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This is an amazing episode with De Wolfe CEO, Joel Feinberg. Joel's journey from a musician balancing his career in the heart of NYC to becoming the CEO of de Wolfe Music USA is nothing short of inspirational. With over two decades of experience in the industry, Joel's insights are pure gold! In this captivating episode, we explore everything from the art of business development in the sync world to the visionary legacy of de Wolfe Music, one of the world's first sync libraries. Joel shares his wisdom on what it truly means to be a confident composer, the common pitfalls that composers face, and why some labels may never give your music a chance. Discover where the sync industry is heading and why embracing being "productively uncomfortable" might just be the key to your success. Tune in now to "Sync Gems" and elevate your understanding of the music sync world! Connect with Joel: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joel-feinberg-b1a0632/ https://www.dewolfemusic.com
Joel is........someone who embodies the joy of running. After first jogging with his mom in the cornfields of Indiana, he found his passion for racing and started working at a run shop in high school. After walking on to the IU Cross Country Team, he eventually graduated with a degree in marketing, and became a brand ambassador for Cliff Bar. Always heeding the call to adventure, he bought the Universal Soles Running shop from his buddy in 2008, and proceeded to create a loyal community around fun run events. With online shopping and Amazon starting to eat into his profit margins, he eventually closed the shop in 2017 and turned Universal Soles into an event based organization. The annual Burgers and Beer Fun Run was so loved by locals that it gradually took over Soldier Field, and this year has pivoted to a Twilight Trail Run edition that will take place on August 7th on the Palos Trails outside of Chicago, with big grills & partnership with craft beer company Solemn Oath. As someone who has run 5 Chicago Marathons, helped bring charity Back on my Feet to Chicago, and has served roles with the running organization CARA and the Lakeview Chamber of Commerce, Joel is someone who truly champions the sport of running, for solely the joy and fun of it all. Catch him at one of our Wednesday 6:30 runs (https://www.universalsole.com/) (https://www.meetup.com/local-voices-chicago/) and experience the cathartic effect of gathering with running friends.
***Reposting this podcast with fixed audio. We had a glitch when we rendered this one in Premiere Pro where it sounded fine in the program, but the rendered file had a terrible audio echo. Josh missed it because he was in a hurry and didn't check the rendered file before uploading, and then went on sabbatical. Sorry about that! Now we know to not skip that quality control check. Because of the nature of the problem we couldn't make this a perfect mix, so it's a little worse audio than usual, but the echo is gone so it's way easier to listen to now. Thanks for your patience!*** Josh Brahm and Rachel Crawford dive deeper into the pro-choice argument regarding back-alley abortions than we ever have before on ERI. Topics include understanding why this argument is particularly persuasive to pro-choice people, the most persuasive responses, several bad pro-life responses, and how some pro-abortion-choice advocates lied about this before Roe vs. Wade. A good question to ask: “Do you think like I do, that abortion is an unjust act of violence against an innocent person? If you don’t, that’s okay and we should talk about that. But I do, and so it affects the way I think about these questions. Can you think of one other example where we should keep an unjust act of violence legal to make it safer for a perpetrator to do it anyway?” Mary Anne Warren: “The fact that restricting access to abortion has tragic side effects does not, in itself, show that restrictions are unjustified, since murder is wrong regardless of the consequences of prohibiting it.” Source: “On the Moral and Legal Status of Abortion,” in The Problem of Abortion, Joel Feinberg, et al, Wadsworth, 1984, p.103 Mary Calderone: “Abortion is no longer a dangerous procedure. This applies not just to therapeutic abortions as performed in hospitals but also to so-called illegal abortions as done by physicians . . . Second, and even more important, the conference estimated that 90 per cent of all illegal abortions are presently being done by physicians, trained as such; and many of them are in good standing in their communities. They must do a pretty good job if the death rate is as low as it is.” Source: “Illegal Abortion as a Public Health Problem,” American Journal of Health 50 (July I960): 949 Afred Kinsey source: Cincinnati, Ohio: Hayes Publishing Co, 1988), 169. Dr. Bernard Nathanson: “It was always '5,000 to 10,000 deaths a year,' I confess that I knew the figures were totally false, and I suppose the others did too if they stopped to think of it. But in the 'morality' of our revolution, it was a useful figure, widely accepted, so why go out of our way to correct it with honest statistics? The overriding concern was to get the laws [against abortion] eliminated, and anything within reason that had to be done was permissible.” Source: Aborting America, New York, Doubleday, 1979, 193 Dr. Christopher