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Josh, Matt, & Tony from Batyard Productions discuss Fleischer Superman : The Underground World & Bride Of Frankenstien 1935'. Subscribe/rate/review our show on iTunes, Anchor, Spotify and more! Follow us on Instagram @batyardsfinestpod. Find our hosts on Instagram as well! Josh & Mateo: @batyardproductions, @batyardsfinestpod. Follow us & Subscribe to the Batyard Productions YouTube Channel. The Underground World is the sixteenth of seventeen animated Technicolor short films based on the title character Superman originally released June 18, 1943.
In this episode, Amy interviews Professor Bill Henderson of the Indiana University Maurer School of Law. Prof. Henderson's research focuses primarily on the empirical analysis of the legal profession and has appeared in leading legal journals, including the Stanford Law Review, the Michigan Law Review, and the Texas Law Review. He regularly publishes articles in The American Lawyer, The ABA Journal, and The National Law Journal. His observations on the legal market are also frequently quoted in the mainstream press, including the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, Atlantic Monthly, The Economist, and National Public Radio. Based on his research and public speaking, Professor Henderson was included on the National Law Journal's list of The 100 Most Influential Lawyers in America (complied every ten years). In 2015 and 2016, he was named the Most Influential Person in Legal Education by The National Jurist magazine. In addition to his research and teaching, Professor Henderson has participated in several legal innovation initiatives: 2018 to present: Co-founder of the Institute for the Future of Law Practice (IFLP, “i-flip”), a nonprofit that designs and delivers curricula and training for T-shaped legal professions (i.e., law combined with data, process, technology, design principles, and business). 2017 to present: Founder and editor of Legal Evolution, an online applied research publication focused on successful legal industry innovation. 2010-2016: Co-founder of Lawyer Metrics, an applied research company that helps lawyers and law firms use data to make better operational and strategic decisions. Lawyer Metrics (now LawyerMetrix) was acquired by AccessLex Institute in 2015. Additional links mentioned in the podcast: On diffusion theory: https://www.legalevolution.org/2019/06/scoring-your-innovation-098/ On the CRT: https://www.legalevolution.org/2019/06/is-access-to-justice-a-design-problem-099/
“You're marrying a firefighter. That's all I'll ever be. I'm never going to finish college.” That's what Bill Henderson told his soon to be wife many years ago, but thankfully that was not true. Fast forward to today and Bill is now Professor William Henderson, the Stephen F. Burns Chair on the Legal Profession at Indiana University and he has been a law professor for nearly 20 years. Professor Henderson is also the moving force behind Legal Evolution, an online publication focusing on changes in the legal industry with the stated mission of providing lawyers, legal educators, and allied professionals with high-quality information to solve very difficult industry-specific problems. It was almost true that Professor Henderson did not finish college. He dropped out and got a job as a firefighter. But… it was only because he was a firefighter that he ended up going to law school. In the early 90s, during firefighter union negotiations, Bill's union rep asked him to tag along and take notes. Foreshadowing his career as a professor, not only did Bill take notes, he also did in depth research into prior collective bargaining agreements and into state law so the union team could strike a better bargain. In the end, Bill moved on from note taker to union vice president and eventually took over as lead negotiator. Because of all of this, Bill decided to go to law school at the University of Chicago and became a legal professor. Since entering academia, Bill has done a ton of research and writing on the state of legal services in general, but more specifically, how legal innovation can improve it. In a nutshell, Bill's research has determined that more and more legal work is focused on commercial law at the expense of “PeopleLaw” –a term he uses to describe legal work done on behalf of individuals (like criminal law, domestic relations law and the like). 50 years ago, legal work was pretty much split 50/50 between PeopleLaw and commercial law. Now that division is 75/25 in favor of commercial law which is causing an access to justice issue. There is a great need for legal services related to PeopleLaw, but it is too expensive or just doesn't exist. However, Professor Henderson thinks there are a few things the legal community can do to address this problem: Better use of project management techniques, use of allied professionals, and leveraging legal technology.
