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In this special bonus episode, we share highlights from a recent January webinar featuring Paul F. Austin in conversation with Chris Villar, a successful executive coach and graduate of the Psychedelic Coaching Institute. Find full show notes and links here: https://thethirdwave.co/podcast/episode-289b/?ref=278 Chris shares his transition from Goldman Sachs and founding a $125 million company to becoming an executive coach incorporating psychedelics into his practice. Together, Paul and Chris explore the business aspects of psychedelic coaching, ethical considerations, and practical strategies for building a successful practice. For more of Chris's personal and professional journey, check out his interview in Episode 268 of The Psychedelic Podcast. Chris Villar studied finance & accounting at Georgetown University and began his career at Goldman Sachs, where he led a $500 million investment portfolio in the home security industry. In 2007, he left Goldman and founded Frontpoint Security, an early disruptor for self-installed alarm systems and smart home technology. Chris served as CEO from inception to over $125-million in revenue as the company grew to nearly 800 employees and received frequent recognition for both customer and employee satisfaction. After selling the company in 2020, Chris founded VILLAR Coaching, a boutique coaching practice focused on helping founders (and other high achievers) scale their companies while cultivating skills in peak performance and fundamental wellbeing. Chris has done extensive work to overcome a lifetime of stress, anxiety, and burnout and to detach from the lifelong grip of achievement; and now enjoys helping others do the same. He lives in Washington, DC with his husband and their 10-year old beagle and enjoys the outdoors, hiking, and traveling. Highlights: Chris's background: From Goldman Sachs to founding a $125M company The journey to becoming a psychedelic integration coach Key skills Chris learned through professional training Structuring client engagements and coaching containers Incorporating ketamine therapy through legal providers Revenue generation and pricing strategies in psychedelic coaching Group retreats and scaling a coaching practice Essential advice for aspiring coaches Episode Links: Chris's website The Psychedelic Coaching Institute's Practitioner Training Program
In this episode of The Psychedelic Podcast, Paul F. Austin welcomes Chris Villar, a successful entrepreneur turned executive coach. Find episode links, summary, and transcript here: https://thethirdwave.co/podcast/episode-268-chris-villar/?ref=278 Chris shares his journey from Goldman Sachs to founding Frontpoint Security, a company he grew to $125 million in revenue before selling in 2020. He discusses his transition into psychedelic-assisted coaching, exploring how these experiences have shaped his approach to personal growth and professional development. Chris offers valuable insights on balancing high achievement with mental wellbeing, the importance of emotional processing, and how psychedelics can be integrated into a holistic approach to peak performance and self-discovery. Chris Villar studied finance & accounting at Georgetown University and began his career at Goldman Sachs, where he led a $500 million investment portfolio in the home security industry. In 2007, he left Goldman and founded Frontpoint Security, an early disruptor for self-installed alarm systems and smart home technology. Chris served as CEO from inception to over $125-million in revenue as the company grew to nearly 800 employees and received frequent recognition for both customer and employee satisfaction. After selling the company in 2020, Chris founded VILLAR Coaching, a boutique coaching practice focused on helping founders (and other high achievers) scale their companies while cultivating skills in peak performance and fundamental wellbeing. Chris has done extensive work to overcome a lifetime of stress, anxiety, and burnout and to detach from the lifelong grip of achievement; and now enjoys helping others do the same. He lives in Washington, DC with his husband and their 10-year old beagle and enjoys the outdoors, hiking, and traveling. Highlights: Chris's journey from Goldman Sachs to founding Frontpoint Security Key lessons learned as a founder and entrepreneur Chris's introduction to psychedelics and their impact on his life The role of psychedelics in emotional processing and creativity Insights from "The Path of Least Resistance" by Robert Fritz Chris's unique perspective as an executive coach with founder experience
Play-by-play as called by Darek Sharp on Bulls Unlimited, as Rice took an early lead but the Bulls had two quick answers - all in the first half after the Bulls had played five straight 0-0 first halfs! Then down to the field for the thoughts of Head Coach Chris Brown, whose Bulls improved to 6-1-2 overall (1-0-1), still unbeaten since the season opener.
As today's guest will tell us, breakfasts have recently overtaken Friday dinners as the number one dining out experience of choice. So in the always-competitive hospitality industry, restaurants that do those meals particularly well are in a fantastic position. Chris Tomasso definitely understands how to excel in this space. Chris is the CEO of First Watch Restaurants, which trades under the symbol FWRG. Prior to taking the helm in 2018, Chris served as President for three years and as Chief Marketing Officer from 2006 to 2015. Before joining First Watch, Chris led strategic branding and marketing for renowned national and international brands such as Cracker Barrel and Hard Rock Cafe International.In 2021, Chris was named one of the restaurant industry's most admired C-suite leaders by FSR Magazine. Later that year, he led First Watch into Wall Street with their IPO. Chris earned a BA from the University of Central Florida and is an active alum who currently serves on the University of Central Florida Foundation Board of Directors. He was inducted into the University's Nicholson School of Communication and Media Hall of Fame in 2016. Highlights:Chris describes First Watch's background and market concept (2:57)Competition and First Watch's position in the market (4:08)Chris describes First Watch's business model (6:17)First Watch's unique shift schedule, and why it attracts employees (8:43)Chris' approach to business operations (10:36)Chris describes the importance of remaining in the restaurant atmosphere as a CEO (12:06)How First Watch incorporates developing technology into their business (13:59)How Chris applies his marketing background in his role at First Watch (15:30)Chris' capital allocation strategies (17:21)More on First Watch's disruptive business model, and their strategic market placement (18:54)Chris' view on inflation and its ongoing impact on the hospitality industry (20:28)Chris describes the impact of First Watch to becoming a public company (22:09)How Chris was introduced to the hospitality industry (24:27)Links:Chris Tomasso on LinkedInFirst Watch Restaurants on LinkedInFirst Watch Restaurants WebsiteICR LinkedInICR TwitterICR WebsiteFeedback:If you have questions about the show, or have a topic in mind you'd like discussed in future episodes, email our producer, marion@lowerstreet.co.
On the surface, successful growth in business might seem to be about rapid expansion. But that's not the right strategy for every business. Growth has to align with the business's principles, be at the right pace, and it can't endanger the brand's image and identity along the way. Today's guest has reset his growth strategy to reinforce and preserve brand identity.We're sitting down with Chris Schultz, CEO of Voodoo Doughnut. Chris has a remarkable track record in expanding renowned brands, both nationally and globally with over four decades of industry experience. In the 1990s, he played a vital role in Starbucks' US and international growth, including entry into the UK market.Chris was a founding team member at ModPizza, growing it from one store to over 300 locations worldwide. His strategic acumen and leadership made ModPizza a fast, casual industry leader. Since 2017, as CEO at Voodoo Doughnut, he's tripled the company's size and expanded from 5 to 22 locations in 7 states.Chris has twice been recognized as one of the most innovative and influential CEOs by National Restaurant News, and recently as one of the top 25 food and beverage executives of 2023 by C-Suite Magazine. Throughout his career, Chris has consistently demonstrated his ability to build and nurture successful restaurant brands. His innovation, passion, and commitment to exceptional customer experiences make him a respected industry leader.Highlights:Chris' journey in the restaurant business, and his path to Voodoo (3:10)Voodoo's history and unique identity (4:29)Chris describes what differentiates Voodoo in their market (6:35)Chris talks about Voodoo's unique consumer base and following (8:01)Voodoo's growth strategy, and the importance of maintaining brand identity amidst expansion (10:03)Chris' approach to expansion, and new locations for Voodoo (10:56)Chris' approach to innovation with the Voodoo brand (12:29)How Voodoo finds its employees and keeps them motivated and engaged in the unique culture (15:54)How Voodoo maintains consistency amongst its varied brand presence (18:31)Chris' approach to tech innovation at Voodoo (20:26)Chris discusses Vodoo's 'Giving Doughnuts' program (23:37)Chris reflects on his biggest successes as CEO at Voodoo (24:53)The advice Chris would have given himself during his early days in the restaurant business (27:29)Links:Chris Schultz on LinkedIn Voodoo Doughnut on LinkedInVoodoo Doughnut WebsiteICR LinkedInICR TwitterICR WebsiteFeedback:If you have questions about the show, or have a topic in mind you'd like discussed in future episodes, email our producer, marion@lowerstreet.co.
00:00 Chris Dempsey hops on to talk Nuggets.19:50 Nuggets-Timberwolves game five tonight.34:00 Avs-Stars game four highlights.
