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Jacob Gurvis on Jews in sports today, author of "The Jewish Sports Report" on JTA and contributing writer to Major League Baseball
Should priests and rabbis have something to say about policy? Is it the role of ministers and imams to speak on matters of politics and partisanship? Rabbi Micah Streiffer explores questions about religion and politics, ethics and responsibilities, through progressive Jewish eyes. You can also read this article on JTA. --------------------------------- Seven Minute Torah is a production of LAASOK. To support the production of this podcast, visit either www.patreon.com/sevenminutetorah (for per-episode contribution) OR https://laasok.org/support/ (for a tax-deductible one-time or monthly contribution). For info on our weekly Zoom study groups or other learning opportunities go to https://laasok.org/. Comments or questions? Email info@laasok.org, or contact Rabbi Micah Streiffer directly at micah@laasok.org.
This week, Jason is back in the hot seat by the Curious Canadian & voice of the viewer, David Arduin! David steps into the hosting role as he and Jason dive into their annual year-in-review episode, covering everything from finances and personal lives to their professional journeys. David kicks things off by reminding Jason of his prediction for 2024 and reflecting on how the year actually played out. They discuss last year's goals, and break down the numbers behind Spotify Wrapped. Jason also shares his predictions for 2025, both for the podcast and for the growth of the Rewired Talent agency. JTA 2024 wraps it all up, covering everything in between! Jason and David reveal all that and so much more in another episode you can't afford to miss! Host: Jason Tartick Co-Host: David Arduin Audio: John Gurney Stay connected with the Trading Secrets Podcast! Instagram: @tradingsecretspodcast Youtube: Trading Secrets Facebook: Join the Group All Access: Free 30-Day Trial Trading Secrets Steals & Deals! Strawberry.me: Feeling uncertain about what's next in your life or career? You're not alone. Life can be overwhelming—big decisions, changing relationships, or just trying not to make a mistake. Strawberry.me will assess your needs and connect you with the perfect coach for you! Visit Strawberry.me/TRADINGSECRETS and take charge of your future with the help of a certified coach plus, get 20% off your first month membership. SnapDragon Apples: The versatile SnapDragon is the perfect snacking apple or sliced in salads, and pairs beautifully with rich cheeses (especially on a charcuterie board), and so much more. SnapDragon apples are now available in retailers, including Target, Safeway, ShopRite, Sprouts, and more. SnapDragon apples are also the Official Apple of the Buffalo Bills. Visit SnapDragonApple.com to learn more Quince: With a new year comes a new opportunity to reimagine ourselves and, more importantly, our wardrobes! Upgrade your closet this year without the upgraded price tag. Go to Quince.com/tradingsecrets for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order!
You're Listening to Parallax Views https://parallaxviews.podbean.com/ Support the Show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/parallaxviews On this edition of Parallax Views, Arno Rosenfeld, a reporter for one of America's most prominent Jewish publications, The Forward, joins the show to discuss his reporting on the right-wing, conservative think tank The Heritage's Foundation's Project Esther. Laid out as a plan to combat antisemitism, some have noticed the Project Esther seems to promote a conspiracy theory around the causes of antisemitism that is itself pulling from antisemitic conspiracy tropes. According to Project Esther, pro-Palestinian activism and antisemitism is the result of a "Hamas Support Network". In a PowerPoint presentation Project Esther point towards Jewish figures like billionaire George Soros and Illinois Governor JB Pritzker as the "masterminds" of cabal fueling antisemitism today. Beyond the conspiratorial nature of this claim and the fact that it's arguably promoting an antisemitic conspiracy theory itself, Rosenfeld has reported on how the Heritage Foundation's approach to combatting antisemitism differs from that of Jewish institutions and discusses how American Jewish institutions have been wary to endorse the Heritage Foundation project. These are Rosenfeld's reports on Project Esther: "Project Esther docs describe conspiracy of Jewish ‘masterminds'" "Scoop: Heritage Foundation plans to ‘identify and target' Wikipedia editors – The Forward" We will discuss the second article mentioned above and the concerns that the Heritage Foundation's plans of targeting Wikipedia editors has raised. Additionally, Arno and I will delve into the fault lines that exist in American Jewish political life today. This will make up the second half of our conversation and delves into the differences between legacy American Jewish institutions (what Jewish journalists like Rosenfeld and JTA's Ron Kampeas have called the American Jewish Establishment) and American Jews as a whole. This leads to a discussion of how American Jews are not a monolith. We will also discuss the impact of newer, counter-institutions like J Street on American Jewish political life, divisions in the American Jewish community over how to fight antisemitism, and much, much more.
Plus de sept millions d'électeurs se sont rendus aux urnes pour les législatives anticipées au Sénégal. Le scrutin s'est déroulé dans le calme dans l'ensemble. Le Pastef est à la recherche de la majorité absolue pour pouvoir gouverner. Mehdi Ba, journaliste à Jeune Afrique était l'invité du JTA.
What do the results of the 2024 U.S. presidential election, a sweeping victory for President-elect Donald Trump and Vice President-elect J.D. Vance, mean for the U.S. Jewish community and Israel? How did the Jewish community vote? What are the top takeaways from the Senate and the House elections? Get caught up on all the latest election data points and analysis in this week's episode, featuring Ron Kampeas, JTA's Washington Bureau Chief and guest hosted by Julie Fishman Rayman, AJC's Managing Director of Policy and Political Affairs. AJC is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization. AJC neither supports nor opposes candidates for elective office. The views and opinions expressed by guests do not necessarily reflect the views or position of AJC. AJC's Policy Priorities: AJC Congratulates President-Elect Donald J. Trump Listen – AJC Podcasts: The Forgotten Exodus: with Hen Mazzig, Einat Admony, and more. People of the Pod: The Jewish Vote in Pennsylvania: What You Need to Know Sinwar Eliminated: What Does This Mean for the 101 Hostages Still Held by Hamas? From Doña Gracia to Deborah Lipstadt: What Iconic Jewish Women Can Teach Us Today Follow People of the Pod on your favorite podcast app, and learn more at AJC.org/PeopleofthePod You can reach us at: peopleofthepod@ajc.org If you've appreciated this episode, please be sure to tell your friends, and rate and review us on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Transcript: Julie Fishman Rayman: Hello, I'm Julie Fishman Rayman:, AJC's managing director of policy and political affairs. Today, I have the pleasure of guest hosting people of the PA and speaking with Ron Kampeas, JTA's Washington bureau chief, to discuss the results and the implications of the 2024 US presidential election as the nonpartisan global advocacy organization for the Jewish people, AJC congratulates Donald J Trump on his election as the 47th president of the United States and Senator J.D. Vance as vice president. AJC looks forward to working with the president-elect and his administration on the domestic and foreign policy concerns that are AJC advocacy priorities to learn more about our policy priorities for the incoming administration. Head to the link in our show notes as a reminder. AJC is a 501(c)3 non partisan, not for profit organization. AJC neither supports nor opposes candidates for elected office. Ron, welcome to people of the pod. Thank you for being here Ron Kampeas: Of course. Julie Fishman Rayman: Well, I'd like to start in asking you if you have a sense about the Jewish vote, because there have been a number of different exit polls, which, I guess, not surprisingly, because exit polls are what they are, say vastly different things. There are some that say it's the biggest Jewish vote in support for a Democratic candidate ever, and then also the highest percentage ever for a Republican candidate. What do we know to be true? And what would you sort of be looking at in terms of, you know, as we're examining this moving forward? What are we looking for? Ron Kampeas: So first of all, I know I've seen those very extreme assessments as well, and I know what they're based on, and even when what based on what they're based on, and we, I'll talk about that too. That's just not correct. So they're talking about a 79% turnout, according to a poll the consortium of a number of organizations like the CNN and the New York Times. And that poll is not reliable yet. It does show 79% and think 21% in other words, an even split. Nobody seemed to have voted for at least among the Jews for third party candidates. And I'm not sure what number of Jews who were included in that poll were. I mean, it's a vast, vast poll. They do talk to a lot of people, but even they will say, and I think they put it on their things, that it's just preliminary, the more reliable analysis is considered to be the one that came out of the Fox AP analysis that showed 66% 67% for Paris, 32% 31% for Trump. And I think that's what the Trump people are talking about in terms of the highest for Republicans. It's just not the highest for Republican. I think if you count in the margin of error, that's not even like recently the highest for a Republican. Nothing's changed in the last four years. I think what it is showing is that whereas Republicans, when I started at JTA in 2004 they were happy to get 25% they've gone up from 19% with George W Bush in 2020 to 25% with John Kerry a few years later, now they can comfortably say they're getting about 30% of the Jewish community. People love to attach everything that happens to the very current politics of the day. So however you count it, nothing seems to have changed. Julie Fishman Rayman: So interesting, because for I think a lot of Jews around America, we feel as though so much has changed. But when you go to the voting booth, Jews consistently aren't necessarily thinking just about either Israel or antisemitism, AJC does a survey looking at American Jewish opinion, not every year, but almost every year. And we did it in June, and asked questions about political affiliation. Who are you going to vote for? And one of the things that we asked was, what drives your vote, and foreign policy is always low down on the list. On election night, CNN asked that same question, of course, to all Americans, and I think 4% said that their vote was driven by foreign policy. Has there been a moment where the American Jewish vote is more focused on issues that feel perhaps a bit more parochial. Ron Kampeas: No, certainly within the Orthodox subset, and it's always difficult to tell, because it's the smaller the subset, the bigger the margin of error. But when there's consistency over time and survey after survey after survey, I think you can conclude that, yes, Orthodox Jews do attach. Of more importance to the US Israel relationship and how it's manifesting, how they're perceiving it. The only time that a Democrat, at least since FDR, I think, a Democrat, didn't receive a majority of the Jewish vote was Jimmy Carter, who, in 1980 got a plurality of the Jewish one, I think, about 45%. People sort of conflate things in their head. In his post presidency, Carter became very identified with being very critical of Israel, and it's true, in 1980 he'd had difficult relationships with Menachem Begin, but he brokered the most important peace treaty in Israeli history. He saved a lot of lives. So I don't think people were feeling bad about Carter in 1980 because of Israel. I like to tell people, Jews are like everybody else. You know it's true that a majority of us vote for Democrats, and there are other subsets where, like a majority vote for Republican more majority for Democrats, but we vote for the same reasons as everybody else. Our votes will get more enthusiastic for a Democrat on one circumstance, just like everybody else's will, or might get less enthusiastic just like everybody else's will. We're susceptible to the same things. Julie Fishman Rayman: It's really interesting. So at this moment, there's so much Monday morning quarterbacking happening, and I don't want to look too far in the rear view, but I do want to ask you for your take on this question of, would the result have been different had the Vice President selected Shapiro, Governor, Shapiro from Pennsylvania, as her running mate. Ron Kampeas: Maybe it's hard to say vice presidents have had such a little impact on nominations. But on the other hand, Pennsylvania was close enough, and Shapiro is popular enough that perhaps it might have made the difference. She might have had Pennsylvania, and then if she had Pennsylvania, I don't know, she would have gotten to 270 but you know, Nevada and Arizona are still being counted. They might still go in her column. If they do go in her column, although I don't think they will, I think it looks like they're going to go into Trump's column if Nevada and Arizona go into her column and she missed out on Pennsylvania, you could say that her decision to go with Tim Walz instead of Josh Shapiro was faithful. On the other hand, everybody's a cynic. Nobody actually believes anything anybody says. But I tried to get away from that. I try not to be too much of a cynic. And when Josh Shapiro said afterwards that he had second thoughts about taking other thing because he's he's like a hugely successful governor so far in Pennsylvania is this is two years into his first term. You know, if I'm Josh Shapiro, I'm thinking about my legacy, and I'm thinking about running for president in the future and two years, just, yeah, I'm not going to make an impact in Pennsylvania in just two years. If I'm the 60% governor who can get Republicans to vote for me in the middle of the state, I'm thinking two terms will make me like, well, you know, get me a statue in some building at one point, there's this whole narrative that there was an anti semitic pushback. It was an anti semitic pushback against Shapiro. It was anti-Israel at times. I really believe it did cross over antisemitism. I'm not sure that that had the effect on the Harris campaign in terms of its decision making. She clicked with Tim Wallz. Shapiro wasn't so eager. Shapiro was going to be a co president. Walls wanted to be a vice president. He made that very clear. He had no intentions of ever running for the presidency. So if you're a Harris, do you want to have a Dan Quayle, or do you want to have a Dick Cheney kind of thing? You know as somebody