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Mike Madison explains his battle with an extremely rare condition.
James Cameron-Wilson says box office is up 12%, with Heretic at #3 a horror film starring Hugh Grant. While the first half is a blast in the vein of Sleuth, it then descends into full-out nasty horror. Although #6 Anora, starring Mike Madison, won the Palme D'Or, and has a great central performance, James was disappointed, perhaps because expectations were so high. He found #10 Clint Eastwood's 40th film as director, Juror #2, with Nicholas Hoult, totally gripping. It's a great story with multi-layered characters. James also celebrated a 75th anniversary restoration of The Third Man, one of the UK's greatest movies. The Blu-Ray and 4K disc of this riveting noir classic is also packed with great extras. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
There might only be one person in the world who understands what motivates this show and it's content. And what is X, and Elon, up to? Suing to get more globalist advertisers and joining a WEF group? Wait...what?!
Join me as I sit down over coffee with one of my favorite photographers, Mike Madison. (aka @bumpopera) Not only do we do a deep dive into photography, but we also talk about imposter syndrome, gear, pricing your work as a creator, and why he's not allowed to share his photographs of the Foo Fighters. www.thecuriouspod.com/questions/mikemadison ※ Follow Mike on Instagram: @bumpopera ※ And buy all his prints at: www.bumpopera.com ※
1. Following up on the Mississippi transgender bathroom bill being killed by Republican (Ackerman, Ms) Joey Hood and not allowed to get out of conference. All hell broke loose after multiple outlets (mine included) took Hood through the car wash and held him personally accountable for allowing men to legally use the women's restroom and locker rooms here in the state. Luckily we have a few great men and women down at the capitol still and they suspended the rules and plan on making the bill a reality. 2. Mike Madison joins the show as out in-house Libertarian to discuss Donald Trump being invited to and accepting the invitation to speak at their national convention this summer. This of course turned into a 20 minute conversation about the Libertarian party, their crap job of messaging and marketing themselves and more. We also hit on the Biden administrations pandering to black people by waiting till now to reclassify marijuana in America. 3. Ole Miss fans are really mad at me right now, it's a great reminder that we put way too much energy into defending our sports teams and not nearly enough defending our freedoms and our country. 4. A 100,000 citizens of Baton Rouge, La. have seceded from Baton Rouge and started a brand new city within a city because they're fed up with Democrats ruling their lives and destroying their property values. I compare this to what the residents of Belhaven and Fondren should have done in Jackson if they weren't so afraid of being called racist.
WYAB host Mike Madison joins the show as out in-house Libertarian to discuss Donald Trump being invited to and accepting the invitation to speak at their national convention this summer. This of course turned into a 20 minute conversation about the Libertarian party, their crap job of messaging and marketing themselves and more. We also hit on the Biden administrations pandering to black people by waiting till now to reclassify marijuana in America..
Ep #470 Of The Clay Edwards Show On 103.9 WYAB 03/14/2023 1. Mike Madison joins the show again today for two full hours to discuss the collapse of SVB and how that is going to trickle down to us. We also take a look at the bigger picture and ask what this could lead to. Check out my website & all of my social channels by clicking my link tree at www.solo.to/clayedwards
Hour #2 / Ep #469 Of The Clay Edwards Show On 103.9 WYAB 03/13/2023 1. Mike Madison joins the show for the full hour to discuss the collapse of SVB and how that is going to trickle down to us. We also take a look at the bigger picture and ask what this could lead to. Check out my website & all of my social channels by clicking my link tree at www.solo.to/clayedwards
In this week's episode, Mike Madison chats with Michael Morneualt, a senior lawyer and litigation consultant now with Lighthouse, who has watched ALSPs grow and evolve from multiple perspectives: as a practicing lawyer, in business development, and as a long-time leader of a tech-driven litigation support and investigations practice. Michael talks extensively about changing patterns among ALSPs and dispute resolution, and how data science is influencing other areas of law practice. Make sure you tune in every Tuesday for everything legaltech, ALSP's and law. Head to www.thefuturelawpodcast.com for more information. Thanks for listening! CREDITS: Hosts: Mike Madison and Dan Hunter Executive Producer/Editor: Pariya TaherzadehSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We're back to continue the season for 2023! Every now and then we a broader view of the future of law, beyond ALSPs, and in this episode we do just that. Mike Madison chats with Eric Holder, former Attorney General of the US under President Barack Obama, about the critical importance of defending and advancing voting rights in the American system and in democracy generally. The conversation draws on his recent book, "Our Unfinished March." What are your thoughts? Make sure you tune in every Tuesday for everything legaltech, ALSP's and law. Head to www.thefuturelawpodcast.com for more information. Thanks for listening! CREDITS: Book: ‘Our Unfinished March' by Eric Holder and Sam Koppelman Hosts: Mike Madison and Dan Hunter Executive Producer/Editor: Pariya TaherzadehSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This is a “big ideas” episode, part of our goal to bring out “big ambitious ideas about the future" as well as day to day concerns about ALSPs and legal services. Law professor Orly Lobel talks with host Mike Madison about her new book, The Equality Machine: Harnessing Digital Technology for a Brighter, More Inclusive Future, recently named one of the best books of 2022 