Professors Scott Friedman and Neil Henderson join the Surfers (including the returning Stephen Harrison) to discuss some truly exciting advances in advanced NASH omics, including work on mRNA/CAR-T anti-fibrotic therapies. There is not enough room to capture this entire conversation in a summary. It's a lot, but really eye-opening and exciting. Take the time to listen to the entire episode, even if in bite-sized pieces.This episode starts with bonhomie and humor as the group congratulates Professor Friedman on being honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award from the faculty at Mt. Sinai, and then listens as Professor Henderson relates one of the most truly unique "one thing you wouldn't know about me if I didn't tell you" in the history of the podcast.The science portion of the podcast starts with Scott discussing a fantastic series of advances in basic science, wherein researchers have begun to evaluate CAR-T therapy, which was originally developed to treat lymphomas and other blood dyscrasias, to attack the surfaces of fibrogenic cells in the liver (MSK, New York) or, separately, the heart (University of Penn). Today, we create CAR-T cells by taking cells from the diseased patient, re-engineering them and injecting them back into the patient. This approach is associated with high rates of Level 3+ cytokine response syndrome (CRS). It has also been found to leave this engineered CAR-T material in the patient's system for at least a decade after therapy.Scott goes on to explain how the Epstein lab at Penn integrated the CAR-T strategy with mRNA, the protein behind the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna DOVD-19 vaccines, to create a vaccine that can reprogram cells within the body to replicate the CAR-T effect. Scott notes that so far, this has only been reported in mouse models, and that there are many major issues to resolve before we know it will be safe and effective in humans. It is a staggering breakthrough nonetheless.After a couple of questions, the group turns to Neil, who points out that this kind of finding can help "make precision medicine a reality," in part because it creates the possibility we can target multimodal therapy at the precise location it is needed. Stephen suggests that the ideal place for this kind of therapy might be in a late-stage patient where we can regress fibrosis and, once the liver is better able to function, resort to a more metabolic therapy. Scott suggests how helpful it would be to develop insight into how different types of cells respond to different medication, which shifts the conversation toward the broader topic of single-cell genomics, and specifically, the growing utility of spatial transcriptomics in these situations. Neil provides a description of the benefits of spatial transcriptomics, and then takes the group back through a history of omic technology.Jörn Schattenberg asks what these techniques have taught us about variability between patients. Neil discusses the congruence of individual samples. Jörn points out this would mean that we can develop robust therapies targeted at a cell type. Scott suggests that we can use these insights to standardize clinical trials, to target the specific patients with the genetic targets most likely to respond -- a large step on the path to personalized precision therapy.In response to a question from Louise Campbell about sources for liver tissue, Neil asks for study purposes, "What is a normal human liver?" One of his major sources of tissue are distal liver sites from patients with colorectal cancer. However, even if these are cancer free, thy could be affected by chemotherapy.As discussion winds down, the group comes to focus on the issue of why and how the liver regenerates. It raises fascinating questions: why does it not seem to "over-regenerate?" Are the regenerated cells different from pre-injury cells, and if so, how?
Rebecca Henderson is the John and Natty McArthur University Professor at Harvard, where she specializes in innovation and organizational change. Her newest book "Reimagining Capitalism in a World on Fire" examines how capitalism might be reworked so as to strive for a greener, more equitable future. "Reimagining Capitalism" was named to the shortlist of the Financial Times and McKinsey Business Book of the Year Award, and has received high praise from both academia and industry. Many scholars have argued that capitalism is at a crossroads, as the climate crisis and soaring inequality pose problems that the free market has proven to be incapable of solving. Professor Henderson points to Milton Friedman and the Chicago school of economics as the origin of these issues. As businesspeople adopted shareholder value maximization as their primary goal, and proponents of free market capitalism attacked government and regulation, capitalism spiralled out of control. How can businesses balance social responsibility and profitability? What changes need to be made to our current form of capitalism? And can the system truly be reformed? These are the questions that led Professor Henderson to write Reimagining Capitalism. In this interview, we explore these questions and more, diving into Professor Henderson’s insights as well as the research that informed her conclusions. We begin with Professor Henderson’s vision of “purpose-driven capitalism,” in which businesses place profit maximization on equal footing with serving society. How feasible is such an idea? Are there any real-world examples of businesses embracing this philosophy? Professor Henderson argues that, in many cases, the interests of business align with the interests of society. One of Professor Henderson’s key insights is that business and strong political institutions are complements – not adversaries. In opposition to the classical view of government as detrimental to economic efficiency, Professor Henderson argues that businesses benefit from capable government and regulation. What does this mean for tech giants like Facebook and Google? We discuss potential antitrust activity against these companies, and how it might be carried out in a responsible manner. Finally, we place Professor Henderson’s research alongside other recent books about capitalism: Thomas Piketty’s "Capital in the Twenty-First Century", Branko Milanovic’s "Capitalism, Alone", Nicholas Lemann’s "Transaction Man", Katharina Pistor’s "The Code of Capital", Glen Weyl on "Radical Markets"… How does "Reimagining Capitalism" differ in its approach to reforming capitalism? What makes Professor Henderson’s insights unique from that from academic economists?
