Podcast appearances and mentions of Jeff Herman

  • 33PODCASTS
  • 55EPISODES
  • 38mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Sep 12, 2024LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about Jeff Herman

Latest podcast episodes about Jeff Herman

The Pet Buzz
Sept. 14 - Back to School Blues & Best and Worst Dog-friendly Cities

The Pet Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2024 44:50


This week on the show, Petrendologist Charlotte Reed talks with dog trainers and author Babette Haggerty about Fido's Back to School Blues and with Jeff Herman, LawnStarter Editor-in-Chief, about the best and worst dog-friendly cities in the US.

The Pet Buzz
July 20 - How Dirty Cities Affect Pets

The Pet Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2024 44:50


This week on the show, Petrendologist Charlotte Reed speaks with Jeff Herman, Editor-in-Chief of The LawnStarter Blog, and with Tina Wismer, DVM, the Medical Director of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animal's Poison Control Center about how America's dirtiest cities affect pets.

bluevalleybaptist
06-02-2024 - Ridgeview - The Person of Jesus: Whom Do We Love?

bluevalleybaptist

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2024 34:10


Jeff Herman, BVC Elder, continues our sermon series, "The Person of Jesus: Luke's Gospel: Part 1", preaching from Luke 6:27-42.

Alabama's Morning News with JT
Jeff Herman tells us all about naked gardening

Alabama's Morning News with JT

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2024 6:07 Transcription Available


Nightside With Dan Rea
NightSide News Update

Nightside With Dan Rea

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2024 35:44 Transcription Available


We started with Jeff Herman, Editor-in-Chief of LawnStarter and sister brand, Try Home Gnome to look at the shocking study that lists 2024s most lead paint vulnerable cities and Somerville, MA being the 8th most.Then Dr. Tirrell De Gannes from the Thriving Center of Psychology looked at the equally shocking study that says 93% of Gen Zers and Millennials are focusing on mental health in 2024, with 3 in 4 seeking therapy for anxiety or depression.Up next, Duston Whitney and his book "Demographic Deception-Exposing the Overpopulation Myth and Building a Resilient Future" And finally, Nancy Schultz, Chair of the Swampscott Historical Commission who advocates to Save historic General Glover farmhouse from demolition.

Alan Weiss' The Uncomfortable Truth
A Conversation with Jeff Herman

Alan Weiss' The Uncomfortable Truth

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2023 26:21


Jeff has been representing me for over 30 years, and was responsible for acquiring publishers (McGraw-Hill, Wiley, Macmillan, AMACOM, et. al.) for my four best-sellers, including the 30-year, 6-edition Million Dollar Consulting. He is responsible for thousands of published works and hundreds of authors' happiness. For example, he represented the famous Why Bad Things Happen to Good People. We talk of the takeover of publishing by large venture capital firms. We discuss why hard copy books have never disappeared or even greatly diminished, despite the false prophets of electronic dominance. Learn how to create a query letter and formal proposal to “sell” an agent to represent you, and why publishers are expecting the authors to market and sell enough books to pay for the entire initial press run (sad, but true, and publishers know next-to-nothing about marketing these days, and wouldn't invest in it even if they did). Publishers once paid for advances, but now they want the “advance” from you in terms of initial sales. You can, of course, pay between $50,000 and substantial six-figure amounts to firms which will “guarantee” a best-seller position in the New York Times or Wall Street Journal, but it's for a nanosecond. I know people who have done it. They don't even deserve the nanosecond. Jeff talks about the distinctions of the power of reviews vs. testimonials, and what it takes to convince an agent to represent you. This is a fast and furious tour through modern publishing. You might want to fasten your seat belt. Most of my business and referrals have originated with my books.

Discovery
Millennial Balance - LawnStarter's Editor in Chief Jeff Herman

Discovery

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2023 29:58


This week, Millennial Balance is all about travel now that the weather is heating up! Afua and Shaliza will be joined by LawnStarter's Editor in Chief Jeff Herman about our neighbours to the south and the most glamorous American cities, and Liisa Sefton from Destination Ontario tells us all about the great places to visit in our home province.

Hilary Topper On Air
The Power and Practice of Spiritual Writing

Hilary Topper On Air

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2023 28:23


Are you a spiritual writer? In this episode of Hilary Topper on Air, Hilary speaks with Deborah Levine Herman, Author of Spiritual Writing From Inspiration to Publication: 2nd Edition. Listen as Hilary and Deborah discuss the power and practice of spiritual writing. About Deborah Levine Herman Deborah Levine Herman is a bestselling author, publisher, former literary agent, and intuitive writing coach who guides writers on their journeys. As a gifted spiritual teacher, an expert at author branding, and someone skilled in navigating the modern publishing world, Herman helps writers discover their spiritual writing path. Herman is the author of 13 books and has dedicated her 25-plus year career in publishing to writer education. In her latest book, Spiritual Writing from Inspiration to Publication 2nd Edition, she embarks on her own mission as a mystic to combine her spiritual journey with the writer's path. Herman is the CEO of Micro Publishing Media (MPM), an indie publishing company. She is also a lawyer, and a journalist, and wrote the number-one Amazon bestseller My Story of Charles Manson, Life Inside his Cult and the Darkness that Ended the Sixties (William Morrow) which has received over 1000 five-star reviews. This book helped make Herman a memoir-writing expert. She's appeared in documentaries as a cult expert. Deborah Levine Herman is also co-author with Jeff Herman on the industry bible Write the Perfect Book Proposal: Ten Proposals that worked and Why. Plus she has written about parenting, and motherhood and is an expert at helping people write their memoirs. She is a graduate of Ohio State University College of Law and worked with both the law school and Journalism Graduate school to create a dual degree program. She resides in New England with her husband, a doxie, a wild whippet, two rather annoyed cats, and a horse that is happy to stay out of that house. Herman also enjoys collecting antiques and energy drawing. About Spiritual Writing From Inspiration to Publication: 2nd Edition Spiritual Writing From Inspiration to Publication: 2nd Edition is based on the premise that there are writers who write because they want to and those who write because they feel they have to. Through this timely book, Deborah helps writers discover their spiritual writing path. Her book helps spiritual writers answer the question: which kind of spiritual writer are you? To learn more about Deborah or order your own copy of Spiritual Writing From Inspiration to Publication: 2nd Edition, visit www.soulodysseybooks.com.

Become a Writer Today
Breaking into the Publishing Industry: Insights from a Literary Agent Jeff Herman

Become a Writer Today

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2023 27:58 Transcription Available


Do you want to break into the publishing industry? Many authors have questions about how to traditionally publish a book and how to find a literary agent who can help with that process. This week, I caught up with Jeff Herman, who's been working in the industry for 25-plus years.He runs a literary agency in the United States and has published over 1,000 different books. So, he has a wide variety of experience across different genres or niches.In this episode, we discuss:how to land a literary agentand what you should put in your pitchthe benefits of creating a back catalog of bookResources: Jeff's websiteSupport the showIf you enjoyed the show please leave a review on Apple. And if you have any questions you can find me on Twitter @BryanJCollinsThanks for listening!

Across The County Podcast
Season 4 Episode 6: JEFF HERMAN - San Diego No. 7 Best City to Walk Your Dog

Across The County Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2023 8:38


Want to read (and hear) a cool statistic?  San Diego ranks 7th for "Best City to Walk Your Dog"!  Learn why, PLUS discover OTHER fascinating facts and stats. from Jeff Herman, editor-in-chief of "LawnStarter".  It's all about proper training, and quality-of-time with Man's-Best-Friend! http://www.LawnStarter.com   #JeffHerman#LawnStarter#LawnLove#MansBestFriend#CanineTraining#DogWalking#SanDiego#BestCitiesToWalkYourDog  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Places I Remember with Lea Lane
Take a Hike! Best Trails In The U.S.A.

Places I Remember with Lea Lane

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2022 16:31 Transcription Available


The simple pleasures of recreational walks -- hiking -- is our topic.  Jeff Herman, avid hiker, first talks with Lea about the Appalachian Trail and The Pacific Crest Trail.Lea discusses hiking jargon: "Zero Hike,""Nero Hike" and others.  We also discuss top hikes around the country.  Jeff then talks with Lea about his company's survey of the 10 best places to hike near U.S. cities.  We end with Jeff's favorite hiking memory ._____Jeff Herman is editor and chief of Lawnstarter, a company which often collates travel statistics._____Podcast host Lea Lane blogs at forbes.com, has traveled to over 100 countries, written nine books, including the Kirkus Reviews starred travel-memoir Places I Remember. She has contributed to many guidebooks. Contact Lea!  @lealane on Twitter; PlacesIRememberLeaLane on Insta; on  Facebook, it's Places I Remember with Lea Lane. Website: placesirememberlealane.com.  New episodes drop every other week, on Tuesdays. Please tell folks about us, and follow, rate and review this award-winning travel podcast wherever you listen! 

Podcasts From The Printerverse
Exponential Email Returns with Jeff Herman, LawnStarter

Podcasts From The Printerverse

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2022 21:02


Jeff Herman, Editor in Chief at LawnStarter, joins Deborah Corn to discuss his creative email campaign that shares interesting "study" stories, the reward of backlinks and more powerful SEO, and how this strategy has nothing to do with sales.  Mentioned in Today's Episode: Jeff Herman: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeffjherman/ LawnStarter: https://www.lawnstarter.com/ LawnStarter Blog: https://www.lawnstarter.com/blog Lawn Love: https://lawnlove.com/ Deborah Corn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/deborahcorn/  Print Media Centr: https://printmediacentr.com Project Peacock: http://projectpeacock.printmediacentr.com/ Girls Who Print: https://girlswhoprint.net

The Pet Buzz
Wk of Aug. 14 - Best Cat Cities, Pet Radiology & Transmitting Monkey Pox to Dogs

The Pet Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2022 54:50


This week on the show, Petrendologist Charlotte Reed and Michael Fleck, DVM talk with Lawn Starter's Editor, Jeff Herman, about the best cities for cats and their owners and with Mississippi State University's veterinarian, Dr. Marc Seitz, about pet radiology. Reed also discusses the first human-to-dog transmission of MonkeyPox.