Tietze, chief statistician for, among others, Planned Parenthood and the CDC at the time: “Some 30 years ago it was judged that [illegal abortion] deaths might number 5,000 to 10,000 per year, but this rate, even if it was approximately correct at the time, cannot be anywhere near the true rate now. The total number of deaths from ALL causes among women of reproductive age in the U.S. is not more than about 50,000 per year. The National Center for Health Statistics listed 235 deaths from abortion in 1965. Total mortality from illegal abortions was undoubtedly larger than that figure, but in all likelihood it was under 1,000.” Source: Scientific America, volume 220 in 1969 Related Links: We referenced a graphic image of Gerri Santoro's body, who died because of an illegal abortion in 1964. Then picture is circulated in textbooks today, and it was also published in Ms. Magazine in 1973. Here's a link to the Wikipedia article about her, that includes the famous picture. Graphic picture warning, both for blood and for nudity: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerri_Santoro Abortion Images: A Case for Disagreement without Division Podcast: Should Women be Punished if Abortion Becomes Illegal? Podcast: Response to Pro-Choice Propaganda Bodily Rights Arguments Necessitate Extremism Is Abortion 14 Times Safer Than Childbirth? Video Version: https://youtu.be/LI7Zdggb8kY Fetus Tunnel Vision: 4 Reasons Pro-Lifers Need to Stop Doing This Back Alley Abortion Arguments in 5 Minutes
Claudia talks to Valéry Giroux about liberty and how it relates to animals and the law. Valéry unpacks some of the debates and tensions that arise when thinking about liberty, the different types of liberty there are and also how she envisions the law could better serve animals' freedom by acknowledging them as persons with rights. Date recorded: 26 June 2020Guest: Valéry Giroux has an academic training in law and is a doctor in philosophy. She is one of the two coordinators of the Center for research in ethics (a Quebec interuniversity center), where she does research in animal ethics. She is also an adjunct professor at the Faculty of Law of University of Montreal, and a Fellow of the Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics. She regularly gives conferences and speaks in the media about animal rights, animal ethics and veganism. She is the author of the books Contre l'exploitation animale (L'Âge d'homme) and Le Véganisme (Puf, co-authored), both published in 2017. In the same collection as the latter, she just published another book, this one on antispeciesism. Host: Claudia Hirtenfelder is a PhD Candidate in Geography and Planning at Queen's University and is currently undertaking her own research project that looks at the historical relationships between animals and cities. Connect with her on Twitter (@ClaudiaFTowne).Featured readings: The Rights of Animals and Unborn Generation (1974) by Joel Feinberg; Created from Animals: The Moral Implications of Darwinism (1991) by James Rachels; Welfare, Happiness, and Ethics (1999) by L.W. Sumner; The Animal Question: Why Nonhuman Animals Deserve Human Rights (2004) by Paola Cavalieri; Zoopolis. A Political Theory of Animal Rights (2013) by Sue Donaldson and Will Kymlicka; Animal Rights Without Liberation. Applied Ethics and Human Obligations (2012) and Sentientist Politics. A Theory of Global Inter-Species Justice (2018) by Alsadair Cochrane;
On this episode DeWolfe CEO NA Joel Feinberg talks with host Jason Godbey about his experience during the pandemic and the opportunities that exist for creators in the wake of COVID-19. Edited by Sergio Beltran Show Theme by Christopher Gillard Created by Jason Godbey
We start with the arrogance of John Adams. We end with the first amendment.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/CuriousInsights)
On this episode Joel Feinberg, CEO of DeWolfe Music USA talks about the ins and outs of music licensing with host Jason Godbey. Edited by Sergio Beltran Show Theme by Christopher Gillard Associate Producer Adonis Tsilimparis Created by Jason Godbey
A free-form discussion drawing on Stanley Fish's “There’s No Such Thing as Free Speech, and It’s a Good Thing, Too” (1994), Joel Feinberg’s “Limits to the Free Expression of Opinion” (1975), and other sources. What are the legitimate limits on free speech? Feinberg delves into the harm and offense principles. Fish argues that every claim to free speech has ideological assumptions actually favoring some types of speech baked into it. A lively back and forth ensues!
Aaron speaks with the CEO of DeWolfe Music USA, Joel Feinberg. Joel discusses some of the key areas most musicians seem to get wrong when it comes to licensing music, the nature of production and library music and much more. For more information on How To License Your Music Premium, visit http://www.htlympremium.com/ For more information about DeWolfe Music, visit http://dewolfemusic.com/
As a rep for the world's largest music library, Joel can get you anything. This week he talks to Brent about what the job is like and the path that lead him there.
Philosophy professor Jonathan Wolff discusses 19th century classical liberal thinker John Stuart Mill’s famous ‘harm’ principle
Transcript -- Philosophy professor Jonathan Wolff discusses 19th century classical liberal thinker John Stuart Mill’s famous ‘harm’ principle