who who's prone to take over, or somebody who's prone to do what needs to be done to be vice president. And obviously she preferred the latter. Julie Fishman Rayman: It's a great analogy. Can we talk for a minute about sort of Jewish representation in Congress where Israel was on the ballot? What are your perceptions there? Ron Kampeas: I think that it might have made a difference in Mark 17th, where Mike Lawler defeated Mondair Jones. Mondair Jones was perceived when he first ran into 2020, and he was elected. He was perceived initially as somebody who would be very different from Nita Lowey, who he was replacing because she's a very solid, long time pro-Israel and an AJC board member and an AJC board member. He actually declared before she retired, so he was a little bit confrontational with her, which happens, obviously, I don't know if Israel came up in that equation, though young progressive people thought he'd be a squatter, but he wasn't. In his two years in Congress, he wasn't a member of the squad, and he went out of his way to align with the pro-Israel community, and this because it was so important in his district. But Lawler is just like he's been. He's a freshman, but he's been out front. He's been very good at cultivating the Jewish people in his district. And he's not just led on a number of Israel issues, but he's always made sure to do it in a bipartisan way, partnering with Jared Moskowitz in Florida, or Josh got him or in New Jersey, and you know, that might have helped him in the district. It was a close race. He won by a close margin. So I think maybe that was definitely a factor there. I think that one of the group's decision desk that declares winners just declared for Jackie Rosen in Nevada. She's been reelected, according to them, but we'll wait. We'll see if and when AP calls it. But again, a state with a substantial Jewish population, she is, like, one of the premier Democrats. She's Jewish, but she also is like, very, very upfront about Israel. She co chairs an antisemitism Task Force. She has a bill that would designate a domestic antisemitism coordinator. So in such a close race or such close margins with the Jewish community, that's actually much larger than the margin that might have helped put her over the top. On the other side, you. Know, you have Michigan, which might have also, like we looked at Pennsylvania and Josh Shapiro, Michigan also might have cost Kamala Harris the presidency because of her support for Israel, because, you know, President Trump managed to peel away Muslim American and Arab American voters in in Michigan, in a kind of a weird slate of hand, because he said that he would be more pro their issue than Kamala Harris was, even though he's more pro Netanyahu, definitely than Kamala Harris is. But also, there were third party voters, people who voted for Jill Stein. Julie Fishman Rayman: Pretty significant numbers for Jill Stein from Michigan. Ron Kampeas: Pretty significant numbers for Jill Stein. But Elissa Slotkin over the top, very pro Israel, centrist Democrat Jewish. Very much a foreign policy, you know, specialist. She came out of the CIA and the Defense Department. Also very partisan. She was meeting with red constituents, like veterans, and she was doing a good job of it. She had that appeal. And I think that's why she ran for Senate. I think that's where Democrats are excited to have her run for Senate. And then October 7 happened, and she had to navigate a very difficult situation in her state, which has a substantial Jewish community, has an even bigger Muslim American and Arab American community. She had meetings with both leaders. She put out sensitive statements after the meetings. I think one of the most interesting sort of developments with her is that Rashida Tlaib, the Palestinian American Congresswoman attacked Dana Nessel for prosecuting people who were violent were allegedly violent at protests. She put out a statement that, without saying it was because Dana Ness was Jewish, she was said that Dana Nessel had other sort of considerations. When she brought these prosecutions, Dana Nessel outright accused her of antisemitism, and then Rashida Tlaib was the subject of a lot of Islamophobic, anti Palestinian vitriol. And it was interesting because there were two letters that went out at the time from Congress members, one condemning anything that insinuated that Dana Nessel had dual loyalties, or anything like that, and one condemning the anti Islamic rhetoric that Rashida clade faced, and the only person who signed both letters was Alyssa Slotkin. That was interesting. Julie Fishman Rayman: I want to to turn a little bit if we can, to the expectations for for the next administration, even for the next Congress. When we last spoke, right after the Republican National Convention, JD Vance had been selected as the running mate, and you and I, we talked about what that means for a Trump foreign policy in the next administration. Will it go in a more isolationist direction, more aligning with JD Vance's world view? What do you think now and what might we expect? Ron Kampeas: But still a potential for sure, there are names being rooted about for Secretary of State. One of them is Rick Grinnell, who's completely a Trumpist, who will do what he wants, his former Acting CIA director. And the other is Marco Rubio, gave one of the best speeches at the convention, I thought, and who is very close to the pro Israel community, who's an internationalist, but who has tailored his rhetoric to be more to make sure he doesn't antagonize Donald Trump. He was, you know, he was a came close to being the vice presidential pick himself. I mean, if Marco Rubio becomes Secretary of State, I think that's a good sign for internationalists. I mean, you know, Israel has kind of a buffer, because the Republican Party is very pro Israel. And there are people like JD Vance says, who say, you know, Israel is the exception when it comes to what I think about pulling United States back from the world, even though he says it's not so much the exception. And then there are people like Marco Rubio who are internationalists. Does Marco Rubio get to run an independent foreign policy? That would be very good news, I think, for for internationalists, if, if Donald Trump doesn't get in his way. But I don't know if that that happens. There's a view of pro israelism that says internationalism is necessary. I always like to say when a pack used to have its policy conferences, and it's a shame it doesn't any more, they would have a little brief talk before on Tuesday morning, before going up to the Hill, they would have, like, some prominent Senator come out and give a rah rah speech, and then like, three officials would come out on the stage Howard core, late Richard Fishman, and Esther Kurz. And Esther Kurz had handled Congressional Relations, and they would talk about the three items they were bringing up the Hill, usually two laws in a letter or a resolution or something like that. And she would always say, and this was like the one moment like they would sort of reveal this. They'd be very candid about this. You have to push not for assistance for Israel, but foreign assistance generally, because there is no such thing as sort of singling out Israel and saying, Okay, we're going to take care of Israel, but nobody else in the world that it's all it's all interconnected, and it's such a true thing now, because you can say, you know, let's just cut off Ukraine. But if you're cut off Ukraine, you're bolstering Putin. If you're bolstering Putin, you're bolstering somebody who has a substantial and military alliance with Iran, if you're bolstering Iran, that is not good for Israel. And it's like it's kind of circuitous to get there, but it's also very substantive point. I think those are the things the pro Israel community is going to be looking at with genuine concern. Julie Fishman Rayman: Indeed, it's all about sort of the strength of the American global leadership regime. And when you start to whittle away at one, the overall package ends up being weaker. Speaking of Israel, I can't speak to you this week and not ask you about the news out of Israel, about Netanyahu firing the defense secretary, gallant and what that means. And also, if we can extrapolate, if we can prognosticate what might happen vis a vis Israel in this lame duck session, while we still have Biden as president, but moving through the transition towards a future Trump administration. Ron Kampeas: Yeah, you know, there a lot of Israelis are actually worried about that. Like, Oh, Biden's gonna take his frustrations out on VB in the lame duck doesn't have anything stopping him. I don't think that's going to happen. I think what's interesting is, like, you had a couple of instances in American history where a lame duck president used the fact that he didn't care, you know, what anybody thought of him, to push something through in 1988 Ronald Reagan recognized the PLO because it's something George H W Bush wanted him to do. George H W Bush wanted to push like more Israel Palestinian peace he did with the Madrid Conference, but he didn't want to be the one to invite the PLO into the room, so he got Ronald Reagan to do it in his last two months in office. In 2016 Barack Obama allowed through a Security Council resolution of that condemned the settlements. The United States didn't vote for it, but it also didn't veto it. That really kind of shook Israel up. But was interesting. I've done the reporting on this. When he was taking advice, Should I, should we vote for the resolution? Should we veto it, or should we just allow it through? There were people voicing opinions on all sides. Joe Biden and Jack Lew, who was then the Treasury Secretary, is now the ambassador to Israel, both said, veto it. Don't let it through. Don't let it through because, partly because it's going to really upset our Jewish supporters. If you let it through, you're not going to be president anymore, but somebody in the room is going to probably try and be president. I think that Joe Biden still has that sense of responsibility. I could be wrong. You know, four years or a year of like, from his perspective, being very strongly supportive of Israel and not getting anything back. From Bibi, from his perspective, might have changed his mind. Something might occur now. But the question is, like, you can tell Israel if they hit anything, but if they hit, if they hit anything, if they elevate it at all, they're going to need US assistance. And Trump hasn't said he's going to give that. Biden has. Biden's proven he's going to give it. So you've got two months of a president who will, who will back up Israel with American might, and then you have a president who has isolationist tendencies and who doesn't want to get involved with wars for another four years. Julie Fishman Rayman: Is there anything else that you're hearing, perhaps, from the Israeli perspective, about Gallant departure, and what that signal? Ron Kampeas: I think, that Netanyahu, you know, he's just trying to keep his government intact. Gallant is very vocal in opposing or in supporting drafting the ultra orthodox the Haredi orthodox Netanyahu government relies on Haredi orthodox parties. So there's that he's also facing a kind of spy scandal from his own circle. Just a weird, weird story. Somebody who's in his circle is alleged to have tried to help Netanyahu politically by leaking highly classified documents and altering them as well to foreign news outlets. The allegation is that whatever the guy's motivation was, he's actually put Israel at risk. So Netanyahu is suddenly in a position of facing allegations that he put Israel at risk. Now he's faced a lot of scandals in his time. Israelis have a high level of tolerance for people who are alleged to have skimmed off the top, alleged to have helped themselves, and that's what the scandals are about. They have no tolerance for anybody who puts Israel's security at risk. So if this comes back to Netanyahu that could be more damage than than any other scandal that he's endured so far and so notably, I think, you know, when he was firing Galant, he said he accused Galant of leaking information, although, I mean, what he was seemed to be referring to was Galant didn't leak anything. Galant openly said that he disagreed with Netanyahu on certain tactics, and that, you know Netanyahu is casting is putting Israel at risk, which is not to say that Netanyahu is necessarily going to be implicated by the scandal, but it's certainly not of a piece with leaking, actually classified documents that reveal methods and sources can put Israel's intelligence gathering methods at risk. Julie Fishman Rayman: As always, there's so much more to the story, right? Ron Kampeas: Yeah, yeah. There always is. Julie Fishman Rayman: Ron, we could probably talk for a very long time about the American elections and what's going on in Israel and the degrees of various scandals and how populations will take them, and what the future of our country in the region looks like. But I know that you're very busy, especially this week, and I just want to say how grateful we are they always make time for AJC and for people of the pod. Ron Kampeas: Of course.
C'est un fléau mondial qui prend une dimension encore plus grande sur le continent africain. Avec 72 millions de tonnes d'ici 2030 de déchets électroniques soit vingt fois plus qu'il y a 5 ans. Mais le traitement des déchets électroniques n'est pas à l'ordre du jour dans de nombreux pays africains. C'est notre FOCUS du JTA ce samedi soir, avec pour invité Ramata Thioune, spécialiste programme auprès du Centre de recherches pour le développement international (CRDI).
For today's episode, NBA Champion & veteran, Juan Toscano-Anderson, joined the show for a fun courtside conversation!Juan is a member of the G-League United Team that is traveling overseas for some international games! He reflected on growing up in Oakland, California & being able to play for his boyhood team. Anderson also shared fun stories from his time playing with teammates like Steph Curry & Draymond Green!Juan Toscano-Anderson is also behind the JTA Foundation that helps families in need within the U.S. & Latin America. Whether it's giving out turkeys during the holidays or providing backpacks & haircuts to children; the JTA foundation continues to make a positive impact! Please visit: https://journeytoachieve.org to help make a difference in the community!For video footage of this interview:https://youtu.be/eITOHxncG6U?si=NPqTYY12M46t3y-EFor more exclusive content, follow the Jim on Base Show on social media (Twitter/Instagram/TikTok): @JimonBaseShow
Les interrogations persistent sur la tentative d'évasion à la prison de Makala en RDC. Les familles, sans nouvelles de leurs proches, ont été appelés a se rendre dans les morgues pour les identifier. L'invité du JTA était Patrick Muyaya, Ministre de la communication et Porte parole du gouvernement. Il a pu revenir sur l'enquête à propos de la prison de Makala mais également sur la situation sanitaire et la vaccination contre le virus MPOX.