by The Economist magazine. In the conversation and in the book, she talks about how scepticism about AI and robots can get overblown. Are they always uncontrollable, incomprehensible, privacy-eating systems? She argues no: in proper measure they have the power to do enormous good in the world. Much of the book draws its argument from beyond law, so in this episode she focused on the specifics of the legal world, especially when it comes to access to justice and dispute resolution systems. Make sure you tune in every Tuesday for everything legaltech, ALSP's and law. Head to www.thefuturelawpodcast.com for more information. Thanks for listening! CREDITS: Hosts: Mike Madison & Dan Hunter Executive Producer/Editor: Pariya TaherzadehSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The emergence of ALSPs and legaltech doesn't change some fundamentals of lawyering and dispute resolution. Jon Harris, founder and managing partner of Harris St. Laurent & Wechsler, a boutique law firm in New York specializing in employment law and white collar criminal defense, talks with Michael Madison about blending classic legal skills and multidisciplinary experience. Make sure you tune in every Tuesday for everything legaltech, ALSP's and law. Head to www.thefuturelawpodcast.com for more information. Thanks for listening! CREDITS: Hosts: Mike Madison & Dan Hunter Executive Producer/Editor: Pariya Taherzadeh See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Despite double-digit salary growth in the legal industry, many firms are grappling with serious staffing concerns. So what do you do about it? Do you look outside your geographic boundaries? Or do you simply train up young lawyers? Alternative Legal Service Providers (ALSPs) offer a range of solutions. Mike Madison chats with the founders of LegalEase Solutions, Tariq Hafeez and Tariq Akbar, about their approach to delivering the right legal talent to law departments and corporate counsel. Make sure you tune in every Tuesday for everything legaltech, ALSP's and law. Head to www.thefuturelawpodcast.com for more information. Thanks for listening! CREDITS: Hosts: Mike Madison & Dan Hunter Executive Producer/Editor: Pariya Taherzadeh See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We're back for another season! Last time we looked at a pair of topics: legaltech, and skills and competencies that are newly prominent in the new legal market. This season, we are digging into two new themes. We'll look at ALSPs, which stands for “Alternative Legal Service Providers,” a rapidly growing and diverse market sector in legal. And we'll also take some swings at big themes, systems, and structures in law itself, changing with tech, with global, and more.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
I was a guest on my good friend Mike Madison's show yesterday morning, we agree and disagree on a lot of stuff politically. Mike talks a lot about how he can't understand how people can let politics cost them real life friends and family relationships. I came on to his show to explain that it's not over politics it's over feeling personally attacked by American hating, middle-class, blue collar hating marxist, commie bastards. Check out the Mike Madison Show every Monday - Friday from 9am - 11am on 103.9 WYAB https://themikemadisonshow.podbean.com/
From a young age we're taught that ‘education is the key', but what if after years of studying in the field of law you decide to completely change direction? Will it get you ahead of it all, or have you wasted your time? In this special bonus episode Mike Madison chats with lawyer, investor, and author Adam Pascarella of “Reversed in Part: 15 Law School Grads on Pursuing Non-Traditional Careers” about whether law is a gateway to a lot of things, not just practising law. CREDITS: Guest: Adam Pascarella - https://www.adampascarella.com/ Book: ‘Reversed in Part: 15 Law School Grads on Pursuing Non-Traditional Careers' - https://reversedinpart.com/ Host: Mike MadisonExecutive Producer: Pariya Taherzadeh Editor/Mixer: Pariya Taherzadeh This podcast is powered by Queensland University of Technology. Head to www.thefuturelawpodcast.com for more information. Thanks for listening! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
You can definitely learn a thing or two from those who aren't necessarily in the field of law. That's why Mike Madison chats to lawyer-turned-prize-winning-biographer John Matteson about how future lawyers draw on the talents of historians and biographers - and the reverse. CREDITS Guest: John Matteson - https://amzn.to/3O8TMdv Hosts: Dan Hunter and Mike Madison Executive Producer: Pariya Taherzadeh Editor/Mixer: Pariya Taherzadeh This podcast is powered by Queensland University of Technology. Head to www.thefuturelawpodcast.com for more information. Thanks for listening! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Starting a start up isn't easy… or is it? In this episode of Future Law Podcast, Dan Hunter chats with the CEO of Checkbox.AI, Evan Wong - the automation platform provider, about life as a founder of legaltech solutions and how to break into the field. CREDITS Guest: Evan Wong Hosts: Dan Hunter and Mike Madison Executive Producer: Pariya Taherzadeh Editor/Mixer: Fyona Smith Supervising Editor: Pariya Tahezadeh This podcast is powered by Queensland University of Technology. Head to www.thefuturelawpodcast.com for more information. Thanks for listening! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Do you think it's time to move past “thinking like a lawyer” as the key skill set that legal experts bring to their clients' problems? As legal tech gets better and better, clients increasingly want more from their counsel: problem solving capabilities for dealing with “wicked” problems. In this episode, Mike Madison speaks to senior lawyer and Managing Director Duc Trang at legal recruiters Major, Lindsey & Africa, about what success as a lawyer looks like in a world where AI technology is more and more powerful. Plus, Duc shares tips and lessons for both new and experienced lawyers. CREDITS Hosts: Dan Hunter and Mike Madison Executive Producer: Pariya Taherzadeh Editor/Mixer: Fyona Smith This podcast is powered by Queensland University of Technology. Head to www.thefuturelawpodcast.com for more information. Thanks for listening! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Information Ecosystems: A Sawyer Seminar at the University of Pittsburgh