Total Information AM
St. Louis BBQ is number 1 according to LawnStarter

Total Information AM

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2022 8:58


Jeff Herman, Editor and Chief of LawnStarter joins Debbie Monterrey talking about St. Louis being number 1 in BBQ. Then Stuart McMillian caught up with Butcher Alex Seiter at Herrell's Market in Imperial to ask him about what is STL style BBQ.

The Ohioan
What's the best city in Ohio for naked gardening?

The Ohioan

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2022 17:51


Jeff Herman from lawnstarter.com talks about his study identifying the best cities in Ohio and the U.S. for naked gardening. Ways you can help support the show Chase Bank – where you can get a $200 bonus by opening an account and doing a direct deposit. Open an account today at https://accounts.chase.com/consumer/raf/online/rafoffers?key=1934238931&src=N. Ashley Furniture – Save money on your furniture with this coupon. https://www.ashleyfurniture.com/?extole_share_channel=SHARE_LINK&extole_shareable_code=viewfromthepugh5&extole_zone_name=friend_landing_experience Donate to the show – Through CashApp at $ChrisPugh3. Sign up for CashApp – Using the code ZFZWZGF. We will both get $5. https://cash.app/app/ZFZWZGF Get your next project done for $5 through Fiverr – https://fiverraffiliates.com/affiliatev2/#:~:text=https%3A//fvrr.co/3K9Ugiq Follow our podcast hosts on Twitter – Chris Pugh, Craig Shoup, Paul Yanchek, Joe Frost and also follow co-hosts George Thomas and Bob Garver. Read Chris and Craig's professional work – Read Chris Pugh's work for the Columbus Dispatch and Cincinnati Enquirer and Craig's work at Clarksville Leaf-Chronicle --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/theohioan/message

The Ohioan
Why Kroger's and other grocery stores are having customers do more work

The Ohioan

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2022 114:22


We're hesitant about Kroger's plans to expand conveyer belt lanes in its stores, Joe Castle talks about a new Lego Batman trailer, Elon Musk buying Twitter, Yankees fans fighting Guardians outfielders and Jeff Herman from LawnStarter.com talks about America's most sustainable cities. Ways you can help support the show Chase Bank – where you can get a $200 bonus by opening an account and doing a direct deposit. Open an account today at https://accounts.chase.com/consumer/raf/online/rafoffers?key=1934238931&src=N. Ashley Furniture – Save money on your furniture with this coupon. https://www.ashleyfurniture.com/?extole_share_channel=SHARE_LINK&extole_shareable_code=viewfromthepugh5&extole_zone_name=friend_landing_experience Donate to the show – Through CashApp at $ChrisPugh3. Sign up for CashApp – Using the code ZFZWZGF. We will both get $5. https://cash.app/app/ZFZWZGF Get your next project done for $5 through Fiverr – https://fiverraffiliates.com/affiliatev2/#:~:text=https%3A//fvrr.co/3K9Ugiq Follow our podcast hosts on Twitter – Chris Pugh, Craig Shoup, Paul Yanchek, Joe Frost and also follow co-hosts George Thomas and Bob Garver. Read Chris and Craig's professional work – Read Chris Pugh's work for the Columbus Dispatch and Cincinnati Enquirer and Craig's work at Clarksville Leaf-Chronicle --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/theohioan/message

The Ohioan
It's been a bad week for the U.S. Postal Service in Ohio

The Ohioan

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2022 80:37


Joe Frost and Chris Pugh talked about nearly 40,000 pieces of undelivered mail in Columbus, how thieves stole $200,000 in checks from mailboxes in Cincinnati, a biotech company that offers money for poop in Arizona, ripoff companies in Russia and a man who lived in an airport for 14 years to escape his family. In addition, we talked to Kyle Newman from Oddscheckers.com about early new NFL odds and Jeff Herman from LawnStarter.com about the best cities for lunches in the U.S. Ways you can help support the show Chase Bank – where you can get a $200 bonus by opening an account and doing a direct deposit. Open an account today at https://accounts.chase.com/consumer/raf/online/rafoffers?key=1934238931&src=N. Ashley Furniture – Save money on your furniture with this coupon. https://www.ashleyfurniture.com/?extole_share_channel=SHARE_LINK&extole_shareable_code=viewfromthepugh5&extole_zone_name=friend_landing_experience Donate to the show – Through CashApp at $ChrisPugh3. Sign up for CashApp – Using the code ZFZWZGF. We will both get $5. https://cash.app/app/ZFZWZGF Get your next project done for $5 through Fiverr – https://fiverraffiliates.com/affiliatev2/#:~:text=https%3A//fvrr.co/3K9Ugiq Follow our podcast hosts on Twitter – Chris Pugh, Craig Shoup, Paul Yanchek, Joe Frost and also follow co-hosts George Thomas and Bob Garver. Read Chris and Craig's professional work – Read Chris Pugh's work for the Columbus Dispatch and Cincinnati Enquirer and Craig's work at Clarksville Leaf-Chronicle Share us with your friends --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/theohioan/message

The Pet Buzz
Wk of Jan. 16 - Top Dog-Walking Cities & Benefits of Dog Training

The Pet Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2022 54:50


This week on the show, Petrendologist Charlotte Reed and Michael Fleck, DVM talk with Jeff Herman, the Editor-in-Chief at the Lawn Starter, about their survey of the best dog walking cities and with Paw & Order's Founder, Elissa Weimer-Sentner, about how dog owners can save money by training their dogs.

bluevalleybaptist
12-26-2021 - Ridgeview - Elder Led Service

bluevalleybaptist

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2021 12:14


Jeff Herman leads our elder led devotional.

Your daily news from 3DPrint.com
3DPOD Episode 88: Fabric8Labs 3D Printing for Copper Parts

Your daily news from 3DPrint.com

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2021 41:46


Fabric8Labs is a startup that has turned to lithography and chip manufacturing processes to develop a unique 3D printing technology. Their method uses thin film and electroplating to produce very fine parts from copper. The team is very ambitious. We speak to CEO Jeff Herman and Director of Product Ian Winfield about their prospects. This is a startup that wants to grow big and its team thinks that their technology will give them enormous potential. We discuss funding, applications, and how to work with clients, and much more in this episode.

The Pet Buzz
The Pet Buzz week of August 22 - Pet-friendly Cities, Pet Finances, and More

The Pet Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2021 54:50


This week on The Pet Buzz, Petrendologist Charlotte Reed and Michael Fleck, DVM, talk with Jeff Herman, editor-in-chief of LawnStarter about the best and worst cities for cats and with Jill Gonzalez from WalletHub.com about their 2021 pet-friendly cities analysis, pet finances, and more.

BVC Pastor Speak
Lay Elders Discuss Sabbaticals

BVC Pastor Speak

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2021 22:52


Elder Vice Chairman, Jeff Herman, hosts a conversation with three lay elders about our newly implemented sabbatical policy including the biblical foundation, the benefits for our pastors and the benefits for our church.

Consumer Talk with Michael Finney
Michael Finney: July 17, 2021: San Francisco the Best City for a Vaxcation

Consumer Talk with Michael Finney

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2021 10:40


Jeff Herman, Editor in Chief for Lawn Starter explains why San Francisco is the Best City for Your Summer Vaxcation See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Pet Buzz
The Pet Buzz wk of July 25 - Top Dog Park Cities, Agoraphobic Dogs, & Pet Proofing 101

The Pet Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2021 43:49


This week on The Pet Buzz, Petrendologist Charlotte Reed and Michael Fleck, DVM, talk with Jeff Herman, Editor-in-Chief at Lawn Starter, about the top cities for dog parks and with author and dog trainer Babette Haggarty about agoraphobic dogs. Dr. Fleck talks about a brutal weekend at the clinic and Reed talks Pet Proofing 101.

The Kathryn Zox Show
Jeff Herman

The Kathryn Zox Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2021 0:30


Kathryn interviews Jeff J. Herman Editor-in-Chief at Lawnstarter.If you're among the 50% of the U.S. population planning to ride a bicycle more post-pandemic, you'll want to know the Best Biking Cities in America.To mark World Bicycle Day on June 3, LawnStarter ranked the 200 biggest U.S. cities based on 18 key indicators of a bike-friendly lifestyle. Among the factors considered are the length of bike lanes, the share of workers who bike to work,and access to bike stores and repair shops, however also taking into account the air quality, weather, and availability of biking clubs in each city. Cities that dominate the top rankings include San Francisco, CA, Portland, OR and Fort Collins,CO while it seems the southern states do not fare so well with Newport News, VA, Jackson, MS and Baton Rouge, LA at the bottom of the list. Kathryn also interviews Author Carew Papritz. Parental roles have fluctuated throughout modern history. Covid has shifted that paradigm once again. Many fathers have transitioned to working from home, or unfortunately, not working at all. Both, however, presented fathers with greater opportunities to not only spend more time with their children but also have a more proactive role in parenthood. With the end of the pandemic in sight and the world returning to normalcy, fathers now face concerns over how much time they can dedicate to their children and what effect that will have. According to educational thought-leader and Author Carew Papritz, positive male role models are vital to a child's development, now more than ever, and studies show having a close relationship with your father is directly associated with an adolescents' psychological well-being. Papritz's writing has been published in a number of media outlets including Huffpost, Inc., Reader's Digest, The Insider Mag, HR.com & First Time Parent Magazine