Send us a textThis is our first episode in front of a LIVE audience, and it does not disappoint! We had the amazing opportunity to interview Andrew Rush, the Co-Founder and CEO of Star Catcher. Not only did we hear about his journey but also his passion for building companies right here in Jacksonville! I truly hope you walk away from this episode as inspired as our audience did! Big thank you to Carlton Robinson for hosting this event at the Jax Chamber Open Innovation Center at the JTA building.Support the show
Listen to an in-depth conversation on all the latest in the 2024 U.S. presidential election, from the vice presidential picks –Tim Walz and JD Vance – to Israel and antisemitism. Julie Fishman Rayman, AJC's Managing Director of Policy and Political Affairs, speaks with Ron Kampeas, the Washington, D.C. Bureau Chief at the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Kampeas also discussed the importance of accuracy and empathy in reporting on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, highlighting the need for journalists to avoid biases and misrepresentations. *The views and opinions expressed by guests do not necessarily reflect the views or position of AJC. Episode Lineup: (0:40) Ron Kampeas Learn: AJC's Call to Action Against Antisemitism U.S. Party Platforms Must Take a Stand Against Antisemitism Here are 5 Jewish Issues Republicans and Democrats Must Address at their Conventions Listen: What the Unprecedented Assassinations of Terror Leaders Means for Israel and the Middle East Aviva Klompas is Fighting the Normalization of Antisemitism on Social Media On the Ground at the Republican National Convention: What's at Stake for Israel and the Middle East? Follow People of the Pod on your favorite podcast app, and learn more at AJC.org/PeopleofthePod You can reach us at: peopleofthepod@ajc.org If you've appreciated this episode, please be sure to tell your friends, and rate and review us on Apple Podcasts. Transcript of Interview with Ron Kampeas: Manya Brachear Pashman: This week, my colleague Julie Fishman Rayman, AJC Managing Director of Policy and Political Affairs, spoke to Ron Kampeas, the Washington DC Bureau Chief of JTA, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. They broke down the latest in the 2024 US presidential election. Julie, the mic is yours. Julie Fishman Rayman: Ron, thank you so much for joining us. I'm so pleased to have this conversation with you, because we get to flip the tables and someone who's really a beloved and renowned journalist in the Jewish space, and finally, I get to ask you questions. So thank you for making this opportunity available to us. Ron Kampeas: Thank you. Julie Fishman Rayman: I want to start by talking a little bit about the conventions. You were in Milwaukee covering AJC's event, alongside a number of other things. Thank you for being there with us. What were your biggest takeaways from the Republican Convention, particularly as they related to the issues of Israel and antisemitism? Ron Kampeas: I think Israel was front and center, and they made it front and center because it's an obvious advantage that they have over the Democrats right now. So, you know, I think the representative moment was, in a way, when Matt Brooks, the CEO of the Republican Jewish Coalition, he was invited for the first time to address the Republican Convention, and the first thing he said was, let's hear it for Israel, or something like that, or let's hear it for the hostages. And there were cheers, and then he says that couldn't happen in a month at the Democratic Convention. He might be right. And so that was a big plus for them. On antisemitism it's a little more opaque, but it's problematic, I think, because after Matt spoke, he called us Jewish media reporters together for a little gaggle, and we asked him, naturally, about the isolationism that the vice presidential or the running mate pick JD Vance represents. And it's interesting, the way that Matt put it. He said, yeah, it is a problem. He was candid. He said, it's a problem in the party, and we plan to fight it. And, you know, nobody prompted him, but he said, we plan to take on the Tucker Carlson wing of the party. The interesting thing about that is that he said, prevent Tucker Carlson wing from getting a foothold. And Tucker Carlson had very much a foothold at the convention. He spoke on the last night, setting up Donald Trump's speech. He was up in the balcony with Donald Trump. And of course, you know, Matt's point is that Tucker Carlson is very much an isolationist, particularly as far as Ukraine goes, but he's given hints as far as Israel goes. But it's more than that. He's platformed antisemites, and he's kind of ventured into that territory himself – antisemites like Candace Owens, Kanye West – and I think that that is something that Jewish Republicans are going to have to grapple with. Julie Fishman Rayman: One of the things that was discussed at AJC's event alongside the Republican National Convention was the policy positions of not just JD Vance, but others who sort of align with that faction of the Republican Party – I guess, the Tucker Carlson faction – and sort of reading the tea leaves on Ukraine and saying, you know, at what point does the hesitancy around support for Ukraine translate into hesitancy for support for Israel? And does it? What would you say to that question? Ron Kampeas: You know, it's interesting that at least as far as I could track, that played out an explicit sense only at your event, at the AJC event. There were people who were asking hard questions of the panelists, and two of the panelists were very much not stumping for Trump, they were defending Trump and the Trump policies. Kirsten Fontenrose, not so much. She was more critical, and even though she was part of the Trump NSC. And so the defense that they were saying is that simply, you know, whatever you may think of Trump's position, this is Rich Goldberg has particularly said this, but I think Ken Weinstein also said it, whatever you may think of Trump's positions on Ukraine, the strength he will project in the world. And this was right after the assassination, and Rich Goldberg kept on bringing up that Associated Press photo of Trump looking very defiant after being shot, that strength is going to deter the kind of actions that Putin has taken in Ukraine. But the flip side of that actually came up a couple of weeks later at a Christians United for Israel conference here in DC, where isolationism was very much on the mind, and what they were articulating and what might have been articulated in an AIPAC conference, if AIPAC still had conferences – it doesn't – but what they were articulating is that it's holistic, that you can't just say, like, JD Vance says, ‘Oh, I'm all for assisting Israel, but we don't need to assist Ukraine, because Russia's bad actions in Ukraine are being supported by Iran. Iran is supplying arms to Russia in Ukraine that it then can, you know, see how those arms work in Ukraine, and they can use them theoretically against Israel.' We're seeing now, as tensions build up in the Middle East, that Russia has Iran's back. And then, you know, there's also China, which is also problematic and is buying Iranian oil and helping to prop up the Iranian economy that way. So it's not simply a matter of whether one side projects strength better than the other side, and this is the argument coming out of the Christians United for Israel thing. It's a matter of constant engagement and awareness of how all these things can interlock. Julie Fishman Rayman: I think that's a really great point, and I'm glad you made that connection. I know one of the other issues that was present or discussed at the Christians United for Israel conference was the issue of the hostages, and what you said before about the sort of rallying result of Matt Brooks' comments about, you know, let's hear it for Israel, let's hear it for the hostage families. And a similar cry might solicit or elicit at the DNC. What do you think we could expect? You know, would you expect that a hostage family will take to the stage as Orna and Ronen Neutra did at the DNC, and if so, what might the result be? Ron Kampeas: So that's a good question. I know that they've asked. I know that the hostage families have asked to appear at the DNC. I know that there are people who have told me that the DNC, especially like with Kamala Harris, who has spoken out for the hostages. I don't see how Kamala Harris could not have the hostages or some sort of representation of the hostages at the conference. On the other hand, the Democrats are going to have to worry about, I don't think they're going to be booed, but I think that they're not going to get the same sort of enthusiastic reception that maybe that they got at the Republican conference, and simultaneously the uncommitted movement. The movement was founded in Michigan and spread to some other states that when Biden was the nominee, particularly, they were upset that Biden wasn't doing enough to stop the war in Gaza, wasn't doing enough to force Israel into a ceasefire, and they wanted to show that they didn't necessarily have to vote for him in November, so they didn't vote for him in the primaries. And they had different effects in different states, but certainly in states like Michigan and Minnesota, I think that they had a pretty good turnout as far as that goes. And they want a doctor from Gaza to speak at the DNC. So you know which might be fine. It might be a legitimate enterprise in their part, but you know that the Democrats are going to be accused of “both sides-ing” it, that the Republicans wouldn't have somebody like that. So because of the Democrats of different constituencies, as much as the Republicans are now, at least the Trump campaign is now trying to reach out to Arab Americans. It's much more a constituency for the Democrats, as are the Jews. It's going to be like a tightrope for them to walk. And so I don't know how that's going to be a play out, but it's certainly something we're going to be tracking. Julie Fishman Rayman: Talking about that, that tightrope, and also, because you mentioned Michigan and Minnesota, let's talk for a moment about the selection of Minnesota Governor Tim Walz for the vice presidential nominee. He has both spoken at AIPAC's conferences, stood by Israel after the October 7 attacks, talked about Jewish students on campus dealing with encampments and anti-Israel protests and has really been outspoken about rising antisemitism in this country. On the flip side, he also speaks to the more progressive flank of the Democratic Party, and has urged the party to do more intentional kind of outreach to anti-Israel voters who aren't committed to voting the Harris-Walz ticket. What do you make of him in this moment, as both a campaigner and then presumably, if elected, what would you make of him as a vice president? Ron Kampeas: It's hard to say right now. Nobody was really aware of Tim Walz a lot outside of Minnesota until last week, but it's so funny because, you know, there was this whole push back against Shapiro from the far left because he was perceived as being – I'm talking about Josh Shapiro, the Pennsylvania Governor who was a front runner – because he was perceived as being too pro-Israel. But Yair Rosenberg did a really good job. I also did a little bit of reporting into this about how the other candidates, who other likelies that Kamala Harris were considering, are also pro-Israel, and Tim Walz has a long list of accomplishments, but you know, a measure of how fast this summer has gone, how crazy this political season has been, is this a week and a half ago, when Yair put up his story, he didn't even have Tim Walz in it. He was looking at Roy Cooper, he was looking at Mark Kelly from Arizona, and then, because nobody was even thinking about Tim Walz then, and now, he's the running mate. But from what you can see about him, and like, we just, JTA just did a big story about his master's thesis on Holocaust education, he's somebody who really wants to listen. His recommendation to the Republican Party, you know, he's coined this whole weird thing. That's actually why the Harris campaign noticed him, because he was the first to call the Republicans weird. I mean, the Republican candidates, but he said don't direct that at the voters, direct that only at the nominees, because we have to listen to the voters. And so I think that you can look at what he says about listening to the protesters on campuses in that context. For somebody who was born in Nebraska and lived most of his life in a town of 400 people in Minnesota, he shows, like, remarkably nuanced understanding of things that are of Jewish concern regarding the Holocaust. He's talked about how, you know, one can look at the Holocaust legitimately as an anomaly in history, but also understand it as something that could be repeated, which is actually Yehuda Bauer, the famous Holocaust historian's point. The way he boiled it down was that the Holocaust happened only to the Jews, but it can happen to anybody. And so that's Waltz's outlook, and it shows somebody who's really sort of read up on this and considered it in depth. Julie Fishman Rayman: Because you mentioned that Josh Shapiro had been very much in the running there, I want to get your take on the sort of social media trends of calling him “Genocide Josh” because of his pro-Israel statements and record. Is that just blatant antisemitism that we need to be mindful of, was it specific? Do you think it's just, you know, savvy opposition researchers? What do you make of that? Ron Kampeas: You know, we often think of antisemitism as, you know, planning to be antisemitic and putting out a statement. There are people who are consciously antisemitic, but the much greater, the much more vexing problem is that, how, it just seeps into the discourse. We have a polarized society, and it's just very easy when you're opposing somebody to grab whatever is in the toolbox to harm them. And for anybody who's Jewish, I mean, you see this and we talk about it openly, you see it when we talk about women in politics, about how attacks on them can be gendered. And nobody, at least nobody on the left, complains about that. Actually, maybe they did a little bit. You know, the Bernie Bros made gendered attacks on Hillary Clinton, and they didn't denied it. But anyways, so you can say that attacks can be gendered, but it's hard to explain how attacks can also be antisemitic, because that's a tool in the box. And then a lot of people on the left don't want to acknowledge that. They slip into that. And I think that's what happened with Josh Shapiro. I think that there is for some reason, I mean, I can speculate as to, not even speculate – people have said why, even though he was just as pro-Israel as Tim Walz. He's like he's not less pro-Israel. But Mark Kelly did things that I'm sure Josh Shapiro wouldn't have done. Josh Shapiro doesn't like Benjamin Netanyahu. Mark Kelly, the senator from Arizona, went to the Netanyahu speech, shook his hand afterwards and applauded, and they didn't get attacked in the same way. And if you look at some of the reasons that Shapiro was attacked, they talked about his upbringing, his going to a Jewish Day School in the Philly area, and the things that he was exposed to, they talked about his going to Israel when he was a teenager. And those are things that are part and parcel of a lot of American Jewish upbringings. And so you can say those things are indicting, but there's a point, because you're an American Jew coming up in American Jewish communities, going to be exposed to a lot of pro-Israel. But at what point does that become antisemitic? Because that's just the natural part of Jewish life. Julie Fishman Rayman: I want to ask you another question related to the media. I want to sort of get your take. Last week, AJC and the Jewish Federations of North America published an open letter to media outlets generally, really identifying how so many of them got the Hezbollah attack on the soccer field in the Golan so, so, so wrong that, after a dozen Druze kids playing soccer were murdered in the middle of the afternoon, Washington Post, Houston Chronicle, others, just totally misrepresented the facts. The Washington Post headlined a story “Hezbollah denies responsibility for the fatal rocket strike.” It wasn't true. Hezbollah celebrated the attack until they learned that children were killed and then walked it back. And then doubling down, a later Washington Post story showed an image of the funeral of one of the children who was killed, but the headline read, “Israel hits target in Lebanon.” So if you only look at the picture and you only read the headline, you think it's a Lebanese kid that has been killed by a strike in Israel, not that an Israeli Druze kid was killed by a Hezbollah attack. CNN, AP, they all sort of downplayed Hezbollah's role in these really horrific murders. Is this ignorance? Is it bias? Is it both? And regardless, if we're sort of operating under this principle of journalist integrity, is this OK? Ron Kampeas: No, it's not OK. I don't know what went on at the Washington Post. I was witness, kind of, to one of the most foundational episodes in bad media takes, which happened right after the Second Intifada began, and the AP put out a photo of a policeman helping up a Haredi Jewish kid who had just been knocked down or even beaten by Palestinian writers in Jerusalem. And the AP captioned the photo saying that the policeman was attacking a Palestinian on the Temple Mount, which is so funny because there's a gas station in the back of the picture and there's no gas stations on the Temple Mount. I mean, if you know Jerusalem, you know the Temple Mount, you know how crazy that is. And so, like, what had happened was that I knew the guy who was handling photo editing at the AP that night when he got this picture. And at the time – this is in the early days of the Internet and computers – the picture came across at the AP's, Israeli photo agency affiliate, and Hebrew couldn't work on that machine, so, like, the Hebrew was scrambled. They captioned it in Hebrew. It was scrambled. So the guy calls up the other guy who's also tired, and he said, was this like some cop beating up a Palestinian on the Temple Mount? He said, yeah, sure, and that's how the thing goes out. So it's just, like, journalists can screw up in ways that speak to a certain underlying bias about the conflict. They expect to see certain things, but it's also can be stupidity and laziness and just screw ups at the last minute. I mean, I imagine that's what happened with the Washington Post front page, but it's awful, and it needs to be remedied, and people need to be more educated, and they need to pay more attention. I think you're right. I think the way that the media has been treating the Hezbollah-Israel conflict in the north, in a way, differently than it treated, at least at the beginning, it treated Israel-Hamas. Hamas is clearly defined as a terrorist organization. Hezbollah is a terrorist organization. Hezbollah is an organization that's holding Lebanon hostage. Historically, people now think it was a big mistake to invade Lebanon in 1982. Hezbollah was partly an outgrowth of resentment of the Israeli occupation in southern Lebanon. But Israel withdrew to UN. They went to the UN and they said, you decide where the lines are. We're not going to decide where the lines are. You decide where the lines are, and we will withdraw that to that point. In 2000 Israel did that. Hezbollah continued to attack. Hezbollah launched a war in 2006 that Israel did not want, and conflict with Israel helps uphold Hezbollah within Lebanon. And so I think that because Hezbollah is a very proficient and weathered militia, they fought a war in Syria. They fought a terrible, genocidal war in Syria. They were on the wrong side of that, but they fought a war in Syria. They're good at what they're doing. So maybe there's a reflex to see this as a conflict between two militaries, but it's not. It's a conflict between Israel and a terrorist organization that unprovoked launched missiles inside Israel on October the eighth, even before Israel was striking back in Gaza as a means of solidarity with Hamas. And so I think that needs to be front, just as I think a lot of media, obviously JTA, but even a lot of like, you know, non-Jewish media always put out there that Hamas started this war. It needs to be reminded that Hezbollah also started its version of the war, and that Hezbollah, it's not an army that's accountable to any kind of civilian infrastructure, never mind a democratic one, like the Israeli army is accountable to elected officials. It's its own militia with a stranglehold on Lebanon. So yeah, I think that should be evident in everything that's written about that conflict, and maybe that's what helped distort at least the initial reporting from what happened in Majdal Shams, which is just horrible. Julie Fishman Rayman: One of the things that AJC is always trying to call on media outlets to do is to know who to call. Right, if there is an incident related to Israel that they don't fully understand, if there's an antisemitic attack and they need more context, to understand that there are Jewish individuals and organizations who can help to provide insight and texture and understanding so that their reporting can be more accurate. That's one of the recommendations in our Call to Action Against Antisemitism in America, recommendations for media. I wonder if, you know, journalist to journalist, if folks call you and say, “Ron, this is what we're writing, is this right?” Knowing that you are just such a font of knowledge, they should, this is what I'm saying. They should call you. Ron Kampeas: My son asks me, I mean, very occasionally, I do get calls more having to do with my alleged knowledge of the American Jewish community and how it works and how it functions. I get calls about that. I think on Israel, less so because everybody's an expert. Everybody considers themselves an expert. Everybody flies in. I think what was an unfortunate standard. 20 years ago, it wasn't just the AP, it was all mainstream media, that you get your best takes from a foreign correspondent between three and six months into the assignment, because it takes them three months to learn it, but it takes them six months to go native, which is to sort of really understand the nuances. I think that's unfortunate, because I think going native, really understanding the nuances, sort of delving into a story, becoming familiar with it, becoming sympathetic in ways, with all sides to the story, actually enriches a story. And I think that that's something that maybe you know, I've been doing JTA for 21 years. I've been in journalism for 35 years. I think it's great to have fresh outlooks. It's good. I think it's also good to sometimes rely on institutional knowledge and to listen to people who have been here before. It was weird at AP. I was in a position at AP when I wasn't allowed to use my institute for bizarre reasons. Institutional knowledge, you know. But it was funny, because at the outset of the Iraq War, the first day, the major Iraq war in 2002, 2003, I knew things that signal that it was going to go wrong, because I'd lived in the Middle East, and I wasn't the only one. By far, by far, there were a lot of people who knew those things institutionally. It means literally saying, like what the Israelis said in 1982, the Shiites are throwing rice and you had actual examples in 1982 of Shiites throwing rice at Israelis, and in 2003 of Shiites throwing rice at Americans. They want this. And it never works out that way. It goes awry. But nobody was listening, because people were too invested in a particular outcome to listen to the institutionalists. And I think that that's a problem. There's a reflex sometimes to say, oh, the institutionalists got it wrong in the past, because the world is still a mess, but that's not their value. The value of the institutionalists, and a great institutionalist just passed away, Martin Indyk, the value of the institutionalists is that sometimes they can actually say, this is where I went wrong, and this is what we misunderstood, and this is how we misunderstood it, and this is how we were deep in the weeds and we misunderstood it. And that's the kind of knowledge that I think shouldn't go wasted. Julie Fishman Rayman: Thanks so much for that perspective. I was going to ask you as a final question, if there was anything that you wanted to raise that we haven't discussed yet. But I would also add to that question, feel free to answer that question. Or is there something that we're getting wrong now institutionally? Ron Kampeas: Yeah, I think that, you know, there's a lot that we're getting wrong now institutionally. I think that people are, and every side of the Israel-Hamas conflict are they retreating into sort of easy, reflexive understandings of what could go right and what could go wrong. I think that there is a value in understanding how toxic Hamas ideology is, that was, I think, grasped at the beginning after October the seventh, but has slipped away as this seems to be just a conflict, and people are retreating into Israel's bashing Gaza. We have to get it to stop bashing Gaza, which is fine, it's an outlook. It's a legitimate outlook, but it's one that's not going to register at all with any Israeli, unless you take into account how Hamas is perceived among Israelis as a genocidal organization. If it wasn't before October 7, it is now. On the other hand, I think that sort of reflexive, we can never have a two state solution. I'm not saying, advocating, for two state solution. We never have a two state solution. We're just going to go on as we've gone with the Palestinians. I think that also reflects this kind of like a reflexive blindness that you have to account for the Palestinians, somehow. Nothing is going to be imposed on them. They have to be agents and actors and whatever happens, and it might not happen in my generation, it might not happen in my lifetime, but that has to be back of mind. And I think for a lot of people, particularly in parts of the Israeli establishment, it is not back of mind. So those are things that I think that people can maybe, you know, if, if these competing, they're not actually enemies, I'm talking about people who are on the same side. They can be on the same side in Israel, they can be on the same side in America, but they're rivals, and they don't like to listen to each other. But if they did talk to each other and listen to each other, maybe they would find nuances that could get everybody to a better place. Julie Fishman Rayman: If we could do a word cloud of some of the themes that have come out of this conversation, listening is definitely one of the words that would be prominent. And I think it's not only a good aspiration, but I also want to highlight that our listening to you on these really important issues is revelatory, truthfully, and we're grateful for all the work that you're doing with JTA every day, but also for being here on People of the Pod with us and for all the wisdom that you've shared. Thank you. Ron Kampeas: Thank you. Manya Brachear Pashman: If you missed last week's episode, tune in for my conversation with AJC Jerusalem Director Avital Leibovich on what the widely reported deaths of two terror leaders last week could mean for Israel and the wider region.