A digital humanities librarian, project manager and researcher, philosopher, and law professor walk into a podcast... Hear what happens in today's episode, which features four members of the Year of Data and Society Steering Committee: Tyrica Terry-Kapral, Liz Monk, Lisa Parker, and Mike Madison. The interviewer is Briana Wipf. This season of the Information Ecosystems podcast is being produced in affiliation with the Year of Data and Society at the University of Pittsburgh. The website for the Information Ecosystems project is https://infoeco.hcommons.org/, and the website for the Year of Data and Society at the University of Pittsburgh is https://yearofdataandsociety.pitt.edu/. For more about Terry-Kapral's work, visit https://cadatpitt.github.io/. For more about Lisa Parker's work, visit https://bioethics.pitt.edu/people/lisa-s-parker-phd. For more about Liz Monk's work, visit https://ucsur.pitt.edu/index.php. For more about Mike Madison, visit https://www.law.pitt.edu/people/michael-j-madison. Give his podcast a listen at https://omny.fm/shows/future-law-podcast-1. Interviews for this episode were recorded between March 22, and April 4, 2022. The Information Ecosystems project seeks to advance a deeply powerful understanding of where data comes from and how it is used, setting the present moment within a century-long history of information supply and its power-laden consequences. At a moment when societies are in urgent need of guidance to navigate rapidly shifting digital terrain, we are coming together to build a deep understanding of the social and political life of data.
Economic headlines paint a pretty rosy picture of the US economy. What is the reality? Is Mike Madison broadcasting misinformation about the jabs?! And Starla Brown with Americans For Prosperity is in studio.
The primary season is arriving. Candidates fail to inspire the freedom lover because of the "nibbling around the edges" nature of what candidates view as change. What is the platform that would inspire a Mike Madison? The incredibly EMPTY Biden administration. It's not just Biden himself.
How are incumbent lawyers standing in the way of the future of law? And what are future-oriented innovators doing about that? Mike Madison chats with Eddie Hartman, well-known as a co-founder of the online legal technology company LegalZoom, and now a consultant and investor. Eddie focuses on thinking differently about the challenges and opportunities associated with expanding markets for legal services. Eddie shares his vision for strategizing solutions to Access to Justice problems, talking about practitioners, regulators, technologists - and investors. And he illustrates with his recent experience, using design strategies and technology, in bringing interdisciplinary teams together to overcome barriers in the legal system. CREDITS Hosts: Dan Hunter and Mike Madison Executive Producer: Pariya Taherzadeh Editor/Mixer: Pariya Taherzadeh This podcast is powered by Queensland University of Technology. Head to www.thefuturelawpodcast.com for more information. Thanks for listening! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Lots of legal problems can be answered quickly, cheaply, and automatically – if only someone sat down and mapped out the steps. It's just that there aren't simple-to-use systems to do this. So, two young lawyers and a computer programmer decided it was time to make a change. Dan chats to Chief Operating Officer and Co-Founder at Josef, Sam Flynn about an automated product he and his co-founder created, tailored for legal environments. Sam let's us in on how he built a commercially-appealing chatbot platform as well as a fast growing legaltech company. CREDITS Hosts: Dan Hunter and Mike Madison Executive Producer: Pariya Taherzadeh Editor/Mixer: Pariya Taherzadeh This podcast is powered by Queensland University of Technology. Head to www.thefuturelawpodcast.com for more information. Thanks for listening! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
What do you think of when you hear an orchestra? Is it the music? Perhaps you imagine the conductor standing in front of a large orchestra waving their hands around? What does all this have to do with law you ask? Good question, we asked it too. In this episode, Mike Madison chats with a conductor who has been leading symphonies and orchestras around the world for more than 30 years - Scott Speck, about how to guide a collection of experts so that the “music” matches the vision. CREDITS Hosts: Dan Hunter and Mike Madison Executive Producer: Pariya Taherzadeh Editor/Mixer: Pariya Taherzadeh This podcast is powered by Queensland University of Technology. Head to www.thefuturelawpodcast.com for more information. Thanks for listening! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The growing role of technology in the legal industry is changing a lot of things for lawyers, but some fundamentals aren't changing at all. One of those fundamentals is the key role that stories and storytelling play in legal practice, in judging, in designing and running systems, and in making and applying public policy. In this episode, Mike Madison interviews the Hollywood producer of American Beauty, Down With Love, Silver Linings Playbook, Milk, and the upcoming Rustin - Bruce Cohen, chatting about how filmmakers and lawyers both need to engage and persuade various audiences through storytelling. CREDITS Hosts: Dan Hunter and Mike Madison Executive Producer: Pariya Taherzadeh Editor/Mixer: Pariya Taherzadeh This podcast is powered by Queensland University of Technology. Head to www.thefuturelawpodcast.com for more information. Thanks for listening! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
DHS says people who "undermine public trust in government institutions" are "threat actors"? The Fed (Deathstar) continues to unleash inflation on the masses. And Forrest Thigpen with Americans For Prosperity is on air.
