Buy An O? Tom Waits' Better Off Without a Wife from his album, Nighthawks at the Diner. For an overview of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) with many reliable sources to learn more, here is a good place to start: On the web: https://citizensmedia.tv/2019/10/26/mmtintro/ On Twitter: https://twitter.com/ActivistMMT/status/1189357776797077504?s=20 On Facebook: Follow this podcast :) The pinned post contains the above web-article. We shouldn't have to beg, but we do have to beg. So it's not *that* we beg, but *who* we beg. I am choosing to beg you, my listeners, to financially support this show. $1 patrons are very much appreciated. Every little bit helps. Thank you. $5 patrons get exclusive access to episodes (generally) four days before they are released to the public, and exclusive "patron only remixes". $10 patrons get much earlier access to episodes – sometimes weeks in advance. To be clear, all episodes of Activist #MMT are free for all, forever. Patrons only get the opportunity to hear them before the public. Take a listen. If you like what you hear, thank you for considering becoming a patron of Activist #MMT (here: https://www.patreon.com/activistmmt). ✌️, ❤️, and #MMT
Fred Lee serves as chief technology officer for Cars.com. In this position, Lee manages the technical and data engineering teams and is responsible for the product, data and operational platforms. Prior to Cars.com, Lee was the vice president of digital architecture at Grainger and chief technology officer at Gamut, a fully-owned subsidiary of Grainger. Previously, Lee was the chief technology officer at Belly, a six-year-old Chicago startup with top-tier investors, such as Andreessen Horowitz and Lightbank. Before his time at Belly, Lee was the chief information officer and chief technology officer of Enova International, Inc. (NYSE: ENVA). During his time at Enova, he helped launch eight businesses in six different countries while managing a team of 250 engineers, five data centers, and multiple systems. Lee served as the director of web strategy at Vail Systems prior to joining Enova, where he was responsible for the creation and development of the company’s web-based services and products. Lee received a bachelor’s degree in industrial engineering from Purdue University and a Juris Doctor from Loyola University Chicago School of Law.
In this episode, we talk with Nathan Tankus, Research Director of the Modern Money Network, and Research Fellow at the Clarke Business Law Institute at Cornell Law School. Nathan recently co-authored an opinion piece in the Financial Times with Scott Fullwiler and former MoL guest Rohan Gray about MMT’s position on the causes of inflationLink to the piece: https://ftalphaville.ft.com/2019/03/01/1551434402000/An-MMT-response-on-what-causes-inflation/ In the conversation, we ask Nathan to expand upon and deepen his engagement with the inflation question in all its historical, political, and rhetorical complexity. More specifically we discuss the different historical approaches to inflation; how the Post Keynesian MMT perspective diverges from those approaches; the vital contributions of economist Fred Lee to the foundations of Modern Monetary Theory; as well as how we ought to be thinking about issues of inflation and growth as they pertain to the Green New Deal. The conversation is as compelling as it is challenging.
Craft Brew News - 3/1/2019Actual Brewing Files for BankruptcyIn the wake of sexual assault allegations against Actual Brewing Company founder Fred Lee, the Columbus, Ohio-based craft beer company has filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, according to Columbus Business First.Actual’s largest unsecured claim is a $100,000 loan made by John Dilley, Business Firstreported. The company also owes federal taxes of $55,000 and thousands of dollars to other creditors, including the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services ($3,750), the city of Columbus ($3,500), Keg Logistics ($21,392), mobile canner Iron Heart Canning ($5,087), and its landlord, Plaza Properties ($39,068).Meanwhile, the company is facing a civil lawsuit from an investor attempting to recoup $50,000, the outlet reported.Northern Eagle Beverage Acquires New Jersey A-B WholesalerNorthern Eagle Beverage Co. today announced the acquisition of Anheuser-Busch Sales of New Jersey, a Jersey City-based wholly-owned distributor, according to a press release.The divestiture does raise questions about A-B’s next potential move. Included among the conditions in last October’s final judgment approving A-B’s MegaBrew merger with SABMiller is an agreement that the global beer giant cannot purchase a beer wholesaler if the acquisition would result in more than 10 percent of its U.S. volume being sold via wholly-owned distribution companies.In 2015, A-B swapped ownership of a wholly-owned distribution outfit