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Brewbound revealed the winners of its 2024 awards during the Brewbound Live business conference this week in Marina del Rey, California. This week's Brewbound Podcast features interviews with three of those award winners: The 2024 Craft Brewery of the Year, Coronado Brewing Company; The 2024 Large Brewery of the Year, Narragansett Beer; And the 2024 Beyond Beer Company of the Year, Surfside. Coronado co-founder Rick Chapman discusses how Weekend Vibes IPA was the catalyst for spurring the San Diego brewery's growth. Narragansett Beer owner Mark Hellendrung shares how the Rhode Island legacy brand reversed fortunes and is now producing over 100,000 barrels. And Surfside co-founder and CEO Clem Pappas breaks down the growth of the canned cocktail brand, which was the fastest growing spirits brand in the U.S. in 2024.
On this episode of Managed Care Cast, we're talking with Rick Chapman, PhD, chief science officer of the Center for Innovation & Value Research, formerly known as the Innovation and Value Initiative (IVI). We discussed the Center's Rare Disease project, including the primary goals, key discoveries from Phase 1, and what to expect moving forward.
In this mini episode from our 'Blink' series, Rick Chapman shares stories from photographing elite athletes who have competed in the Olympic Games. The first step, he says, is to put the camera down. The second is not to talk about sports too much.Rick's ESPY Collection, for ESPN, features 40 celebrity athletes, including boxers, tennis stars and basketball royalty. You can find it here.See the portraits we discussed:Venus Williams, black and whiteVenus Williams, colorShaun White, black and whiteShaun White, color
Rick Chapman is a current scare actor that started in 2005 and former venue supervisor from Knotts Scary Farm.
The small patient populations of rare diseases, the limited natural history of these conditions, and the lack of long-term experience with new treatments all contribute to the difficulty in determining the value of rare disease therapies. The issue can be further complicated by whether value is calculated in a single payer system, or a multi-payer system. Recently the Innovation and Value Initiative issued a report with the Everylife Foundation for Rare Diseases from a long-term project to bring together stakeholders to explore patient-centered outcomes across rare diseases to inform those discussions. We spoke to Rick Chapman, chief scientific officer of the Innovation and Value Initiative, about the challenges of assessing the value of rare disease therapies, the role qualitative data should play in value assessments, and the recommendations from the report.
Terry Wilcox, Patients Rising CEO, along with Rick Chapman, the Chief Science Officer at the Innovation and Value Initiative, and Darius Lakdawalla, the Chief Scientific Officer at EntityRisk, hold a patient advocate event focused on the need to improve ICER; and the Patient Access and Affordability Project's new report on discriminatory formulary practices. Healthcare Policy Pop Episode: Biosimilars Slow Uptake (GRACE Model) Patient Access and Affordability Project Report: Equitable Access: Examining Discriminatory & Restrictive Practices in Prescription Drug Formularies
Rick Chapman - Jul 27, 1985
Multitasking on the Macintosh evolves beyond Switcher. MultiFinder review by Bruce Webster, Macworld, April 1988. Commentary by Jerry Borrell, Macworld, January 1988. Correction: Declaring an application's memory requirements through a SIZE -1 resource began in the days of Switcher. (source: MacTech Spring 1989) Charismatic IBM evangelist David Barnes selling OS/2 Steve Jobs-style at a 1993 meeting of the HAL-PC Users Group. David's presentation is in the second half of the meeting. Memory prices were a hot topic in computer magazines during the DRAM crisis of 1988-1989. CE Software's DiskTop: helping you fake multitasking since 1986. Rick Chapman's “In Search Of Stupidity” covers the fall of dBase, Borland, OS/2, WordStar, and other things people under the age of 50 have never heard of. Steve Crutchfield of BeamWars fame has (in the year 2023–I am not making this up) backported Mac OS 8's relative dates feature to System 6! Download “Today's The Day” from Macintosh Garden. (discussion, Let's Play BeamWars) “Damn!” is a registered trademark of 65scribe.