Are you worried about what automation will look like for you? Perhaps you're curious about how the disruptions of the pandemic will affect your job? Well, this season Mike Madison and Dan Hunter look at the skills and competencies of future law. Starting off the first episode of the year, Dan and Mike look at the changes they've observed in the legal industry over these last two years and how to best deal with this change. CREDITS Hosts: Dan Hunter and Mike Madison Executive Producer: Pariya Taherzadeh Editor/Mixer: Pariya Taherzadeh This podcast is powered by Queensland University of Technology. Head to www.thefuturelawpodcast.com for more information. Thanks for listening! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
When will shifts to remote working bring changes to legal education as well? St. Mary's University School of Law in San Antonio, Texas recently received American Bar Association (ABA) approval to host a cohort of its JD students in a fully online environment. Even before the arrival of the COVID pandemic in early 2020, other US law schools had moved bits and pieces of their programs online. St. Mary's is the first school to receive accreditation for online delivery of a complete JD. In this episode of The Future Law Podcast, host Mike Madison talks with Patty Roberts, Dean of St. Mary's Law, about that school's plans and about how she and her colleagues navigated their proposal through design and accreditation processes. Links Dean Patricia Roberts at St. Mary's University St. Mary's University School of Law See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Liquid Legal Institute is a Germany-based think tank and platform for action that aims to develop common standards for law practice and legal services using cutting-edge technology. In this episode of the Future Law Podcast, host Mike Madison talks with LLI co-founders Dierk Schindler and Bernhard Waltl about their vision for the LLI, and what the LLI is doing today. Links Liquid Legal Institute Dierk Schindler at LinkedIn Bernhard Waltl at LinkedIn Book: Liquid Legal: Transforming Legal into a Business Savvy, Information Enabled and Performance Driven Industry Book: Liquid Legal: Towards a Common Legal Platform See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The "regulatory sandbox" in Utah is a leading example of innovation to promote innovation - and justice. On this episode of The Future Law Podcast, host Mike Madison talks with two of the key leaders of the Utah legal community, state Supreme Court Justice Deno Himonas and former Utah bar president John Lund, about how the sandbox came about and what it promises to do. Links: The Office of Legal Services Innovation of the Utah Supreme Court Justice Constandinos ("Deno") Himonas John Lund, at Parsons, Behle & Latimer See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
"Never fall in love with a politician" - Mike Madison. Another seemingly good Republican is exposed as a lying Fraud. Nate Baker with Americans For Prosperity is in studio.
"Never fall in love with a politician." - Mike Madison. Another GOP darling of freedom is exposed as a massive, lying fraud. Nate Baker with Americans For Prosperity is in studio.
The toothless GOP wrote a "letter" to the CDC asking about a little bit of freedom. Americans own more zombies now than at any time since 2000. And Tucker Carlson joins Mike Madison in taking on the Generals!
Joy Heath Rush is the CEO of the ILTA, a global volunteer-led membership organization that develops and shares information about technology in law practice, supporting lawyers and other professionals in law firms, law departments, governments, and academic organizations. In this episode, she and host Mike Madison reflect on the evolution of legal tech since the mid-1980s and bring the story up to the present, with insight into critical contemporary topics and takeaways. Link International Legal Technology Association See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
How can law and lawyers move the public policy process? Dr. Andrea Matwyshyn is a law professor at Penn State University who is on a mission to bring lawyers, policymakers, and engineers together to solve complex social problems at the edges of law and technology. (She has a faculty appointment at Penn State's College of Engineering to go with her law faculty role.) Future Law Podcast host Mike Madison talks with her about grounding that mission in her "lab" work with her students, and how that "lab" projects come out of her research on technology, computer security, gender and ethics, and history. Dr. Andrea Matwyshyn's home page The PILOT Lab at Penn State Law A PILOT Lab project: the Computer Herstory Museum The Manglona Lab at Penn State Law Dr. Andrea Matwyshyn on Twitter Article about "The Internet of Bodies" See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The future of law includes more than the future of lawyers. At Villanova University, Professor Michele Pistone has launched a pioneering online program to train non-lawyers as authorized advocates in immigration law. Professor Pistone talked about her plans on an earlier episode of the Future Law Podcast. Now she's back, sharing stories of her surprising results, with host Mike Madison. Michele Pistone at Villanova Law The VIISTA program at Villanova Michele Pistone on Twitter See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
As a law student, Colin Levy saw the future of legaltech, and after graduating he set about building himself a career in the field. Ten years later, he's navigated through in-house roles, built out his skill set, and networked his way to a position as Director of Marketing and Business Development for WordRake, which produces editing software for professionals, including lawyers. For the Future Law Podcast, Mike Madison talked with Colin about his path to his identity as a self-described "Legal Tech Evangelist." Colin Levy at Linkedin Colin Levy at Twitter See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Does the legal profession have a place for creative and imaginative people? How does the future of law differ from its past? Hear an unusual conversation between Future Law Podcast host Mike Madison and Eimear McCann, now Director of Strategy at UK-based LegalTech firm Summize and also a former immigration and human rights lawyer, and also a teacher and writer. Links: Eimear McCann Summize See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
"Future Law" is a global phenomenon with multiple local applications. What's different about the French experience, and what does the French experience share with the future of law elsewhere? The EDHEC Business School in Lille is the home of the new Augmented Law Institute, a purposeful blending of training in law, business, and technology that builds on EDHEC's long-standing investment in multi-purpose professional preparation. In this episode of the Future Law Podcast, Mike Madison interviews Christophe Roquilly, the Director of the Augmented Law Institute and the architect of EHDEC's law-plus-business programming. Links: The Augmented Law Institute at EDHEC Business School Professor Christophe Roquilly See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Fastcase is now 20 years in to its mission to transform legal publishing and access to legal information. Fastcase co-founder and CEO Ed Walters joins Mike Madison to talk about the origins of the company (beer and softball contributed, along with a research challenge from an unexpected source), the journey to date, and visions and implications of the future of law. Links: Ed Walters Fastcase See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode of the Future Law Podcast, Mike Madison talks with Marlene van Nelson, a recent law graduate who followed a classic path: she hung out a proverbial shingle and launched a solo practice. A few short but fast-paced years later, she's expanded her practice and found her niche, delivering "people law" services to small business and individual clients while nimbly blending the personal with the technological. Marlene tells her own story, from her dream of becoming a lawyer, to the detours along the way, to her current firm: Trellis Legal. All about Trellis Legal. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