Are you considering a career change in the real estate industry? Today's episode of the Real Estate Syndication Show features Chris Finlay and Nick Elder, who share their valuable insights and practical tips for navigating career transitions in this dynamic field. Our first guest, Nick Elder, shares his inspiring tale. Witnessing a twist of fate when he was laid off from a lucrative pharmaceutical sales job, Nick embraced the challenge and transitioned into real estate. Through unwavering resilience and strategic networking, he found himself spearheading investment relations and capital raising at Ironton Capital. Nick's story illuminates the power of resilience and the hidden opportunities nestled within career setbacks.Later in the show, Chris Finley, with over four decades of experience, shares his remarkable journey from pilot to successful real estate entrepreneur. He highlights his firm's evolution from brokerage to multifamily properties, with a recent pivot to senior living driven by demographic shifts and COVID-19 impacts. Despite operational challenges, Chris emphasizes the growth potential and value of discounted assets in senior living investments.Here are 3 key takeaways:Embrace Change: Both Nick and Chris exemplify the power of adaptation in the face of adversity or evolving market dynamics.Network Strategically: Networking isn't just about making connections; it's about cultivating meaningful relationships that can open doors to unforeseen opportunities.Seize Opportunities: Whether it's a career transition or an investment pivot, success often stems from recognizing and seizing the right opportunities at the right time.Looking to build wealth through real estate? Subscribe to the Real Estate Syndication Show for expert advice and inspiring stories. Explore investment opportunities and kickstart your wealth-building journey at lifebridgecapital.com.Until next time, keep learning, keep networking, and keep building wealth in real estate!VISIT OUR WEBSITEhttps://lifebridgecapital.com/Here are ways you can work with us here at Life Bridge Capital:⚡️START INVESTING TODAY: If you think that real estate syndication may be right for you, contact us today to learn more about our current investment opportunities: https://lifebridgecapital.com/investwithlbc⚡️Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheRealEstateSyndicationShow
Big healthcare challenges demand cutting-edge healthcare products. Today's guest is building strategic partnerships to get ahead of disease and fuel the growth of their company. Today we're sitting down with Chris Hall, CEO and President of Personalis, which trades under the symbol PSNL. In his role, Chris drives the vision and strategy for the company, including commercializing its diagnostic product offerings. He brings over 20 years of experience in general management and product development within the diagnostics industry, most recently as CEO of Naring Health. Previously he served as President, COO, and Chief Commercial Officer of Veracyte Inc, where he led the company's commercial entry into endocrinology and pulmonology and scaled its operational groups. Chris also served as an SVP and Chief Business Officer at Berkeley HeartLab, part of Celera Corporation, where he helped new product launches, and restructured operations to improve profitability and streamline delivery of services.Chris holds a BA in political science from DePauw University and an MBA from Harvard.Highlights:Chris describes Personalis and their work (3:45)Personalis' MRD test and how it works (6:25)Chris walks us through Personalis' tech evolution (8:23)Personalis' current partnerships and collaborations (10:24)More about the internal team at Personalis (14:31)Chris discusses Personalis' recent Medicare coverage announcement (16:09) The current macro environment's effect on business (18:09)2023 highlights at Personalis (19:54)Near-future growth and development goals for Personalis (22:25)Leadership and company culture at Personalis (24:22)Product development and long-term objectives (26:19)Links:Chris Hall on LinkedInPersonalis on LinkedInPersonalis WebsiteICR LinkedInICR TwitterICR WebsiteFeedback:If you have questions about the show, or have a topic in mind you'd like discussed in future episodes, email our producer, marion@lowerstreet.co.
Chris Lunt is a technology executive with more than 25 years of experience building web services and data platforms. He is in his seventh year as the CTO for the NIH's All of Us Research Program. He joined the NIH from GetInsured, where he worked to improve health insurance shopping and enrollment systems. Previously Chris ran VC-backed internet startups, with one IPO.Highlights:- Chris is hopeful about Silicon Valley going back to its roots to create sociological change by uniting people and being thoughtful about what the world should look like. Over the last couple decades it has become more venal.- Chris believes in the power of investing public money to create opportunities. He says that Silicon Valley is largely the story of a public private partnership and that it's hard to do certain fundamental research in a purely market-based economy.- Chris says that the initiatives around Web3 weren't grounded in a realistic understanding of human nature and the result was not a good outcome.- Healthcare is one of the most conservative industries but a way to drag it into the future is for the government to mandate change. Health records are currently built for billing purposes rather than for improving health. It's also not all that long ago that hospitals were using paper records until the Affordable Care Act required that they digitize.- There is a moment coming soon where there is an opportunity to completely reimagine healthcare delivery. A generalist will be able to help a person navigate between various providers and specialists instead of the current fragmented approach.Thanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform. Check us out on the web at villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.
Lawyer Chris Otten shares his journey switching from being an insurance defense lawyer to serving policyholders. He underlines the importance of empathy and honesty when interacting with clients. Chris finds his past as a defense lawyer beneficial in his present role, often mediating between clients and insurance companies. He mentions his passion for teaching and community engagement, aims to positively impact people's lives, and is always open to new endeavors. Besides his legal practice, he is also a part owner of a restaurant. Chris believes in continually striving for excellence and delivering outstanding outcomes for his clients. Who's the Guest? Christopher G. Otten joined Hair Shunnarah Trial Attorneys in 2022. Prior to that, Chris represented plaintiffs for personal injury and property casualty claims, as well as in the insurance defense field, where his practice was primarily focused on health care and professional liability issues. A member of the Louisiana State Bar Association and the State Bar of Texas, Chris is also admitted to practice before the United States District Courts for the Eastern, Middle, and Western Districts of Louisiana, the United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit, and the United States Supreme Court. Born and raised in Hoboken, NJ, Chris came to New Orleans to attend Tulane University in 2001, graduating in 2005 with a B.S.M. in Legal Studies, German, and a minor in Political Science. In 2009, Chris earned his Juris Doctor from Loyola University New Orleans, College of Law. Highlights Chris' transition from New Jersey to Louisiana, his involvement in law since college, and the effects of Hurricane Katrina on his life The balance between understanding and letting the clients express their unique experiences Galen remembers his encounter with Chris in a courtroom and reflects on his effective courtroom skills His admiration for women who continue to succeed in managing their various responsibilities, including those who are pregnant or have young children His daily routine between his academic office, attending to client matters, and managing his restaurant The importance of maintaining good relations with people and making a difference in their lives The value of understanding and empathizing with clients to better solve their legal matters The role of empathy in attaining successful outcomes in the legal profession What it means for Chris to level up': Honesty, empathy, and delivering outstanding results for clients Episode Resources Connect with Galen M. Hair https://insuranceclaimhq.com hair@hairshunnarah.com https://levelupclaim.com/ Connect with Chris Otten https://insuranceclaimhq.com/attorney/christopher-g-otten/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/chrisotten
As today's guest will tell us, breakfasts have recently overtaken Friday dinners as the number one dining out experience of choice. So in the always-competitive hospitality industry, restaurants that do those meals particularly well are in a fantastic position. Chris Tomasso definitely understands how to excel in this space. Chris is the CEO of First Watch Restaurants, which trades under the symbol FWRG. Prior to taking the helm in 2018, Chris served as President for three years and as Chief Marketing Officer from 2006 to 2015. Before joining First Watch, Chris led strategic branding and marketing for renowned national and international brands such as Cracker Barrel and Hard Rock Cafe International.In 2021, Chris was named one of the restaurant industry's most admired C-suite leaders by FSR Magazine. Later that year, he led First Watch into Wall Street with their IPO. Chris earned a BA from the University of Central Florida and is an active alum who currently serves on the University of Central Florida Foundation Board of Directors. He was inducted into the University's Nicholson School of Communication and Media Hall of Fame in 2016. Highlights: Chris describes First Watch's background and market concept (2:57) Competition and First Watch's position in the market (4:08) Chris describes First Watch's business model (6:17) First Watch's unique shift schedule, and why it attracts employees (8:43) Chris' approach to business operations (10:36) Chris describes the importance of remaining in the restaurant atmosphere as a CEO (12:06) How First Watch incorporates developing technology into their business (13:59) How Chris applies his marketing background in his role at First Watch (15:30) Chris' capital allocation strategies (17:21) More on First Watch's disruptive business model, and their strategic market placement (18:54) Chris' view on inflation and its ongoing impact on the hospitality industry (20:28) Chris describes the impact of First Watch to becoming a public company (22:09) How Chris was introduced to the hospitality industry (24:27) Links:Chris Tomasso on LinkedInFirst Watch Restaurants on LinkedInFirst Watch Restaurants WebsiteICR LinkedInICR TwitterICR WebsiteFeedback:If you have questions about the show, or have a topic in mind you'd like discussed in future episodes, email our producer, marion@lowerstreet.co.