This week on All Ears Abby welcomes Professor Rebecca Henderson, who teaches about innovation, corporate culture change, and ethics at Harvard Business School. Her class, “Reimagining Capitalism”, is one of HBS’s most popular classes, and she says that the majority of her students tend to believe that capitalism is broken. But Professor Henderson tells Abby that capitalism is a fundamentally moral enterprise, albeit one that needs to be held in delicate balance with a strong society and a democratically accountable government. They discuss the dramatic pivot point created by the charismatic economist Milton Friedman in the early 1970s. According to Professor Henderson, Friedman’s fervent free market beliefs created the moral, political, and legal arguments for abolishing ethical boundaries in business practices in the name of maximizing profits. Then, using their political clout, unchecked business leaders spend the next decades undermining protections for workers, healthcare, infrastructure and the environment. Professor Henderson urges listeners to lean into their power as consumers and voters as the engine of business cultural change.Find Professor Rebecca Henderson on Twitter: @RebeccaReCapEPISODE LINKSReimagining Capitalism In A World On Fire (Rebecca Henderson)“The Business Case For Saving Democracy: Why Free Markets Need Free Politics” (Rebecca Henderson)“A Friedman doctrine‐- The Social Responsibility Of Business Is to Increase Its Profits” (New York Times, 9/13/70)“The Powell Memo: A Call-to-Arms for Corporations” (Moyers On Democracy)
Us later, not me now | Rebecca Henderson is the John and Natty McArthur University Professor at Harvard University Business School. In this interview, hosted by Andrew Keen, she explains how she has been re-imagining capitalism. Free markets, Professor Henderson argues, need to be balanced with free politics, mirroring what many others in How to Fix Democracy Season 2 have identified as a core linkage between unhealthy capitalism and damaging politics. There’s an immediacy and selfishness in politics and business now, she says, which reflects more of a “me now” instead of an “us later” mentality.
Ep. 97: Rebecca Henderson - Harvard Business School Professor & Author || For episode 97 we welcome Professor and author Rebecca Henderson. Henderson is the John & Natty McArthur University Professor at Harvard University, where she has a joint appointment at the Harvard Business School in the General Management and Strategy units. Professor Henderson is also a research fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research. She spent the first 21 years of her career at MIT, much of it as the Eastman Kodak Professor of Management. Additionally, she teaches 'Reimagining Capitalism' in the HBS MBA Program and sits on the boards of Amgen and of IDEXX Labs. For today’s show we focus the discussion on the engine of environmental change - the economy. Professor Henderson has recently released the book “Reimagining Capitalism - In a World on Fire” - which borrows from the name of a course she teaches at Harvard Business School. As she explains, "I am convinced that we have a secret weapon. I spent twenty years of my life working with firms that were trying to transform themselves. I learned that having the right strategy was important, and that redesigning the organization was also critical. But mostly I learned that these were necessary but not sufficient conditions. The firms that mastered change were those that had a reason to do so: the ones that had a purpose greater than simply maximizing profits. People who believe that their work has a meaning beyond themselves can accomplish amazing things, and we have the opportunity to mobilize shared purpose at a global scale." In our 45 minute discussion we cover stakeholder value vs. shareholder value. We learn about the role that companies and executives will have in environmental action and social responsibility in the near future. Additionally, we discuss food systems, regenerative natural resource management and how politics gets woven into this recipe of change. For those fans of water and environmental service marketplaces out there, hear Professor Henderson's recommendation for sending a new price signal through the novel notion of 'embodied water', and gain a deeper understanding for how markets will evolve to integrate more of these values into buy decisions. Joining as co-host for the conversation is Dutch-American Agricultural Economist, Renée Vassilos. Vassilos has spent over fifteen years in the production agriculture space. Her work experience includes time spent with the USDA, she’s started her own consultancy to help investors and Agtech companies, and she spent nearly a decade with John Deere; with much of that time in Beijing. Last year, Renée joined The Nature Conservancy as their Agriculture Innovation Director. She manages TNC’s investments in early stage agtech companies that will support regenerative agriculture production at scale. We all seek new mechanisms to coax values through the supply chain of food and its production. Tune in to ep. 97 to hear from an expert about engaging with diverse stakeholders to partake in a new economic system; a reimagined economic system that takes into account a true cost of production by reaping the benefits for product differentiation and decommoditization of these values. www.SourcingMatters.show
"The Trust Revolution: How the Digitization of Trust Will Revolutionize Business & Government" In this CBI, Professor Henderson will examine how Internet platforms--eBay, Uber, AirBnB--relate to the Code of Hammurabi, Medieval guilds, the New York Stock Exchange, and corporate brands. All of these institutions, along with religions and governments and families, are in large part about providing trust to enable human cooperation. By undertaking a genealogy of trust, we can illuminate modern debates about the role and scope of government in regulating the daily lives of citizens. M. Todd Henderson is the Michael J. Marks Professor of Law. This Chicago's Best Ideas talk was presented on January 27, 2020.