How do you build and re-build collaborative and innovative cultures in a virtual environment? The future of law isn't all face-to-face. In this reunion episode, original Future Law Podcast host Lisa Leong returns to talk with Mike Madison about pivoting her broadcasting and consulting practices in response to COVID shutdowns, what practicing lawyers and law teachers can borrow from her experience, and about shifting mindsets from "me" to "we." Links and references: Lisa Leong at LinkedIn Robert Putnam, "The Upswing" Otto Scharmer and Presencing See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Daniel W. Linna, Jr. is Senior Lecturer and Director of Law and Technology Initiatives at Northwestern University's Pritzker School of Law, with an additional appointment in Northwestern University's McCormick School of Engineering. He's also a former litigation partner in a large law firm in Detroit. He joined Mike Madison for an energetic conversation about legal system innovation and change, what law schools and law firms are doing right and wrong today, and about the need to ground innovation on all sides in evidence. Dan Linna at Northwestern Law. Dan hosts the LegalTech Lever blog. And he has his own podcast, Law Technology Now. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Michele DeStefano is the founder and leader of Law Without Walls, or LWOW, a pioneering program for team- and project-based legal education that gathers students and partners from around the world. She is a full-time professor of law at the University of Miami who has also documented her methods and published research on their effectiveness. Mike Madison talks with Michele about the origins and impacts of LWOW. Michele DeStefano's biography at the University of Miami. The Law Without Walls website. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode, Michael J. Madison, Professor of Law and John E. Murray Faculty Scholar at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law, discusses his article "Fair Play: Notes on the Algorithmic Soccer Referee," which will be published in the Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment & Technology Law. Madison begins by explaining how the rules of soccer or "football" give the referee a degree of discretion absent from other professional sports. He observes that the introduction of video playback is changing how the rules of soccer are administers, and he reflects on what the "polycentric" decisionmaking of soccer can tell us about integrating AI and other technology into the law. This episode was hosted by Brian L. Frye, Spears-Gilbert Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of Law. Frye is on Twitter at @brianlfrye. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Thomas Aertgeerts is the co-founder and CEO of a Belgium-based LegalTech startup offering tax law services today and on a mission to transform the legal industry tomorrow. He talks with Mike Madison about the legal entrepreneur's life, transitioning out of a classic law practice career, and the future of legal services. He is the author of a provocative essay in the American Bar Association (ABA) Journal in April 2020 titled, "Is my law firm preparing me for success in the next decade?" His company, Aeco, can be found here. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Elizabeth "Lizzy" Shackelford took her law degree and followed her dream to serve internationally, eventually spending more than seven years with the US Department of State in a series of posts in Eastern Europe and in Africa. Now retired from her diplomatic service and the author of a recent book on US foreign policy and diplomacy, in this podcast she reflects with Mike Madison on what it means to be a lawyer in a rapidly-evolving world. Link to the book: Elizabeth Shackelford, The Dissent Channel: American Diplomacy in a Dishonest Age (PublicAffairs, 2020) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Miguel Willis caught the innovation and entrepreneurship bug early in his law school career, and he exited with a JD and leadership of an innovative program that blends technology skills, design, law, and the public interest. The Access to Justice Technology Fellows program connects law students with civil justice organizations for an immersive, 10-week, paid project-based fellowship experience, changing lives in the community and priming the students for careers as 21st century lawyers. Mike Madison caught up with Miguel for this podcast. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Duc Trang, former private practitioner, general counsel, and now Managing Director of Major, Lindsey & Africa Transform Advisory Services, talks with Mike Madison about the changing marketplace for legal services and legal professionals and what those changes mean for private firms, for legal technology development, and for legal education. Also featured in this episode: Michael Madison, The Shapes and Letters of the Modern Lawyer (August 3, 2020). See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Eric DeChant isn't a lawyer. He's a recent graduate of the novel Master of Science in Law program at Northwestern University's Pritzker School of Law, which aims to give STEM professionals (like Eric) enough grounding in law to accelerate them into careers as allied legal professionals but not so much that they qualify to become licensed lawyers. Mike Madison interviews Eric to hear how he found the Northwestern program, what he thought of his time in school, and his plans for a future in law - though not as a lawyer. Here is the background to Eric DeChant's story, from Legal Evolution. Eric has started a voluntary organization titled the American Society of Legal Engineers. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Dan Rodriguez, formerly Dean of Northwestern Law and president of the Association of American Law Schools, gets inside the future of legal education for the benefit of legal professionals and new law graduates. The interview is hosted by Mike Madison. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Mike Madison sits down with Kevin Miller, CEO of the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based LegalTech firm LegalSifter. LegalSifter is powered by tech developed in Pittsburgh's AI and robotics ecology, centered on Carnegie Mellon University. A seasoned lawyer-entrepreneur, Kevin shares his thoughts about what lawyers and law firms are doing well, and what they can do better with AI-powered tools. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Mike Madison talks with Dean Trish White and Andrea Sinner, the chair and director of the American Bar Association Commission on the Future of Legal Education. The Commission wrapped up two years' worth of work in March 2020 and published a report that reads more like a manifesto for change than a conventionally sober reflection. Find the ABA Commission Report online here. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Margaret Hagan, a global leader in bringing design to legal education and law practice, talks with Michael Madison about what design is and why design matters, supplying some of her own back story along the way.