The Kathryn Zox Show
Jeff Herman

The Kathryn Zox Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2021 0:30


Kathryn interviews Jeff J. Herman Editor-in-Chief at Lawnstarter.If you're among the 50% of the U.S. population planning to ride a bicycle more post-pandemic, you'll want to know the Best Biking Cities in America.To mark World Bicycle Day on June 3, LawnStarter ranked the 200 biggest U.S. cities based on 18 key indicators of a bike-friendly lifestyle. Among the factors considered are the length of bike lanes, the share of workers who bike to work,and access to bike stores and repair shops, however also taking into account the air quality, weather, and availability of biking clubs in each city. Cities that dominate the top rankings include San Francisco, CA, Portland, OR and Fort Collins,CO while it seems the southern states do not fare so well with Newport News, VA, Jackson, MS and Baton Rouge, LA at the bottom of the list. Kathryn also interviews Author Carew Papritz. Parental roles have fluctuated throughout modern history. Covid has shifted that paradigm once again. Many fathers have transitioned to working from home, or unfortunately, not working at all. Both, however, presented fathers with greater opportunities to not only spend more time with their children but also have a more proactive role in parenthood. With the end of the pandemic in sight and the world returning to normalcy, fathers now face concerns over how much time they can dedicate to their children and what effect that will have. According to educational thought-leader and Author Carew Papritz, positive male role models are vital to a child's development, now more than ever, and studies show having a close relationship with your father is directly associated with an adolescents' psychological well-being. Papritz's writing has been published in a number of media outlets including Huffpost, Inc., Reader's Digest, The Insider Mag, HR.com & First Time Parent Magazine

Consumer Talk with Michael Finney
April 17, 2021: Why SF is 3rd Most Relaxed Citi in the US

Consumer Talk with Michael Finney

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2021 10:40


Jeff Herman of Lawnstarter reports San Francisco Is the No. 3 Most Relaxed City in America See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

BVC Pastor Speak
What Really Happens At Staff Retreat?

BVC Pastor Speak

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2021 21:37


Welcome to the first Pastor Speak podcast recorded in front of a live audience! Listen today as Pastor Derrick talks with elders Jeff Herman and Mike Bailey on location in the Tulsa area, about what really happens at Staff Retreat! Hear their reactions and impressions of this annual strategic planning gathering of the BVBC staff. Subscribe to the BVBC App through your preferred app provider.

Kayak Fishing with Jim Sammons
S7E9 Belize Kayak Fishing Adventure Pt2

Kayak Fishing with Jim Sammons

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2021 67:10


Our Kayak Fishing adventure in Belize chasing Tarpon and more continues with our friend Jeff Herman at Belize River Lodge. Join us as we share memories of this great location LIVE. The episode will once again start off with Patrick Sebile of A Band Of Anglers sharing information about his great products so make sure you join us for your chance to win one of our weekly prizes. What the full episode here https://youtu.be/R9grsAueISY

Kayak Fishing with Jim Sammons
S7E8 Kayak Fishing Belize For Tarpon

Kayak Fishing with Jim Sammons

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2021 78:24


More giveaways from A Band of Anglers begin with this episode of The Kayak Fishing Show Live! This week we are in Belize chasing Tarpon with our friend Jeff Herman at Belize River Lodge. Join us as we share memories of this great location LIVE. The episode will once again start off with Patrick Sebile sharing information about his great products so make sure you join us for your chance to win one of our weekly prizes. Watch the full episode here https://youtu.be/bJ7SnGu_PPk

KGO 810 Podcast
February 13, 2021: What Makes SF the 3rd Most Glam City?

KGO 810 Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2021 10:41


Jeff Herman, Managing Editor Lawnstarter shares why San Francisco Is the 3rd Most Glamorous City in America See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Consumer Talk with Michael Finney
February 13, 2021: What Makes SF the 3rd Most Glam City?

Consumer Talk with Michael Finney

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2021 10:41


Jeff Herman, Managing Editor Lawnstarter shares why San Francisco Is the 3rd Most Glamorous City in America See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Pet Buzz
wk of Feb 7 - Dirtiest Cities, Heat Using Sniffing Dog & New Guinness Book World Record Holders

The Pet Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2021 43:50


This week on The Pet Buzz, Petrendologist Charlotte Reed and Michael Fleck, DVM, talk with LawnStarters' Jeff Herman about dirtiest cities in America and how they affect pets and pet owners; with SNIFF's Aron Shteierman about partnering with Global K9 Protection Group to supply the Miami Heat with virus detection dogs; and with Dogmantics Dog Training, Emily Larlham, about trick training her dogs to become Guinness Book of World Record Holders.

Kayak Fishing with Jim Sammons
S2E13 Kayak Fishing Show In San Diego

Kayak Fishing with Jim Sammons

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2021 65:17


In this episode of The Kayak Fishing Show with Jim Sammons from 2010 we hit Jim's home waters of San Diego. Jim is joined by several of his friends, including Paul Lebowitz, Jeff Herman and Scott Sherman as they hit San Diego Bay for spotties and lobster and chase big fish on live squid in La Jolla. Join Jim as we broadcast this episode with live commentary and answer all your questions. Watch the entire episode here https://youtu.be/N0QFtQHbAHk

FM Talk 1065 Podcasts
Midday Mobile - Friday, December 18 - Hour 2

FM Talk 1065 Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2020 38:18


Jeff Herman with Lawnstarter talks about the best states to live off the grid

The Pet Buzz
wk of Oct 4 - Crappiest Lawns in USA, Pets Shedding COVID-19 and Hottest 2020 Halloween Pet Costumes

The Pet Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2020 43:50


This week on The Pet Buzz, Petrendologist Charlotte Reed and Michael Fleck, DVM, talk with Jeff Herman, Managing Editor, from LawnStarter, about the crappiest lawns in America; veterinarian, Dr. Angela Bosco-Lauth, Assistant Professor at Colorado State University about her research which reveals that cats can spread COVID-19 to one another but that dogs did not shed the virus; and Howie Beige from Rubies about the hottest pet costumes for this year's Howl'oween celebrations.

Kayak Fishing with Jim Sammons
S5E7 Big Tarpon In Puerto Rico

Kayak Fishing with Jim Sammons

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2020 49:39


In this episode of The Kayak Fishing Show with Jim Sammons we make our first visit to Puerto Rico to fish with Omar Orraca and the target species is Tarpon. This shoot with Omar was one of the toughest we have had, filled with stress and frustration but ending in victory and what has turned into a long time friendship ! Joining me on this trip were Jeff Herman and my wife Allene. Before the episode begins we are joined by Jim Winston from Heroes on The Water to discuss their upcoming charity tournament. Join us live for the airing of this episode with commentary and stories from the trip. Watch the full episode here https://youtu.be/jtrB-bk8kXs

Kayak Fishing with Jim Sammons
S6E9 Kayak Fishing Texas With The One And Only Dean Slowride Thomas

Kayak Fishing with Jim Sammons

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2020 67:06


In this part two of The Beard vs Hair challenge we get to fish with the one and only, the legend Dean Thomas in his home waters of Aransas Pass Texas. We are also joined by Jim's good friends Jameson Redding and Jeff Herman. Join us as Dean and Jim share memories of our day on the water while the episode airs. You can view the episode here. https://youtu.be/mw0qaqMa_8w

Kayak Fishing with Jim Sammons
S1 E12 Kayak Fly Fishing In Montana

Kayak Fishing with Jim Sammons

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2020 51:45


In this airing of The Kayak Fishing Show with Jim Sammons from Season one we visit Montana. Jim brings along his son Randy and friend Jeff Herman. Local CG Feldman is their host and guide while targeting trout on the fly. Join Jim as he shares memories of this fun trip as the episode airs. See the full episode here https://youtu.be/qskvqrtAMM4

The Trauma Recovery Podcast w/ Paul Christino
EPISODE #9 | Jeff Herman ESQ. | Top Church Sexual Abuse Attorney

The Trauma Recovery Podcast w/ Paul Christino

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2020 45:55


Jeff Herman is a nationally-recognized trial lawyer and advocate for survivors of rape, sexual abuse and sexual exploitation. He is a trailblazer in the representation of victims of sexual abuse, devoting 100% of his practice to the cause. Over his career he has represented one thousand brave men, women and children. Over the past two decades, Jeff has built a national practice and has become one of the nation’s leading childhood sexual abuse attorneys and pioneers, a true champion of his clients’ rights. Jeff is the founding and managing partner of Herman Law.In November, 2011, Jeff won a landmark $100 million verdict on behalf of a client who was sexually abused by Father Neil Doherty, a Roman Catholic priest of the Archdiocese of Miami.For more than 25 years, Jeff has enjoyed a reputation for aggressive and tireless advocacy on behalf of his clients. He understands the unique issues involved in the representation of survivors of rape and sexual abuse. His clients come to him with different needs, which is why he is committed to helping them navigate the other issues that may arise for survivors, such as developing a support system of counselors and advocates, or participating in the criminal prosecution of the perpetrator. Jeff knows that healing from sexual abuse is a complex, multi-dimensional journey and that a civil lawsuit is only one part of that journey, albeit an important one. He believes that empowering abuse victims is the most important part of representing them. Victims of rape, sexual abuse, and sexual exploitation from all over the United States seek Jeff out to represent them in civil lawsuits.Jeff Hermanhermanlaw.comHerman LawNew York Office434 W 33rd St., PenthouseNew York, NY 10001Phone: (212) 390-0100 / (800) 686-9921Paul Christinocoachpaulchristino.comSOCIAL MEDIA► Follow on Twitter: @paulchristino► Follow on Instagram: @coachpaulchristino► Join me on Facebook: facebook.com/groups/coachpaulchristino► Trauma Recovery Podcast: https://www.buzzsprout.com/907366♦ FOR TRAUMA RECOVERY COACHING SESSIONSinfo@coachpaulchristino.com

Kayak Fishing with Jim Sammons
S1E5 Kayak Fishing Texas And Our First HOW Event

Kayak Fishing with Jim Sammons

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2020 55:32


In this episode of The Kayak Fishing Show from season one we make our first visit to Texas to fish with Jeff Herman and take part in one of the early Heroes on the Water events. The fishing was tough but the memories were amazing. Join us this week as we watch share stories from this early shoot of our show. Watch the full episode here. https://youtu.be/QDdQZWMHR7Y