"The Trust Revolution: How the Digitization of Trust Will Revolutionize Business & Government" In this CBI, Professor Henderson will examine how Internet platforms--eBay, Uber, AirBnB--relate to the Code of Hammurabi, Medieval guilds, the New York Stock Exchange, and corporate brands. All of these institutions, along with religions and governments and families, are in large part about providing trust to enable human cooperation. By undertaking a genealogy of trust, we can illuminate modern debates about the role and scope of government in regulating the daily lives of citizens. M. Todd Henderson is the Michael J. Marks Professor of Law. This Chicago's Best Ideas talk was presented on January 27, 2020.
Linda Henderson earned her PhD at Yale University and has taught 20th-century European and American art in the Department of Art and Art History since 1978. Before coming to the University of Texas, she served from 1974 through 1977 as Curator of Modern Art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Professor Henderson’s research and teaching focus on the interdisciplinary study of modernism, including the relation of modern art to geometry, science and technology, and mystical and occult philosophies. In addition to periodical articles and catalog essays, she is the author of The Fourth Dimension and Non-Euclidean Geometry in Modern Art(Princeton University Press, 1983; new ed., MIT Press, 2013) and Duchamp in Context: Science and Technology in the Large Glass and Related Works(Princeton, 1998), which won first prize in the Robert W. Hamilton Author Awards competition in 1999. To learn more about Lina Henderson, Click Here
Today, we’ll discuss the corporate disclosures required by the SEC and an alternative method for handing these disclosures—the creation of a market to buy and sell corporate data. This episode features M. Todd Henderson, the Michael J. Marcus professor of law at the University of Chicago Law School and Donald Langevoort, the Thomas Aquinas Reynolds Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law Center. Professor Henderson and his coauthor, Kevin S. Haeberl, associate professor of law at William and Mary Law School, explore this issue further in their paper Making a Market for Corporate Disclosure. The paper is available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2814125. This episode of Briefly, a production of the University of Chicago Law Review, was produced by Sef Schaffel, David Sandefer, Thomas Molloy, and Chris Walling. Music from www.bensound.com. Special thanks to Tom Garvey and the V85 Online Group.
When business leaders commit to solving big problems everyone wins, says Harvard Business School's Professor Rebecca Henderson. It creates happy employees, more revenue and stable economies. That's exactly what's happening now. Businesses are "waking up to the business case for social responsibility" and are starting to exert their powers for positive change; not dumping in rivers, or buying from those who tolerate poor working conditions or who burn fossil fuels. What was an unlikely scenario even just 10 years ago - businesses doing good because it's profitable in the long term - is now a viable business strategy, one that's laying the groundwork for systemic change. In this episode of Minds Worth Meeting, Professor Henderson shares stories of companies leading the way (Unilever) in sustainability efforts and of consortiums derived from the palm oil dilemma as she gives us a framework for how leaders can make change today to embrace and implement a long-term strategy for the future. Also, our guest host Mel Blake returns!