In Today’s Tic, we discuss the importance of consistency both in chiropractic as well as running … #19 The Impact of Consistency in Chiropractic | Mike Madison, DC Read More » The post #19 The Impact of Consistency in Chiropractic | Mike Madison, DC appeared first on Trent Scheidecker, DC.
Lisa Damon and Stephen Poor, innovators and leaders at the global law firm Seyfarth Shaw, talk with Mike Madison and Dean Dan Hunter about developing Seyfarth Lean, the name the firm gives to its widely-recognized applied innovation strategies: data-driven process improvements, project management techniques, and legal technology R&D that have changed the firm's DNA. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Lisa Leong, Dean Dan Hunter, and Mike Madison take apart the challenges of modern law practice: clients increasingly want multi-functional capabilities from their lawyers and firms. The profession is full of talk of "T-shaped" lawyers, who combine deep legal knowledge and broad business and organizational skills. How can firms find, train, and keep these "T-shaped" professionals happy and productive? How can T-shaped lawyers find success in law firms, or beyond?
Professor Deborah Merritt of the Moritz College of Law at Ohio State University talks with Dan Hunter and Mike Madison about the sources of critical challenge in US law schools today and describes paths to re-invention, including a new focus on clients, for herself, for current students, and for law faculties.
Professor Michele Pistone from the Charles Widger School of Law at Villanova University in Philadelphia talks with Dan Hunter and Mike Madison about disruption in law practice and legal education, about change management in higher education, and about working across the university to build new, cross-disciplinary training for law.
In episode #220 we learn about Acquia's open source product, BLT, from Mike Madison. www.talkingdrupal.com/220 Topics What is BLT? What is your involvement with BLT What type of project is it used for? Size/Scope What are the benefits of using BLT and similar tools As an Acquia project, is BLT tied to Acquia services What local tools are supported with BLT? Why is Lightning installed by default? Versioning with Drupal 8 How do you recommend someone gettings started? How many people work on BLT at Acquia Resources Acquia BLT BLT on Github BLT 10 Guest Mike Madison @mikemadison mikemadison.net Hosts Stephen Cross - www.stephencross.com @stephencross John Picozzi - www.oomphinc.com @johnpicozzi Nic Laflin - www.nLighteneddevelopment.com @nicxvan
Lisa Leong, Dean Dan, and Mike Madison take a tour through strategies for initiating innovation and change, for people who don't have "innovating" in their professional portfolios - and who may not have budgets. They have case studies to share, from their own experiences in law firms, companies, and law schools. Anyone can put themselves in a position to innovate. Here's how to get started.
Dean Dan and Mike Madison talk about whether the future has caught up with law schools. They catch up with Professor Ray Campbell, from Peking University-School of Transnational Law in Shenzhen, China, who suggests that the future of legal education doesn't look like the way that we've always done things...
Our three brave co-hosts go "on tape" to predict what the legal industry will look like in 2028 (ten years from now). Dean Dan, Lethal Lisa and Most Interesting Mike cover law firms, lawyers and law schools. Nothing is safe. Platform plays and multi-disciplinary practices are also covered. Agree or agree to disagree - please add to the conversation on the website: http://thefuturelawpodcast.com/
In this episode, Lisa Leong, Mike Madison and Dan Hunter unpack "Artificial Intelligence" in the context of law. Prof Dan was on the public speaking circuit in the 90s banging on about AI - but in those days, no one was listening! He was so into AI that he would have dated Siri if she had existed in the 90s.
Dean Dan has broken out of our ivory tower and gone to speak with a third party! Mick Sheehy was formerly a GC at Telstra - and is now a Partner of New Law @ PwC. We speak about CLOC, Legal Operations and Tech Platforms. If you don't know what any of these terms mean - please listen!