In this episode of Smart Lawyers Position to Transition, Victoria Collier sits down with Maya Markovich, Executive Director of the Justice Technology Association, to discuss how technology is revolutionizing law firms, transforming them into valuable businesses, and enhancing client service. Maya shares insights from her extensive experience in legal tech, innovation, and change management, highlighting the importance of adopting new technologies and strategies to create more efficient and profitable law firms. Key Takeaways: 1. Embrace Legal Tech: Discover how adopting the right technologies can streamline operations, enhance efficiency, and increase the profitability of your law firm. 2. Overcoming Resistance to Change: Learn strategies to effectively manage change within your law firm, ensuring a smooth transition to new tech solutions. 3. Client-Centric Innovations: Explore how innovative tools and platforms can improve client experiences and satisfaction, setting your firm apart in a competitive market. Learn More About Our Guest Maya Markovich is an innovation leader who is passionate about legal industry transformation and client centricity. With a unique background spanning law, VC, behavioral science, and change design, Maya delivers technology, process, and business growth services worldwide. She helped launch Nextlaw Labs/Nextlaw Ventures, the first tech-focused legal innovation catalyst at Dentons, where she served as chief growth officer for six years. Connect With Maya https://www.linkedin.com/in/mayamarkovich/ Twitter: @MarkovichMaya Get involved with JTA at https://justicetechassociation.org/get-involved/ We want to hear from you! You can leave us a rating and review in Apple Podcasts. Click here and then scroll down the page to the rating and review section. You can also leave us a rating in Spotify by clicking here. Connect with Victoria Collier https://quidproquolaw.com/ Private Facebook Group https://www.facebook.com/groups/1284225722042602 LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/victoria-collier-coaching/
Durante los primeros días de la sublevación militar, el gobierno de la República creó la Junta del Tesoro Artístico (JTA), una institución dedicada a proteger de los saqueos y bombardeos los bienes culturales y almacenarlos en depósitos seguros. A medida que las tropas sublevadas fueron ocupando territorios, crearon el Servicio de Defensa del Patrimonio Artístico Nacional (SDPAN) que, al finalizar la guerra, se debía encargar de la devolución de las obras a sus propietarios. Nunca ocurrió. El Ministerio de Cultura ha publicado un inventario de los bienes incautados durante la Guerra y la dictadura, que ya se puede ver online. La coordinadora de los trabajos ha sido María Peláez, con la que charlamos.
JTA faces scrutiny over Skyway 2.0, and the developer of the Laura Street Trio proposes a new deal.
A la une de ce JTA, une énième tentative de coup d'état selon le gouvernement au Burkina Faso. Les autorités putchistes affirment avoir démanteler un réseau de déstabilisation du pays, nous décrypterons la situation avec Serge Daniel.
At the recent IOC session in Mumbai a number of IOC members called for IOC President Thomas Bach to go another term in the job.This would give Bach a further four years. The optics aren't great. It's all a bit North Korea.Jens Sejer Andersen of Play the Game wrote this: Eight-to-12-year term limits for Presidents to prevent accumulation of power are the single most important principle of governance reforms across Olympic sports. If Thomas Bach's term is extended, hundreds of sports Presidents at the national and international level will be inspired to follow suit."So, ripple effects. But did the calls for four more years arise organically or is it an idea planted by Thomas Bach's people?Bach's response was to wave away the calls for another term. Yet the idea is now out there, in the air. A conversation has begun. The Second Bounce - The Coe conundrumSuccessors to Bach are positioning themselves for election, scheduled for 2025.These include Juan Samaranch Junior, son of former President, which is another tricky optic for the IOC's comms dept to handle. And then there's Seb Coe.The problem for Coe has been conflict of interest.His ownership stake in sports marketing agency CSM is often whispered as a barrier to his elevation to the top job. A few weeks ago, that problem went away, when CSM was bought by Casey Wasserman's company. So Seb Coe no longer chairs a major sports agency. Fast forward to that IOC session, and the idea of Thomas Bach going again is mooted by fawning IOC members who owe their place in the room to, erm, Bach. If Bach goes four more years to 2029, Coe will be aged out. The Bach-Coe relationship is described as ‘frosty'. The President would prefer his legacy candidate to be Kirsty Coventry.It's all a bit Succession.So we asked two hugely experienced Olympic insiders for some guidance as to what's really going on.Michael Payne was the IOC's first marketing and broadcast rights director, from 1983 to 2004 and was awarded the Pierre de Coubertin Medal by the IOC for services to the movement. Jon Tibbs OBE is Chairman and founder of JTA, a leading international relations and communications agency specializing in the area of international sport and particularly clients linked to the Olympic Movement. Unofficial Partner is the leading podcast for the business of sport. A mix of entertaining and thought provoking conversations with a who's who of the global industry. To join our community of listeners, sign up to the weekly UP Newsletter and follow us on Twitter @UnffclPrtnrWe publish two podcasts each week, on Tuesday and Friday. These are deep conversations with smart people from inside and outside sport. Our entire back catalogue of 300 sports business conversations are available free of charge here. Each pod is available by searching for ‘Unofficial Partner' on Apple, Spotify, Google, Stitcher and every podcast app. If you're interested in collaborating with Unofficial Partner to create one-off podcasts or series, you can reach us via the website.
JTA moves forward with plans for autonomous vehicles; the Artist Series at Florida State College at Jacksonville will debut next month; songs have been added at The Independent.
Welcome to the Jew and Gentile Podcast. Text the Jew and Gentile your comments, questions, concerns (OY!), and news at: 424-444-1948 Is There Life After Death? Jewish Thinking on the Afterlife https://momentmag.com/is-there-life-after-death/ From the Scriptures: Rev 17 FOI Equip Classes: Israel's Independence and Leaders TEACHER: CHRIS KATULKA MAY 11, 18, 25 Register: Foiequip.org Guest Lecture Series - The Six-Day War TEACHER: DR. MORDECHAI KEDAR JUNE 15 Register: Foiequip.org Encounter: Encounter is a short-term, introductory level training program that provides Christians (high-school age and up) with the opportunity to engage in a biblically-based ministry experience of loving and serving Israel and the Jewish community. Travel to Philadephia area required. ENCOUNTER DATES: May 31—June 4, 2023 July 19—23, 2023 $450 per person https://www.foi.org/encounter/ To Give visit: gofoi.org/foiequip Get a free one-year trial subscription to Israel My Glory https://israelmyglory.org/subscribe/ Get Involved with Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry https://www.foi.org/outreach Israel Always foi.org/israelalways From the news surrounding Israel and the Jewish People: American couples caught at Tel Aviv airport trying to smuggle hundreds of pounds of Fruit Roll-Ups into Israel https://www.jta.org/2023/05/03/israel/american-couples-caught-at-tel-aviv-airport-trying-to-smuggle-hundreds-of-pounds-of-fruit-roll-ups-into-israel#:~:text=(JTA)%20%E2%80%94%20At%20least%20two,due%20to%20a%20TikTok%20craze. Trans Tyranny: Christian Teacher Banned from Profession After Calling Students ‘Girls' in Classroom https://www.breitbart.com/europe/2023/05/24/trans-tyranny-christian-teacher-banned-from-profession-after-calling-students-girls-in-classroom/ As demand for Orthodox Jewish conversion soars, the number of successful cases dips https://www.timesofisrael.com/as-demand-for-orthodox-jewish-conversion-soars-the-number-of-successful-cases-dips/ Yiddish Word(s) of the Day ??? - Please
Alex Inglot, the Commissioner of the ESL Pro League (Esports). We discuss his legal background, his various sports roles before he entered the Esports world. Alex has been involved across multiple spectrums of the sports industry and is sharing his experiences with us before diving deep into his current role as Commissioner of the ESL Pro League (CS:GO). Lots of great stories and learning across sports and gaming. Key Highlights How it all started, studying law at Oxford, playing Volleyball at Uni to his first internship at IMG – Rugby World Cup contract work A few years of commercial law at various law firms in London – looking at a way back into the industry Took FIFA International Master program to bring him back into the industry First job after the program, heading to Mexico working at Atlante FC (club had just moved to Cancun), establishing a new fan base and building relationship with the region Couple of years at JTA – working on Manchester United Corporate Communication, working with owner Jon Tibbs, difference between legal and marketing communication principles Sportradar – promoting Sportradar's integrity services to Federations and other rights holders (as Director of Communication), later involved in the non-betting services and then the opportunities in US sports betting ATP Tour – Board Director – European Player Representative -working with ATP Player Council to drive progress for the members, redistribution of prize money, etc Setting up systems, processes, transparency (eliminating distrust between players and tournaments) -driven by Andrea Gaudenzi's vision, the new Chairman of ATP Tour How ATP Tour survived Covid and continued the vision of Gaudenzi – creating a JV mentality between players and events During COVID, ticketing revenue, which had always been very important for tennis events now became a vulnerability ATP Media – broadcast arm, bundling rights across different levels of events – aggregating media rights was key to create one stop shop for broadcasters and/or fans Commissioner of ESL Pro League (CS:GO – Counter Strike – Global Offensive) – major title by Valve Intro to CS:GO – history the past 10 years – one of the major FPS (First person Shooter) games, played globally ESL Pro Tour – owned by ESL FACEIT Group (new entity, created through merger, owned by Savvy Gaming Group from Saudi Arabia) CS:GO landscape with total Price money US$ 18 mil across all events - players earning US$ 20-50k per month Comparison with other games and economics for teams – power of Publisher Louvre Agreement – distribution of money ESL makes to teams to build ecosystem – helping to sustain teams investments CS 2.0 is coming later this year and how the transition will happen Structure of League – 12 founding member teams – revenue share of traditional revenues such as sponsorship – guaranteed slot in Pro-League (currently 15 out of 32 team format) Opportunities for sponsor by aggregation of rights, bundling is key opportunity League staged in Malta – teams fly in for periods of time – Malta Gaming establishing itself as Esports/Gaming hub Esports/Gaming after Covid – from red hot to current slow down, is there a “winter” or just a natural correction? The fundamentals of Esports are solid and very attractive, especially anyone targeting the younger demographics (Metaverse, digital items, etc) About A unique strategist drawing on years of international corporate and commercial law in the City of London; nearly a decade working at the sharp end of global sports communications and public affairs; and now Commissioner of the ESL Pro League. Focused on reading the landscape, developing a direction, securing buy-in and delivering impact. Driving the new structure that sits behind the CSGO ecosystem-leading EPL to ensure optimal governance and operations, record-breaking revenues and fair distribution, and the realisation of existing and upcoming aggregation opportunities. In parallel, using the platform to break down barriers across the wider CSGO stakeholder map and to drive collaboration for ecosystem optimisation. Took a driving role in the full review and overhaul of the ATP's leadership in order to bring in new structures and dynamic individuals, to ensure the Tour can continue to grow in a fast-changing entertainment landscape. Juggled stress-testing a seismic strategic vision, defining a clear governance upgrade and adapting to the challenges of a global circuit in COVID times, all while undertaking upgraded player outreach to ensure structure and policies were effective, well understood and beneficial. Previously led the whole range of communications and public affairs activities of one of the fastest growing enterprises in the global sports technology and innovation space, promoting their full range of expertise across data, content, betting, esports, streaming and integrity. This followed a number of years as a senior PR and international relations consultant to big names in football, Olympic sports and the integrity space. Over the years, I have been a regular spokesperson across conference panels, workshops and seminars, while also guest lecturing at academic institutions across Europe and sitting on industry event and award advisory boards. Former member of the English National Mens Volleyball Team Former coach of the Swiss Cottage Ladies Volleyball Team Follow us on our social sites for the latest updates Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sportsentrepreneurs/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/marcusluerpodcast LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/sports-entrepreneurs Website: https://marcusluer.com Podcast: https://marcusluer.com/podcast To get in touch, please email us at podcast@marcusluer.com Feel Good by MusicbyAden https://soundcloud.com/musicbyaden Creative Commons — Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported — CC BY-SA 3.0 Free Download / Stream: https://bit.ly/_feel-good Music promoted by Audio Library https://youtu.be/bvgIqqRStcQ