In this highlight episode , host Whitney Sewell interviews Chris Okada to delve into the profound impact of the pandemic on the real estate industry. Chris emphasizes the importance of thinking outside the box and adapting to the new challenges presented by the crisis. The conversation explores how buyers are navigating the current market and finding ways to secure financing for their real estate deals. Additionally, the episode delves into the transformation of the work landscape, with many companies embracing remote work policies. Chris highlights the significant changes that have occurred and emphasizes their lasting impact on the real estate industry. This episode provides valuable insights into the evolving nature of the market and the need for creative solutions in these unprecedented times.To listen to the full episodes and gain more valuable insights from our guest, click the links below to tune in . Don't miss out on the opportunity to learn and grow in the world of real estate.https://lifebridgecapital.com/2023/09/04/unlocking-opportunities-in-commercial-real-estate-chris-okada/https://lifebridgecapital.com/2023/09/05/how-to-navigate-real-estate-cycles-chris-okada/VISIT OUR WEBSITEhttps://lifebridgecapital.com/Here are ways you can work with us here at Life Bridge Capital:⚡️START INVESTING TODAY: If you think that real estate syndication may be right for you, contact us today to learn more about our current investment opportunities: https://lifebridgecapital.com/investwithlbc⚡️Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheRealEstateSyndicationShow
On Welcome to the Arena, Tom gets to talk to some of the most impressive people around, and with today's guest, that couldn't be more true. An added bonus? Their conversation combines two things Tom is a huge fan of: the NHL and Whisky, so this is an extra special episode.Today we get to hear from Chris Pronger, not just a former professional hockey player, but a Hall of Famer who has been voted one of the NHL's hundred greatest players ever. For 19 years, Chris was known as one of the fiercest and most dominant defensemen in the history of the league, and was a four-time All Star, a Norris Trophy winner as the league's best defenseman and a Hart Trophy winner, which is the league's most valuable player, and very rare for a defenseman. Chris took three teams to the Stanley Cup Finals as Captain and won it all with the Anaheim Ducks. He was a two-time Olympic gold medal winner for Canada and is one of 30 players in the Triple Gold Club IIHF World Champion, Olympic Gold, and Stanley Cup.Chris is a great family man and a hardworking entrepreneur launching among other businesses, The JRNY, a 100 percent Canadian rye whisky with his brother, Sean. And that's our focus for today's conversation...with a bit of hockey thrown in as well. Highlights: Chris' tells his journey of getting drafted into the NHL (3:14) First impressions of the league and Chris' immersion into his first team (4:44) Chris describes his time on the Anaheim Ducks (6:13) Chris' turn to hold the Stanley Cup (8:24) The most skilled player Chris ever played against (9:07) The greatest player Chris ever played alongside (10:02) Inspiration for founding The JRNY Whisky (11:13) How Chris and his brother landed on the name 'The JRNY' (13:58) How The JRNY is made and what makes it a premium product (15:53) How Chris approached the product's marketing (16:56) Approaching the Whisky and Canadian-Whisky marketplace (18:38) Where to buy the product and business expansion (19:43) Chris' current favorite NHL teams (21:34) Chris' role as a defenseman, and how the position has changed over time (24:00) Links:ICR XICR LinkedInICR WebsiteChris Pronger on LinkedInThe JRNY Whisky on LinkedInThe JRNY Whisky WebsiteFeedback:If you have questions about the show, or have a topic in mind you'd like discussed in future episodes, email our producer, marion@lowerstreet.co.
In this riveting episode, Ryan DeMent sits down with Chris Myles, the mastermind behind numerous successful website flips and the founder of blogger evolution.com. Chris pulls back the curtain on his journey from feeling "just over broke" to achieving financial freedom through the art of website arbitrage. Learn how he identifies undervalued websites, implements strategic fixes, and then sells them for a profit. Chris shares invaluable insights on the market's cyclical nature, the importance of due diligence, and the thrill of finding that perfect niche site. Whether you're a seasoned digital entrepreneur or just curious about alternative investment avenues, this episode is packed with actionable tips and fascinating stories that will inspire and educate. Highlights: Chris's journey from job dissatisfaction to digital success. The intricacies of website flipping and the potential for high returns. The importance of understanding Google algorithm updates and their impact on site value. Real-world examples of niche sites and the opportunities they present. The delicate art of negotiation and partnership in the digital realm. If this episode sparked your interest in the world of digital real estate, make sure to subscribe to Chasing Happiness Podcast for more enlightening conversations. Please leave us a review and share this episode with your network to spread the knowledge! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/chasinghappiness/message
Welcome back to this week's Headline Highlights! In today's episode we are going to talk about Chris Watts new girlfriend, Chad Daybell, aka the biggest loser in Idaho, a horrific case out of Arizona, and the latest regarding Steve Goncalvez & The Idaho Murders Airmail Publication that has everyone up in arms. Join Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/annieelise SERIALously Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/serialouslypod/ All Social Media Links: https://www.flowcode.com/page/annieelise_ About Me: https://annieelise.com/ SERIALously FB Page: https://www.facebook.com/SERIALouslyAnnieElise/ For Business Inquiries: 10toLife@WMEAgency.com
Welcome to the Thrive with Cate podcast, hosted by Cate. In this episode, Cate is joined by Chris Orwig, a talented photographer, and storyteller known for capturing the essence of people's stories through his images. They discuss the art of storytelling in photography, focusing on the importance of finding one's authentic identity. Chris shares anecdotes of photographing influential individuals such as Kelly Slater and Jack Johnson, emphasizing the need to go beyond surface appearances to create meaningful and relatable stories. Join Cate and Chris as they explore the world of photography and its impact on influencer culture. What You Will Get Out of Tuning In Insights into the art of storytelling through photography Understanding the importance of authenticity and finding one's unique story Discovering the challenges faced by celebrities in maintaining their true identity Tips for photographers and influencers on capturing deep and soulful moments Exploring the role of intention and technique in photography and videography Highlights Chris shares his passion for finding the light within others and connecting with them in a meaningful way through photography. The discussion revolves around the significance of creating one's own story rather than relying on existing narratives. Examples of photographing influential figures like Kelly Slater and Jack Johnson highlight the struggle between projected image and true identity. The conversation delves into the need for photographers to move beyond surface appearances to capture profound and relatable stories. Chris provides insights into the role of intention in photography and how it shapes the final outcome of an image. The discussion extends to the influencer culture, exploring common pitfalls and the importance of storytelling through imagery and text. Quotes "What I enjoy most about photography is finding the light within others and connecting in a meaningful way." "As an artist or photographer, I know I can't just recreate something someone else has done. I have to find my story." "Celebrities have a tough time balancing the projected image with their true selves." "The work of a photographer is different from just noticing. It's noticing and then doing the work." "Influencers must create snackable content that feels light, relatable, and tells a story behind the story." "The light in the eyes is key to capturing the essence and storytelling in photography." Links Get access to Uplevel Your Life here. Use promo code: UPLEVELFREE Cate's latest book: Uninflamed: 21 Anti-Inflammatory PRIMAL HABITS to heal, sleep better, intermittent fast, detox, lose weight, feel great, & crush your life goals with a kickass microbiome Want to ask Cate a question for the podcast? Record it here: catestillman.com/ask Want a free personalized session: curious@clubthrive.global Join Cate and Chris Orwig in this captivating episode of the Thrive with Cate podcast as they delve into the art of storytelling through photography. Gain valuable insights into finding authenticity, capturing meaningful moments, and navigating the influencer world. Whether you're a photographer or an influencer, this episode will inspire you to go beyond surface appearances and create impactful and relatable stories through imagery and text.
Galen interviews Chris Courville, CEO of Interior Environmental Consulting (IEC). They discuss the importance of promptly addressing mold and water damage to minimize health risks and the growth of IEC. Chris highlights the significance of maintaining high industry standards, proper testing, certifications, and having a well-trained team for insurance claims. He believes that ethical business practices and effective communication are crucial for success in the industry. Highlights Chris explains the reason behind his switch from working as a contractor to becoming a consultant. Chris talks about the process of providing documentation for policyholders after a disaster. The importance of assessing and mitigating damage quickly for health reasons and to minimize potential risks. Chris discusses his busy schedule and the number of projects his company can handle at once. The importance of considering the health aspect over the policy aspect and outlines the importance of mold testing. Chris talks about getting to know the story of the policyholders he works with. The growth and team-building process of IEC is discussed. The importance of documentation in fire losses and how to properly test for carcinogens are explained. Chris highlights the importance of proper PPE, certification, and third-party lab testing. Episode Resources Connect with Galen M. Hair https://insuranceclaimhq.com hair@hairshunnarah.com www.levelupclaim.com Connect with Chris Courville https://www.linkedin.com/in/chris-courville-8292a8261
Episode 4: Turning Passion into Profession with Chris BradleyDescription:The Upgraded Coach, Glasgow PT and Author of Fitness Business Mastery, Chris Bradley has built a successful business training PT professionals to scale their business. In this episode we talk about turning your passion into profession, mastering digital marketing, as well as living your life on your own terms. Highlights:- Chris details the drivers that took him from working full time in Sainbury's to running a successful PT business and the on to becoming the Coaches' Coach.- We talk about how to scale your business through digital marketing.- He provides us some golden nuggets on entrepreneurship and scaling your own business. Resources:- Follow Chris on Social Media: o Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thecoachesmentor/- Check Our Chris Bradleys's company: https://www.theupgradedcoach.co.uk/timeforanupgrade1- Check out Chris's book: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Fitness-Business-Mastery-fitness-qualify-ebook/dp/B0BV3DFLJB/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=fitness+business+mastery&qid=1680516848&sprefix=fitness+busines%2Caps%2C74&sr=8-1- Our story on Starting Real Estate Wealth Development and going for 0-200 properties in two and a half years: https://rewdtraining.co.uk/essentials-course-page/- Following Real Property Training, for more tips on property investing:o You tube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1JmktMGRuEpPalLqndDRRwo Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100089657347374- Join our Real Property Community on Facebook: - Our Book: Fast track to Property Millions: Fast-Track to Property Millions: Amazon.co.uk: Duncan, Laurie, Robertson, Alex, Tracey, Conar: 9781739854379: Books Your Host: Alex Robertson is a self-made property investor and businessman. He comes from a financial background, gaining a degree in Accounting and Finance and then going on to qualify as a chartered management accountant. Alex is one of Co-Founders of Real Estate Wealth Development, a group of companies in the property industry, with over 200 buy to let properties, training company, construction company and development business. He is also the co-author of the book Fast Track to Property Millions. Contact:Instagram: @rewdgroupalexFacebook: (4) Alex Robertson | FacebookLinked in: (2) Alex W Robertson | LinkedInEmail: info@therealwealthpodcast.com