In this episode, Michael J. Madison, Professor of Law at the University of Pittsburgh College of Law, discusses his papers "The End of the Work as We Know It" and "Creativity and Craft," which respectively address the fundamental copyright concepts of the "work" and creativity." Among other things, Madison observes that we do not have a coherent doctrinal definition of either concept, and that incoherence often leads courts to lose sight of the purpose of copyright protection. Madison blogs at Madisonian and tweets at @profmadison.Keywords: intellectual property, intanible property, tangible property, copyright, originality, craft, Work of Authorship, Boundaries, Boundary Objects See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Joe becomes the guest guest and Mike Madison the guest host, as we talk about Joe's new research into the web of law and what citations tell us about what law means. As one might expect for a show which is ostensibly about legal theory but actually, as all good argunauts know, an extended meditation on Being Joe, this is a very special episode of Oral Argument. This show’s links: Joe Miller's faculty profile (http://www.law.uga.edu/profile/joseph-s-miller) and writing (https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=104702) Mike Madison’s website (http://madisonian.net/home/), writing (http://madisonian.net/home/?page_id=85), and blog (http://madisonian.net) Joseph Miller, Law's Semantic Self-Portrait: Discerning Doctrine with Co-Citation Networks and Keywords (https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3212131) Joseph Miller, Charting Supreme Court Patent Law, Near and Far (https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3125510); Joseph Miller, Which Supreme Court Cases Influenced Recent Supreme Court IP Decisions? A Citation Study (https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3012262) Charles Barzun, Three Forms of Legal Pragmatism (https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3178155) Andrew Green and Albert Yoon, Triaging the Law: Developing the Common Law on the Supreme Court of India (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/jels.12161) Frank Pasquale, A Rule of Persons, Not Machines: The Limits of Legal Automation (https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3135549) James Scott, Seeing Like a State (https://books.google.com/books?id=PqcPCgsr2u0C&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false) Special Guest: Mike Madison.
Have you ever failed at closing a sale, a business or trying a new hobby or side hustle? It sucks huh?! UGH. You feel like a total loser and hate having to face reality. When it happened to me all I wanted to was eat Cheetos until my fingertips were sticky and orange and binge watch Lost on Netflix. (That actually happened. I blew through the entire SIX season series in a few weeks and gained 10 pounds). It was even more fun paying the IRS a bunch of money the next year after it closed and I realized I had been doing my taxes wrong. Blech. Today's guest has also been there and on this episode we talk about why entrepreneurship is really one of the best ways to improve your net worth because of the freedom and opportunity it provides you but sometimes it means finding your alignment in it through multiple attempts. Dr. Mike Madison is a Chiropractor, artist, woodworker, coach, (soon to be) author and most importantly a student of life. Through his study of the human body, economics, philosophy, personal development, business, communication and human behavior he's on a journey of continual self discovery that intertwines all of the above. With that information he also hopes to share, inspire, and motivate others to reach their optimal potential; physically, mentally, emotionally, and financially. We also chat about how to feel aligned with your business and how the health of yourself and you business are intertwined. If your health is a mess your you business and finances are very likely to be also. I learned so much from Mike in this episode and it was refreshing talking to him. His desire for ultimate alignment in your physical life and financial life is so evident. xoxo, Gretchen
Mike Yolo raises 14 acres of organic olives, cut flowers, a variety of tree fruits, and the occasional vegetable crop at Yolo Press, near Davis, California. With his wife, Diane, Yolo Press creates olive oil and a variety of value-added products that are sold with the cut flowers through independent grocers and farmers markets in Davis. Yolo Press has provided a living for Mike and Diane since 1986. We dig into the development of Yolo Press’ crop mix and markets, and how they developed to accommodate farmer labor and to provide a good living for Mike and Diane. Mike provides all of the production labor on the farm, so we discuss the hows and the whys of making that work, as well as the economics of the farm business and value-added products. Mike is also the author of the recently published Fruitful Labor: The Ecology, Economy and Practice of a Family Farm. Perennial support for the Farmer to Farmer Podcast is generously provided by Vermont Compost Company. Pictures, show links, and more at farmertofarmerpodcast.com/episodes/madison.
Mike Madison is back to talk with us about knowledge commons, institutions, open-source software, citizen science, and the the basic problem of understanding how we cooperate. This show’s links: Mike Madison’s website (http://madisonian.net/home/), writing (http://madisonian.net/home/?page_id=85), and blog (http://madisonian.net) Oral Argument 90: We Are a Nation of Time-Shifters? (http://oralargument.org/90) Michael Madison, Information Abundance and Knowledge Commons (https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2867578) About the institutional analysis and development framework (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Institutional_analysis_and_development_framework) Elinor Ostrom, The Institutional Analysis and Development Framework and the Commons (http://scholarship.law.cornell.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3170&context=clr) Governing Knowledge Commons (http://knowledge-commons.net/publications/gkc/) (Brett Frischmann, Michael Madison, and Katherine Strandburg, eds.) The Knowlege Commons Research Framework (http://knowledge-commons.net/publications/gkc/research-framework/) Workshop on Governing the Knowledge Commons (http://knowledge-commons.net) Christine Borgman, Big Data, Little Data, No Data (https://mitpress.mit.edu/big-data-little-data-no-data) Matthys Levy, [Why Buildings Fall Down: How Structures Fail][levy] [levy]: https://www.amazon.com/Why-Buildings-Fall-Down-Structures/dp/039331152X Special Guest: Mike Madison.
Our main topic is fair use, the engine of so much cultural reuse and advancement. We’re joined by one of the doctrine’s most interesting scholars, Mike Madison. But the conversation spans: Joe’s telecomm cursing issues (0:00:36), FBiPhones and the Apple-FBI imbroglio (0:09:26), and fair use (0:28:27), including discussion of Mike’s Big Idea of social practices (0:53:03), reverse engineering, parody, video tapes, and much more. This show’s links: Mike Madison’s website, writing, and blog FCC v. Pacifica Foundation FCC v. Fox (Fox II) (containing a link to Fox I) This American Life 267: Propriety (It’s all good, but the discussion of the legal issue in Fox is at about 19:15.) Amy Davidson, The Dangerous All Writs Act Precedent in the Apple Encryption Case John Gruber, The Next Step in iPhone Impregnability Oral Argument 80: We’ll Do It LIVE! Oral Argument 42: Shotgun Aphasia (guest Orin Kerr) Orin Kerr, An Equilibrium-Adjustment Theory of the Fourth Amendment Apple’s motion to vacate the order to assist the FBI Riley v. California (and see Orin Kerr’s post about the case shortly after it was decided About Fair Use Week Ty v. Publications Int’l (Judge Posner, giving an explanation of market substitution and fair use); see also Richard Posner, When Is Parody Fair Use? Suntrust Bank v. Houghton Mifflin Co. Key, lower-court cases deciding whether university course packets qualify for fair use protection: Basic Books Inc. v. Kinko’s Graphics Corp., Princeton Univ. v. Michigan Document Services, and, most recently, Cambridge University Press v. Patton David Fagundes, Market Harm, Market Help, and Fair Use Kickstarter page for Star Trek: Axanar, an independent Star Trek film (includes the twenty-minute video Prelude to Axanar) Ryan Reed, Crowdfunded 'Star Trek' Movie Facing Copyright Infringement Lawsuit; Eriq Gardner, 'Star Trek' Fans Want Paramount, CBS to Do Better Job Explaining Franchise to Court See also the unrelated and rather amazing Star Trek New Voyages, a nonprofit web series; and Paul Post, A ‘Star Trek’ Dream, Spread From Upstate New York A googol Statement of the Librarian of Congress Relating to Section 1201 Rulemaking; about anti-circumvention exemptions Electronic Frontier Foundation, Victory for Users: Librarian of Congress Renews and Expands Protections for Fair Uses Michael Madison, A Pattern-Oriented Approach to Fair Use Sony Corp. v. Universal City Studios Joel Hruska, How Sony’s Betamax Made YouTube and Twitch Possible Sega v. Accolade Frank Pasquale, Toward an Ecology of Intellectual Property: Lessons from Environmental Ecology for Valuing Copyright’s Commons Randy Picker, Closing the Xbox Sony Computer Entertainment v. Connectix Corp. MGM v. Grokster Jonathan Zittrain, The Generative Internet Horace Dediu, Seeing What’s Next (featuring a wonderful graph showing the adoption rates of various technologies, including the VCR); see also Derek Thompson, The 100-Year March of Technology in One Graph Eduardo Peñalver and Sonia Katyal, Property Outlaws: How Squatters, Pirates, and Protesters Improve the Law of Ownership (see also this article-length treatment) Eben Moglen, Freeing the Mind: Free Software and the Death of Proprietary Culture (“It is wrong to ask, ‘What is the incentive for people to create?’ It's an emergent property of connected human minds that they do create.”) Jennifer Rothman, The Questionable Use of Custom in Intellectual Property Michael Madison, Madisonian Fair Use Special Guest: Mike Madison.
Your hostest with the mostest, Cosandra Calloway, and Mike Madison from Madison Media Radio, go live tonight to talk about their visit to tonight's Jimmy Kimmel Live! show in Hollywood. You don't want to miss this one, it's going to be a blast!
How do we know what we know when everyone in power seems to be lying? (I Am) Nobody's Lunch was a Civilians investigation asking this question in the early 2000's, during the years of Homeland Security and George W. Bush's "truthiness." Emily Rossell plays a Columbia student who joined a cult, then Donnetta Lavinia Grays performs an interview with a Jamaican facialist. Aysan Celik plays a "remote viewer" who has a special technique for accessing truth. Lastly, Mike Madison plays a song by Michael Friedman inspired by interviews about this topic called "Super Secret Places."For more, please visit http://www.thecivilians.org.To leave a comment, please visit The Civilians' blog http://blogforthecivilians.blogspot.com/!
Tales of Thanksgiving.Dan's second Grandchild is in the works.Mail Bag:One from Dennis on Thanksgiving.Three from Allen in New Jersey:1) Kanye West's Today Show rant.2) Some information on using stimulus money.3) As I mature.Peter pushes Dan's buttons again: Obama pardons 2 turkeys on Thanksgiving Eve.One from Mike: Madison may require homeowners to clear bus stops to aid disabled.The Rest of the Show:1) Palin hits back after "North Korea ally" slip.2) Spanish woman claims she now owns sun.