#AmWriting
Episode 173, #LiteraryMagsandPopularAcademics

#AmWriting

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2019 41:01


Medicine, literature, academic writing, submitting to literary journals: we wander all over the map with guest Danielle Ofri. Funny thing—writers for popular pubs tend to see literary magazines as an unsurmountable challenge (I know I do) and vice versa. Danielle Ofri, though, straddles both worlds as the Editor-in-Chief of the Bellevue Literary Review and a regular contributor to the New York Times and Slate as well as journals like The Lancet and The New England Journal of Medicine, making her the perfect person to talk to about that crossover, as well as the crossover between a career with confidentiality at its core, and one where telling the whole truth is key. Episode links and a transcript follow—but first, a preview of the weekly Top 5 for Writers that will be dropping into #AmWriting paid subscriber inboxes on Monday, August 26, 2019: Top 5 Questions for Your Novel's Main Character. Not joined that club yet? You’ll want to get on that!Got a friend who needs more #AmWriting? As always, this episode (and every episode) will appear for all subscribers in your usual podcast listening places, totally free as the #AmWriting Podcast has always been. Find us on iTunes, Stitcher, Outcast, Spotify and everywhere else. This show notes email is free, too, so please—forward it to a friend.To support the podcast and help it stay free, subscribe to our weekly Top 5 email.LINKS FROM THE PODCAST#AmReading (Watching, Listening)Danielle: Ragtime E.L. Doctorow and Little King, Salmon Rushdie's short story excerpt in the New Yorker from his book, Quichotte.KJ: Deep Work: Rules for Focused Success in a Distracted World, Cal Newport#FaveIndieBookstoreThe Strand again! We don't mind repeating a good one.Our guest for this episode is Danielle Ofri, the author of What Patients Say, What Doctors Hear; Singular Intimacies ; Incidental Findings;  Medicine in Translation; Intensive Care; What Doctors Feel;Best of the Bellevue Literary Reviewand the forthcoming When We Do Harm, a Doctor Confronts Medical Error.She is also the Editor-in-Chief of the Bellevue Literary Review, a journal that explores issues of health and humanity. fiction and non-fiction and poetry. Find their submission guidelines here. Find out more about at Danielle at DanielleOfri.com, and Listen to her TEDMed Talk: Deconstructing Perfection, here. You can listen to her TEDMed talk Fear: A Necessary Emotion here.This episode was sponsored by Author Accelerator, the book coaching program that helps you get your work DONE. Visit https://www.authoraccelerator.com/amwritingfor details, special offers and Jennie Nash’s Inside-Outline template.Find more about Jess here, and about KJ here.If you enjoyed this episode, we suggest you check out Marginally, a podcast about writing, work and friendship.TRANSCRIPT (We use an AI service for transcription, and while we do clean it up a bit, some errors are the price of admission here. We hope it’s still helpful.)       KJ:                                I'm KJ Dell'Antonia Jess: and I'm Jess Lahey. KJ: And this is #AmWriting Jess: with Jess and KJ. KJ: #AmWriting is the every week the podcast about writing all the things that you might be writing, fiction, nonfiction, short pieces, long pieces, essays, pitches, humor, proposals. And most of all, this is the podcast about sitting down and getting the work done.Jess:                             01:52                I'm Jess Lahey and I'm the author of the Gift of Failure and a forthcoming book on preventing childhood substance abuse. And I had to think about it for a second. What am I writing? And you can find my work. Let's see. Pretty soon in air mail, but I generally am in the New York Times, Washington Post, places like that.KJ:                                02:11                It must be August. I am KJ Dell'Antonia. I am the author of How To Be a Happier Parent. I'm the former editor of the Motherlode blog at the New York Times where I still contribute occasionally. I'm also the author of a novel that will be coming out next year and you can find my work most often at the New York Times. But just incidentally, just by the way, pretty soon you'll also be able to find a little something by me and Wendy Aarons at the New Yorker.Jess:                             02:42                I mean I did not know if you were going to announce this today, but I am like burst rocketing bursting. This is a bucket list thing. This is huge and big bucket. Oh yeah. We'll be talking about that more because there's, it's cool and there's a lot to talk about there, but we have a guest, our guest today I'm so excited to talk about because my husband came home from work and he said, Oh my gosh, there's this woman you must talk to. I heard her speak. She's incredible. Her name is Danielle Ofri. She is a physician. She's at Bellevue hospital and is a writer of lots of different things. She writes for sort of traditional publishing about she has a forthcoming book on medical error.Jess:                             03:31                She has a book that I have been enjoying very much called What Patients Say, What Doctors Hear. And she also writes for the New York Times and Slate and a bunch of other places. But she's the co-founder and editor and chief of the Bellevue Literary Review, which coincidentally was the present you gave Tim last year, KJ. You gave Tim a subscription to the Bellevue Literary Review just last year, which was so cool. And this sound really fancy, but the truth is that I wrote for Danielle at the Bellevue, right. And they gave me a couple of subscriptions. All right, well I passed one on to Tim as someone I thought would deeply enjoy it. And that was, that's how that came about. So, so often we have guests who have at some point been edited by me. I have been edited by Danielle, a little little flip around. It's so cool. And actually speaking of bucket list, check this out. Her essays had been selected by Stephen Jay Gould, Oliver Sacks, Susan Orlean for best American essays, twice, best American science writing. And she, yeah, she got, she's just all over the place with all these buckets, things that we would be honored to have on our resume and our CV. So Danielle, welcome to the show and thank you so much for joining us today.Danielle:                       04:49                Thank you guys. It's really fun to be here.Jess:                             04:52                We get so many questions about academic writing and obviously at some point we want to spend some time talking about that. But really what I'd love to do is start with you and how you got started as a writer. Did the doctor part come first or did the writing part come first?Danielle:                       05:09                Well, I, you know, as a little kid, I love to write books, but that got pushed by the wayside and I was a doctor first. I did a sort of a long route. I did an MD PhD program or did research that I ended up in a lab did a residency at Bellevue fell in love with internal medicine, but I trained in the 90s during the height of the AIDS epidemic. And if you remember that time, it was a fairly brutal time, a lot of death and destruction and very exhausting. And so when I finished my decade of training there, I took a year and a half off and I just needed to get away. So I, and I must say my, all my supervisors said, that's a terrible idea. You'll forget all your medicine. You'll never get back into academic medicine. You'll lose all your connections. But someone else said, you know, I think they might be jealous. You know what, maybe so. So, off I took to just support myself. I worked for, for eight weeks in various clinics around the country. There's a whole system for temporary doctors to fill in. And I did that. And then I would go to South America, traveled to the money, ran out, and then call, collect from Wahaca, say, what do you got next? And then ended up in New Hampshire. And so during that year and a half when I learned nothing to do in these small towns, I began to write down the stories of my medical training with no intention to, you know, write a book. I just needed to write them down because at the time I remember thinking this is singular. I will never be so up-close to such a monumental moment. I think every month I should be writing this down. But of course who has time then you're so busy. You know, a patient would die in the bed or be filled in five minutes. But I think it was also too close to the emotional bone at the time. So I needed to really be physically away and I wrote them down, not as a way to process them or do therapy, but I just needed to give them their due cause they had to go somewhere. And so I spent a year and a half writing. I eventually came back to Bellevue, which is where I always wanted to be. At the time there was an economic crisis and a hiring freeze. And when a spot finally opened up, there was only a part time position available, 60% time, which I'd never imagined. But you know, I had student loans so I took it. And so one of my days off I picked up a writing book off the street and one of those yellow you know, Gotham writer's workshop boxes on second Avenue degrading class. And that is how it started. And so I began working on these stories with different writing teachers and sending them out to a little, you know, literary journals was some, you know, subscriber base was smaller than my medical school class were ashore. And then eventually one running, he just said, you know she, she missed her subway. Stop reading a story to that, that needs time to get an agent. So I got an agent pulled together my first collection of essays called singular intimacies becoming a doctor a, Bellevue, which all my friends thought was about French lingerie, but it was about these relationships that doctors and patients have and that's kind of how the writing began.Jess:                             08:02                Well, so let me stop you for a second. So these are the nitty gritty is this is really what our listeners adore. So how did you go about getting your agent?Danielle:                       08:11                So I looked in a book on how to find an agent and they said, look at other books that like yours. So I went to the acknowledgement section. I also got a book on agents I think was by Jeff Herman maybe, and we'll do their personal interests and those interested in medicine. I send out sample chapters and I finally got an agent, although I will say I did not close my book, deal with the agent. My agent sent my collection out and I got turned down by 13 of New York city's finest publishing houses. And then one day I had a piece of peer, I think in Tikun magazine and the director of Beacon Press called me and said I read your piece. And do you have any interest in writing a book. I say, Oh, do you have one? Have I got, have a book right here. And I confess, I committed my one act of theft and I borrowed, I'll say in quotes, eight prepaid, FedEx labels from my chairman's office because I didn't have time to get the FedEx. I'm working all the time and sent my manuscript to Beacon Press, which they took. And so I get rid of my agent and I've published, now we'll going on my sixth book with Beacon Press without an agent.Jess:                             09:16                Okay. So that, that's really interesting. So how did that go down with your agent? I've never heard of that specific situation where an agent has submitted everywhere and had no success and then you go ahead without your agent. So did you just mutually part ways with your agent at that point?Danielle:                       09:32                I told her, you know, I have been approached and through that she hadn't gotten it sold. And so it, you know, it was a little awkward, but I think she understood and we, you know, parted amicably and I've had agents approached me since then saying, well, and I say, I don't really need an agent because I have a publisher. Oh, but we can negotiate you a better deal. But I don't want that. I really, Beacon Press is an incredible press to work with it and it fits in that little niche. It's not a big house, but it's not a small indie houses having a medium size press and that feels like kind of three bears just right. So I'm fortunate that my, my editor is the director, so I feel like I have the ear of the director as well as my editor. And in my five books, I've have no turnover of my editor, the publicity person or the marketing person.Jess:                             10:20                Oh wow. That is so unusual.Danielle:                       10:23                I know, because I'll tell you, we plan first book, we sold the paperback rights to one of the big houses, which I was really excited about. And every six months I did a letter saying, hi, my name is Jane, I'm your editor. Hi, my name is Joe, I'm an editor and I had no idea every six months it was a new person. And so the difference is so palpable and every book, my husband's, Oh, you should really try for a bigger publishing house. And I don't think I want to because I, I've had friends with, with very mixed experiences. You know, you have one big as great and you're the prince for the, you know, six months, then your next book fails. And yet no one answers your calls.Danielle:                       10:57                And I have no trouble with that. My team always answers my calls. We talk on the phone for an hour. I really feel like they're interested in my career. And I remember what my editor said on the first day before I signed it. She said, we never let our books go out of print. So we only publish books that we want to keep on even in small print runs. And this was sort of pre, you know, E readers, what really mattered. And that kind of commitment meant a lot to me. And I'd much rather have a smaller print run, you know, smaller finances that if the exchanges that you know, stays in print and treated respectfully because I'll tell you that big house, let my book go out of print the paper back and never told me. And so I had the humiliating experience of going into a, an appearance. He said, we want to get you a book, which book? I told a bunch book and they said, Oh, we called the publisher, it's not in print. And boy with that, that was awful.Jess:                             11:50                That would be a really embarrassing...Danielle:                       11:51                Beacon Press took the rights back and we publish their own paper back. But that was the case. They didn't even give me the courtesy of letting me know they're dropping it. So that's a difference I think between working with a medium sized press versus a big house and listen to the big houses are wonderful and they lots of great stuff. But for me I couldn't, I think stomach is ups and downs that a big house offers.KJ:                                12:12                So I want to come back to the question of how your professional colleagues received the idea of you as a nonacademic writer, because that feels in so many settings, and medicine is definitely one of them. It feels like that could be very fraud.Danielle:                       12:32                Well, I would say my immediate colleagues who are largely clinical and their academic in that they're all teaching, but most aren't doing research and research papers.KJ:                                12:41                Right. And I also want to note that this sort of predates the era of, you know, doctors write for the New Yorker and that makes, you know, and that's what they do and we love them. This was, you know, you