More than ever, the world needs builders – people ready to roll up their sleeves and build solutions for the challenges we face. In this season finale episode, Eboo Patel, Founder and President of Interfaith America, speaks with four leaders already building Interfaith America. Grounded in their faith communities and ethical traditions, these panelists respond from their beliefs to provide hope and inspiration. This panel discussion was a part of the opening plenary at the 2022 Interfaith Leadership Summit. Guest Bios:Panelist: Allison Josephs (she/her)Allison Josephs is the founder and executive director of Jew in the City, a nonprofit that changes negative perceptions of religious Jews and makes engaging and meaningful Orthodox Judaism known and accessible. She has been involved in the field of Jewish Outreach for over twenty years and is the Partner in Torah mentor to actress Mayim Bialik. Variety named her as an advocate for inclusivity in the entertainment industry in its 2022 Inclusion Impact Report. Allison has been quoted or written about in numerous publications, including Vanity Fair, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, People Magazine, NYPost, Daily News, TMZ, The Daily Beast, and Hollywood Reporter. She has appeared on numerous television and radio networks including CBS, ABC, Fox5, TLC, Associate Press TV, and NPR; her articles have appeared in publications including The Washington Post, JTA, Jewish Week, Jerusalem Post, The Forward, and Kveller.Panelist: Nisha Anand (she/her)Nisha Anand is an Indian-American activist, mom of two teenagers, and leader for racial justice. Once a radical grassroots activist arrested in Burma for passing out pro-democracy leaflets, Nisha's expansive organizing experience and work with mentors like Van Jones, solidified her belief in the power of working with unlikely partners to find real solutions. As Dream Corps' CEO, Nisha leads a diverse group of people who are learning, like her, the value of unconventional relationships. Nisha's journey from punk-rock protester to common ground champion is documented in her TED talk, The Radical Act of Choosing Common Ground.Panelist: Sarwang Parikh (he/they)Sarwang Parikh is a Licensed Marriage & Family Therapist (LMFT) in CA. He was born and raised within a devotional Hindu Gujarati Indian culture from an immigrant, working-class family in the South. They have been steeped in the practices and study of Yogic sciences & Buddhism for nearly 20 years. Sarwang earned his MA from CIIS in Integral Counseling Psychology, BA in Psychology and Religious Studies from University of SC. Additionally, they have advanced training in the healing arts and have completed Spirit Rock's two-year Dedicated Practitioners Program (DPP5) within the tradition of Theravāda Vipassanā. Sarwang is a long-time sangha member and community teacher at East Bay Meditation Center (STL teacher training); mentors youth with iBme; and currently serves as the Interim Director at Buddhist Peace FellowshipPanelist: Ulysses W. Burley III (he/him)Dr. Ulysses W. Burley III is the founder of UBtheCURE, LLC – a proprietary consulting company on the intersection of Faith, Health, and Human Rights. Ulysses served as a member of the Executive Committee of the World Council of Churches as well as the United States Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS (PACHA) under the Obama Administration. He has been recognized by the National Minority Quality Forum as a top 40 under 40 Minority Health Leader for his work in faith and HIV in communities of color and serves on the NMQF Advisory Board. Ulysses is an internationally recognized speaker and award winning writer on topics including faith, HIV/AIDS policy, LGBTQIA, gender and racial justice, food security, and peace in the Middle East. Registrations are now open for 2023 Interfaith Leadership Summit -- the largest gathering of students and educators with a commitment to American religious pluralism. Join the hundreds of people who care about the future of our religiously diverse society as they learn to bridge divides and forge friendships across lines of religious and worldview differences. Learn new skills and return to your campus inspired and ready to build.Visit Interfaith America to learn more about the organization and our podcast.Follow us on Twitter and Instagram to stay up to date with new episodes, interfaith stories, and our programs.
Cet épisode nouvelles discute d'améliorations dans le JDK, d'Hibernate 6, de Service Weaver, de la fin d'options dans DockerHub pour certains projets open source, de Gradle, de cURL et pleins d'autres choses encore. Enregistré le 17 mars 2023 Téléchargement de l'épisode LesCastCodeurs-Episode–292.mp3 News Langages Quelle version de JDK utiliser en fonction des fonctionnalités que l'on souhaite utiliser mais aussi du long time support https://whichjdk.com/ JetBrains propose une formation Rust intégrée aux IDEs https://blog.jetbrains.com/rust/2023/02/21/learn-rust-with-jetbrains-ides/ Un apprentissage directement intégré à l'IDE Avec un plugin “Academy” dédié, qui rajoute un troisième panneau avec les instructions, les explications, et on fait des exercices dans la partie IDE Une chouette manière d'apprendre intégrée directement à son IDE Chacun doit pouvoir créer ses propres ressources d'apprentissage, et on pourrait appliquer ça à des frameworks, des outils, ou pourquoi pas son propre projet informatique ! Retravail de classes du JDK Bits / ByteArray vers un usage via VarHandle pour le swapping de bits dans Java 21 https://minborgsjavapot.blogspot.com/2023/01/java–21-performance-improvements.html petit changement mais utilisé par beaucoup de classes comme ObjectInputStream RandomAccessFile etc améliore la serialization en java Rajout de la notion de “sequenced collection” dans la hiérarchie des collections, planifié pour JDK 21 https://www.infoq.com/news/2023/03/collections-framework-makeover/ va permettre de codifier les collections qui ont un ordre donné (pas forcément trié) rajouter aussi des méthodes pour traverser des collections séquentielles à l'envers, ou pour récupérer ou ajouter un élément au début ou à la fin d'une collection ordonnée aujourd'hui ces methodes sont eparpillées dans les implémentaions et n'avaient aps de contrat commun Le guide ultime des virtual threads https://blog.rockthejvm.com/ultimate-guide-to-java-virtual-threads/ un très long article qui couvre le sujet des nouveaux virtual threads comment en créer comment ils fonctionnent le scheduler et le scheduling coopératif les “pinned” virtual threads (lorsqu'un thread virtuel est bloqué dans un vrai thread, par exemple dans un bloc synchronized ou lors d'appel de méthondes natives) les thread local et thread pools Librairies Quarkus 3 alpha 5 avec Hibernate ORM 6 et une nouvelle DevUI https://quarkus.io/blog/quarkus–3–0–0-alpha5-released/ passage d'Hibernate 5 a 6 (donc testez! switch de compatibilité supérieur pour aider la transition https://github.com/quarkusio/quarkus/wiki/Migration-Guide–3.0:-Hibernate-ORM–5-to–6-migration#database-orm-compatibility (DB interaction esp schema StatelessSession injectable Gradle 8 nouvelle DEvUI (nouveau look and feel, plus extensible pour els extensions et pplus facile a utiliser, va au dela des integrations d'extension (config etc) quarkus deploy dans la CLI, gradle et maven: deploie dans Kube, knative, OpenShift La route vers Quarkus 3, article sure infoq https://www.infoq.com/news/2023/03/road-quarkus–3/ Jakarta EE, ORM 6, Microprofile 6, virtual threads, io_uring, ReactiveStreams=> Flow io_uring reduit les copie de buffer entre userspace et kernel space pas de support JPMS en vue mais Red Hat contribue a project Leyden Camel extensions, attendez Camel 4 (passage Jakarta EE) Interview de Geert Bevin, l'auteur du framework Java RIFE2 https://devm.io/java/rife2-java-framework Google annouce Service Weaver https://opensource.googleblog.com/2023/03/introducing-service-weaver-framework-for-writing-distributed-applications.html EJB is back (Enterprise Go Beans :D) ecrire en tant que modular monolith permet au deploiement décider ce qui est distribué basé sur leur experience du surtout de maintance des microservices (contrats plus difficiles a casser - dbesoin de coordination de rollout etc) dans la communauté des entousiastes et des gens concernés par les 10 falaccies of distributed computing et le fait de cacher les appels distants EJB et corba avant cela ont été des échecs de ce point de vue la ils n'expliquement pas comment le binding de nouveax contrats et de deploiement se fait de maniere transparente des deployeurs implementables (go et GKE initialement) Etude d'opinion de certains utilisateurs de Jakarta EE (OmniFaces community) https://omnifish.ee/2023/03/10/jakarta-ee-survey–2022–2023-results/ biaisée donc attention Java EE 8 suivi par Jakarta EE 8 et derriere Jakarta EE 10 etc WildFly puis Payara puis glassfish ensuite tomee et JBoss EAP gens contents de leurs serverus d'app sand Weblogic et Websphere les api utilisées le plus JPA, CDI, REST, Faces, Servlet, Bean Validation, JTA, EJB, EL etc Produit microprofile: Quarkus puis WildFlky puis Open Liberty puis Payara et Helidon Dans microprofile: Config, rest client, open api, health et metric sont les plus utilisés Comment utiliser des records et Hibernate https://thorben-janssen.com/java-records-embeddables-hibernate/ pas en tant qu'entité encore (final, pas de constructeur vide) mais en tant qu'@Embeddable records sont immuable dans hibernate 6.2, c'est supporté par default (annoter le record @Embeddable Ca utilise le contrat EmbeddableIntentiator Cinq librairies Java super confortables https://tomaszs2.medium.com/5-amazingly-comfortable-java-libraries–887802e240de mapstruct mapper des entités en DTO jOOQ requête de bases de données typées WireMock mocker des API ou être entre le client et l'API pour ne mocker que certaines requêtes Eclipse Collections : pour rendre le code plus simple et facile à comprendre. Attention à la,surface d'attaque HikariCP connection pool rapide - agroal est dans la meme veine mais supporte JTA. C'est ce qui est dans Quarkus. Retour d'expérience sur Hibernate 6 https://www.jpa-buddy.com/blog/hibernate6-whats-new-and-why-its-important/ côté APIs et côté moteur jakarta persistence 3 ; java 11 annotations de types hibernate sont typesafe support des types JSON OOTB meilleur support des dates avec @TimeZoneStorage soit natif de la base soit avec une colonne séparée changement dans la génération des ID (changement cassant) mais stratégies de noms historique peut être activé Options autour de UUID (Time base et IP based) composite id n'ont plus besoin d'être serialisable type texte long supportés via @JdbcTypeCode multitenancy (shared schema, resolver de tenant a plugger) read by position (SQL plus court car sans alias, deserialisarion plus rapide, moins de joins dans certains cas) modele sous jacent commun entre HQL et l'api criteria et donc même moteur meilleure génération du SQL et plus de fonction SQL modernes réduisant le gap entre HQL et SQL ronctions analytiques et fenêtre quand la base les supportent graphe traverse en largeur plutôt qu'en profondeur (potentiellement plus de join donc bien mettre lazy sur vos associations) Cloud Docker supprime les organisations open source sur DockerHub https://blog.alexellis.io/docker-is-deleting-open-source-images/ Les projets open source risquent de devoir passer de 0 $ à 420 $ par an pour héberger leurs images Rétropédalage de Docker https://www.docker.com/blog/we-apologize-we-did-a-terrible-job-announcing-the-end-of-docker-free-teams/ Web Une base de connaissance sur le fonctionnement et les bonnes pratiques autour des WebHooks https://nordicapis.com/exploring-webooks-fyi-the-webhooks-knowledge-center/ Guillaume a refondu son blog https://glaforge.dev/ Cette fois ci, c'est un site web statique, généré avec Hugo, avec des articles en Markdown, hébergé sur Github Pages, buildé / publié automatiquement par Github Actions Outillage Gradle 8.0 est sorti https://docs.gradle.org/8.0/release-notes.html Une CLI connectée à OpenAI's Davinci model pour générer vos lignes de commandes https://github.com/TheR1D/shell_gpt sgpt -se "start nginx using docker, forward 443 and 80 port, mount current folder with index.html" -> docker run -d -p 443:443 -p 80:80 -v $(pwd):/usr/share/nginx/html nginx -> Execute shell command? [y/N]: y Un petit outil en ligne basé sur le modèle GPT–3 qui permet d'expliquer un bout de code https://whatdoesthiscodedo.com/g/db97d13 Copiez-collez un bout de code de moins de 1000 caractères, et le modèle de code de GPT–3, et l'outil vous explique ce que fait ces quelques lignes de code Assez impressionnant quand on pense que c'est un modèle de prédiction probabiliste des prochains caractères logiques Certaines réponses donnent vraiment l'impression parfois que l'outil comprends réellement l'intention du développeur derrière ce bout de code Git: Comment rebaser des branches en cascade https://adamj.eu/tech/2022/10/15/how-to-rebase-stacked-git-branches/ native-image va être inclu dans la prochaine version de GraalVM JDK. Plus besoin de gu install native-image https://github.com/oracle/graal/pull/5995 Si vous utilisez l'outil Mermaid pour faire des graphes d'architecture, d'interactions, etc, il y a un petit cheatsheet sympa qui montre comment faire certains diagrammes https://jojozhuang.github.io/tutorial/mermaid-cheat-sheet/ Un site avec plein de trucs et astuces sur psql, le langage SQL de PostgreSQL https://psql-tips.org/ CURL a 25 ans ! https://daniel.haxx.se/blog/2023/03/10/curl–25-years-online-celebration/ Son créateur, Daniel Stenberg, est toujours à la tête du projet cURL est utilisé dans d'innombrables projets par défaut dans plein de systèmes d'exploitation Cédric Champeau explique le concept de version catalog de Gradle et comment il améliore la productivité https://melix.github.io/blog//2023/03–12-micronaut-catalogs.html permet de réduire le temps et l'effort nécessaire à gérer la version de ses dépendances apport aussi plus de sécurité, de flexibilité, pour s'assurer qu'on a les bonnes versions les plus récentes des dépendances et qu'elles fonctionnent bien entre elles Architecture La pyramide des besoins du code de qualité https://www.fabianzeindl.com/posts/the-codequality-pyramid le bas de la pyramide supporte le haut performance de build performance de test testabilité qualité des codes de composants fonctionalités performance du code pour chaque bloc, il explique les raisons, ses definitions et des astuces pour l'ameliorer par exemples les fonctionalites changent et donc build, testabilité et qualite de code permet des changements légers en cas de changement dans les fonctionalités perf viennent ensuite ("premature opt, root of all evil), regader des besoins globaux Méthodologies Le DevSusOps est né https://www.infoq.com/news/2023/02/sustainability-develop-operation/?utm_campaign=i[…]nt&utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=feed&utm_term=culture-methods bon serieusement, comment on couvre avec un nom pareil sans déraper :man-facepalming: ah dommage Micreosoft rejoints la FinOps foundation https://www.infoq.com/news/2023/02/microsoft-joins-finops-org/?utm_campaign=infoq_content&utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=feed&utm_term=Cloud Imagine si ils avaient rejoint la DevSusOps fondation Sécurité Plein de choses qu'on peut faire avec des Yubikeys https://debugging.works/blog/yubikey-cheatsheet/ Pour générer des time-based one-time passwords, pour l'accès SSH,, pour sécuriser un base Keepass, comme 2FA pour le chiffrement de disque, pour la vérification d'identifiant personnel, pour gérer les clés privées… Loi, société et organisation Le fabricant de graveurs de CPU hollandais ASML se voit interdire d'exporter ses technologies vers la chine https://www-lemagit-fr.