Joining us today on the Clever Investor Show are serial entrepreneurs, Chris and Lori Harder. About Chris: After an 11-year career as an executive and partner in the banking industry, he retired from banking in 2011 and partnered with his wife, Lori, to start and scale four different multi-million dollar businesses, along with investing in several other successful startups. Chris also founded the Elite Entrepreneur Mastermind, helping seven-figure business owners scale their businesses through carefully curated collaboration, along with the Fast Foundations mastermind, helping entrepreneurs in their early stages of business. Chris' core belief and motto is that “when good people make good money, they do great things!” About Lori: Lori Harder is a leading expert in the field of fitness, transformational work, mindfulness, and self-love. She is also an author, cover model, and three-time fitness world champion, who offers a carefully curated set of practical tools to promote sustainable health, spiritual well-being, and financial freedom. Lori has also helped dozens of people reach six-figure or more salaries through her network marketing business (Isagenix), and she has helped hundreds of others to start their own home-based businesses. HIGHLIGHTS: Chris and Lori Harder share their journey from bankruptcy to building a multi-million dollar business in Isagenix. Importance of having a clear and concise vision as an entrepreneur Earning $18 million through MLMs They talk about the power of building relationships and meeting the people that will rocket-ship your business and or endeavors. Website URL: Chris: https://chrisharder.me/ Lori: https://loriharder.com/meet-lori/ Social Media URL: Chris IG
“I think you need to be aware and see people be open to what can happen and get a feel, get an instinct. I think I've been blessed with instinct. I mean, I did not do well at school. I passed zero exams. I'm unemployable, but I've been blessed with having instincts. The instinct of U2 was seeing their determination, the fact that the music itself initially wasn't close to what most of my music was because most of my music was bass and drum. And most of their music was vocal, so it wasn't a certain kind of music that I like all the time. I like music from all different kinds of levels…I absolutely felt for Bob Marley to really make it worldwide as it were, he needed to change something a little bit. I didn't want him to change what he was doing, not his lyrics and everything else like that. It was more the instrumentation of it. I felt for Bob to be able to reach a wider audience that he needed to move away a little bit from that and focus more and more on his lyrics.When I finally met Cat Stevens, and we just sort of sat down and then when he played the song ‘Father and Son,' then suddenly the lyrics of the song and what it meant and everything, I suddenly felt this guy is fantastic. You know, the I person I'd seen on television had nothing to do with this person sitting in front of me. And so that's really when I said to him, I opened up to him and I said, ‘Honestly, I wasn't really interested to meet, but this song that you've just sung for me is such an incredible song.' I felt that I could definitely connect with him. ‘Where Do the Children Play', that was the one that, just the fact that he was somebody who was thinking like that.There was one time when Mick Jagger asked me to come and meet with him because I think he'd heard the records that were coming up from me, mainly Jamaican records and things, and that's why he wanted me to come and meet with him. He was leaving Decca, and wanted to go to another level. And I said, ‘It makes absolutely no sense for you to come to my label because you already are huge.'Grace Jones, she's a stunning-looking lady. They put on the record and there was a drum machine, and all it played was a drum machine. There was no vocal, there were no instruments, nothing for about two and a half to three minutes before I heard a voice. I thought, Oh my gosh, this is a disaster. This is going to end in tears. And then suddenly I heard the voice, and the voice sounded great.”Chris Blackwell, an inductee of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, is widely considered responsible for turning the world on to reggae music. As the founder of Island Records, he helped forge the careers of Bob Marley, Cat Stevens, Grace Jones, U2, Roxy Music, among many other high-profile acts, and produced records including Marley's Catch a Fire and Uprising. Blackwell currently runs Island Outpost, a group of elite resorts in Jamaica, which includes GoldenEye—the former home of author Ian Fleming. He received the A&R Icon Award in recognition of his lasting influence on the music business. He is author, with Paul Morley, of The Islander: My Life in Music and Beyond.www.islandoutpost.com www.simonandschuster.com/books/The-Islander/Chris-Blackwell/9781982172701 www.islandrecords.comwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.org IG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
“I think you need to be aware and see people be open to what can happen and get a feel, get an instinct. I think I've been blessed with instinct. I mean, I did not do well at school. I passed zero exams. I'm unemployable, but I've been blessed with having instincts. The instinct of U2 was seeing their determination, the fact that the music itself initially wasn't close to what most of my music was because most of my music was bass and drum. And most of their music was vocal, so it wasn't a certain kind of music that I like all the time. I like music from all different kinds of levels…I absolutely felt for Bob Marley to really make it worldwide as it were, he needed to change something a little bit. I didn't want him to change what he was doing, not his lyrics and everything else like that. It was more the instrumentation of it. I felt for Bob to be able to reach a wider audience that he needed to move away a little bit from that and focus more and more on his lyrics.When I finally met Cat Stevens, and we just sort of sat down and then when he played the song ‘Father and Son,' then suddenly the lyrics of the song and what it meant and everything, I suddenly felt this guy is fantastic. You know, the I person I'd seen on television had nothing to do with this person sitting in front of me. And so that's really when I said to him, I opened up to him and I said, ‘Honestly, I wasn't really interested to meet, but this song that you've just sung for me is such an incredible song.' I felt that I could definitely connect with him. ‘Where Do the Children Play', that was the one that, just the fact that he was somebody who was thinking like that.There was one time when Mick Jagger asked me to come and meet with him because I think he'd heard the records that were coming up from me, mainly Jamaican records and things, and that's why he wanted me to come and meet with him. He was leaving Decca, and wanted to go to another level. And I said, ‘It makes absolutely no sense for you to come to my label because you already are huge.'Grace Jones, she's a stunning-looking lady. They put on the record and there was a drum machine, and all it played was a drum machine. There was no vocal, there were no instruments, nothing for about two and a half to three minutes before I heard a voice. I thought, Oh my gosh, this is a disaster. This is going to end in tears. And then suddenly I heard the voice, and the voice sounded great.”Chris Blackwell, an inductee of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, is widely considered responsible for turning the world on to reggae music. As the founder of Island Records, he helped forge the careers of Bob Marley, Cat Stevens, Grace Jones, U2, Roxy Music, among many other high-profile acts, and produced records including Marley's Catch a Fire and Uprising. Blackwell currently runs Island Outpost, a group of elite resorts in Jamaica, which includes GoldenEye—the former home of author Ian Fleming. He received the A&R Icon Award in recognition of his lasting influence on the music business. He is author, with Paul Morley, of The Islander: My Life in Music and Beyond.www.islandoutpost.com www.simonandschuster.com/books/The-Islander/Chris-Blackwell/9781982172701 www.islandrecords.comwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.org IG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
“The Harder They Come, that film was made by a very close friend of mine. And it was at a period where Jamaican music had started to really catch fire a bit. It was certainly selling in England. It was starting to grow, and there was interest in England and Europe. Not really in America. America wasn't interested in it at that period in time at all. But it was really decided to try and get this across. To do a film so you could get a feel for where this music was coming from. And a man called Perry Henzell, who was a very good friend of mine, he wanted to do a film. He called me one time and said there was an album cover of Jimmy Cliff, who was one of the other artists that I was working with from early on. And he said he's the guy I really want to be the leader of the film. And so I said, ‘Okay, that's great. Go ahead.' And so Jimmy Cliff really became the leader of that film. And that film really sort of expanded the whole image and point of view of Jamaican music and Jamaican life. That film was very, very important for getting Jamaican music known in the world.”Chris Blackwell, an inductee of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, is widely considered responsible for turning the world on to reggae music. As the founder of Island Records, he helped forge the careers of Bob Marley, Cat Stevens, Grace Jones, U2, Roxy Music, among many other high-profile acts, and produced records including Marley's Catch a Fire and Uprising. Blackwell currently runs Island Outpost, a group of elite resorts in Jamaica, which includes GoldenEye—the former home of author Ian Fleming. He produced Kiss of the Spider Woman and Stop Making Sense, and other films. He was location scout and production assistant for the Bond film Dr. No before deciding to devote himself to the music. He received the A&R Icon Award in recognition of his lasting influence on the music business. He is author, with Paul Morley, of The Islander: My Life in Music and Beyond.www.islandoutpost.com www.simonandschuster.com/books/The-Islander/Chris-Blackwell/9781982172701 www.islandrecords.comwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.org IG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
“I think you need to be aware and see people be open to what can happen and get a feel, get an instinct, I guess. I think I've been blessed with instinct. I mean, I did not do well at school. I passed zero exams. I'm unemployable, but I've been blessed with having instincts.Miles Davis was the best teacher, always amused when I asked him questions. I was pretty cocky at the time, and I once asked him why he played so many bad notes, unlike Bix Beiderbecke and Louis Armstrong, who always played clean. He didn't blink. He didn't bite my head off. ‘Because I try and play what I hear in my head, he said, “not what I know I can already play.” That, to me, was the essence of jazz, trying to get somewhere new and not worrying if you made mistakes as long as you got there in the end. On a tightrope, and wobbling a little, but eventually gliding across that tightrope.Well, it's really great if you can be involved in doing something which brings something to people and lifts things. You know, if you can find a way to…when I say find a way, you just get an instinct of something, Oh, this is going to be fun. That can be great. I'm always looking…I don't know that I'm deliberately looking at things. I think things have happened, and I've seen something or got a feel for something or feel for the person or… I think I've been given a lot of luck.”Chris Blackwell, an inductee of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, is widely considered responsible for turning the world on to reggae music. As the founder of Island Records, he helped forge the careers of Bob Marley, Cat Stevens, Grace Jones, U2, Roxy Music, among many other high-profile acts, and produced records including Marley's Catch a Fire and Uprising. Blackwell currently runs Island Outpost, a group of elite resorts in Jamaica, which includes GoldenEye—the former home of author Ian Fleming. He received the A&R Icon Award in recognition of his lasting influence on the music business. He is author, with Paul Morley, of The Islander: My Life in Music and Beyond.www.islandoutpost.com www.simonandschuster.com/books/The-Islander/Chris-Blackwell/9781982172701 www.islandrecords.comwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.org IG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