were one of the early ones.Danielle:                       12:55                Yeah. So I would say my clinical colleagues actually find a lot of recognition in the writing and largely, you know are supportive because they see their own experiences reflected, which often don't get airtime any place else. I mean, academically I see where that plays a role is, you know, do I get promotion based on that? And that's definitely been a little bit fraud, your tenure, that kind of thing. Because that kind of running doesn't really count.KJ:                                13:21                No. Cause people read it. I mean, why would that, yeah. Right.Danielle:                       13:28                And it doesn't bring in grants and grant money. And so although lip service is paid to, you know, international recognition, yada, yada, yada. If it's not bringing in grant money and it's not the traditional publishing. No, I've published a lot in academic journals, but essays, so New England Journal of Medicine and the Lancet, all these big medical journals, but in their sort of essay perspectives in fact, the first time the New England Journal ever did it perspective, they refuse to do that sort of, you know, namby pamby you know, type of writing for the longest time. I was actually the first one they published, so it really took quite a risk with them. And so for the readership who would never seen that in those pages, that was a completely new piece I type of writing. And now that section is probably their most popular section. So I think it's been received well clinically, academically, probably not gonna get me tenure or promoted, but that's okay.Jess:                             14:22                One of the things I would love to know is where, how the Bellevue Literary Review got started and how you got involved in that, how you decided to start that and how it came about.Danielle:                       14:32                Well after I got back from my, you know, year and a half of traveling and started to write when I started back in the clinic, I really wanted to bring some of that writing in. Now what we do is as academics as, as teachers is we the students, medical students hand in their writeups about the patients, the history and physical. It's very, very jargony. And you know, once you've read 10 or 20 or 50 or a hundred, they all kind of start to sound the same. So I find, send them, listen guys, you're killing me from one of your write-ups in this semester. Just tell me the patient's story. Ask the patient, what's it like that emphysema, what was it like when the doctor first told you that diabetes? And I started getting these really fascinating essays that people would turn in. Really interesting and they were sort of stacking up on a file cabinet at the same time we did a new chair of medicine come in Marty blazer and he was having the students on the hospital awards write a 1000 word essay on anything. Philosophy, pathophysiology, economics along as inspired by patient, just kind of heretical for medical students writing an essay. Oh my goodness. You know, he started having his little stack of essays and the student colleagues that you guys ought to meet. He just come on. I just started working there. So we met and we had a respect of stack of essays and we thought, you know, we should make a journal. We thought about, you know, an in-house mimeograph student journal. But as we talked more, it became apparent that issues of medicine and health are really universal. And then you listen, you can get by in life and never need a plumber or an accountant or a lawyer if you're lucky, but you're never going to get by without interfacing with the medical system. And even if you are perfectly healthy, you care for a child, an elderly parent, you have a job visible, you will never get by without it. And I think that that also in genders a real existential fear in people that their body or their mind might betray them, you know? And they can't control that. And when you're in the medical system, you are, you're powerless. Many times you don't know often what's going on. You can't speak the language, you're freezing cold in a gown, you don't know what's going to cost and you're in pain or worried about your family members. So it's very hard to sort of hold onto yourself. And so we thought maybe it makes sense to have a journal that allows you to creative way to address this because you know, the top 10 tips or that bending osteoporosis doesn't really, I think address that kind of things. So we put out a two line call for submissions for poetry fiction, nonfiction on health and healing. And we've got a thousand submissions right off the bat.Jess:                             17:02                Wow.Danielle:                       17:03                We knew we tapped a nerve and they were not from medical people, from ordinary writers and now we get 4,000 submissions a year, all walks of life all over the world. And as our publisher likes to say, it's hard to be published in the BLR now than in the New England Journal of Medicine because we only can print, you know, a few of them. So I think there really isn't. And I think creativity and vulnerability really overlap and that great Venn diagram of how we write. And so it's not surprising that brushes with mortality and death and fear and worry help ignite some kind of passion, creativity and that comes out and poetry and fiction and creative nonfiction.Jess:                             17:40                I have a question that's actually related to what KJ used to do, which is you're dealing with these really grave, you know, many moments of mortality, these moments that are huge events in people's lives. And when you write about them, it can become incredibly precious to you. It can become so important to you that when, when/if you get rejected, it's not just a blow to your writing, it's a blow to like this experience you had in your life. And KJ used to get, you know, submissions about, you know, the death of a child or you know, these incredibly moving experiences. But for some reason or another, they're just not a great fit. How do you balance, you know, how do you go about communicating with your writers about the importance of an event and the way you write about it and creating sort of pieces that are not just people's therapy but that are really great works of writing.Danielle:                       18:41                It's a very interesting thing in particular that comes up in the realm of nonfiction because people are ready about their real experience and it is painful to reject a piece about their mother's Alzheimer's disease. And you know, when I, when I talk about this on panels, there's a difference between a moving experience and a moving piece of writing. They're not the same thing. And also it has to be more than just the particularities of here. I went to the doctor. This is what happened. It has to be transcendent. It has to rise above what actually happened to something that can connect to others. And so I do suggest that people, you know, read other things we've published or other, you know people who have written about enlist in a way that brings it beyond just the nuts and bolts of what happened. I also stressed that using the techniques of fiction is very helpful in terms of, not in terms of making things up because nonfiction is truth. But in terms of developing character and voice and setting and in drama and and pacing, you know, so often in nonfiction people are very, they applaud right along the way things go, but they don't have to be that way. It's still truthful if we cut back and forth in time and we have flash powers and flashbacks and we stretch moments and compressed moments because that's makes for more dramatic writing. In the actual rejections, I tried to be very gentle and we try when we can to offer feedback. Of course at that volume we can for everyone. So if you do get a fun letter, please forgive us. We're all volunteers, but we do try, we do have some that we think could be helpful. We'll include that in the rejection letter.Jess:                             20:11                That's incredibly generous of you given the volume, but also as you well know, incredibly helpful for a writer. I mean we, we cling to these pieces of, you know, even if it's just a one line piece of you know, this is promising, but you might want to whatever, those are pieces of that's feedback that we hold onto with great hope.Danielle:                       20:34                Yeah,I stress that a lot of it's subjective. And I have my own story. I had a piece that was ended up in the Missouri Review and went on to being the best American essays. Which was a huge honor. And so I got a letter from a professor of English in the Midwest and he's complimented in essence that he uses it in his teaching. And I was very honored and I look at the bottom of his email and his, you know, so-and-so pH D department, English editor of their, you know, literary journal. So I went back to my nice, huge rejection folders. I kept every rejection and in fact I submitted the very same piece to that journal. No, he wasn't then. He wasn't the editor then, but, and it stood out because that came back with post-it stuck on the thing. This is so dull, boring. You know. Again, it wasn't him, but it came back when someone left on those really negative projections and it was the same piece. So you know what, don't worry, it's not, it's like dating. You just gotta visit the numbers and someone's going gonna connect. And so it may not be, the is not good. It didn't fit in for me on this day. But try other places, you know, play the numbers game. Hold on. I just have to back up for a second. You got a rejection with actual post it notes from the person who read it and rejected it with the actual notes of what they said. I don't know if that was intentional, but there were, ah, and then the, the current editor stains are allowed to compliment me on this piece and how he uses it in his teaching. That's all a little satisfying. Oh, that's amazing. It didn't work at that moment. Just keep submitting.KJ:                                22:10                Now you're an editor yourself. So you know, you,Danielle:                       22:13                You got my other thing I do mention is you please do read the submission guidelines. If it says max 5,000 words, don't send a piece of 8,000 words. Yeah. Because it will be rejected. If it says we don't take PSI Phi, don't submit PSI Phi, you would be amazed. You know, we now have to charge a small reading. No, I wouldn't know. We wouldn't have to charge it a $5 meeting fee by our higher ups. We don't have to do, but we have to. Okay, so now you're paying $5 a submitted. Don't submit a piece that we rejected out of hand, you know. But it is all, all in is so common. Maximum three polling people send 10 poems and so I feel terrible. But you know, you do have to, with the submission guidelines, that's your end of the bargain as a writer.KJ:                                22:57                I know that our listeners are now going to be sort of madly Googling Bellevue Literary Review so talk to us about what you guys do publish, what your mission is, and how that has evolved.Danielle:                       23:15                Yeah. So we're looking for, to explore, you know, the issues of underlying health and illness and failty of the body and mind. We call it the journal of humanity, human experience and we interpret that loosely. So topic wise weren't fairly wide ranging, but the writing has to be excellent. That's our first thing. So fiction wise, we are fairly traditional. We do not do genre fiction, romance. We don't, we rarely do flash fiction. We stay away from gimicky writing things that have lots of, you know, 20 different kinds of headings and numbers. You know, I feel like the writing should stand on its own. It has to read like a great short story and it has to be character driven. I've got to feel a need to want to follow this character. So our, our that's our fiction or nonfiction has to be more than just what I did when I went to the doctor.Danielle:                       24:10                It has to rise above that and somehow and, and be applicable to other people or it has to have the same beauty of writing a fiction does it. And it's not academic. We don't take things with footnotes or extensive quotes from 20 different sources and we want your thoughts and your exploration of an issue. And for poetry, we prize accessibility. So again, we do not do, while the experimental stuff, you know, as a unusual literary journal, for many people, we're the only literal journal they've ever read because a lot of our readers are not English lit people. They don't subscribe to 20 literary journals, but they have an interest in medicine and that's how they come to us. So for this audience, we weren't poems they can read and not be intimidated by it. So we tend to stick again a little more traditionally on the poetry that someone who's not an English lit major can read and say, Oh, that, that connects to me.Jess:                             24:59                What I would love to know is how you balance you obviously do your own writing, your working as a physician and so how do you balance these two things and what is your daily or weekly routine look like?KJ:                                25:13                And she's reading all these submissionsJess:                             25:15                and reading all this review.Danielle:                       25:17                That's exactly right. And I will say we also have reviewers who help us weed through the initial slush pile because we can't read all 4,000 ourselves.KJ:                                25:26                That's almost worse because then you're left with you know, 40 things that are all good enough to be in there and the process of figuring out which eight to put together. .Danielle:                       25:36                Exactly. But so anyway, so back when I started, as I mentioned, I ended up on a part time track because that's all that was available. So the full time slot eventually opened up and I said that actually get married and I thought long and hard about going full time, my salary would double because part timers are prorated on the shabbier side of things as you probably know. But I've thought about what would I do if I had twice as much money tomorrow? Well I still couldn't afford an apartment in New York city. You know, I couldn't buy anything. I don't need a car. I have clothes such as they are. And I recognize that the one thing I'd want is that one thing money really can't buy and that's time. So I feel like I kind of bought time by turning down the full time offer and to this day or made 60% off, not happenstance on day one.Danielle:                       26:21                If they sit here and go sign up for the full time as everyone else does, this wouldn't have happened. So I'm 60% of my time in the hospital the equivalent of of six half days, you know, strangely abortion. And then my other time is writing legal. Of course I had three kids in there. So, you know, taking them to the dock, doing everything else in life ends up in that time. So often, you know, your writing time gets eaten away cause you don't leave work to do these things. You take it out of your own time. But I try to, if I can get one or two snippets of writing for an hour or so a week, I'm happy that that's success. And then, you know, the BLR and, and everything else. I took up cello lessons about 13 years ago and that's my will.Danielle:                       