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/www.lemagit.fr/actualites/365532284/Processeurs[…]le-escalade-dans-les-sanctions-contre-la-Chine?amp=1 en tous cas les technologies de gravure des deux dernières generations de la pression commerciale on passe au registre d'exclusion par decision militaire ASML s'était fait espionner récemment CAnon et Sony aussi dans la restriction Meta supprime de nouveau 10000 emplois soit 25% au total depuis la fin de l'année dernière https://www.lesechos.fr/tech-medias/hightech/meta-va-supprimer–10000-postes-de-plus–1915528 Rubrique débutant Bouger les éléments d'une liste https://www.baeldung.com/java-arraylist-move-items discute le concept d'array list en dessous et donc le coût d'insérer au milieu decouverte de Collections.swap (pour intervertir deux elements) decouverte de Collections.rotate pour “deplacer” l'index zero de la liste Conférences La liste des conférences provenant de Developers Conferences Agenda/List par Aurélie Vache et contributeurs : 15–18 mars 2023 : JChateau - Cheverny in the Châteaux of the Loire Valley (France) 23–24 mars 2023 : SymfonyLive Paris - Paris (France) 23–24 mars 2023 : Agile Niort - Niort (France) 30 mars 2023 : Archilocus - Online (France) 31 mars 2023–1 avril 2023 : Agile Games France - Grenoble (France) 1–2 avril 2023 : JdLL - Lyon 3e (France) 4 avril 2023 : AWS Summit Paris - Paris (France) 4 avril 2023 : Lyon Craft - Lyon (France) 5–7 avril 2023 : FIC - Lille Grand Palais (France) 12–14 avril 2023 : Devoxx France - Paris (France) 20 avril 2023 : WordPress Contributor Day - Paris (France) 20–21 avril 2023 : Toulouse Hacking Convention 2023 - Toulouse (France) 21 avril 2023 : WordCamp Paris - Paris (France) 27–28 avril 2023 : AndroidMakers by droidcon - Montrouge (France) 4–6 mai 2023 : Devoxx Greece - Athens (Greece) 10–12 mai 2023 : Devoxx UK - London (UK) 11 mai 2023 : A11yParis - Paris (France) 12 mai 2023 : AFUP Day - lle & Lyon (France) 12 mai 2023 : SoCraTes Rennes - Rennes (France) 25–26 mai 2023 : Newcrafts Paris - Paris (France) 26 mai 2023 : Devfest Lille - Lille (France) 27 mai 2023 : Polycloud - Montpellier (France) 31 mai 2023–2 juin 2023 : Devoxx Poland - Krakow (Poland) 31 mai 2023–2 juin 2023 : Web2Day - Nantes (France) 1 juin 2023 : Javaday - Paris (France) 1 juin 2023 : WAX - Aix-en-Provence (France) 2–3 juin 2023 : Sud Web - Toulouse (France) 7 juin 2023 : Serverless Days Paris - Paris (France) 15–16 juin 2023 : Le Camping des Speakers - Baden (France) 20 juin 2023 : Mobilis in Mobile - Nantes (France) 20 juin 2023 : Cloud Est - Villeurbanne (France) 21–23 juin 2023 : Rencontres R - Avignon (France) 28–30 juin 2023 : Breizh Camp - Rennes (France) 29–30 juin 2023 : Sunny Tech - Montpellier (France) 29–30 juin 2023 : Agi'Lille - Lille (France) 8 septembre 2023 : JUG Summer Camp - La Rochelle (France) 19 septembre 2023 : Salon de la Data Nantes - Nantes (France) & Online 21–22 septembre 2023 : API Platform Conference - Lille (France) & Online 25–26 septembre 2023 : BIG DATA & AI PARIS 2023 - Paris (France) 28–30 septembre 2023 : Paris Web - Paris (France) 2–6 octobre 2023 : Devoxx Belgium - Antwerp (Belgium) 10–12 octobre 2023 : Devoxx Morroco - Agadir (Morroco) 12 octobre 2023 : Cloud Nord - Lille (France) 12–13 octobre 2023 : Volcamp 2023 - Clermont-Ferrand (France) 12–13 octobre 2023 : Forum PHP 2023 - Marne-la-Vallée (France) 19–20 octobre 2023 : DevFest Nantes - Nantes (France) 10 novembre 2023 : BDX I/O - Bordeaux (France) 6–7 décembre 2023 : Open Source Experience - Paris (France) 31 janvier 2024–3 février 2024 : SnowCamp - Grenoble (France) 1–3 février 2024 : SnowCamp - Grenoble (France) Nous contacter Pour réagir à cet épisode, venez discuter sur le groupe Google https://groups.google.com/group/lescastcodeurs Contactez-nous via twitter https://twitter.com/lescastcodeurs Faire un crowdcast ou une crowdquestion Soutenez Les Cast Codeurs sur Patreon https://www.patreon.com/LesCastCodeurs Tous les épisodes et toutes les infos sur https://lescastcodeurs.com/
Leaders bring you a conversation with the Commissioner of one of esports' biggest leagues and an interview snippet with record-breaking cricketer Sir Alastair Cook.Welcome back to Leaders and How They Lead, the podcast series that looks at what it means to be a leader in the sports industry.The series explores a range of leaders' perspectives from a range of different organisations; pressing them on what makes them tick; how they think they manage (upwards and downwards); how they handle failure and conflict; how they communicate strategic vision; how they develop people; and how they lead to win – whatever ‘win' means.The first guest of the season is Alexander Inglot. Inglot began his career as a corporate commercial lawyer in City of London prior to moving to Mexico to work in Marketing and Communications for Atlante FC. He later returned to the United Kingdom to work as a Senior Consultant at JTA (with clients including Manchester United and AETLC), then later as Director of Communications at Sportradar AG. Following a period of balancing a role as a European Player Representative at the ATP Tour with his current role as Commissioner of the ESL Pro League, he chose to depart from the former in 2021.Beginning at 28:22, the episode also includes insights on leadership from British cricket legend Alastair Cook. In a snippet from an interview recorded at our fourth Leaders Sport Business Summit Abu Dhabi, Cook discusses his leadership style, the importance of resilience and how to guide a team through crises and challenges. The fifth edition of Leaders Sport Business Summit Abu Dhabi returns on 1st and 2nd March. Please visit https://leadersinsport.com/sport-business/leaders-events/the-sport-business-summit-abu-dhabi/ to find out more and register your interest.
In this episode Jay from JTA realtors sits down Ned Specktor a social media reporter and swag salesman. In this episode they discuss what it means to be purposeful in your work , how to get started in business and the life of a salesman. Follow @detroitrealestatepodcast on instagram to watch clips from this episode. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/jtapodcasts/message
That's 3 in a row folks! Patrick breaks down the Golden State Warriors' 112-107 win over the Utah Jazz at Chase Center. Jordan Poole was necessarily aggressive and Patrick Baldwin Jr. got some eye-opening run. Without Stephen Curry, Andrew Wiggins, or Klay Thompson the rest of the W's chipped in and showed they're continuing to turn the corner. (0:00) W's are growing by learning to win without Stephen Curry (0:33) Young guys and new guys stepping up (3:07) Patrick Baldwin Jr. impresses on both ends in extended run (7:30) Jordan Poole forcing the issue out of necessity (9:23) Narrative arc of the season (14:06) James Wiseman another solid night, does anyone miss JaMychal Green? (16:20) Funny Steve Kerr lineups (17:04) Ty Jerome and Anthony Lamb are better than DLee and JTA (20:46) Jonathan Kuminga reminiscent of a young Terrell Owens (25:03) Upcoming games including Phoenix Suns without Devin Booker (26:31) The joy of watching homegrown talent actually grow (27:44) Donte DiVincenzo vs. Gary Payton 2, and the Portland Trailblazers WATCH, LISTEN, & SUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL: youtube.com/OaklandWarriors CONNECT ON MASTODON: sfba.social/@warriors CONNECT ON POST: post.news/warriors BUY AN OAKLAND WARRIORS SHIRT! oaklandwarriors.myshopify.com CONNECT ON TWITTER: twitter.com/OaklandWarriors EMAIL US AT: oaklandwarriors.com@gmail.com LEAVE US A VOICEMAIL AT: 323-863-6044 THE BASKETBALL PODCAST NETWORK: thebasketballpodcastnetwork.com MUSIC BY Paper Son paperson.bandcamp.com soundcloud.com/paper-son If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisis counseling and referral services can be accessed by calling 1-800- GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) (IL/IN/LA/MI/NJ/TN/PA/WV/WY), 1-800- NEXT STEP (AZ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO/KS/NH), 888-789-7777/visit ccpg.org (CT), 1-800-BETS OFF (IA), 877-8-HOPENY/text HOPENY (467369) (NY), visit OPGR.org (OR), or 1-888-532-3500 (VA). 21+ (18+ NH/WY). Physically present in AZ/CO/CT/IL/IN/IA/KS/LA(select parishes)/MI/NH/NJ/ NY/OR/PA/TN/VA/WV/WY only. Void in ONT. $150 in Free bets: New customers only. Min. $5 deposit. Min $5 pregame moneyline bet. $150 issued as six (6) $25 free bets. Bet must win. Ends 12/31/22. Stepped Up SGP: 1 Token issued per eligible game. Opt in req. Min $1 bet. Max bet limits apply. Min. 3-leg. Each leg min. -300 odds, total bet +100 odds or longer. 10+ leg req. for 100% boost. Ends at start of final game of the 2022-2023 NBA Season. See eligibility & terms at sportsbook.draftkings.com/basketballterms. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Patrick breaks down the Golden State Warriors' 110-105 win over the Charlotte Hornets at Chase Center. Jordan Poole and Klay Thompson carried the squad, while Jonathan Kuminga pushed them over the top. (0:00) W's are growing by learning to win without Stephen Curry (1:07) Jonathan Kuminga puts the W's over the top (6:28) Jordan Poole and Klay Thompson deliver (7:44) Donte DiVincenzo's all around game (10:18) James Wiseman making strides and showing signs (15:07) Remembering Kuminga's massive G League block on Poole (16:00) The kids are all right (17:02) Up next: Revenge SZN on the Jazz? (18:57) Looking ahead to the season's halfway mark (21:09) Anthony Lamb and Ty Jerome have basically become JTA and Damion Lee WATCH, LISTEN, & SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEW YOUTUBE CHANNEL: youtube.com/OaklandWarriors CONNECT ON MASTODON: sfba.social/@warriors CONNECT ON POST: post.news/warriors BUY AN OAKLAND WARRIORS SHIRT! oaklandwarriors.myshopify.com CONNECT ON TWITTER: twitter.com/OaklandWarriors EMAIL US AT: oaklandwarriors.com@gmail.com LEAVE US A VOICEMAIL AT: 323-863-6044 THE BASKETBALL PODCAST NETWORK: thebasketballpodcastnetwork.com MUSIC BY Paper Son paperson.bandcamp.com soundcloud.com/paper-son If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisis counseling and referral services can be accessed by calling 1-800- GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) (IL/IN/LA/MI/NJ/TN/PA/WV/WY), 1-800- NEXT STEP (AZ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO/KS/NH), 888-789-7777/visit ccpg.org (CT), 1-800-BETS OFF (IA), 877-8-HOPENY/text HOPENY (467369) (NY), visit OPGR.org (OR), or 1-888-532-3500 (VA). 21+ (18+ NH/WY). Physically present in AZ/CO/CT/IL/IN/IA/KS/LA(select parishes)/MI/NH/NJ/ NY/OR/PA/TN/VA/WV/WY only. Void in ONT. $150 in Free bets: New customers only. Min. $5 deposit. Min $5 pregame moneyline bet. $150 issued as six (6) $25 free bets. Bet must win. Ends 12/31/22. Stepped Up SGP: 1 Token issued per eligible game. Opt in req. Min $1 bet. Max bet limits apply. Min. 3-leg. Each leg min. -300 odds, total bet +100 odds or longer. 10+ leg req. for 100% boost. Ends at start of final game of the 2022-2023 NBA Season. See eligibility & terms at sportsbook.draftkings.com/basketballterms. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Patrick discusses the news that Stephen Curry will not require shoulder surgery but he will likely miss at least 2-4 weeks. With a stable of unproven youngsters and role players, this is the perfect chance for them to showcase what they've got and grow on the court. Will this ultimately be a blessing in disguise for the Golden State Warriors? Only time will tell. (0:00) Steph's injury update (1:43) The reality of the situation (3:14) Intriguing period coming from for the squad (4:16) Setting realistic expectations (6:21) Moses Moody, Jonathan Kuminga, Donte DiVincenzo (8:09) Playing with purpose (8:36) Can James Wiseman show he's improved? (10:50) Andrew Wiggins, Klay Thompson, Jordan Poole (13:17) Re: GP2, OPJ, JTA, DLee (15:05) Is it Wiseman SZN? WATCH, LISTEN, & SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEW YOUTUBE CHANNEL: youtube.com/OaklandWarriors BUY AN OAKLAND WARRIORS SHIRT! oaklandwarriors.myshopify.com SUPPORT THE SHOW ON PATREON! patreon.com/OaklandWarriors CONNECT WITH PATRICK: twitter.com/PatrickEpino CONNECT WITH THE POD! oaklandwarriors.com twitter.com/OaklandWarriors EMAIL US AT: oaklandwarriors.com@gmail.com LEAVE US A VOICEMAIL AT: 323-863-6044 THE BASKETBALL PODCAST NETWORK: thebasketballpodcastnetwork.com MUSIC BY Paper Son paperson.bandcamp.com soundcloud.com/paper-son If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisis counseling and referral services can be accessed by calling 1-800- GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) (IL/IN/LA/MI/NJ/TN/PA/WV/WY), 1-800- NEXT STEP (AZ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO/KS/NH), 888-789-7777/visit ccpg.org (CT), 1-800-BETS OFF (IA), 877-8-HOPENY/text HOPENY (467369) (NY), visit OPGR.org (OR), or 1-888-532-3500 (VA). 21+ (18+ NH/WY). Physically present in AZ/CO/CT/IL/IN/IA/KS/LA(select parishes)/MI/NH/NJ/ NY/OR/PA/TN/VA/WV/WY only. Void in ONT. $150 in Free bets: New customers only. Min. $5 deposit. Min $5 pregame moneyline bet. $150 issued as six (6) $25 free bets. Bet must win. Ends 12/31/22. Stepped Up SGP: 1 Token issued per eligible game. Opt in req. Min $1 bet. Max bet limits apply. Min. 3-leg. Each leg min. -300 odds, total bet +100 odds or longer. 10+ leg req. for 100% boost. Ends at start of final game of the 2022-2023 NBA Season. See eligibility & terms at sportsbook.draftkings.com/basketballterms. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Allison Josephs (Founder & Executive Director of Jew in the City) has been involved in the field of Jewish Outreach for over twenty years and is the Partner in Torah mentor to actress Mayim Bialik. Variety named her as an advocate for inclusivity in the entertainment industry in its 2022 Inclusion Impact Report. Allison has been quoted or written about in numerous publications, including Vanity Fair, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, People Magazine, NYPost, Daily News, TMZ, The Daily Beast, and Hollywood Reporter. She has appeared on numerous television and radio networks including CBS, ABC, Fox5, TLC, Associate Press TV, and NPR; her articles have appeared in publications including The Washington Post, JTA, Jewish Week, Jerusalem Post, The Forward, and Kveller.Pearson Education, the largest textbook company in the world, produced a video segment on Allison's life for the Judaism chapter of their textbook. She is a sought-after international lecturer whose corporate clients include Con-Edison and NYU Langone and hosts a weekly podcast on the Nachum Segal Network. She received her Bachelor of Arts from Columbia University in Philosophy and lives with her husband and four children minutes from the George Washington Bridge.00:00 - Intro13:25 - Interview1:04:52 - OutroRabbi Efrem Goldberg: Rabbi, Boca Raton Synagogue (BRS). Rabbi Philip Moskowitz: Associate Rabbi, BRS. Rabbi Josh Broide: Outreach Rabbi, BRS.