“I think you need to be aware and see people be open to what can happen and get a feel, get an instinct. I think I've been blessed with instinct. I mean, I did not do well at school. I passed zero exams. I'm unemployable, but I've been blessed with having instincts. The instinct of U2 was seeing their determination, the fact that the music itself initially wasn't close to what most of my music was because most of my music was bass and drum. And most of their music was vocal, so it wasn't a certain kind of music that I like all the time. I like music from all different kinds of levels…I absolutely felt for Bob Marley to really make it worldwide as it were, he needed to change something a little bit. I didn't want him to change what he was doing, not his lyrics and everything else like that. It was more the instrumentation of it. I felt for Bob to be able to reach a wider audience that he needed to move away a little bit from that and focus more and more on his lyrics.When I finally met Cat Stevens, and we just sort of sat down and then when he played the song ‘Father and Son,' then suddenly the lyrics of the song and what it meant and everything, I suddenly felt this guy is fantastic. You know, the I person I'd seen on television had nothing to do with this person sitting in front of me. And so that's really when I said to him, I opened up to him and I said, ‘Honestly, I wasn't really interested to meet, but this song that you've just sung for me is such an incredible song.' I felt that I could definitely connect with him. ‘Where Do the Children Play', that was the one that, just the fact that he was somebody who was thinking like that.There was one time when Mick Jagger asked me to come and meet with him because I think he'd heard the records that were coming up from me, mainly Jamaican records and things, and that's why he wanted me to come and meet with him. He was leaving Decca, and wanted to go to another level. And I said, ‘It makes absolutely no sense for you to come to my label because you already are huge.'Grace Jones, she's a stunning-looking lady. They put on the record and there was a drum machine, and all it played was a drum machine. There was no vocal, there were no instruments, nothing for about two and a half to three minutes before I heard a voice. I thought, Oh my gosh, this is a disaster. This is going to end in tears. And then suddenly I heard the voice, and the voice sounded great.”Chris Blackwell, an inductee of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, is widely considered responsible for turning the world on to reggae music. As the founder of Island Records, he helped forge the careers of Bob Marley, Cat Stevens, Grace Jones, U2, Roxy Music, among many other high-profile acts, and produced records including Marley's Catch a Fire and Uprising. Blackwell currently runs Island Outpost, a group of elite resorts in Jamaica, which includes GoldenEye—the former home of author Ian Fleming. He received the A&R Icon Award in recognition of his lasting influence on the music business. He is author, with Paul Morley, of The Islander: My Life in Music and Beyond.www.islandoutpost.com www.simonandschuster.com/books/The-Islander/Chris-Blackwell/9781982172701 www.islandrecords.comwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.org IG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
“I think you need to be aware and see people be open to what can happen and get a feel, get an instinct, I guess. I think I've been blessed with instinct. I mean, I did not do well at school. I passed zero exams. I'm unemployable, but I've been blessed with having instincts.Miles Davis was the best teacher, always amused when I asked him questions. I was pretty cocky at the time, and I once asked him why he played so many bad notes, unlike Bix Beiderbecke and Louis Armstrong, who always played clean. He didn't blink. He didn't bite my head off. ‘Because I try and play what I hear in my head, he said, “not what I know I can already play.” That, to me, was the essence of jazz, trying to get somewhere new and not worrying if you made mistakes as long as you got there in the end. On a tightrope, and wobbling a little, but eventually gliding across that tightrope.Well, it's really great if you can be involved in doing something which brings something to people and lifts things. You know, if you can find a way to…when I say find a way, you just get an instinct of something, Oh, this is going to be fun. That can be great. I'm always looking…I don't know that I'm deliberately looking at things. I think things have happened, and I've seen something or got a feel for something or feel for the person or… I think I've been given a lot of luck.”Chris Blackwell, an inductee of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, is widely considered responsible for turning the world on to reggae music. As the founder of Island Records, he helped forge the careers of Bob Marley, Cat Stevens, Grace Jones, U2, Roxy Music, among many other high-profile acts, and produced records including Marley's Catch a Fire and Uprising. Blackwell currently runs Island Outpost, a group of elite resorts in Jamaica, which includes GoldenEye—the former home of author Ian Fleming. He received the A&R Icon Award in recognition of his lasting influence on the music business. He is author, with Paul Morley, of The Islander: My Life in Music and Beyond.www.islandoutpost.com www.simonandschuster.com/books/The-Islander/Chris-Blackwell/9781982172701 www.islandrecords.comwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.org IG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
“I guess the work that we're doing here at the Climate Hazards Center is trying to build out the science to cope with a two-degree world. And I think that we can do that. It's not going to be easy, but I think that's definitely within our capabilities, and it is already making human beings be smarter together in very empowering ways. And these are examples of people in Boulder, Colorado getting ready for the next big flood event and having conversations between the National Weather Service and local communities, or me on a zoom call at seven in the morning with my friends in East Africa as they're getting ready to cope with the next extreme. There are great examples of radio clubs in Niger who are working with their meteorological agencies and local farming communities that are pulling data that we're producing here in Santa Barbara, precipitation estimates, but then using them to decide whether they should fertilize their millet crops or not. And so there are ways that we can counter climate hazards and weather hazards by being smarter.”Chris Funk is the Director of the Climate Hazards Center (CHC) at UC Santa Barbara. He works with an international team of Earth scientists to inform weather and famine-related disaster responses. Chris studies climate and climate change while also developing improved data sets and monitoring/prediction systems. He's the author of Drought, Flood, Fire: How Climate Change Contributes to Recent Catastrophes and co-author with Shrad Shukla of Drought Early Warning and Forecasting. While his research interests are quite diverse, a central theme uniting Chris' work is developing both the technical/scientific resources and the conceptual frameworks that will help us cope with increasingly dangerous climate and weather extremes.www.chc.ucsb.eduwww.chc.ucsb.edu/people/chris-funkDrought, Flood, Fire: How Climate Change Contributes to Recent Catastropheswww.oneplanetpodcast.org www.creativeprocess.info
“I guess the work that we're doing here at the Climate Hazards Center is trying to build out the science to cope with a two-degree world. And I think that we can do that. It's not going to be easy, but I think that's definitely within our capabilities, and it is already making human beings be smarter together in very empowering ways. And these are examples of people in Boulder, Colorado getting ready for the next big flood event and having conversations between the National Weather Service and local communities, or me on a zoom call at seven in the morning with my friends in East Africa as they're getting ready to cope with the next extreme. There are great examples of radio clubs in Niger who are working with their meteorological agencies and local farming communities that are pulling data that we're producing here in Santa Barbara, precipitation estimates, but then using them to decide whether they should fertilize their millet crops or not. And so there are ways that we can counter climate hazards and weather hazards by being smarter.”Chris Funk is the Director of the Climate Hazards Center (CHC) at UC Santa Barbara. He works with an international team of Earth scientists to inform weather and famine-related disaster responses. Chris studies climate and climate change while also developing improved data sets and monitoring/prediction systems. He's the author of Drought, Flood, Fire: How Climate Change Contributes to Recent Catastrophes and co-author with Shrad Shukla of Drought Early Warning and Forecasting. While his research interests are quite diverse, a central theme uniting Chris' work is developing both the technical/scientific resources and the conceptual frameworks that will help us cope with increasingly dangerous climate and weather extremes.www.chc.ucsb.eduwww.chc.ucsb.edu/people/chris-funkDrought, Flood, Fire: How Climate Change Contributes to Recent Catastropheswww.oneplanetpodcast.org www.creativeprocess.info
“I guess the work that we're doing here at the Climate Hazards Center is trying to build out the science to cope with a two-degree world. And I think that we can do that. It's not going to be easy, but I think that's definitely within our capabilities, and it is already making human beings be smarter together in very empowering ways. And these are examples of people in Boulder, Colorado getting ready for the next big flood event and having conversations between the National Weather Service and local communities, or me on a zoom call at seven in the morning with my friends in East Africa as they're getting ready to cope with the next extreme. There are great examples of radio clubs in Niger who are working with their meteorological agencies and local farming communities that are pulling data that we're producing here in Santa Barbara, precipitation estimates, but then using them to decide whether they should fertilize their millet crops or not. And so there are ways that we can counter climate hazards and weather hazards by being smarter.”Chris Funk is the Director of the Climate Hazards Center (CHC) at UC Santa Barbara. He works with an international team of Earth scientists to inform weather and famine-related disaster responses. Chris studies climate and climate change while also developing improved data sets and monitoring/prediction systems. He's the author of Drought, Flood, Fire: How Climate Change Contributes to Recent Catastrophes and co-author with Shrad Shukla of Drought Early Warning and Forecasting. While his research interests are quite diverse, a central theme uniting Chris' work is developing both the technical/scientific resources and the conceptual frameworks that will help us cope with increasingly dangerous climate and weather extremes.www.chc.ucsb.eduwww.chc.ucsb.edu/people/chris-funkDrought, Flood, Fire: How Climate Change Contributes to Recent Catastropheswww.oneplanetpodcast.org www.creativeprocess.info