27:06                The one thing that I pursue outside of all of this, you know, because I just, I can't, I'm too embarrassed show up to my teacher without having practice. So I'm the goody two shoes, medical student and I practice every night, but I'll go to the gym. I don't see anything else. And I don't watch, I haven't watched a TV show since ER you know, all of that. So I leave pop culture, I leave up to my kids, but so that's, that's kind of how I do it. And then, you know I get rid of everything else. Like my goal in life is to never set foot in a store unless voluntarily. So I ordered it line. I don't want to spend any time shopping unless I want to. So I don't spend my weekends ever going to, you know, stores. I don't really care about my clothes are 20 years old. That's fine, you know, unless I feel like doing it, but not for for necessities.KJ:                                27:56                But you're writing what feel like these densely researched they're interview intense books where you really both telling your own story and telling a thoughtful story about what's happening in the medical profession and wrapping that within the, you know, the story often of a particular case or a particular doctor, one to two hours a week. My mind is boggling, does that include the research?Danielle:                       28:28                Yeah. Everything that, it also depends. I mean I do a lot of traveling, so airplane time is writing time, airport time. You know, often I'll get more writing time in there. But my goal was to have like at least choose two to three sessions where I gets a, you know, a little time of writing. And hopefully more than that, it can be two or three hours, but sometimes it's not. I also did two years that I took off from work. So I took off a year, let's see, my daughter, youngest is 13, so 13 years ago we went to Costa Rica for a year. I quit my job. We took our two kids at the time. I actually had my baby there and we've done a novel, which then turned into a book instead of a novel. And then six years ago we took a year and went to Israel and I worked on what doctors feel and that was really wonderful. I'm gonna talk about a luxury of having, you know, be able to write five days in a row and keep a train of thought. That was, I would love to do it again, but I think I would lose my job.Jess:                             29:28                That's actually what I was gonna mention when KJ said the thing about two hours for me. If I don't have more time than that, I find it very difficult for them to pick up where I left off to continue a train of thought to, you know, continue forward knowing where I'm headed next. So huge respect for being able to pull this stuff together cause your writing is so lovely and your narrative is so seamless. It doesn't, it feels like you're fully immersed in your writing. So I don't know. I'm so impressed.Danielle:                       29:56                Thank you. It's short pieces for that very reason. You know, to write the larger thing takes a chunk of time. Sometimes I will try to block out, you know, for the next month, try to schedule nothing on my writing time so I can write for four hours, you know, several times a week.KJ:                                30:11                Well that's what I was going to ask you. Do you schedule the writing time? Like do you know when your next sessions are going to be? Do you sit down at the beginning of the week or the end of the week and figure out when that's going to fit in?Danielle:                       30:21                No, I mean I know when I'm not in the hospital so that's my starting point. But then things, you know, things fill in. But I try to, each of my time, not in the hospital, at least have some time toward writing. But of course writing also involved, you know, social media and publicity that you have to do a lot on your own and a lot of that, you know, work these days is on, on the writer. So there's that part as well.KJ:                                30:43                Well, and you have a, I mean, you have a new book coming out this spring that you did not get to take a break to write. And I'll just, we'll, we'll put it on our website of course, and talk about it more, but it's called When We Do No Harm, a Doctor Confronts Medical Error. And I'm just taking, you know, a wild swing at the idea that that was not easy to research or write, it's not something people want to talk about.Danielle:                       31:06                Yeah. That is true. That, that it's been several sorts, taken several years to, to write. But people were also remarkably generous, you know, once you find someone who likes to talk and just get on those interviews, you know, am I a non-hospital afternoons or mornings or days? Yeah. and then I try not to do it on weekends, but really when I do a lot of travel, I catch up a lot on writing it, you know, even five hours on a plane, I couldn't ask for anything more. Now some people hate it. I think it's the most ideal luxury.KJ:                                31:39                Yeah, that's, that's the way it works for me too. I have to agree. I just spent intentionally seven hours on a train on Monday and Tuesday for exactly that reason. I mean, I was going somewhere that I wanted to go, but I wouldn't have gone if it wasn't also for that seven hours.Danielle:                       31:54                I've gone there and back to California in two days and I don't give, it isn't all, I'm like, I don't mind that all, man. I have two days in a row to have all this time, you know, with no one bothering you. It's wonderful. So I would fly back and forth across the country if someone would would fund me on that.KJ:                                32:07                There's a story in Deep Work about someone who took a flight to Japan, drank a cup of coffee, got back on the flight and then flew back because he had like, you know, a massive deadline to complete an entire book. And I felt such sympathy. I was like, yeah, yeah, I could do that. That would be a good way to do it.Danielle:                       32:35                Yeah, I do really, I would say Amtrak up and down the East coast. Yes.KJ:                                32:40                I want that Amtrak residency. There you go. That's exactly, yeah. That's exactly where I was for my seven and a half hours. DSLR Boston, New York, New York to Boston.Jess:                             32:52                Alright. You're all helping me reorient my thinking about all the travel and how I'm going to get all the work done. So now, now that it's clear that my,KJ:                                32:59                Well, you're getting ready for what you do when you get there, it is different.Jess:                             33:03                At the same time, I do tend to think of airplane time as, Ooh, I get to listen to an audio book for two whole hours, but now I'm going to reorient and think of it as two hours that I can be spending writing.Danielle:                       33:15                I don't have as much time to read novels. I mean that, that I do have to say between writing manuscripts and writing and listening to audio books, I have to, you know, shelve a few things and unfortunate that often gets shelved. Yeah.Jess:                             33:29                Yeah. Well actually speaking of which we love to spend some time at the end of each podcast talking about what we've been reading. Do you have something you've been enjoying recently?Danielle:                       33:38                So we did have a weekend away and I was in a thrift store and I saw for $1 an EL doctor's book, Ragtime, which I had never read it. You know, I should really read that and I paid my dollar and read it cover to cover in a weekend and just loved it. What am I, I know he's a master, but to sort of be in the clutches of someone who just puts you through that story, no holds barred, it's an amazing experienceJess:                             34:02                That's going to have to go on my list because I have to admit I haven't read that one either. It's one of those books that sort of sits around on the periphery of my consciousness and I've never picked it up so I will have to read that one too.Danielle:                       34:13                Yeah, it goes by very quickly.Jess:                             34:14                KJ, what have you been reading?KJ:                                34:17                I also haven't had, I've been doing pretty intense writing so I haven't had a lot of reading time and I have spent what I have rereading Deep Work by Cal Newport, not Rivkin, although I'm sure he's written something maybe. And you know, it's just, it's one of those books that keeps it, you know 10 minutes in there keeps me focused when I'm you know, when I put the book aside. So I've been rereading it, we've recommended it a zillion times and here I am shouting it out again.Jess:                             34:51                I talked about Deep Work on a podcast with someone else yesterday. It, it comes up all the time for me. I love that book. I am reading, I'm reading two very interesting things. I I was, did an interview in which I punted a question back to the host who asked it of me because I was not up on all of the research on marijuana use and mental illness. And there is now a new book. It just came out by Alex Berenson who writes for the New York Times and various other outlets and it is a book called Tell Your Children the Truth About Marijuana, Mental Illness and Violence. And I'm sure there is going to be a lot to argue about with this book, but it's a really interesting perspective on Alex Berenson had a conversation with his spouse about the, of marijuana use and said, you know, sort of led him down the rabbit hole as it so often does and he decided to write an entire book about it. So now I at least don't have to punt that question. Next time I get asked about marijuana use and mental illness on a podcast because I've now read an entire book about it and it's really interesting and in the same vein, I'm just starting and it's great. Ben Westhoff's new book, Fentanyl, Inc and that one I believe is just about to come out. It should be out by the time this podcast airs. And it's for those people who don't know what fentanyl is, it's the drug that's causing so many drug overdoses because it's sneaking in to so many other drugs, usually heroin. And it's the story of how fentanyl ended up in the drug supply. And it's a fascinating story. I highly recommend it.Danielle:                       36:28                Yeah, just add, I read the recent a New Yorker story by Salman Rushdie calls Little King and he has a new book coming out. This is an excerpt, but fentanyl and the opioid crisis are woven into his story in a remote essay. And so I can't wait for that book to come out.Jess:                             36:45                Oh, I'll have to check that out. Absolutely. do you have an independent bookstore that you love and would love to give a shout out to?Danielle:                       36:53                Oh, I just love The Strand.Jess:                             36:55                You and me and KJ, all of us, we love The Strand. What do you love about it?Danielle:                       37:00                Well, as a student I would pass by there my bike on the way to medical school all the time and pick up those $1 books, you know, all the time. So I just love being able to afford the books. But then I as an author experience the effect of independent bookstore when for what doctors feel my book once death, never put it out as a staff pit and left it out for a year. And we sold copies in that one bookstore than any bookstore in the entire country. It was more than a thousand copies in one store because one staff member put it out there. And I so appreciated that personal touch was all it took. And so I did the opening of my next book at strand. Because I was so happy to be part of that kind of community.Jess:                             37:45                It makes such a huge difference. Our local bookstore did the same thing for the Gift of Failure. It was on a book, you know, it was sort of on the, it wasn't like, Oh, here, here's a little charity for our local author. It was like, we love this book. Here it is. You should read it. And that makes such a huge difference in book sales because the, you know, independent booksellers really have power to move books. It's amazing.Danielle:                       38:06                Oh yeah, absolutely. And so in a BLR, we try to also give shout outs to our authors who have published books. So anyone who's been in the BLR, and that includes you, KJ, if you have, you know, new book coming out, let us know. We will not run on social media and send it around, including on newsletter because we, we know how much those little, you know, boosts help and every little bit helps in today's publishing world.Jess:                             38:28                That's incredibly generous of you. And it means so much to writers to get a shout ou like that. All right. If people would like to find your work. And I do have to mention, you have a wonderful Ted med talk on sort of deconstructing our perceptions of perfection that I think could also be really helpful for writers. I really enjoyed it from the perspective as a writer and thinking about perfection. But if people want to find out about your books, about your Ted, talk about the articles you write, where can they find you?Danielle:                       38:59                My website is just Danielleofri.com. I keep all my writings there on my Ted talks and various things. I also send out a newsletter once a month with new articles. I have a new piece coming out in a week or so, kind of writing about the experience of doctors and nurses in the hospital and, and their perception of their own profession and how it may have not upheld its ideals. So I send that out to non-commercial. And I also talk a little about the Bellevue Literary Review. So if you want to hear that, you know, give me a shout.Jess:                             39:28                Well, and that was what I was going to ask next. If someone wants to find the Bellevue Literary Review either to read or subscribe or to submit, where would, where would we send people for that?Danielle:                       39:38                The blreview.org. Although in the past, a new website coming. So if you get on there now, you might your old one, but the new one is coming soon. So but if you're on my newsletter, you'll hear, you'll hear about it also.Jess:                             39:52                Fantastic. All right, well thank you. This has been incredibly enlightening. This is also been a big hole in our knowledge of the whole, you know, academic and I'm just so grateful to you for all of your knowledge and for the writing that you do, so thank you.Danielle:                       40:06                Well, thank you. It's been a pleasure.Jess:                             40:08                All right, all of our listeners, until next week, keep your button, the chair and your head in the game.KJ:                                40:21                This episode of #AmWriting with Jess and KJ was produced by Andrew Perella. Our music aptly titled Unemployed Monday was written and performed by Max Cohen. Andrew and Max were paid for their services because everyone, even creatives, should be paid for their work. This is a public episode. Get access to private episodes at amwriting.substack.com/subscribe