The Lakers head into Minnesota with an 0-4 record and a change in the lineup with Anthony Davis and JTA out and Russell Westbrook coming off the bench. Despite a spirited performance from Lebron James with 28 points, the Lakers fall to the T-Wolves 111-102. Tune in as LakerTom and Jamie Sweet from lakerholics.com, Joe Soro from lakersball.com, and "MagicMan" Sean Grice speculate with Gerald Glassford on how long Russell Westbrook will stay a bench player and if the best option will be just to have him stay home. Plus when or where will the Lakers be able to right this ship on their anemic offense? All this and a shocking development in San Antonio on our latest Lakers Fast Break podcast! Please Like, Share, and Subscribe to our channel and our social media @lakersfastbreak on Twitter. If you have questions for us give us a shout-out on Twitter, YouTube, or Facebook, or send us your thoughts to lakersfastbreak@yahoo.com. Gear up with your favorite Lakers Fast Break shirts and gifts in our Pop Culture Cosmos TeePublic store at https://www.teepublic.com/user/pop-culture-cosmos Presented by our friends at the Hoop Heads Podcast Network, NBA Draft Junkies, lakerholics.com, lakersball.com, Pop Culture Cosmos, Inside Sports Fantasy Football, Vampires and Vitae, the novel Congratulations, You Suck (available at Amazon and Barnes and Noble), The Happy Hoarder, and Retro City Games! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lakers-fast-break/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lakers-fast-break/support
Andy's on vacation, but the show doesn't stop! Cyrus Saatsaz, host of Locked On Warriors, stops by the show. We start with a scouting report on Juan Toscano-Anderson. What is a reasonable expectation, and how many minutes are too many for JTA? It's been a while since the Lakers had a real, live wing, but while Toscano-Anderson should be a fan favorite, just how big a role could/should he play for the Lakers this year? We talk trades. The Lakers efforts to trade Russell Westbrook and get Kyrie Irving are tied to the Nets moving Kevin Durant. Is Golden State still a live possibility? Are the Lakers a contender if they can swing a one of these big trades? That leads to a conversation about how long these Warriors could play at a championship level, obviously a question of importance to Lakers fans given GSW's status as one of the teams LA would have to chase down. Spoiler alert: With vets who could age well in Steph Curry and Klay Thompson, a third cog in Draymond Green they can increasingly rest through regular seasons and young talent like Jonathan Kuminga, James Wiseman and Moses Moody... they're gonna be good for a while. Finally, what does Saatsaz, as an outsider who looks at the Lakers from afar, think about the prospects of the Lakers if they're able to pull off a deal that improves the team? HOSTS: Brian Kamenetzky, with Guest Cyrus Saatsaz SEGMENT 1: Scouting Juan Toscano-Anderson. How much will he help the Lakers this season? SEGMENT 2: How much would a Kyrie deal improve the Lakers? Could the Warriors actually step in and make a deal for Durant? SEGMENT 3: What is the window for the Warriors, and by extension, how much work do the Lakers need to do to make up the gap (whether with Golden State, or the West at large)? Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors! Built Bar Built Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order. BetOnline BetOnline.net has you covered this season with more props, odds and lines than ever before. BetOnline – Where The Game Starts! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Andy's on vacation, but the show doesn't stop! Cyrus Saatsaz, host of Locked On Warriors, stops by the show. We start with a scouting report on Juan Toscano-Anderson. What is a reasonable expectation, and how many minutes are too many for JTA? It's been a while since the Lakers had a real, live wing, but while Toscano-Anderson should be a fan favorite, just how big a role could/should he play for the Lakers this year?We talk trades. The Lakers efforts to trade Russell Westbrook and get Kyrie Irving are tied to the Nets moving Kevin Durant. Is Golden State still a live possibility? Are the Lakers a contender if they can swing a one of these big trades? That leads to a conversation about how long these Warriors could play at a championship level, obviously a question of importance to Lakers fans given GSW's status as one of the teams LA would have to chase down.Spoiler alert: With vets who could age well in Steph Curry and Klay Thompson, a third cog in Draymond Green they can increasingly rest through regular seasons and young talent like Jonathan Kuminga, James Wiseman and Moses Moody... they're gonna be good for a while.Finally, what does Saatsaz, as an outsider who looks at the Lakers from afar, think about the prospects of the Lakers if they're able to pull off a deal that improves the team?HOSTS: Brian Kamenetzky, with Guest Cyrus SaatsazSEGMENT 1: Scouting Juan Toscano-Anderson. How much will he help the Lakers this season?SEGMENT 2: How much would a Kyrie deal improve the Lakers? Could the Warriors actually step in and make a deal for Durant?SEGMENT 3: What is the window for the Warriors, and by extension, how much work do the Lakers need to do to make up the gap (whether with Golden State, or the West at large)?Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!Built BarBuilt Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order.BetOnlineBetOnline.net has you covered this season with more props, odds and lines than ever before. BetOnline – Where The Game Starts! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Laker Film Room - Dedicated to the Study of Lakers Basketball
Can Juan Toscano-Anderson or Stanley Johnson be the combo forward who slots between LeBron and Anthony Davis in a Lakers closing lineup? Do either have the full offensive skill set? What about the defensive versatility? Can both even play in the rotation if the Lakers start AD at power forward? Pete and Darius answer these questions by breaking down Stanley and JTA's games, the Lakers forward position in general, and some of the challenges of investing in this part of the roster when your best players already play those positions. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The boys kick off the episode with more thoughts on the ongoing battle between LIV Golf and the PGA Tour, while also previewing the British Open, dropping thoughts on Tiger and taking a quick dive into whether or not Max Homa is for the boys. JTA issues a troubling defense of the PGA Tour, while providing insight on the history of the game and consistently trying to take the pod to a dark place.
The Lakers have been chasing center Thomas Bryant throughout the free agency period, and late Tuesday finally landed their man. The former Laker draftee, who only turns 25 at the end of the month, returns on a one-year deal that should provide a major opportunity to re-establish his value around the NBA. While the Lakers moved quickly when free agency opened, signing four players out of the gate, a very solid argument can be made that Bryant will be the most impactful. Before hurting his knee in Washington, Bryant was evolving into one of the better young offensive centers in the game, scoring efficiently and stretching the floor with a reliable 3-point shot (over 40%). The Lakers, desperate for floor spacing, may need to find Bryant a role if for no other reason than he's their best shooter, on paper. He is this year's Malik Monk - a player with some skill on a minimum contract trying to parlay opportunity into security. It worked for Monk, who got two years and 19 mil from Sacramento. If it works for Bryant, that's good news for the Lakers because it means he played well. What about Lonnie Walker IV? He talked Wednesday in El Segundo about defense. A lot. About defending multiple positions, and using his athleticism. He talked about shooting, and making teams pay for leaving him open. Walker sounds sincere, and has plenty of incentive to make all of it happen, but to this point in his career he hasn't, which is why Walker was available for the Lakers to sign. Can he evolve in L.A.? Finally, Juan Toscano-Anderson spoke to the media, reflecting on his excitement to be in Los Angeles (he was, like many, a big Kobe guy) and play for a team with the history of the Lakers, after experiencing a championship with Golden State. JTA, who is going to be massively popular in L.A., talked a lot about culture and what goes into making positive contributions on that front. It's something the Lakers need. HOSTS: Andy and Brian Kamenetzky SEGMENT 1: The Lakers sign Thomas Bryant, continuing the trend of skewing young in free agency. Is he the best player they've picked up? SEGMENT 2: Can Lonnie Walker IV live up to some of the potential that made him a high draft pick? What's been missing? SEGMENT 3: Why the Lakers need Juan Toscano-Anderson, beyond what he might contribute on the floor. Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors! TrueBill Don't fall for subscription scams. Start cancelling today at Truebill.com/LOCKEDONNBA. Built Bar Built Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order. BetOnline BetOnline.net has you covered this season with more props, odds and lines than ever before. BetOnline – Where The Game Starts! Rock Auto Amazing selection. Reliably low prices. All the parts your car will ever need. Visit RockAuto.com and tell them Locked On sent you. Arcade1up Pre-order now from arcade1up.com - that's Arcade, the number 1, Up, dot com - for an estimated early September ship date! They are giving away a NBA JAM Shaq edition to a Locked On listener! Enter for a chance to win a game console for your man-cave at arcade1up.com/lockedon. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The Lakers have been chasing center Thomas Bryant throughout the free agency period, and late Tuesday finally landed their man. The former Laker draftee, who only turns 25 at the end of the month, returns on a one-year deal that should provide a major opportunity to re-establish his value around the NBA. While the Lakers moved quickly when free agency opened, signing four players out of the gate, a very solid argument can be made that Bryant will be the most impactful. Before hurting his knee in Washington, Bryant was evolving into one of the better young offensive centers in the game, scoring efficiently and stretching the floor with a reliable 3-point shot (over 40%). The Lakers, desperate for floor spacing, may need to find Bryant a role if for no other reason than he's their best shooter, on paper.He is this year's Malik Monk - a player with some skill on a minimum contract trying to parlay opportunity into security. It worked for Monk, who got two years and 19 mil from Sacramento. If it works for Bryant, that's good news for the Lakers because it means he played well.What about Lonnie Walker IV? He talked Wednesday in El Segundo about defense. A lot. About defending multiple positions, and using his athleticism. He talked about shooting, and making teams pay for leaving him open. Walker sounds sincere, and has plenty of incentive to make all of it happen, but to this point in his career he hasn't, which is why Walker was available for the Lakers to sign. Can he evolve in L.A.?Finally, Juan Toscano-Anderson spoke to the media, reflecting on his excitement to be in Los Angeles (he was, like many, a big Kobe guy) and play for a team with the history of the Lakers, after experiencing a championship with Golden State. JTA, who is going to be massively popular in L.A., talked a lot about culture and what goes into making positive contributions on that front. It's something the Lakers need.HOSTS: Andy and Brian KamenetzkySEGMENT 1: The Lakers sign Thomas Bryant, continuing the trend of skewing young in free agency. Is he the best player they've picked up?SEGMENT 2: Can Lonnie Walker IV live up to some of the potential that made him a high draft pick? What's been missing?SEGMENT 3: Why the Lakers need Juan Toscano-Anderson, beyond what he might contribute on the floor.Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!TrueBillDon't fall for subscription scams. Start cancelling today at Truebill.com/LOCKEDONNBA.Built BarBuilt Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order.BetOnlineBetOnline.net has you covered this season with more props, odds and lines than ever before. BetOnline – Where The Game Starts!Rock AutoAmazing selection. Reliably low prices. All the parts your car will ever need. Visit RockAuto.com and tell them Locked On sent you.Arcade1upPre-order now from arcade1up.com - that's Arcade, the number 1, Up, dot com - for an estimated early September ship date! They are giving away a NBA JAM Shaq edition to a Locked On listener! Enter for a chance to win a game console for your man-cave at arcade1up.com/lockedon. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Steiny & Guru discuss whether or not the Warriors letting GP2, Porter Jr., Bjelica, JTA, and more, walk and if it was the right decision if they want to keep the championship window open.