““One of the things I tried to share in my book Drought, Fire, Flood is that it's not hard, if you look at the data, to see how harmful and impactful climate change is right now. We're seeing horrendous droughts play out across East Africa, an unprecedented level of droughts, but these impacts are also costing hundreds of billions of dollars a year. And the cost of reducing our emissions is not that great. I think the estimate is something like a trillion dollars a year for the entire globe, which sounds like a lot of money, but that's about 1% of global GDP. So we can certainly afford to make a big dent in our emissions.”Chris Funk is the Director of the Climate Hazards Center (CHC) at UC Santa Barbara. He works with an international team of Earth scientists to inform weather and famine-related disaster responses. Chris studies climate and climate change while also developing improved data sets and monitoring/prediction systems. He's the author of Drought, Flood, Fire: How Climate Change Contributes to Recent Catastrophes and co-author with Shrad Shukla of Drought Early Warning and Forecasting. While his research interests are quite diverse, a central theme uniting Chris' work is developing both the technical/scientific resources and the conceptual frameworks that will help us cope with increasingly dangerous climate and weather extremes.www.chc.ucsb.eduwww.chc.ucsb.edu/people/chris-funkDrought, Flood, Fire: How Climate Change Contributes to Recent Catastropheswww.oneplanetpodcast.org www.creativeprocess.info
“I guess the work that we're doing here at the Climate Hazards Center is trying to build out the science to cope with a two-degree world. And I think that we can do that. It's not going to be easy, but I think that's definitely within our capabilities, and it is already making human beings be smarter together in very empowering ways. And these are examples of people in Boulder, Colorado getting ready for the next big flood event and having conversations between the National Weather Service and local communities, or me on a zoom call at seven in the morning with my friends in East Africa as they're getting ready to cope with the next extreme. There are great examples of radio clubs in Niger who are working with their meteorological agencies and local farming communities that are pulling data that we're producing here in Santa Barbara, precipitation estimates, but then using them to decide whether they should fertilize their millet crops or not. And so there are ways that we can counter climate hazards and weather hazards by being smarter.”Chris Funk is the Director of the Climate Hazards Center (CHC) at UC Santa Barbara. He works with an international team of Earth scientists to inform weather and famine-related disaster responses. Chris studies climate and climate change while also developing improved data sets and monitoring/prediction systems. He's the author of Drought, Flood, Fire: How Climate Change Contributes to Recent Catastrophes and co-author with Shrad Shukla of Drought Early Warning and Forecasting. While his research interests are quite diverse, a central theme uniting Chris' work is developing both the technical/scientific resources and the conceptual frameworks that will help us cope with increasingly dangerous climate and weather extremes.www.chc.ucsb.eduwww.chc.ucsb.edu/people/chris-funkDrought, Flood, Fire: How Climate Change Contributes to Recent Catastropheswww.oneplanetpodcast.org www.creativeprocess.info
“I guess the work that we're doing here at the Climate Hazards Center is trying to build out the science to cope with a two-degree world. And I think that we can do that. It's not going to be easy, but I think that's definitely within our capabilities, and it is already making human beings be smarter together in very empowering ways. And these are examples of people in Boulder, Colorado getting ready for the next big flood event and having conversations between the National Weather Service and local communities, or me on a zoom call at seven in the morning with my friends in East Africa as they're getting ready to cope with the next extreme. There are great examples of radio clubs in Niger who are working with their meteorological agencies and local farming communities that are pulling data that we're producing here in Santa Barbara, precipitation estimates, but then using them to decide whether they should fertilize their millet crops or not. And so there are ways that we can counter climate hazards and weather hazards by being smarter.”Chris Funk is the Director of the Climate Hazards Center (CHC) at UC Santa Barbara. He works with an international team of Earth scientists to inform weather and famine-related disaster responses. Chris studies climate and climate change while also developing improved data sets and monitoring/prediction systems. He's the author of Drought, Flood, Fire: How Climate Change Contributes to Recent Catastrophes and co-author with Shrad Shukla of Drought Early Warning and Forecasting. While his research interests are quite diverse, a central theme uniting Chris' work is developing both the technical/scientific resources and the conceptual frameworks that will help us cope with increasingly dangerous climate and weather extremes.www.chc.ucsb.eduwww.chc.ucsb.edu/people/chris-funkDrought, Flood, Fire: www.cambridge.org/core/books/drought-flood-fire/96E0EB1519F5175B68079D294D0B0E93www.oneplanetpodcast.org www.creativeprocess.info
Episode description Your mood affects how your day unfolds. How do you manage your creatives' moods and bring out the best in them? CEO of Bean Labs, a popular story-driven creative agency and production company, Chis Valentino, joins Erika in this episode of Moodally Matters to chat just about that. Chris shares his professional journey from NYU Tisch, his internship in production at A&E, and moving between several production jobs to starting his own production company. In this extra-special behind-the-scenes look at a fast-growing production companies, Chris and Erika talk about the daily life stressors in the creative industry, navigating them, managing your teams' mood, and how it impacts their performance. Plus, Chris shares his best advice for anyone interested in the best strategies to deal with their mood and maintain their well-being. Highlights: Chris tells us about his professional journey from NYU Tisch School of Arts to Hollywood. Chris shares the daily stressors that come up in the creative industry and the approaches to navigate them How the mood of your team, collaborators, or people's impacts how your day unfolds and every level of what you do How your mood negatively impacts your performance and the importance of navigating to a new space where everyone is happy Chris expounds on managing to redirect his mood and pulling himself back to center What well-being at work entails and how Chris achieves that with his team and employees Why Chris believes in keeping creatives in a good mood and building a good relationship with them. Chris' best advice for dealing with your mood and well being in the office About the guest: Chris Valentino is the President of Bean Labs, a creative video storytelling company providing full-service production, post-production, and marketing services for brands and businesses. After graduating from NYU Tisch School of Arts and Film, he secured a job in the production department at A & E, moved between different production companies, and co-founded a production company with friends dealing with promotions and advertising. Chris later started his own company Bean Labs, in 2008. He collaborates with businesses to execute ideas, and his experience, creativity, and dedication have led to developing concepts beyond the brief. His integrated approach to storytelling over the years is a testament to his passion and commitment. Links: Visit Beanlabs: https://beanlabs.com/ Visit Valentino's website: https://mrvalentino.tv/ Visit Moodally's website: https://www.moodally.com Download the Moodally app: https://app.moodally.com Follow Moodally on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/moodally.wellness/?hl=en Subscribe to Moodally's Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/moodally
Museum director, curator, and cultural producer at large, Chris Dercon is the President of the Réunion des musées nationaux – Grand Palais, an umbrella group of national museums in France. His career in major cultural institutions across Europe spans several decades. From 2011 to 2016, he was director of London's Tate Modern. He has been program director of MoMA PS1 in New York, and has served as director of the Witte de With Center of Contemporary Art in Rotterdam, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam, the Haus der Kunst in Munich, and Berlin's Volksbühne theater. He is also a presenter, writer and maker of cultural documentaries.· www.grandpalais.fr· www.creativeprocess.info
Museum director, curator, and cultural producer at large, Chris Dercon is the President of the Réunion des musées nationaux – Grand Palais, an umbrella group of national museums in France. His career in major cultural institutions across Europe spans several decades. From 2011 to 2016, he was director of London's Tate Modern. He has been program director of MoMA PS1 in New York, and has served as director of the Witte de With Center of Contemporary Art in Rotterdam, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam, the Haus der Kunst in Munich, and Berlin's Volksbühne theater. He is also a presenter, writer and maker of cultural documentaries.· www.grandpalais.fr· www.creativeprocess.info
What happens when we push ourselves too hard - over too long a period of time? What happens to our mental, physical and emotional states? Even the most elite performers reach a point when they can't go any further. We are not talking about a single event, or a single day. We are talking about years, or decades, of driving to the limit, pushing through, and winning; only to wake up one day with nothing left in the tank. This is called Operator Syndrome - and it affects the most successful champions in the world, first responders, doctors, lawyers, restaurateurs, and the rest of us driving to make it in the world. Dr. Chris Frueh is a Professor of Psychology at the University of Hawaii and a leader in the research and clinical evaluation of Operator Syndrome. He joins host Fran Racioppi on this episode to show us that even as we push ourselves to the limit every day, we must be conscious of the cumulative effect of stress over long periods of time; and how sleep, nutrition and mindfulness are the "survival skills" we need to combat Operator Syndrome and its negative effects on our performance. Read the full episode transcription here and learn more on The Jedburgh Podcast Website.Highlights: -Chris and Fran define “Operator Syndrome” and list the “impairments” that are associated with it's evaluation.-Evaluation can be as easy as self-evaluation, but also may involve a team of specialists that can assess a person's holistic health across mental, physical and emotional contexts. -Operator Syndrome affects all types of high performers in a variety of industries such as emergency services, first responders, law enforcement, financial services, lawyers & the military, among others. -Chris explains how sleep, nutrition and mindfulness are the “survival skills” needed to combat Operator Syndrome, aid recovery and increase a balanced perspective on life. -Most high performers are unable to identify they suffer from Operator Syndrome, postponing needed medical treatment, or even conversations about the stress they consistently live under. Quotes: -”The natural consequences of an extraordinarily high allostatic load; the accumulation of physiological, neural, and neuroendocrine responses resulting from prolonged chronic stress; and physical demands.”-”What I recommend is a framework that takes the whole person and all of the systems into account as simultaneously as possible.”-”These things are all connected and causative. We can have vicious cycles and virtuous cycles.” -”If you are not sleeping, it is really hard to heal your brain. It's not just about getting enough sleep. It is about getting the right sleep.” -”We don't need sugar. We don't need soda. We don't need fast food. Junk food. Processed food.”-”Find the ability to sit, be quiet, and notice what's going on.”-”We have some agency. We have some control over our lives.”-"You are not crazy because you have some of these symptoms, but you can learn to deal with those symptoms with a multi-tiered approach." This episode is sponsored by Analytix Solutions; improving the efficiency of your business across people, process and technology through multi-divisional outsourcing solutions.