Ann Kroeker, Writing Coach
Ep 190: [Interview] Author & Literary Agent Jeff Herman

Ann Kroeker, Writing Coach

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2019 52:44


Today I'm chatting with author and literary agent Jeff Herman. Jeff's literary agency has ushered nearly one thousand books into print. He's the coauthor of the acclaimed Write the Perfect Book Proposal and is often featured as an expert in print and broadcast media. Jeff provides insider insight that will give you hope that it's possible to see your words in print. When you get a chance, check out his resource: Jeff Herman's Guide to Book Publishers, Editors & Literary Agents, 28th edition. Here's a taste of what he passed along today: "The first myth is that just because you're in New York or the vicinity of New York you have a crucial advantage over someone from Indiana or Alaska. It's really not true. The walls that publishing creates obstruct everyone equally. It's not a matter of geography. It's just a matter of access." "Now, of course, with digital communications, which to a great extent has displaced hard copy and to a certain extent has even displaced telephones and in person communications, I think that has done a lot to equalize the playing field." "The rules are not really true. They're really preferences. The walls are porous, if that's the right word. These walls are not metal plated; it's more like Swiss cheese. And it's a big illusion that you can't get through these walls. The illusion is very useful for agents and editors. It works for us. But it doesn't work for you, the writer, and ultimately it doesn't work for the editors or agents because it does in effect lock out a lot of good people. But that's why we need to be very tenacious and not let the agents or the editors individually or collectively tell you that you are not publishable. Because they don't know. They think they know—they may know what's right for them—but nobody can speak for the industry as a whole." "What I enjoy is working with the writer to make them as good as they can be and helping them to achieve their goals. I like to see the results of our good work together. I like to see that the book gets acquired by a publisher, that it gets published, and that it sells copies, and all the benefits that accrue to the author. I really feel then that I'm serving a purpose by helping the client and the publisher and the reader get all these beneficial results. And that's what I see as the dream situation where we're all working together as a well-oiled machine." Jeff Herman is the author of Write the Perfect Book Proposal and Jeff Herman's Guide to Book Publishers, Editors & Literary Agents, 28th edition. Resources: Website: jeffherman.com Publisher's Marketplace (Jeff mentioned the subscription you can get through them) Jeff Herman's Guide to Book Publishers, Editors & Literary Agents, 28th Edition (affiliate link) Write the Perfect Book Proposal: 10 That Sold and Why (Third Edition) (affiliate link) Jennifer Dukes Lee interview Alison Hodgson interview Shawn Smucker interview Patrice Gopo interview Ann's Patreon account All podcast episodes You can subscribe to this podcast using your podcast player or find it through Apple podcasts, Stitcher, or Spotify.

Ann Kroeker, Writing Coach
Ep 190: [Interview] Author & Literary Agent Jeff Herman

Ann Kroeker, Writing Coach

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2019 52:44


Today I’m chatting with author and literary agent Jeff Herman. Jeff’s literary agency has ushered nearly one thousand books into print. He’s the coauthor of the acclaimed Write the Perfect Book Proposal and is often featured as an expert in print and broadcast media. Jeff provides insider insight that will give you hope that it’s possible to see your words in print. When you get a chance, check out his resource: Jeff Herman’s Guide to Book Publishers, Editors & Literary Agents, 28th edition. Here's a taste of what he passed along today: "The first myth is that just because you’re in New York or the vicinity of New York you have a crucial advantage over someone from Indiana or Alaska. It’s really not true. The walls that publishing creates obstruct everyone equally. It’s not a matter of geography. It’s just a matter of access." "Now, of course, with digital communications, which to a great extent has displaced hard copy and to a certain extent has even displaced telephones and in person communications, I think that has done a lot to equalize the playing field." "The rules are not really true. They’re really preferences. The walls are porous, if that’s the right word. These walls are not metal plated; it’s more like Swiss cheese. And it’s a big illusion that you can’t get through these walls. The illusion is very useful for agents and editors. It works for us. But it doesn’t work for you, the writer, and ultimately it doesn’t work for the editors or agents because it does in effect lock out a lot of good people. But that’s why we need to be very tenacious and not let the agents or the editors individually or collectively tell you that you are not publishable. Because they don’t know. They think they know—they may know what’s right for them—but nobody can speak for the industry as a whole." "What I enjoy is working with the writer to make them as good as they can be and helping them to achieve their goals. I like to see the results of our good work together. I like to see that the book gets acquired by a publisher, that it gets published, and that it sells copies, and all the benefits that accrue to the author. I really feel then that I’m serving a purpose by helping the client and the publisher and the reader get all these beneficial results. And that’s what I see as the dream situation where we’re all working together as a well-oiled machine." Jeff Herman is the author of Write the Perfect Book Proposal and Jeff Herman’s Guide to Book Publishers, Editors & Literary Agents, 28th edition. Resources: Website: jeffherman.com Publisher's Marketplace (Jeff mentioned the subscription you can get through them) Jeff Herman's Guide to Book Publishers, Editors & Literary Agents, 28th Edition (affiliate link) Write the Perfect Book Proposal: 10 That Sold and Why (Third Edition) (affiliate link) Jennifer Dukes Lee interview Alison Hodgson interview Shawn Smucker interview Patrice Gopo interview Ann's Patreon account All podcast episodes You can subscribe to this podcast using your podcast player or find it through Apple podcasts, Stitcher, or Spotify.