in Kentucky for three Colorado operations owned by Texas-based Standard Sales Company. As the pace of middle-tier consolidation picks up, it’s possible A-B could look to buy a wholesaler in another market, while still remaining under the 10 percent threshold established by the U.S. Department of Justice.Class-Action Lawsuit Filed Against Molson CoorsMolson Coors is facing a class-action lawsuit for overstating its net income by nearly $400 million in 2016, according to the Denver Post.In an SEC filing last week, Molson Coors blamed accounting errors with inflating its net income totals and understating its tax liabilities in 2016. Additional accounting errors in 2017 led to overstated tax expenses as well as understated net income and deferred tax liability, the Associated Press reported.The lawsuit claims that Molson Coors — whose flagship products include Miller Lite and Coors Light — as well as CEO Mark Hunter and CFO Tracey Joubert engaged in a scheme to deceive investors by knowingly or deliberately disregarding that the company’s financial statement contained errors and misleading statements.Other Half Hires Eric Salazar Away From New BelgiumAfter a 23-year career at New Belgium, Eric Salazar has departed the Fort Collins-headquartered craft brewery to join New York’s Other Half Brewing and lead its wood-aged and wild ale program, according to the Democrat & Chronicle.Other Half co-founder and brewmaster Sam Richardson told the outlet “He’s going to help us reimagine what we want this program to look like,”.However, Other Half has yet to establish a home for its nascent sour production, which it is currently searching for. For his part, Salazar, who departed New Belgium at the beginning of the year, told the Democrat & Chronicle that he and his wife, Amy, were looking to move to the East Coast to be closer to her family.Subscribe to Craft Beer Storm Podcast iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/craft-beer-storm/id1438117278?mt=2Michael Potorti is the Host of Craft Beer Storm and Founder/Brewer at Beara Brewing Co. in Portsmouth, NHMichael PotortiFounder/BrewerHost of "Craft Beer Storm" Podcastmichael@craftbeerstorm.commichael@bearairishbrew.com*** Come visit our brewery for some delicious local craft brew! ***Beara Brewing Co.2800 Lafayette RoadPortsmouth, NH 03801Tel. (857) 342-3272 www.bearairishbrew.com Like us onInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/bearairishbrew/?hl=enFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/BearaIrishBrewingCo Twitter: https://twitter.com/BearaIrishBrew Linked In: https://www.linkedin.com/in/beara-brewing-co-30776075/**LISTEN to our Craft Beer Storm Podcast and share with a friend**Craft Beer Storm Podcast iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/craft-beer-storm/id1438117278?mt=2Craft Beer Storm You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCp3PVuCGmywNWlGFh0N0ukg?view_as=subscriberCraft Beer Storm Podcast Radio Public: https://radiopublic.com/craft-beer-storm-WdbK0LCraft Beer Storm Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/craftbeerstorm/Craft Beer Storm Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/craftbeerstorm/
Eric Bean and Fred Lee, the owners of Columbus Brewing Co. and the Actual Brewing Co., talk about how the growth of craft beer has changed their companies; how the industry is evolving and the different paths they are taking as they continue to grow.
In this episode, Mike and Fred speak about the Bears' Mitchell Trubisky and then we get to learn all about Fred in our "getting to know you" series. Finally Mike and Fred discuss whether the interview went well or not (You tell us!).
In this episode, Mike and Fred speak about the Bears' Mitchell Trubisky and then we get to learn all about Fred in our "getting to know you" series. Finally Mike and Fred discuss whether the interview went well or not (You tell us!).
Hypnotist and mastermind, he does shows and helps people through therapy. We talk psychology, a bit on how hypnosis works, and his beginnings. Instagram.com/fredleemind www.fredleemind.com/
On Episode 26, we welcome arguably the Australian Open's greatest, the legendary Gary Player, to reminisce on the last of our ‘Road to the Open’ series. We talk to Perth's Fred Lee, who tells us he's already tight with Tiger (ha, ha!) as he earns the right to play at Woods' alma mater, Stanford University. There's a bit of Bernhard, a bit of Shanshan and a heap of giggles as Mark Hayes and Mike Clayton join host Andy Maher.
UMKC Economist Dr. Fred Lee talks with Stephanie about the micro/maco distinction, Post-Keynesian price theory, the problems with neoclassical economics and his ideas about how to move the discipline in a more useful direction.
An interview with Fred Lee of Project Return Peer Support Network. The 3rd in a series of interviews with inspiring individuals across Los Angeles County.