Chris Vonlanthen is the Founder of All Out. He was born and raised in Switzerland. He is on a mission to help business owners unleash their full potential. Chris and Raul talk about how habits transform your life and business. Highlights Chris’s background - 2:22 What happened in 2020 with the pandemic - 3:47 How he lost his job - 4:47 Founding his company: All Out - 5:22 A program for 75 days - 10:13 Good daily habits help - 12:07 Always remember your “why” - 13:29 The power of using our imagination - 14:38 Routines that help him keep on track - 15:56 Delivering happiness and quality for others - 24:54 Episode Resources Connect with Raul Hernandez Ochoa https://www.linkedin.com/in/dogoodwork https://dogoodwork.io/work-with-raul https://dogoodwork.io/podcast Connect with Chris Vonlanthen https://www.allout.ch/ https://www.instagram.com/_chris.vonlanthen_/ https://www.instagram.com/_.allout._/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/chris-vonlanthen-398796b5/ chris@allout.ch
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Museum director, curator, and cultural producer at large, Chris Dercon is the President of the Réunion des musées nationaux – Grand Palais, an umbrella group of national museums in France. His career in major cultural institutions across Europe spans several decades. From 2011 to 2016, he was director of London's Tate Modern. He has been program director of MoMA PS1 in New York, and has served as director of the Witte de With Center of Contemporary Art in Rotterdam, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam, the Haus der Kunst in Munich, and Berlin's Volksbühne theater. He is also a presenter, writer and maker of cultural documentaries.· www.grandpalais.fr· www.creativeprocess.info
The Creative Process · Seasons 1 2 3 · Arts, Culture & Society
Museum director, curator, and cultural producer at large, Chris Dercon is the President of the Réunion des musées nationaux – Grand Palais, an umbrella group of national museums in France. His career in major cultural institutions across Europe spans several decades. From 2011 to 2016, he was director of London's Tate Modern. He has been program director of MoMA PS1 in New York, and has served as director of the Witte de With Center of Contemporary Art in Rotterdam, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam, the Haus der Kunst in Munich, and Berlin's Volksbühne theater. He is also a presenter, writer and maker of cultural documentaries.· www.grandpalais.fr· www.creativeprocess.info
Thinking about getting insurance of any kind mostly feels overwhelming and intimidating: there are loads of options in the market and it's hard to choose. Today's guest, Chris Lotz, shines a light into the insurance world and how necessary this service is. Chris is the CEO of Goodcover, an insurance company which is different from the rest because it offers a digital experience and offers a renters policy that is 50% less expensive than what others charge.Highlights:Chris describes why his insurance company, Goodcover, is different from the rest and how protecting each other is the founding goal of the company.The importance of understanding the insurance industry as the safety net of the global economy.Due to the heavy paperwork and high prices that most insurance companies demand for getting the service, most people have a negative perspective of it. Chris gives some advice for those who are getting insurance for the first time and points out how to go about the whole process. Digital insurance companies offer a good coverage for a great price and almost no paperwork, this is why they appear to be a better option than traditional companies. When starting a new company from scratch, Chris realized the hard way that it is necessary to follow a path of willingness and patience in order to succeedTo learn more about Chris, go visit his company's website Sign up for The First Degree Membership! By becoming a member, we're getting more intimate than ever! Get the Membership! Check our past episodes of The Sixth Degree podcast! Remember to follow us on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter.
Take your KTM's already capable bikes to the next level and experience an evolutionary performance with Rottweiler CEO and founder, Chirsa, and Mariel Parker. Let's watch KTM's current lineup and the in-demand bestsellers, the challenging process of improving them, and transforming it into even better.Rottweiler Performance is a Southern California based design and manufacturing facility with the primary goal of creating useful products for consumers looking to customize their motorcycles beyond what the factory engineers have set for their target audience. Quite often, what manufacturers create for the consumer can be very limited in scope and vision. These include the adventure market as well as dual-sport, street, and road racing. Our rich history in highly competitive motorsports uniquely positions us to draw from varying disciplines of engineering experience to reach our creative goals.Highlights:Chris' racing history and how he met Mariel along his journeyHaving a mechanical brain since he was a child; Chris' first project that people loved and wanted that kick-started his brandHigh demand, low supply; the swift change in the markets demand that's affecting their production during this COVID situationFrom fetching supplies to dealing with country's regulations on international shipments and challenges that they are continually facingKeeping up with customer demands and coping with their disappointmentsThe importance of choosing the right people to represent their brandKTM product upgrades; the freshest products and bestsellers Rottweiler has to offerEngaging their bikes on the race track and witnessing an unbelievable performance from their racer.An evolutionary product that they are currently working with and releasing soonChris' beautiful life in motorcycling and his advice for everyone to fearlessly try something new Instagram Handle:@rottweilerperformancePodcast Mentioned:Size Matters, KTM Breaks the Small CC Stigma | ADVMoto: https://adventuremotorcycle.com/shows?id=28&view=videoLinks:http://www.rottweilerperformance.com/ADVMoto has a new Merch Shop with Custom COVID Facemasks! https://ADVMoto.net/merchIf you love this episode, feel free to share it with your friends or give us a 5-star
What is Q? Is the Great Awakening upon us or have we all been deceived yet again? Who was Father Malachi Martin? Listen the highlights from my podcast with former Royal Marines Commando turned Netflix producer Marty Stalker. Read 'Eating Smoke: One Man's Descent into Crystal Meth Psychosis in Hong Kong's Triad Heartland.' Paperback UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0993543944 Paperback US: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0993543944 Support the podcast at: https://www.patreon.com/christhrall (£2 per month plus perks) https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-our-veterans-to-tell-their-story https://paypal.me/TeamThrall Sign up for my NON-SPAM newsletter and FREE books: https://christhrall.com/mailing-list/ Social media Links: https://facebook.com/christhrall https://twitter.com/christhrall https://instagram.com/chris.thrall https://linkedin.com/in/christhrall https://youtube.com/christhrall https://discord.gg/yqvHRUN https://christhrall.com
Today's guest Chris Rood, Top Real Estate Wholesale Coach in the USA and Canada. Chris is a full-time Real Estate investor, business owner, and Real Estate Coach who specializes in Wholesaling, Fix and Flip, and Mobile Home Parks. In this episode, we dive into Chris's inspiring story behind the success and pure hustle, undergoing rehabilitation and transformation. Chris shares with us how his high and lows in house flipping and how he came across wholesaling. Highlights: -Chris' story of redemption and purification after being diagnosed with ADHD and prescribed with prescription drugs he describes like legal crystal meth -How Chris started his first business out the back of his truck -How he made $125k in his mid 20's -The high and lows in investing -A significant event in the economy in 2014 that led him to the idea of Wholesaling -The importance of upgrading yourself first and adding more value to it -The future Real Estate Market and how to turn it into an opportunity -Considering demographics and population, why Chris chose to invest in Mobile Home Parks -Valuable lessons and advice from Chris for newbie investors Grab a free copy of Chris's book, "The Source of The Deal" at www.thesourceofthedeal.com, or pick up your hard copy on Amazon! Links: Website: https://chrisrood.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/chrisroodentrepreneur YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCPg2GbV7ZanrL7xhw-h0W5g Instagram Handles: @realestaterood ALSO: If you want to connect with Dave, download his Ebook and Audiobook for FREE and then schedule your free strategy call to help you get started. Just go to www.911WealthNetwork.com If you like this content, please Subscribe, Rate and Review!