God's Mighty Ministers of Education; Dr. Silvester Carl Henderson and Professor Evan Wade along with the students take to the mike to share with us relevant information about the Black Student Union Silvester Carl Henderson is a nationally recognized Professor, educator, motivational speaker, business owner, respected real estate investor, community artistic organizer, musician/artist, and conductor of the Gospel Song. Presently he serves as the full-time Professor of Choral Activities and Chair of the Music Department at the Los Medanos College in Pittsburg, CA where he directs the College Chorus, Chamber Chorale, and the Gospel Choir. In addition to those responsibilities, he also teaches voice classes, applied vocal lessons, music theory, class piano, musicianship, classical piano and gospel piano. the Fall of 2000, Professor Henderson developed a “Gospel Piano Curriculum”, which was the only collegiate academic course of its type, in the State of California. Evan Wade is a professor of history at San Joaquin Delta College in Stockton, CA. As a professor Mr. Wade teaches classes in African American History and U.S. History. He is the author/ editor of the newly released textbook, The African- American Primary Source Reader, from 1865-Present (Kona Press), which examines the African American experience through the writings of notable black activists such as Ida B. Wells, Mary Church Terrell, and Marcus Garvey. Prof. Wade is also the advisor for the San Joaquin Delta College Black Student Union. The mission of the BSU is to provide a harmonious atmosphere for black students to support one another, network and thrive. A native of Richmond, California, Professor Wade is a member of the NAACP, Iota Phi Theta Fraternity, Inc. and a Deacon at the Greater Faith Missionary Baptist Church of Stockton, CA.
Prepare to be blessed by the men of God on two special editions of "Every Man Standing In His Place". This week I was joined by God's Mighty Ministers of Education; Dr. Silvester Henderson and Mr. Glen Pearson God's Mighty Ministers of Education will be back in the house! Dr. Silvester Henderson, and Mr. Glen Pearson; Director of the Boys Choir of Harlem will be sharing with us the importance of music and education. Silvester Carl Henderson is a nationally recognized Professor, educator, motivational speaker, business owner, respected real estate investor, community artistic organizer, musician/artist, and conductor of the Gospel Song. Presently he serves as the full-time Professor of Choral Activities and Chair of the Music Department at the Los Medanos College in Pittsburg, CA where he directs the College Chorus, Chamber Chorale, and the Gospel Choir. In addition to those responsibilities, he also teaches voice classes, applied vocal lessons, music theory, class piano, musicianship, classical piano and gospel piano. the Fall of 2000, Professor Henderson developed a “Gospel Piano Curriculum”, which was the only collegiate academic course of its type, in the State of California. Glen Pearson has brought sensitivity and expression to the widest variety of music imaginable. His performances on stage, television, radio, and in recording studios have included his well known position as principle keyboardist for Regina Belle, as well as pianist and arranger for such notables as Jimmy Scott, Earnestine Anderson, Melba Moore, Diane Reeves, Marlena Shaw, Bobby Hutcherson, Delfeayo Marsalis, James Moody, Frank Morgan, Chico Freeman, Will Downing and Kevin . Mr. Pearson also served for eleven years as the Musical/Band Director for the World Renowed Boy’s Choir of Harlem.
In a naïve model of judging, Congress writes statutes, which courts know about and then slavishly apply. But a Chicago lawyer might doubt this model, believing judges are maximizing something other than compliance with the law. In this CBI, Professor Henderson examines judicial compliance with a mandatory Congressional command, and uses it to offer a richer and more nuanced model of judicial behavior. M. Todd Henderson is Professor of Law and Aaron Director Teaching Scholar at the University of Chicago Law School. This talk was recorded on April 15, 2014, as part of the Chicago's Best Ideas lecture series.
In a naïve model of judging, Congress writes statutes, which courts know about and then slavishly apply. But a Chicago lawyer might doubt this model, believing judges are maximizing something other than compliance with the law. In this CBI, Professor Henderson examines judicial compliance with a mandatory Congressional command, and uses it to offer a richer and more nuanced model of judicial behavior. M. Todd Henderson is Professor of Law and Aaron Director Teaching Scholar at the University of Chicago Law School. This talk was recorded on April 15, 2014, as part of the Chicago's Best Ideas lecture series.
In this EBN podcast Dr Calvin Moorley, EBN associate editor and senior lecturer in public health at the University of East London, talks to Professor Amanda Henderson, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Queensland, Australia. Professor Henderson discusses her commentary for EBN on a study by Nancy Matthew-Maich and colleagues: 'Supporting the uptake of Nursing Guidelines: what you really need to know to move Nursing guidelines into Practice'.Read the full commentary here: bit.ly/1dB1Cd9