In this episode, Shamit Dua of Boot Crewe Media joins the show and we do a substantial deep dive into 2022 NBA Free Agency and the offseason. We start with the Rudy Gobert trade. Why we're skeptical for Minnesota, and why it's a great deal for Utah. Then, the Kyrie-for-Russell Westbrook report came from Chris Haynes while recording, so we dove deep into that, explaining why this is the kind of deal that just kind of makes sense for everyone involved given the weird stages of both organizations. Then, we move to the Malcolm Brogdon trade. Then, we go, in order: Portland's free agency moves, the Knicks signing Brunson and Mitchell Robinson, the 76ers having a normal offseason!, Milwaukee's smart moves, the Tyus Jones deal, Golden State's moves, the Raptors bringing back Chris Boucher and Thad Young, the Lakers bringing in JTA, Walker and Brown, the weird Mo Bamba re-signing in Orlando, Marvin Bagley's deal in Detroit, DORT's extension versus Jae'Sean Tate's extension, Malik Monk, Bruce Brown, Ricky Rubio. Finally, we then dive into the rampant Kevin Durant speculation portion of the episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The boys return with rave reviews for LIV Golf and to discuss it's battle with the PGA Tour and Jay Monaghan. Jimmy from Marlborough also drops some inside info from his brown checkmark sources, while JTA attempts to play devil's advocate.
Steiny & Guru react to the news that Kevon Looney is re-signing with the Warriors on a three-year deal. How important is it? Does it make you forgive losing GP2, JTA, and Otto Porter Jr.? Tap in to find out!
Hour 3: Bonta and Shasky speak with Jomboy Media's Chris Rose and share their thoughts on JTA as it's unlikely he'll be back with the Dubs next season.
It's a new episode on Rick Barry's House. Brandon Cadiz recaps another Warriors Parade and the highlights of the celebration. Three days after the parade the Warriors made three draft picks in the 2022 NBA Draft: Patrick Baldwin Jr., Ryan Rollins, and Gui Santos. They also signed undrafted Memphis rookie Lester Quinines. Brandon takes a dive at analyzing each pick. The Warriors announce their Summer League Roster and addressing the Ryan Rollins injury. What to expect with the Dubs in free agency, as well as allowing JTA and Chiozza to walk. Cadiz reacts to Draymond's comments about Golden State needing KD to beat the Cavs, and Steph not having the ability to take over in 2016.
This week I had the pleasure of interviewing Johnny Halman of Alpha Facilities Management Solutions. Before launching Alpha, Johnny spent over 7 years in Facilities at Jacksonville Transportation Authority (JTA), and was responsible for the maintenance of all JTA facilities and grounds. This consisted of almost 300,000 SF of building space across 22 facilities, and over 2,600 transit hubs in the greater Jacksonville area.On this episode, Johnny dives into best practices surrounding core components of project management:BudgetingForecastingData CollectionCustomer SuccessJohnny is passionate about Facilities Management and spreading the word on best practices!Enjoy!
Overcoming glass ceilings, cultural differences and English language challenges, Junko Mukoyama is my next inspirational guest on Lawyer on Air. She explains how Japan has changed so much in just one generation but also the barriers she came up against in her career and how she took control of her career and ended up smashing through them. If you enjoyed this episode and it inspired you in some way, we'd love to hear about it and know your biggest takeaway. Head over to Apple Podcasts to leave a review and we'd love it if you would leave us a message here! In this episode you'll hear: How Junko came to be a lawyer at a time the women often didn't work outside the home in Japan What Junko did when people told her to “be satisfied with what she had achieved” How Junko balances Japanese and Western culture in her work and how it helps her to achieve her potential in her life too Junko's advice for young lawyers who are worried about their English level Her favourite books and other fun facts About Junko Junko is a board member and senior corporate counsel of Avaya Japan Ltd. Avaya provides products and services to enhance and simplify communications and collaborations. She is in charge of all legal matters for the Japan operations including contract negotiation, compliance, personal data protection and dispute resolution. Before she joined Avaya in 2004, she worked for Yuasa and Hara as a trademark attorney and for Nihon Unisys Ltd. She is a member of the Japan Patent Attorney Association and New York State Bar. She received LLB from Chuo University, and Master of Laws from University of Illinois, Urbana Champaign and Waseda University. She has been studying bankruptcy and IP at a graduate school of law and published articles in bankruptcy and IP fields. She is a member of AIPPI, INTA, JTA, ABI and INSOL. Connect with Junko To connect with Junko, please contact Catherine O'Connell Links Ikiru Bokura 生きる僕ら:原田マハ Connect with Catherine Linked In https://www.linkedin.com/in/oconnellcatherine/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lawyeronair Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/catherine.oconnell.148 Twitter: https://twitter.com/oconnelllawyer
We are all pretty familiar with the phrase "Legal Tech." Maya Markovich and Yousef Kassim would like you to also become more familiar with the phrase "Justice Tech" as well. In fact, they have a new trade association focused on this issue called the Justice Technology Association or JTA. Justice Tech is defined as those companies which build tech solutions which are designed to improve or open access to legal rights, improve outcomes, and increase equity within a system that is stacked against users who are often going it alone in the justice system. Yousef Kassim's product, EasyExpunctions.com is one example. Maya Markovich is the Executive Director of JTA, and along with founders like Yousef Kassim and a diverse board of advisors, JTA is looking to leverage technology to help those seeking access to justice. This group of founders and advisors are not limited to lawyers, as access to justice is not a problem that can be solved by lawyers alone. JTA brought in engineers, policy advisors, academics, venture capitalists, and a wide range of other professionals to help guide the mission of the trade association. You can learn more at JusticeTechAssociation.org. LegalWeek Crystal Ball Question: We wind down our series of LegalWeek Crystal Ball responses with another former guest, Steve Embry. Steve recently wrote on his TechLaw Crossroads blog about the desire to be in the office less, and what that means for law firms when it comes to office space, training, and culture. Embry doesn't see it as all doom and gloom as some law firm leaders might. Links: Justice Technology Association JTA Partnership and Collaboration JTA Membership To Support JTA JTA Twitter EasyExpunctions.com Contact Us Twitter: @gebauerm or @glambert Voicemail: 713-487-7270 Email: geekinreviewpodcast@gmail.com Music: Jerry David DeCicca Transcript Available on 3 Geeks
With the Dust Cup less than a week away and a last minute JTA cancellation on the table, Jake and Terrance review the “Hutter System,” which is guaranteed to get any of the boys back onboard immediately. Tigers return at the Masters and Sheffler's green jacket are also on the table, along with Speith's win and the some Saudi League talk to cap off the last episode before the second Dust Cup.
The second Dust Cup draft kicks off with heavy speculation on what type of disastrous outcome JTA incurred during his recent trip to Key West, then the draft is on! Tune in for the final team outcome for Team Terrance and Team Hutter after a 12 round draft and some trade maneuvers to follow, as the kick off date for Dust Cup 2 in Scottsdale inches closer.
On Saturday, January 15th, a British national named Malik Faisal Akram entered Congregation Beth Israel, a Reform synagogue in Colleyville, Texas, and held Rabbi Charlie Cytron-Walker and three congregants hostage at gunpoint. Akram demanded the release of Aafia Siddiqui, who is serving an 86-year prison sentence for allegedly shooting at US FBI agents and army personnel. Akram released one hostage after six hours, and the nearly 12-hour crisis finally ended when the remaining hostages escaped and FBI agents and police entered the synagogue and killed Akram. This disturbing incident activated many American Jews' feelings of vulnerability—especially heightened since the 2018 attack at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh—while also provoking Islamophobic responses and reigniting an ongoing debate about synagogue security. In this episode, recorded the Tuesday after the Colleyville attack, Editor-in-Chief Arielle Angel, Managing Editor Nathan Goldman, Senior Reporter Alex Kane, and Assistant Editor Mari Cohen discuss their immediate reactions to the event and the questions it raises. Note: This discussion cites a https://www.facebook.com/gelbman.itamar/posts/7011321378910489 (statement) from someone claiming to be a former Beth Israel congregant who said he left the synagogue because he wasn't allowed to bring guns into services. After the episode was recorded, Rabbi Cytron-Walker https://www.jta.org/2022/01/19/united-states/the-texas-rabbi-who-escaped-a-hostage-situation-wants-to-correct-the-record (told) JTA that Beth Israel permits concealed carry and said that he wished one of the congregants had been carrying during the attack. Books, Articles, Tweets, and Podcasts Mentioned: “https://jewishcurrents.org/fears-of-government-surveillance-complicate-muslim-groups-access-to-federal-security-funding/ (Fears of Government Surveillance Complicate Muslim Groups' Access to Federal Security Funding)” by Mari Cohen “https://forward.com/news/480922/texas-synagogue-attack-antisemitism-envoy-terrorism-deborah-lipstadt/ (Texas synagogue attack invites debate over delay in confirmation of special envoy on antisemitism)” by Jacob Kornbluh “https://jmb807.medium.com/on-antisemitism-fought-3def3bf9d6c4 (On Antisemitism Fought)” by Judah Bernstein On the Nose episode: “https://jewishcurrents.org/rallies-surveys-and-ice-cream (Rallies, Surveys, and Ice Cream)” “https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-renowned-jewish-historian-stop-using-the-term-antisemitism-1.9193263 (Renowned Jewish Historian: ‘Stop Using the Term ‘Antisemitism'')” by Ofer Aderet “https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv13qftt7?turn_away=true (Away from a Definition of Antisemitism: An Essay in the Semantics of Historical Description)” by David Engel (from Rethinking European Jewish History) “https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/18/opinion/texas-colleyville-antisemitism.html (For Jews, Going to Services Is an Act of Courage)” by Deborah E. Lipstadt https://twitter.com/MaNishtana/status/1483084796947542019 (Twitter thread) by Ma Nishtana “https://twitter.com/MaNishtana/status/1483084796947542019 (Hidden in Plain Sight: Racism, White Supremacy, and Far-Right Militancy in Law Enforcement)” by Michael German Thanks to Jesse Brenneman for producing and to Nathan Salsburg for the use of his song “VIII (All That Were Calculated Have Passed).”
Matt Kolsky is joined by NBC Sports' Carlos Ramirez to discuss the Warriors victory over the Cavaliers, JTA's impact on the game and Curry's massive 4th Quarter.
Matt Kolsky is joined by NBC Sports' Carlos Ramirez to discuss the Warriors victory over the Cavaliers, JTA's impact on the game and Curry's massive 4th Quarter. Also, Kolsky is done with Jimmy Garoppolo despite the win over the Rams and why he needs to see a complete beatdown of the Jaguars to believe again.
Park East, a historic synagogue on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, is going through a critical upheaval. Over the last month, Rabbi Arthur Schneier, the 91-year-old senior rabbi, fired the shul's assistant rabbi, Rabbi Benjamin Goldschmidt, over an alleged coup. Teams have been formed, and allegations thrown around. This week, Uri and Rivky speak to Ben Sales, JTA reporter, about this story and ask, is this merely salacious gossip about real people and their lives, or does this story actually signify something bigger? Relevant links: https://www.jta.org/2021/10/20/ny/park-east-synagogue-pushes-out-assistant-rabbi-sparking-protest https://www.jta.org/2021/10/27/ny/a-world-famous-rabbi-a-popular-assistant-and-a-succession-crisis-inside-the-rupture-at-park-east-synagogue https://www.jta.org/2021/10/29/ny/park-east-fired-rabbi-says-accusations-of-synagogue-coup-are-completely-unfounded-and-personally-hurtful https://www.jta.org/2021/11/02/ny/fired-park-east-rabbi-holding-rival-services-blocks-from-his-old-synagogue https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/news/articles/park-east
Are you growing others in your leadership? We are all leaders in our own lives. There are always people who follow us, who we guide, and who we lead — whether at home, work, or social environments. Leaders dare to create and design, to serve others, and as souls, it's something natural and intuitive to us. I spoke with Dr. Erica Brown about the gift of leadership, and her sheer brilliance on the topic, as well as how she so strongly lives her lessons, made this such an impactful conversation. I hope you'll feel the same way and be more connected to your soulful self. For questions, comments, or feedback, feel free to email Srulifruchter@gmail.com *** Dr. Erica Brown, the director of the Mayberg Center for Jewish Education and Leadership and an associate professor of curriculum and pedagogy at The George Washington University, is the author of twelve books on leadership, the Hebrew Bible and spirituality. Erica has a daily podcast, “Take Your Soul to Work.” Her latest book Esther: Power, Fate and Fragility in Exile (Maggid) was a finalist for the National Jewish Book Council award. She has been published in the New York Times, The Atlantic, Tablet, First Things, and The Jewish Review of Books, and she wrote a monthly column for the New York Jewish Week. She has blogged for Psychology Today, Newsweek & Washington Post's “On Faith” and JTA, and she. tweeted on one page of Talmud study a day @DrEricaBrown. She has master's degrees from the Institute of Education (University of London), Jews' College (University of London) and Harvard University, as well as a Ph.D. from Baltimore Hebrew University. Erica was a Jerusalem Fellow, is a faculty member of the Wexner Foundation, an Avi Chai Fellow and the recipient of the 2009 Covenant Award for her work in education. She previously served as the scholar-in-residence at both The Jewish Federation of Greater Washington and the Combined Jewish Philanthropies of Boston and as the community scholar for the Jewish Center of New York. She currently serves as a community scholar for Congregation Etz Chaim in Livingston, NJ.