On today's episode of The Wow Factor we're joined by Chris Klein. Chris the President of the LA Galaxy. Klein serves as the club's top business executive, overseeing all aspects of business operations, strategic planning and overall management of the team. Klein works closely with Galaxy Head Coach and General Manager Bruce Arena on the soccer aspect of the business and serves as the club's lead on all MLS and community development related matters. Additionally, Klein continues to ensure the long-term financial stability of the Galaxy and all of the club's properties, including; the Galaxy Academy and the LA Galaxy Soccer Center in Torrance, California In this episode, you'll hear Chris talk about his soccer career and how he pivoted into the business side, trusting God's plan, his plan for the LA Galaxy in the years to come, and what it means to lead with integrity and respect. Highlights: Chris's 13-year soccer career The future of soccer in America “Where's God going to lead me next?” How setbacks can become teaching moments Working with the Players Union and being in the middle of Collective Bargaining Agreements Retiring from playing to become president of the team “Generosity inspires generosity” How Chris helped to create the Galaxy Academy for youth soccer players in Los Angeles The excitement when David Beckham and Zlatan Ibrahimović joined the team “Its all about humility and respect” Key Takeaway: In order to succeed in a business, you must lean on others for advice and wisdom. Have the humility and respect to take it and give it to others in return. The WOW Factor Website: https://www.bradformsma.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bradformsma/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/brad.formsma Twitter: https://twitter.com/bradformsma LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brad-formsma-a9a06424/ Chris Klein Website: https://www.lagalaxy.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lagalaxy Instagram: @ lagalaxy Twitter: https://twitter.com/LAGalaxy YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/LAGalaxy
On the final hour of The Nick Handley Show, Nick continues to react and to take your phone calls on Husker football and the Nebraska-Iowa game. Then Chris Heady of the Omaha World Herald joins the show to talk more Huskers. Next, Nick gets into Jim Harbaugh losing another game to Ohio State before ending the show with What's on Tap.
Catch up through our first thirty episodes by listening to insightful highlights from Chris Burkard, Sorelle Amore, @Canon_Photos_, Josh Yeo, Matt Komo, Kitty Peters, Garret King, & Gerald Undone. Be sure to subscribe as we release a new episode every Tuesday!
Hear the highlights from last week’s Summer Music Project with the young people who took part and Leeds legend and experimental musician Chris Sharkey.
Whether you attended or not, (re-)immerse yourself in some of the great content from the event. Chris Pope, VP Innovation, ServiceNow, and Rhiannon Prothero, VP, Marketing EMEA, ServiceNow share their top takeaways from across the event week. The latest from the Now Platform The secrets of success shared by our most successful customers How digital workflows make work easier and more productive across the enterprise Listen to this podcast for Chris Pope's and Rhiannon Prothero’s highlights and the best of Knowledge 2019 condensed down into one insightful session.
Whether you attended or not, (re-)immerse yourself in some of the great content from the event. Chris Pope, VP Innovation, ServiceNow, and Rhiannon Prothero, VP, Marketing EMEA, ServiceNow share their top takeaways from across the event week. The latest from the Now Platform The secrets of success shared by our most successful customers How digital workflows make work easier and more productive across the enterprise Listen to this podcast for Chris Pope's and Rhiannon Prothero’s highlights and the best of Knowledge 2019 condensed down into one insightful session.
Today on Paychecks & Balances, we welcome Chris Hutchins to the podcast. After being laid off in the 2008 financial crisis, and seeing so many others in the same circumstance, Chris created LaidOffCamp, an organization to empower people through education. A few years later, he co-founded Milk, a mobile app incubator in San Francisco, where he launched Oink to over 100,000 users before being acquired by Google. After his four years at Google Ventures, he then left to create his own financial planning service, Grove. At Grove, clients are paired with top-notch financial advisors to create personalized strategies, help track their financial health progress, and available for advice anytime, anywhere. Grove’s mission is to make personalized financial advice affordable and accessible to everyone. In this episode, you’ll learn how to turn a passion into a business, why financially literacy and follow-through are crucial to your future, and why a financial advisor might just be the thing you need to get your funds right. Highlights: Chris’s experience in investment banking How one weekend in Boston at a “Start-Up Weekend” changed his life! What is the “LaidOffCamp”? What is your passion? Is there an opportunity? Can you do it? Yes, yes, and yes? Then start a business! The “Minimal Viable Product” is crucial to prove to the world you can do it and prove to yourself its possible Why random people who will give you really harsh feedback about your business is market research GOLD Research shows that 85% of adults feel financial anxiety Wealth is a state of mind Can you get financial planning and behavioral coaching if you’re not rich? Why Grove’s affordable, personalized, financial advice is the first of its kind You must take action today! Key Takeaway: “Everyone already knows this”, is very different that “Everyone already does this.” You don’t need more ideas; you need more action. Step into your future already. Paychecks & Balances Website: https://paychecksandbalances.com/ https://www.patreon.com/paybalances Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/paybalances/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/paychecksandbalances Twitter: https://twitter.com/paybalances?lang=en Chris Hutchins Website: www.chrishutchins.com https://hellogrove.com/ Instagram: @hellogrove Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/usegrove/ Twitter: @hutchins
Balls! Strikes! Jon Lovitz! In this grand slam episode, Chris and Jason find themselves on opposite teams when it comes to A League Of Their Own. Highlights: Chris's sunglasses and stolen bike are diversions as Chris wonders how you score a touchdown in baseball. Jason speculates as to the motives of screenwriters Babaloo Mandel and Lowell Ganz. And we both celebrate Laverne & Shirley, Lenny, Squiggy, Gary Marshall's cameo in 'Lost In America', 80's Madonna ballads, Tom Hanks as a grizzled baseball lifer who can't spit tobacco, Geena Davis, Lori Petty, Madonna and Rosie O'Donnell's great chemistry, Del Close, and whether you'd want your immediate family present at your induction into a Hall Of Fame. ALSO: Matt The Engineer saves us from litigious peril! Again! Subscribe for new episodes every Thursday and let us know what you like, don't like, want to hear about, how you're doing, wanna do this weekend, etc. E-mail: fullcastandcrewpod@gmail.com Twitter: @fullcastandcrew Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Fullcastandcrew/ Instagram: @fullcastandcrew WE FIGURED IT OUT!!
In this episode, I conclude my conversation with my friend, Chris, who lost his father in 2017. Highlights: - Chris cared for his father in his home at the end, with his children present. - You don’t have control. Accepting that reduces the anxiety associated with someone’s passing. - Reconciliation is critical, before or after death. ** Some affiliate links for any books we mentioned ** “The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning” by Margareta Magnusson: https://amzn.to/2OuM5Dn “Final Gifts” by Callanan and Kelley: https://amzn.to/2pKwul4 “The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up” by Marie Kondo: https://amzn.to/2A0BMiy “Being Mortal” by Atul Gawande: https://amzn.to/2CjI2U3 --- Hi, my name is Ryan, and I'm a life coach. I help people embrace their creativity, shed and temper their judgment, and rediscover themselves, their passions, and their possibilities. Who do you want to be? ** Support the cause! ** Patreon: https://patreon.com/lifecoachingwithryan ** Reach out to me for a session! ** Contact: https://lifecoachingwithryan.com/contact ** Join the conversation! ** Instagram: https://instagram.com/educate4_life Twitch: https://twitch.tv/lifecoachingwithryan --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/educate4life/message
Mothercraft nurse Chris Minogue has given some stellar advice for parents over the last three months. From fussy eating, to misbehaving toddlers and independent v.s. dependent sleep association.
Inbound is finally over :( Welcome to our Day 4 Summary & event wrap-up of Inbound 2016! We talk Alec Baldwin, Rand Fishkin's SEO 2017 predicitions PLUS two very special 3-in-3 interviews. The first is with UK's leading voice in Content Marketing, Chris Marr, founder of the Content Marketing Academy and Annual conference of the same same. Check TCMA here: https://www.thecontentmarketingacademy.co.uk/ The second is with Iliyana Stareva, Principal Channel Consultant at HubSpot! Hear from someone actually representing the brand that organises Inbound, Iliyana talks to us about 'Inbound PR' plus key things that have worked for her clients in 2016 We'll be back with our regular format for episode 41 to discuss all things digital and inbound marketing!
Joining us this week is Chris Keaton, an artist manager, music publisher and author based in Nashville. Chris has had tracks cut by Trisha Yearwood and Martina McBride, and has had music placed in TV shows such as Nashville and One Life to Live. Early in the interview he describes himself as fabulous, and after speaking to him, we would have to agree! Highlights: - Chris owes his career in the music industry to The Beatles - Music publishers have the nicest houses, nicest cars and all year tans - Your website is the first impression you’re going to make online, so make it a good one! - Don’t take no for an answer. No = Maybe. Maybe = Yes. - We hear about LML Music Nashville - the imprint label that Chris has just launched - Chris’s crystal ball is broken and the music landscape is constantly shifting - Chris tells us about some of the artists he is currently working with - One of Chris’s artists was commissioned to write the official state song for Virginia - We hear how Chris manages to stay relevant... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Mason is flying solo as he interviews Christopher Knights, the voice of Private from Penguins of Madagascar. Highlights Chris talks about his job at DreamWorks Animation as an editor and how he got into voice acting. Mason asks about other DreamWorks films like Shrek, Trolls, Me and My Shadow, and Mumbai Musical. Chris also answers a question we had on a previous episode, We're Back! A Dinosaurs Story. Tell us what you thought of the interview! Don't forget to use the hashtags #AnimAddicts and #AnimAddicts89 when talking about this episode on Twitter! Runtime: 1:17:46, 37.3 MB Links Watch Penguins of Madagascar: Blu-ray | DVD | Digital | Rent | iTunes Find The Rotoscopers Send us a voicemail at rotoscopers.com/voicemail or call (406) 646-6575. Find us on the web: Rotoscopers.com, Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Tumblr, Instagram Visit our sponsors: Audible, Amazon. Rotoscopers Store Find The Hosts Mason Smith: Twitter, Portfolio Morgan Stradling: Twitter, Instagram Chelsea Robson: Twitter, Facebook Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices