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Donald Trump wasn't supposed to give a closing statement at the New York AG's civil trial, but he gave a brief one anyway — and why not? There's no jury to influence and, let's be honest, Judge Engoron seems to have made his mind up. Plus: Rudy Giuliani is bankrupt and faces the creditors' committee of his nightmares. Michael Flynn has a performative defamation lawsuit against Andrew Weissmann, over the allegation that he was actually guilty of the crime he pleaded guilty to. And Bill Ackman says he'll sue Business Insider for reporting that his wife, former MIT professor Neri Oxman, committed plagiarism — though really, Oxman would have to sue, and an unwinnable lawsuit (as it looks to be) is likelier to serve his PR goals rather than hers.Visit serious trouble.show to sign up for our newsletter and to support our show. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.serioustrouble.show/subscribe
This week, we dig into the latest front into the so-called hit piece. Last week, Business Insider published a pair of stories that dug into the academic record of Neri Oxman, a former MIT professor. Oxman happens to be the wife of Bill Ackman, a powerful activist investor who has been on a campaign against the leaders of top universities, including Harvard's Claudine Gay, who resigned a week ago after plagiarism accusations. The Wall Street Journal meanwhile continued its scrutiny of Elon Musk with a piece that looked into his drug use and whether it has negatively impacted his stewardship of his companies and the requirements of federal law since Starlink is a government contractor. The pieces raise the question of what a fair target for accountability journalism, and whether drug use is the issue or behavior exhibited during drug use (or without drugs of any kind, outside the intoxicant of ego). Finally, we consider the Apple Vision Pro and the prospect of people on planes with it strapped to their faces.Troy Young's People vs Algorithms newsletterBrian Morrissey's The Rebooting newsletterAlex Schleifer's Universal EntitiesFollow Alex, Brian and Troy on Twitter
In this episode veteran PGA TOUR caddie Neil Oxman talks about his real vocation, politics. As the President and Founder of The Campaign Group, Neil is one of the leading political consultants in the country. He has some interesting thoughts on today's political climate, Joe Biden being beatable in a primary and what he would change in politics. If you're politically invested at all, this is a good listen.
A jazz musician since the 1970s, Keith Oxman, toured with the Buddy Rich big band in 1986 and has played with artists including Art Blakey, Sonny Stitt, Red Holloway, Pete Christlieb, Jack McDuff, Phil Woods, Dave Brubeck, Jon Hendricks, Pete Christlieb, Louis Bellson, Pearl Bailey, The Temptations and The Fifth Dimension. He has eleven CDs on the Capri Records label. Two of his CDs were with John Coltrane's trombonist Curtis Fuller, one with liner notes written by Benny Golson. Keith is also a sideman on two of Curtis Fuller's CDs and a CD by Charles McPherson, and he has been a sideman on other recordings that have come out commercially but are not on the Capri label. His 2020 CD release with Houston Person, Two Cigarettes In The Dark (liner notes by Charles McPherson), was widely reviewed and was on the National Top 50 Jazz Week Chart for over two months. It received a 4-star review in the June 2020 issue of DownBeat magazine. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/backstagejazz/message
Neil Oxman might be the most interesting man in golf. The Founder and President of the Campaign Group is a highly respected man in the political arena. However, he first considers himself a caddie. He tells great stories about his days caddying on the PGA Tour and being on the bag for the legendary Tom Watson. He also gives his thoughts on why the United States fared so poorly in this year's Ryder Cup. Do yourself a favor and listen to this episode.
Dr. David Oxman is a Critical Care Doctor and associate professor of medicine here at Jefferson and the program director for the critical care medicine fellowship. He went to medical school at Temple, where he also completed his residency in IM. HE completed four fellowships in Infectious Diseases at Tufts, Surgical Critical Care at Harvard, Medical critical care at Hahnemann, and Medical ethics at Harvard. He is currently the medical school's ethics and professionalism thread director and runs the hospital ethics consultation service here at Jefferson. I also had the personal luxury of being in a student group led by Dr. Oxman, where we had discussions about being medical students and our hospital experiences.Oct 9th___0:00 - Intro0:51 - Statistics About Critical Care4:36 - What Is Critical Care?5:48 - Journey Into Medicine and Critical Care10:30 - Why Critical Care?19:07 - An Average Week/Day Balancing Academia, ICU, and Ethics Consultation25:32 - Ethics Consultation and Ethical Dilemmas in the Hospital42:47 - Best Thing About Being a Critical Care Doctor43:44 - Worst Thing About Being a Critical Care Doctor45:19 - If I Give You $100 Million, What Would You Do?48:25 - Interest in Academia51:07 - Thoughts About Med Students on Social Media55:44 - Common Myth About Critical Care Doctors56:27 - Changes Over the Years and the Future of Critical Care 1:07:02 - Advice for People Looking Into Critical Care1:07:59 - Maximizing Competitiveness1:09:35 - Advice to People Entering a Career in Medicine1:11:49 - Book Recommendations1:14:25 - Lessons From COVID, Changes in Practice and Burnout1:23:29 - What Advice Would You Give Your 18-Year-Old Self?1:25:30 - Closing Message for People Looking Into Critical Care1:29:18 - Closing Message 1:31:13 - Outro__ResourcesOf Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham: https://a.co/d/eT0pUtyMy Own Country by Abraham Verghese: https://a.co/d/ffD8lh7 ___View the Show Notes Page for This Episode for transcript and more information: zhighley.com/podcast___Connect With ZachMain YouTube: @ZachHighley Newsletter: https://zhighley.com/newsletter/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachhighley/?hl=enWebsite: https://zhighley.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/zachhighleyLinkedln: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zach-highley-gergel-44763766/Business Inquiries: zachhighley@nebula.tv___Listen for FreeSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/23TvJdEBAJuW5WY1QHEc6A?si=cf65ae0abbaf46a4Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-zach-highley-show/id1666374777___Welcome to the Zach Highley Show, where we discuss personal growth and medicine to figure out how to improve our lives. My name is Zach a Resident Physician in Boston. Throughout these episodes I'll interview top performers from around the world in business, life, and medicine in hopes of extracting the resources and techniques they use to get to the top.The best way to help the show is share episodes on any platform. If you think a friend or family member will like a certain episode, send it to them!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Systematic reviews such as these are just one of many ways in academic writing to accumulate the current state-of-the-art in a relevant field of research. But fear not, we've got PRISMA as our guiding star. PRISMA stands for “Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses.” In this episode, we will embark on a journey to let you understand what systematic reviews are and how you could use this extraordinary tool to capture an aerial photo from your research. We will also introduce the PRISMA guidelines to equip you with the relevant toolbox to start using this methodology in your own research.References:Higgins, J., Altman, D., Gøtzsche, P., Jüni, P., Moher, D., Oxman, A., Savović, J., Schulz, K. F., Weeks, L., & Sterne, J. A. C. (2011). The Cochrane collaboration's tool for assessing risk of bias in randomised trials. BMJ, 343(oct18 2), d5928-d5928. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.d5928 Page, M. J., McKenzie, J. E., Bossuyt, P. M., Boutron, I., Hoffmann, T. C., Mulrow, C. D., Shamseer, L., Tetzlaff, J. M., Akl, E. A., Brennan, S. E., Chou, R., Glanville, J., Grimshaw, J. M., Hróbjartsson, A., Lalu, M. M., Li, T., Loder, E. W., Mayo-Wilson, E., McDonald, S., … Moher, D. (2021). The PRISMA 2020 statement: An updated guideline for reporting systematic reviews. Systematic Reviews, 10(1), 89. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13643-021-01626-4Stang, A. (2010). Critical evaluation of the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale for the assessment of the quality of nonrandomized studies in meta-analyses. European Journal of Epidemiology, 25(9), 603-605. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10654-010-9491-zUncover even more insights and valuable information by visiting the blog profmanagement.de. Thank you for tuning in! If you enjoyed this episode, we'd be thrilled if you could leave us a glowing review on Apple Podcasts. Got a thought or opinion about this episode? Have a suggestion for a future topic? Send an audio file or voice note to hi@profmanagement.de. For all other comments, send us a tweet or DM at @profmanagement on Twitter or Instagram.
Neri Oxman is a designer, engineer, scientist, and artist working on computational design, synthetic biology and digital fabrication, previously at MIT, and now at OXMAN. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Babbel: https://babbel.com/lexpod and use code Lexpod to get 55% off - BetterHelp: https://betterhelp.com/lex to get 10% off - House of Macadamias: https://houseofmacadamias.com/lex and use code LEX to get 20% off first order - InsideTracker: https://insidetracker.com/lex to get 20% off - ExpressVPN: https://expressvpn.com/lexpod to get 3 months free Transcript: https://lexfridman.com/neri-oxman-transcript EPISODE LINKS: Neri's Twitter: https://twitter.com/nerioxman OXMAN Website: https://oxman.com/ OXMAN Instagram: https://instagram.com/oxmanofficial PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (09:06) - Biomass vs anthropomass (23:27) - Computational templates (43:42) - Biological hero organisms (54:42) - Engineering with bacteria (1:02:59) - Plant communication (1:16:22) - Albert Einstein letter (1:19:44) - Beauty (1:24:40) - Faith (1:34:26) - Flaws (1:54:15) - Extinction (2:05:22) - Alien life (2:09:12) - Music (2:10:39) - Movies (2:15:11) - Advice for young people
Mel's life took an unexpected turn in 2020. Married and raising their daughter, her partner shared they were exploring being gender fluid. Mel didn't know what that meant for her or her partner, but she knew that she wanted to keep her family together. This began a journey of discovery, of redefining what a family looked like and opening up to more abundance than even Mel thought was possible. Be inspired xoCome and hang out with me and our amazing community!Instagram: My.Soul.Life.PodcastFacebook Group: Our Soul Life CommunityThanks for being here and remember, you're already living your Soul Life. Let's keep growing and evolving because it's totally possible to live a life you love everyday, right where you are xo
Caitlin and Lauren chat with singer, actress, and content creator, Katie Oxman, about theater, Disney, college auditions, fashion, social media, content creation, movie musicals, and MORE!
Ten years and 8 autoimmune/chronic conditions into remission ago (in my Gettysburg address voice) I can tell you there is SO MUCH misinformation when it comes to autoimmune disease. So much that sometimes it makes me so angry with the medical profession. Even our medical professionals don't readily share the truth about your body's ability to heal because they simply have been taught a different rhetoric. Let's reprogram your rhetoric right here, right now, with the fact- filled research. FREE One Day Detox https://www.inspirehealthbyjen.com/onedaydetox Bloghttps://www.inspirehealthbyjen.com/work-with-jen Alvergne, A., & Lummaa, V. (2010). Does the contraceptive pill alter mate choice in humans? Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 25(3), 171–179. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2009.08.003 Ascherio, A., & Munger, K. L. (2015). EBV and Autoimmunity. Current topics in microbiology and immunology, 390(Pt 1), 365–385. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-22822-8_15 Benagiano, G., Benagiano, M., Bianchi, P., D'Elios, M. M., & Brosens, I. (2019). Contraception in autoimmune diseases. Best practice & research. Clinical obstetrics & gynaecology, 60, 111–123. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpobgyn.2019.05.003 Bookwalter, D. B., Roenfeldt, K. A., LeardMann, C. A., Kong, S. Y., Riddle, M. S., & Rull, R. P. (2020). Posttraumatic stress disorder and risk of selected autoimmune diseases among US military personnel. BMC Psychiatry, 20(1), 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-020-2432-9 Dube SR, Fairweather D, Pearson WS, Felitti VJ, Anda RF, Croft JB, Dube, S. R., Fairweather, D., Pearson, W. S., Felitti, V. J., Anda, R. F., & Croft, J. B. (2009). Cumulative childhood stress and autoimmune diseases in adults. Psychosomatic Medicine, 71(2), 243–250. https://doi.org/10.1097/PSY.0b013e3181907888 FELDMAN, R. (2020). Perverse Incentives: Why Everyone Prefers High Drug Prices--Except for Those Who Pay the Bills. Harvard Journal on Legislation, 57(2), 303–376. Houen, G., Trier, N. H., & Frederiksen, J. L. (2020). Epstein-Barr Virus and Multiple Sclerosis. Frontiers in immunology, 11, 587078. https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2020.587078 Leverone, D., & Epstein, B. J. (2010). Nonpharmacological interventions for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis: a focus on mind-body medicine. Journal of pharmacy practice, 23(2), 101–109. https://doi.org/10.1177/0897190009360025 Macarenco, M.-M., Opariuc-Dan, C., & Nedelcea, C. (2021). Childhood trauma, dissociation, alexithymia, and anger in people with autoimmune diseases: A mediation model. Child Abuse & Neglect, 122. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2021.105322 Mirashrafi, S., Hejazi Taghanaki, S. Z., Sarlak, F., Moravejolahkami, A. R., Hojjati Kermani, M. A., & Haratian, M. (2021). Effect of probiotics supplementation on disease progression, depression, general health, and anthropometric measurements in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis patients: A systematic review and meta-analysis of clinical trials. International Journal of Clinical Practice, 75(11), e14724. https://doi.org/10.1111/ijcp.14724 Posnett D. N. (2008). Herpesviruses and autoimmunity. Current opinion in investigational drugs (London, England : 2000), 9(5), 505–514. Rashidian, A., Omidvari, A. H., Vali, Y., Sturm, H., & Oxman, A. D. (2015). Pharmaceutical policies: effects of financial incentives for prescribers. The Cochrane database of systematic reviews, 2015(8), CD006731. https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD006731.pub2 Roberts, A. L., Malspeis, S., Kubzansky, L. D., Feldman, C. H., Chang, S. C., Koenen, K. C., & Costenbader, K. H. (2017). Association of Trauma and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder With Incident Systemic Lupus Erythematosus in a Longitudinal Cohort of Women. Arthritis & rheumatology (Hoboken, N.J.), 69(11), 2162–2169. https://doi.org/10.1002/art.40222 Williams W. V. (2017). Hormonal contraception and the development of autoimmunity: A review of the literature. The Linacre quarterly, 84(3), 275–295. https://doi.org/10.1080/00243639.2017.1360065 https://www.nih.gov/news-events/nih-research-matters/epstein-barr-virus-autoimmune-diseases
Oxman interviews Eric Schmidt, the former CEO of Google. They discuss Averroism and underking. Notably, Lvov and grandsire are mentioned.
In this exciting 200th episode we welcome back the beautiful Mel Oxman for a soul inspiring conversation about Susan's Project 2022 journey. We hear all about Susan's transforming and transcendant experiences this year as she has dived deeper into her health and soul, some things expectd, and some not, but still so aligned. Be Inspired xo
Welcome to this very special edition of the Flaghunters Golf Podcast ! Today we welcome Neil Oxman ! Mr. Oxman hails from Philly, PA and has been a Tour Caddy since the early 1970's. He started his Caddying career early by caddying for his Father and then graduated up to the local Monday qualifying for his local TOUR event. From these early days, Neil found his way onto the Tour and as a result, caddying paid for his undergraduate degree from Villanova as well as his Law degree. In this episode, Neil and I talk about the Tour and the early days of caddying. Notably, for the last 20 years, Neil has been caddying for Tom Watson. Neil was on Mr. Watson's bag for that magical week at Turnbeery in 2009. We go into that historic week as well. It's always a privilege to talk to “OX” and I'm so glad to share this wonderful and accomplished Man with you. A big thank you to Neil and cheers ! Jesse
Veteran Democratic media consultant Neil Oxman is one of the most interesting people working in politics. In addition to his years helping elect Democrats at all levels, he caddies on the PGA tour for golfing legends including Tom Watson. In this discussion, Neil talks the history of political ad-making from the 1950s to today and goes deep inside several of his own high-profile races including PA Governor Ed Rendell, Philadelphia's first Black mayor Wilson Goode, Al Gore's 1988 presidential campaign, and more throughout his career that show the ways TV can help win (and lose) political campaigns. Neil's full presentation on the history of campaign ads was recorded by C-Span in 2016 and can be found here. IN THIS EPISODE…Neil's Philly roots and unusual law school experience at Villanova…Neil gets his foot in the door in politics in the summer of 1976…What leads to Neil opening his own media firm in 1980…Neil talks the roots of television advertising in political campaigns…The 1969 television ad that Neil believes kicked off the rise of political ads in non-presidential campaigns…Neil compares ads from the 70s/80s to political ads of today…The races on which Neil starts to come into his own as a media consultant…Neil helps Wilson Goode beat Frank Rizzo to become Philadelphia's first Black mayor…Neil's role on the Kentucky Senate race in 1984 and the strategic mistake that led to Mitch McConnell's first win…Neil's role as ad-maker on the Al Gore 1988 presidential campaign…Neil's connection to then-mayor of Cincinnati Jerry Springer…Neil helps Ed Rendell become Philly Mayor and Governor of Pennsylvania…The last ad that Neil thinks actually mattered in a presidential race…Neil talks his habit of watching 100s of movies a year…Neil talks moonlighting as a caddy on the PGA tour for greats like Tom Watson…Who's the best golfer in politics?Neil's advice for those who want to get into political media…Neil's recommendation for the best political movies…AND 215 media markets, Roger Ailes, Altoona, Doug Bailey, Birch Bayh, Abe Beame, Homero Blancas, Ed Brooke, Pat Caddell, Frank Capra, Hugh Carey, Bob Casey Jr, Bob Casey Sr, Frank Church, Citizens United, cocktail parties, the Columbus Dispatch, Bob Colville, the Daisy ad, John Dierdorf, David Doak, Mike Dukakis, Dwight Eisenhower, Mike Ford, David Garth, gerontocracy, gigantic piles of polls, Wilson Goode, Bob Goodman, Bill Green, Michael Harrington, Anita Hill, Richard Holbrooke, Dee Huddleston, HUT levels, Andi Johnson, Lyndon Johnson, Julian Kanter, Robert Kennedy, Ed Koch, John Lindsay, the Louisville Courier Journal, Willie Maples, McDonalds, George McGovern, Jack McGregor, Mark Moskowitz, Ralph Nader, Jack Nicklaus, Dan Quayle, process questions, Mark Putnam, Robert Redford, regional agoraphobia, Rosser Reeves, Jim Rhodes, Frank Rizzo, Nelson Rockefeller, Buddy Roemer, Nolan Ryan, Rick Santorum, Mike Schmidt, Allyson Schwartz, Joe Sestak, Bob Shrum, Mark Singel, Arlen Specter, Bob Squier, Clarence Thomas, Danny Thomas, Lee Trevino, troglodytes, Harry Truman, Paul Tsongas, Paul Tully, WASPy establishments, Doug Wilder, Tiger Woods, Tom Wolf, Lynn Yeakel & more!
Legendary media consultant Neil Oxman takes us inside politics — and throws some righteous shade
In this week's 'Under the Strap' podcast, The Caddie Network's host John Rathouz was joined by caddies Neil Oxman and Herb Stevens, two old-school loopers who got their start as college kids back in the 1970s. Both Neil and Herb went on to successful careers outside of golf, but still enjoy sharing stories about their times on the PGA Tour with the likes of Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson and more.
Litigation Finance and the Plaintiffs Bar With Matthew Oxman, Vice President of Business Development & Investments at LexShares, With Host Richard Levick of LEVICK: Matthew Oxman, Vice President of Business Development & Investments at LexShares, which funds attorneys, law firms and plaintiffs with commercial lawsuits, and is one of the most active litigation finance firms in the world, speaks with host Richard Levick of LEVICK. Matt discusses the challenges presented on the plaintiff side such as inflationary wage and cost pressures, retaining talent and re-considering physical footprints in light of the work-from-home revolution; trends with respect to capital inflows; industry trends regarding how capital is deployed and how the industry was formerly primarily single case, single plaintiff funding and the move to embrace law firm portfolio funding, corporate legal department funding and even defense-side funding; and a growing awareness both within law firms and among courts of the importance of litigation funding.
Welcome to a new edition of the Neon Jazz interview series with Denver-based Jazz Saxophonist & Educator Keith Oxman on the 2022 CD This One's For Joey .. It was an album recorded for the Joey Pearlman Original Music Project released on Capri Records. We covered quite a bit of ground in this interview .. He's a platinum member of the re-occuring interview club, so there is always much to discuss .. Like the life of Joe Pearlman, his great friend we just lost in Ron Miles, COVID life and so much more on this modern 2022 world of ours .. Enjoy .. Click to listen.Neon Jazz is a radio program airing since 2011. Hosted by Joe Dimino and Engineered by John Christopher in Kansas City, Missouri giving listeners a journey into one of America's finest inventions. Take a listen on KCXL (102.9 FM / 1140 AM) out of Liberty, MO. Listen to KCXL on Tunein Radio at http://tunein.com/radio/Neon-Jazz-With-Joe-Dimino-p381685/. You can now catch Neon Jazz on KOJH 104.7 FM out of the Mutual Musicians Foundation from Noon - 1 p.m. CST Monday-Friday at https://www.kojhfm.org/. Check us out at All About Jazz @ https://kansascity.jazznearyou.com/neon-jazz.php. For all things Neon Jazz, visit http://theneonjazz.blogspot.com/If you like what you hear, please let us know. You can contribute a few bucks to keep Neon Jazz going strong into the future. https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=ERA4C4TTVKLR4
Josh Oxendine sits down with us for the first time. MMA runs Pro Wrestling Paul Daley Retires UFC Fight Night and so much more... MERCH STORE: https://teespring.com/stores/ybemmapodcast Follow Us: www.instagram.com/YBEMMAPodcast Follow Josh "Prep" Iguina: www.twitter.com/elroyprepson www.instagram.com/elroyprepson/ www.youtube.com/channel/UCJ3Gse8XxoxjybG-bHnXnBg? TAGS: MMA, UFC, PFL, Bellator, Jorge Masvidal, Conor Mcgregor, Kamaru Usman, Dustin Poirier, Israel Adesanya, Stylebender, Nate Diaz, YBEMMAPODCAST, yourboyelroy, Kamaru, wrestling, WWE, AEW, Notorious, Jon Jones, Champion, UFC271
Off the heels of an amazing UFC 270 event we're back with a ton on Non-UFC news including Bellator: 273 EagleFC's Stateside debut Lil' Heathen's UFC departure PFL resigning with ESPN Stay tuned for our interview with Josh "OXMAN" Oxendine's introduction interview coming Monday January 31st. MERCH STORE: https://teespring.com/stores/ybemmapodcast Follow Us: www.instagram.com/YBEMMAPodcast Follow Josh "Prep" Iguina: www.twitter.com/elroyprepson www.instagram.com/elroyprepson/ www.youtube.com/channel/UCJ3Gse8XxoxjybG-bHnXnBg? TAGS: MMA, UFC, PFL, Bellator, Jorge Masvidal, Conor Mcgregor, Kamaru Usman, Dustin Poirier, Israel Adesanya, Stylebender, Nate Diaz, YBEMMAPODCAST, yourboyelroy, Kamaru, wrestling, WWE, AEW, Notorious, Jon Jones, Champion, UFC270
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://thecitylife.org/2021/11/28/sfmoma-announces-exclusive-exhibition-nature-x-humanity-oxman-architects-opening-in-february-2022/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/citylifeorg/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/citylifeorg/support
Il nuovo rapporto “Carbon inequality in 2030”, realizzato da Oxfam, la confederazione internazionale di organizzazioni non profit che si dedicano alla riduzione della povertà globale, afferma che, nel 2030, le emissioni di CO2 in atmosfera, prodotte dall'1% più ricco della popolazione mondiale, saranno 30 volte superiori ai livelli sostenibili per limitare l'aumento delle temperature globali entro il limite di 1,5°C rispetto ai livelli dell'era pre-industriale. Un obiettivo fondamentale sia per il presente, che per il futuro prossimo del pianeta, inserito negli Accordi di Parigi del 2015, ma che, andando avanti di questo passo, sarà impossibile raggiungere, con conseguenze sempre più disastrose e imprevedibili. Il documento è stato diffuso proprio mentre, a Glasgow , Friday For Future e le associazioni ambientaliste, manifestavano per lamentare gli impegni – a loro dire - non mantenuti dai Governi sul taglio delle emissioni dopo gli Accordi di Parigi. La Cop26, come ricorda il rapporto di Oxfam, ha tra le sue principali finalità proprio quelle di scongiurare un irreversibile e catastrofico aumento delle temperature globali oltre 1,5° C. Il punto è che però – come si legge nel recentissimo documento - per evitare che il riscaldamento globale salga oltre 1,5° C, ciascun abitante del pianeta dovrebbe inquinare la metà rispetto a quello che fa oggi: in pratica, ogni individuo, entro il 2030, “dovrebbe essere responsabile dell'emissione di appena 2,3 tonnellate di CO2 all'anno in atmosfera, vale a dire circa la metà rispetto ad oggi”. Prendendo in considerazione l'insieme della popolazione globale come se facesse parte di un unico Paese, la ricerca di Oxman stima che “i livelli di emissioni prodotti dalla metà più povera del pianeta, saranno ancora molto al di sotto di quanto sostenibile per limitare l'aumento delle temperature entro 1,5° C. Invece, l'1% più ricco del mondo supererà di ben 30 volte la soglia di guardia e il 10% più ricco di 9 volte. Pertanto, per centrare l'obiettivo cruciale dell'accordo di Parigi, l'1% più ricco dovrebbe ridurre le proprie emissioni del 97% rispetto ad oggi”. Comunque, nonostante le numerose promesse non mantenute, il rapporto segnala che alcuni effetti positivi dell'accordo di Parigi cominciano pure a farsi vedere: per esempio, il 40% della popolazione mondiale è già sulla strada per arrivare ad un taglio delle emissioni pro-capite del 9% tra il 2015 e il 2030. Un dato che – sempre secondo Oxfam – rappresenterebbe un punto di svolta, “considerando che si tratta, in gran parte, di cittadini di Paesi a medio reddito come Cina e Sudafrica, che tra il 1990 e il 2015 hanno fatto registrare gli aumenti più rapidi di emissioni pro-capite”. Analizzando, invece, le emissioni globali totali, anziché quelle pro capite, lo studio stima che l''1% più ricco – cioè 80 milioni di persone – tra meno di 10 anni sarà responsabile di ben il 16% delle emissioni globali, mentre nel 1990 rappresentava il 13% del totale e nel 2015 il 15%. Pertanto, Oxfam spiega che, procedendo sulla strada intrapresa sino ad oggi, “nel 2030 le emissioni totali di cui sarà responsabile da solo il 10% più ricco del mondo, supereranno la quota di emissioni tollerabili per scongiurare l'aumento delle temperature al di sopra di 1,5° C, indipendentemente da ciò che farà il restante 90% dell'umanità”. Basti pensare che un singolo volo spaziale, come quelli organizzati dalle agenzie private per i super-ricchi, è responsabile di più emissioni di quante prodotte dal miliardo di persone più povere del pianeta in un anno. “Viviamo afferma Oxfam - in un mondo in cui una ristrettissima élite sembra avere il permesso di inquinare senza limiti, alimentando condizioni ed eventi metereologici sempre più estremi e imprevedibili. In sostanza, le emissioni del 10% più ricco da sole, potrebbero spingerci verso un punto di non ritorno sul controllo del riscaldamento globale. E a pagarne il prezzo più alto, ancora una volta, saranno le persone più povere e vulnerabili della Terra, che a causa dell'impatto del cambiamento climatico, stanno già oggi affrontando eventi climatici sempre più fuori controllo, fame, carestie e miseria”. ______________________________________ Ascolta "Sostenibilità" a cura di Roberto Frangipane e Ferruccio Bovio Per i notiziari sempre aggiornati ascoltaci sul sito: https://www.giornaleradio.fm oppure scarica la nostra App gratuita: iOS - App Store - https://apple.co/2uW01yA Android - Google Play - http://bit.ly/2vCjiW3 Resta connesso e segui i canali social di Giornale Radio: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/giornaleradio.fm/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/giornaleradio.tv/?hl=it Twitter: https://twitter.com/giornaleradiofm
«Nella natura non c'è separazione tra design, ingegneria e produzione: l'osso fa già tutto questo».Neri Oxman, classe 1976, è senza dubbio una delle menti visionarie più brillanti ed affascinanti del XXI secolo. Architetto e designer israeliano-americana è docente associato presso il MIT Media Lab di Boston dove guida il team Mediated Matter, la cui rivoluzionaria ricerca "maker" si occupa di combinare all'architettura, il design generativo o computazionale, la digital fabrication e la biologia sintetica attraverso l'ingegnerizzazione dei materiali e la modifica il DNA. Neri Oxman Photo Credit: Noah Kalina
"Happy Talk" Frank Morelli - Keith Oxman: The Ox-Mo Incident (Capri Records, 2021) Keith Oxman (saxo tenor), Frank Morelli (fagot), Jeff Jenkins (piano), Ken Walker (contrabajo), Todd Reid (batería). El tema es un clásico de Richard Rodgers y Oscar Hammerstein II. © Pachi Tapiz, 2021 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast.
Joe Oxman received his Ph.D. in organic photochemistry from Northwestern University (1983). He has been employed by 3M for 38 years and is currently a Corporate Scientist. A developer of many dental and non-dental technologies and is considered a global expert in photocurable systems, nanotechnology, structural composites, hard tissue adhesives, glass ionomer materials, orthogonal smart-materials, bioactives and technologies to minimize polymerization shrinkage stress. He has 112 issued US patents, more than 100 publications/abstracts in peer reviewed journals and has been an invited global lecturer for more than 350 keynotes, presentations, and dental school curricula. He has received many international recognitions including induction into the prestigious 3M Carlton Society (2003), two American Chemical Society (ACS) Cooperative Research Awards (2007 and 2020), the University of Colorado Engineering & Applied Science Corporate Advocate Award (2007), the IADR Peyton Skinner Award for Innovation in Dental Materials (2013), ACS Industrial Polymer Science Award (2016) and induction as an ACS Polymer Fellow (2017). He was instrumental in co-establishing the NSF Cooperative Research Center on “Fundamentals Applications of Photopolymerization” (Universities of Iowa and Colorado). He currently serves on the Board of Directors of the AADR, the MinnCResT External Review Board and previously served as the 3M Director of Research for University of Minnesota Dental Research Center for Biomaterials and Biomechanics and as a coach and judge for the Discovery Education/3M Young Scientist Challenge.
Michael started tree work back in the 70's, and that lead him on a path he's still on today. He started his career dragging brush, worked his way to being a climber. And enjoyed a full career. These days he's still building the arborist community. Weather it's through organizing groups on the internet, working on tree fund events, or hauling gear to help set up big climbs.On this episode of The Tree Thinking Podcast our conversation goes from tree work in the 70's, to talking to the future on Building community, Pioneering the future, and the semi-retired life of MichaelSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/tree-thinking/donations
Hvordan tenke klart når man daglig får ulike råd om hvordan bedre livet, få mindre kreft eller bli lykkeligere? Dette skal vi snakke med Matt Oxman om i dagens episode av Verdensrommet.Generelt om Oxman's arbeider:www.informedhealthchoices.orgSjekk din kritiske sans:https://thatsaclaim.org/Artwork: Sarah Rosenbaum - Informed Health ChoicesBokanbefalinger"The heath choices Book" (gratis)https://www.informedhealthchoices.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/IHC-V3-Childrens-Book-and-Cover-Des2016_lowres.pdfSteven Pinkerhttps://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Better_Angels_of_Our_NatureHans Rosling, Ola Rosling og Anna Rosling Rönnlund https://www.norli.no/factfulness?gclid=CjwKCAjwwqaGBhBKEiwAMk-FtBWQuLOVJuasPjv92hZMJjQbsTVU2zXnCYhtwATxC0LGepLmDTmnwRoCcm0QAvD_BwE See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Welcome to the one hundred and sixty-ninth episode of the Heart + Hustle podcast! 0:00 - 10:00 - This week we're offering some mood-boosting tips to help make your workday a little better. 10:00 - 93:31 - Today we are talking to Katie Oxman, a Manhattan-based actress who shares the story of her career journey. She talks about balancing the realities of making a living and being an actress, why she thinks any performers should try a month in NYC, and how she lives as an active ally. You can follow Katie on Instagram at instagram.com/katherinealice. For show notes and a list of everything we talked about, visit www.heartandhustlepodcast.com. Meet the hosts: Angelica Yarde (instagram.com/studio404paper) and Charisma O'Keefe (instagram.com/charismaokeefe)
Welcome to a new edition of the Neon Jazz interview series with Denver-based Trumpeter/Cornetist Ron Miles & Jazz Saxophonist Keith Oxman of The Group Jazz Worms .. We talked to them about their latest 2021 CD Squirmin – Recorded back in 2017, but released during this COVID pandemic year. More than 30 years after the release of their acclaimed debut album, this quintet is back joined by pianist Andy Weyl, drummer Paul Romaine, and bassist Mark Simon .. They open up about the band and so much more .. Enjoy…Click to listen.Neon Jazz is a radio program airing since 2011. Hosted by Joe Dimino and Engineered by John Christopher in Kansas City, Missouri giving listeners a journey into one of America's finest inventions. Take a listen on KCXL (102.9 FM / 1140 AM) out of Liberty, MO. Listen to KCXL on Tunein Radio at http://tunein.com/radio/Neon-Jazz-With-Joe-Dimino-p381685/. You can now catch Neon Jazz on KOJH 104.7 FM out of the Mutual Musicians Foundation from Noon - 1 p.m. CST Monday-Friday at https://www.kojhfm.org/. Check us out at All About Jazz @ https://kansascity.jazznearyou.com/neon-jazz.php. For all things Neon Jazz, visit http://theneonjazz.blogspot.com/If you like what you hear, please let us know. You can contribute a few bucks to keep Neon Jazz going strong into the future. https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=ERA4C4TTVKLR4
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.06.02.128702v1?rss=1 Authors: Wood, K. C., Angeloni, C. F., Oxman, K., Clopath, C., Geffen, M. N. Abstract: Learning to avoid dangerous signals while preserving normal behavioral responses to safe stimuli is essential for everyday behavior and survival. Like other forms of learning, fear learning has a high level of inter-subject variability. Following an identical fear conditioning protocol, different subjects exhibit a range of fear specificity. Under high specificity, subjects specialize fear to only the paired (dangerous) stimulus, whereas under low specificity, subjects generalize fear to other (safe) sensory stimuli. Pathological fear generalization underlies emotional disorders, such as post-traumatic stress disorder. Despite decades of work, the neuronal basis that determines fear specificity level remains unknown. We identified the neuronal code that underlies variability in fear specificity. We performed longitudinal imaging of activity of neuronal ensembles in the auditory cortex of mice prior to and after the mice were subjected to differential fear conditioning. The neuronal code in the auditory cortex prior to learning predicted the level of specificity following fear learning across subjects. After fear learning, population neuronal responses were reorganized: the responses to the safe stimulus decreased, whereas the responses to the dangerous stimulus remained the same, rather than decreasing as in pseudo-conditioned subjects. The magnitude of these changes, however, did not correlate with learning specificity, suggesting that they did not reflect the fear memory. Together, our results identify a new, temporally restricted, function for cortical activity in associative learning. These results reconcile seemingly conflicting previous findings and provide for a neuronal code for determining individual patterns in learning. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
Durante el camino de nuestras vidas tenemos la oportunidad de escoger mentores que te puede ayudar en tu vida personal como profesional. Algunos de nosotros tenemos la bendición de tener un mentor que te conoce más que nadie en el mundo, incluso desde tus primeros pasos, escuchó tu latidos y guió de ti. Sería el mentor ideal, ¿no? Esa es la suerte de este increíble Design Story dedicado a las mejores guías de la vida, las madres. “Lo mejor que compartimos es el tiempo de crear, cada cual en lo suyo, pero el tiempo es compartido” así nos dijo Claudia Robiou de su dinámica como madre de Jimena Chea, quienes siendo madre e hija comparten un interés por el arte muy marcado por estilos completamente opuestos, pero que adoran compartir al unísono del tiempo. No se pisan los talones y por más que le pique la vena de decir “maybe eso necesita…” Claudia ha tomado la decisión que Jimena explore y descubra su propia identidad del arte guiándola y no necesariamente de la mano. La táctica de Claudia, a mi entender es mega práctica e inteligente, no dicta tiempos, técnicas o temas si no que sutilmente expone el arte alrededor de ella, espera por reacciones para compartir y enseñar. Así como le dije en medio de la entrevista tengo que recalcar que admiro su decisión de ser más observadora que maestra. Es mucho más fácil señalar y corregir, que apreciar y dirigir. Lo mejor de esta entrevista es que sacamos a cada una por su lado y les preguntamos a solas su percepción de las cosas. Jimena por una parte ve el arte y las ciencias tan intrínsecamente conectados que es como si hablara del mar y la arena. Me resultó interesante su visión de cómo la ciencia va tan de la mano al diseño y al arte, que le surgió luego de una visita a un museo que hizo junto a su mamá hace unos años. Justamente luego de su entrevista, vi un documental sobre Neri Oxman diseñadora israelí actualmente profesora del MIT Media Lab y fue más que casualidad una increíble manera de ver estas disciplinas con nuevos ojos. Creo que Oxman con la siguienta cita expresa justamente la visión de maternidad que Claudia ejerce con Jimena y también explica la manera tan simple de como Jimena ve el arte y el diseño con las ciencias, todo en una sola frase: I’m not a mother of children, but I’m a different type of mother where my approach to design is more in line with nature. It’s less about dictating and more about editing and listening and allowing something to grow. So I nourish and let the material express what it wants to be. – Neri Oxman Si les pica la curiosidad dale play a este “Design Story” y descubre como la maternidad más que un reto de la vida es un diseño que nunca se termina.
On this episode of Soho Shortwave we hear from Sali Hughes, Oxman on Soho Skank, Iraina Mancini and EMI production music.To catch up on all Soho Radio shows from both our music and culture channels head on over mixcloud.com/sohoradio or tune in live anytime at sohoradiolondon.com.This is a Soho Radio Productions Podcast. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Neri Oxman is simultaneously a hardcore ecologist, evocative futurist, meticulous artist, and abstract scientist. The 43-year-old Israeli-American designer, architect, inventor, and MIT Media Lab professor embodies the same dualities that her work hinges upon. Oxman’s multifarious projects transcend the digital age; Oxman’s multifarious projects transcend the digital age; instead, she’s pioneering the “Biological Age” through “material ecology,” which fuses biology and technology, nature and culture, and the grown and made. Among her works are energy-generating photosynthetic wearables, a geometric dome spun by a robotic arm and completed by a swarm of silkworms, and sinewy masks modeled, in part, after the wearer’s own anatomical and physiological makeup—projects as functional and ideologically ambitious as they are beautiful. Outstanding in their aesthetic rigor, Oxman’s brainchildren have caught the attention of leading museums, including New York’s Museum of Modern Art, the Centre Pompidou in Paris, and the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum. This fall, she will receive SFMOMA's 2019 Contemporary Vision Award, and her next exhibition, “Material Ecology” at MoMA (on view from Feb. 22 to May 25, 2020), organized by Paola Antonelli and Anna Burckhardt, will present eight works from throughout her 20-year career—most notably an updated version of “Totems,” an array of vehicles for synthetically engineered melanin that debuted earlier this year in the Antonelli-curated “Broken Nature” exhibition at the Triennale in Milan. Having pursued architecture after dropping out of medical school, Oxman went on to study at the Architectural Association in London and, later, at MIT, where after earning a Ph.D. she stayed on to become a professor and now leads the pathbreaking Mediated Matter group. On this episode of Time Sensitive, Oxman and Spencer Bailey delve into motherhood, “fossils of the future,” robotic queen bees, death masks, and more.
We have Guests: Geraldine Hughes and Michael Jackson's Attorney Brian Oxman on the show to talk about the upcoming release of the documentary "Leaving Neverland" where two accusers of Micheal Jackson tells their stories. Geraldine comes forth to set the record straight about what really happened behind the scenes in the 1993 child molestation case against Michael Jackson and Brian Oxman you probably have heard his name mentioned or have seen him in the media. He was one-half of the Michael Jackson defense team originally, along with Mark Geragos. When Attorney Thomas Mesereau, Jr. was asked to join the defense team, he eventually fired Oxman. We talk about the truth behind the scenes and what really happened. Come Join The Conversation.
Research Director of the Global Health Unit at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health, talking about the Informed Health Choices project and Key Concepts for critical thinking about treatment claims. https://en.testingtreatments.org/key-concepts-for-assessing-claims-about-treatment-effects/ Lancet papers Nsangi A, Semakula D, Oxman A et al. Effects of the Informed Health Choices primary school intervention on the ability of children in Uganda to assess the reliability of claims about treatment effects: a cluster-randomised controlled trial Lancet 2017; 390:374-88 https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(17)31226-6/fulltext Semakula D, Nsangi A, Oxman A et al. Effects of the Informed Health Choices podcast on the ability of parents of primary school children in Uganda to assess claims about treatment effects: a randomised controlled trial Lancet 2017; 390:389-98 https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(17)31225-4/abstract An N of 1 trial is a trial with just one person where you randomly decide which treatment is given when. For example, a medicine versus a placebo and you alternate that, usually for up to three times per treatment. The big advantage of this is you find out for that person whether the treatment is helpful or harmful. The limitation of n-of-1-trial isthat you can only use it for diseases that are chronic and stable and where you go more or less go back to the state you were in to begin with after the treatment. So it's good for treatment of symptoms but not fora cure for the disease. GETIT entry: http://www.getitglossary.org/term/single+participant+trial
Please click on my YouTube page to access videos of interviews https://www.youtube.com/paulamadeuslane
Please click on my YouTube page to access videos of interviews https://www.youtube.com/paulamadeuslane