Work Alchemy: The Impact Interviews-Ursula Jorch chats with Seth Godin, Marianne Williamson, Martha Beck, Prince Ea & others

Deal-maker for over 1000 book authors, literary agent Jeff Herman talks about his latest book and what you need to know to get published.

MoneyForLunch
Jeff Herman - How To Get A Literary Agent

MoneyForLunch

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2019 33:00


Jeff Herman’s literary agency has ushered nearly one thousand books into print. He is the coauthor of the acclaimed Write the Perfect Book Proposal and is often featured as an expert in print and broadcast media. He lives in Stockbridge, MA. You can find out more about his work at www.JeffHerman.com.   Watch my Celebrity interviews on my YouTube Channel! Go here> https://goo.gl/EA9x6D Connect with Bert Martinez on Facebook. Connect with Bert Martinez on Twitter.

Beyond 50 Radio Show
EPISODE 883 - Book Publishers, Editors, and Literary Agents: Who They Are, What They Want, and How to Win Them Over

Beyond 50 Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2018 50:43


For Beyond 50's "Literary" talks, listen to an interview with Jeff Herman. He is every writer's best friend as a veteran literary agent. Find out about the future of traditional publishing, self-publishing trends, where social media is headed and more. He can also explain how agents work, writing the perfect query letter, and advice to handling contracts wisely. You'll also learn things like how to hire a freelance editor, spotting a scam, along with trademark accuracy and reliability. Tune in to Beyond 50: America's Variety Talk Radio Show on the natural, holistic, green and sustainable lifestyle. Visit Beyond 50 Radio (https://www.Beyond50Radio.com) and sign up for our Exclusive Updates.

radio publishers literary editors literary agents jeff herman visit beyond beyond50radio america's variety talk radio show
Author2Author
Author2Author with Jeff Herman

Author2Author

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2018 34:00


Bill welcomes author and literary agent Jeff Herman to the show. Jeff opened his literary agency in the mid-1980s while in his mid-20s. He has made nearly one-thousand book deals, including many bestsellers. His own books include JEFF HERMAN’S GUIDE TO PUBLISHERS, EDITORS & LITERARY AGENTS (more than 500,000 copies sold), and WRITE THE PERFECT BOOK PROPOSAL (coauthored with Deborah Herman). He has presented hundreds of workshops about writing and publishing, and has been interviewed for dozens of publications and programs. Don't miss a great conversation with this industry insider.

Mr. Media Interviews by Bob Andelman
819 Jeff Herman, literary agent, author, "Jeff Herman's Guide to Book Publishers, Editors & Literary Agents," "Write the Perfect Book Propos

Mr. Media Interviews by Bob Andelman

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2018 44:41


If you’ve ever written or thought about writing a book—unagented—Jeff Herman’s Guide to Book Publishers, Editors & Literary Agents: Who They Are, What They Want, How to Win Them Over is the one book you must own and study. If you only know me as the host of this podcast, you may not know that I make my living as a co-author of more than 15 books. Jeff and his wife Deborah Herman also wrote another important book : Write the Perfect Book Proposal.

Crime Stories with Nancy Grace
Exclusive: Nancy Grace talks to lawyer who filed sex assault lawsuits against Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein & director Brian Singer

Crime Stories with Nancy Grace

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2017 51:59


Jeff Herman is a lawyer known for filing controversial sex assault lawsuits. His latest include two lawsuits against Hollywood super-producer Harvey Weinstein and another against X-Men director Brian Singer. Herman discusses these cases with Nancy Grace in this Crime Stories episode. Grace also questions Herman about a rape accusation filed against him two decades ago that is only now surfacing. Los Angeles psycho analyst Dr. Bethany Marshall and RadarOnline.com reporter Alexis Tereszcuk join Grace and Herman in this episode.

Mr. Media Interviews by Bob Andelman
396 Jeff Herman, literary agent, author," Jeff Herman's Guide to Book Publishers, Editors, and Literary Agents"

Mr. Media Interviews by Bob Andelman

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2017 30:03


From 2010: One of the best resources for the established or wannabe book author is still keeping a copy of Jeff Herman’s Guide to Book Publishers, Editors, & Literary Agents on your desk. The 2012 edition is hot off the press. I have recommended Herman’s book to authors in much the same way I recommend the Writer’s Market from Writer’s Digest to freelance writers interested in exploring article writing. Both are invaluable desktop references, one best for books, one for articles.

Business Writers Radio
Jeff Herman with The Jeff Herman Agency

Business Writers Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2017


Jeff Herman / The Jeff Herman Agency Literary Agent Jeff Herman opened his literary agency in the mid-1980s while in his mid-20s. He has made nearly one-thousand book deals, including many bestsellers. His own books include JEFF HERMAN S GUIDE TO PUBLISHERS, EDITORS & LITERARY AGENTS (more than 500,000 copies sold), and WRITE THE PERFECT BOOK […] The post Jeff Herman with The Jeff Herman Agency appeared first on Business RadioX ®.

The Food Chain
The Plankton Problem

The Food Chain

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2017 26:29


You've swallowed many of them throughout your life without realising, and some look like aliens: we look at plankton, the sea's smallest living creatures that have a big global impact. At the centre of the food web, and responsible for most of the air we breathe, these microscopic plants and animals are eaten by fish in our seas, which are eaten by bigger creatures, and eventually eaten by humans. But what happens when new problems hit these ancient critters, which have existed for millions of years? And how does it affect our health - and our plates? We speak to Jeff Herman in the US, whose skin was left crawling and in sweats after he got Ciguatera food poisoning from eating a hogfish. He tells us how his nightmarish symptoms were linked to toxins created by plankton. We share a voyage with the crew in charge of the world's oldest plankton recorder in Plymouth, England. They have been monitoring the world's seas since the 1930s to check on the health of these tiny creatures so vital to our food chain. Plankton scientists tell the BBC's Emily Thomas that new types of plankton not seen since the Ice Age are moving in - prompting questions around how plankton will adapt to new challenges like pollution and climate change. And what would you do if the sea around you turned bright red? So-called red tides can blight seasides and devastate fishing industries from Florida to the South China Sea. Hong Kong journalist Ernest Kao tells us about the devastation created by an overpopulation of algae, another kind of plankton. And Professor Lora Fleming tells us about the movements and patterns of these tiny creatures, how toxins from some can skew with your sense of hot and cold, and how new research is helping us to harness the power of plankton in a more sustainable way. (Image: Man swimming towards a 'red tide' or algal bloom in Sydney. Credit: William West/ ThinkStock )

Team Guru Podcast
027 - The Age of Content Marketing - Jeff Herman

Team Guru Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2016 58:42


We live in the age of content marketing. ‘Publish or Perish’ is its mantra. But who should publish? What should they be publishing. How? My guest this episode of the podcast is Jeff Herman. It’s his mission to help people and organisations adjust and thrive in this brave new world. Whether you run a small business, think of yourself as an entrepreneur or work in a large organisation, Jeff will convince you of the importance of becoming a creator of useful, authentic content. He tells us who – individuals, businesses, industries - should be creating content and what they should be producing. And he gives us some key insight into the difference between someone who publishes to create value…and someone who is a desperate product pusher. Enjoy!

Adaptive Path Podcast
UX Week 2007 | Collaborating with Customers: Leveraging Design and Research Methods for Customer Success

Adaptive Path Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2008 41:41


Millions of people from around the world come to eBay every day, and the eBay user experience design group applies a range of design and research methodologies to understand and address the perceptions and needs of its widely varied customer base. Jeff Herman and Ann Bishop will co-lead this session, sharing some of their methods for collaborating with eBay’s customers and exploring the ways in which they use customer insights to inform specific design solutions. In this session, you will gain a better understanding of how to: * Engage customers throughout the design process. * Apply new methods to address a wide range of customer goals and needs. * Seamlessly blend design and customer research to contribute to your success. About Jeff Herman Jeff leads eBay’s UI and Visual Design group, which is responsible for the design of eBay’s sites around the world. He has over 20 years of experience as a designer at Apple, Yahoo! and the MIT Media Lab, and he has been a guest speaker at CHI, BayCHI and various university design programs. Jeff holds a master’s degree in Media Arts and Sciences from the MIT Media Lab and a bachelor’s degree in Business Administration from the University of Texas at Austin, and he has received 10 patents. He is also on the Advisory Board of an early-stage Silicon Valley startup. About Ann Bishop Ann manages the Content Strategy practice at eBay, which is responsible for the strategic direction and execution of eBay’s interface content globally. As one of the first user experience architects at eBay, Ann continues to bring a holistic design approach to her work, and she is leading efforts to define content strategy as a design practice rooted in human-centered design methodology, including user research, concept development and execution. Ann has over 15 years experience designing interactive content for companies such as Microsoft, Travelocity and Yahoo!. She holds a BA in English from the University of California, Berkeley.