Rick Chapman - Jul 27, 1985
Here we are in lockdown, podcasting from our homes into yours. It’s a bit shakey, we recorded a zoom and then our brilliant editrix @callmefi evened out the squeaks and boinks. We three amigas talk about the effects of the pandemic on our plans and sales, how we keep going and we even brainstorm ideas for product and activities which might give you some ideas too! There’s a guest interview with the super, smart Rick Chapman who gave us some practical advice on managing our businesses in a crisis.
This week’s special guest is Rick Chapman, the co-founder of Coronado Brewing Company, which has been open for over 23 years. Rick and his brother, Ron, opened the brewpub in the heart of their hometown of Coronado in 1996. Since then, their beers have won some major awards, including the 2014 World Beer Cup Champion for Best Mid-Sized Brewery, and they won four medals at the 2019 Great American Beer Festival competition. They expanded in 2012 with a state-of-the-art production facility and tasting room in Bay Park, and in 2014, they opened up the Imperial Beach Restaurant. They have also expanded their brewhouse to meet the distribution demands of 16 states and 15 countries. For Two People, $50, Rick gave us a few choices: Kaiserhof Restaurant and Biergarten in OB, and his Coronado favorites, Village Pizza, Lil’ Piggy’s Bar-B-Q, and the Brigantine. Lauren chose George’s Level 2 because of their creative custom cocktails, like the pumpkin spice margarita. Erin chose Waypoint Public because of its family-friendly atmosphere and its beer cheese dipping sauce. Troy chose a favorite of many local chefs, The Joint in OB, but you will likely spend over $50 for this delicious, fresh food. In Hot Plates, we talked about how Accursio Lota, formerly of Solare, announced a while back he was going solo and took over the Cardamom Café and Bakery space in North Park to open a new Sicialian restaurant named Cori Pastifico. Park Commons, the new food hall in Sorrento Valley from Whisknladle, will be opening on November 11, and it will have five fast-casual restaurants and a full bar. This week’s Hot Topic is about labels on beer bottles going paperless! A recent article in Food & Wine talks about how Anheuser-Busch is experimenting with something called “direct object printing,” where they will apply the ink and varnish “label” directly on the glass, instead of using paper and an adhesive. Beck's Brewery is currently using this technology in the U.K. Thanks for listening, and we’d love to hear from you! Call us at 619-744-0535 and leave a message. Or if you’re too shy to call, you can email HappyHalfHour@sdmag.com. You can give us your recommendations for Two People, $50, tell us about any news happening in San Diego’s culinary world, or let us know who you’d like to hear featured as a guest on the podcast.
On this episode of the Palmetto Guardian we talk with 1st Sgt. Rick Chapman, 135th Cyber Security Company 1st Sgt. about cyber security. The Palmetto Guardian is hosted by Spc. David Erskine and Sgt. Chelsea Baker with the South Carolina National Guard Public Affairs office.
The greatest ideas can oftentimes come from a complaint or a problem to solve. For Rick Chapman, the idea for DiiDit came out of the frustration when he could not get a response to his survey requests. It was the genesis of a discussion about building a software platform that would allow people to log in and find things that other people want done and compensate them for doing it. Rick is the managing editor of Softletter also the author of several books covering high tech for the last twenty years, including In Search of Stupidity: Over 20 Years of High-Tech Marketing Disasters and Selling Steve Jobs’ Liver: A Story of Startups, Innovation, and Connectivity in the Clouds. He talks about his interesting high tech background, how he got started in the whole business, and his up and coming SaaS startup of which he happens to be the COO. Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share! Here’s How » Join the Your First Thousand Clients Community today: mitchrusso.com Mitch Russo LinkedIn Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The greatest ideas can oftentimes come from a complaint or a problem to solve. For Rick Chapman, the idea for DiiDit came out of the frustration when he could not get a response to his survey requests. It was the genesis of a discussion about building a software platform that would allow people to log in and find things that other people want done and compensate them for doing it. Rick is the managing editor of Softletter also the author of several books covering high tech for the last twenty years, including In Search of Stupidity: Over 20 Years of High-Tech Marketing Disasters and Selling Steve Jobs’ Liver: A Story of Startups, Innovation, and Connectivity in the Clouds. He talks about his interesting high tech background, how he got started in the whole business, and his up and coming SaaS startup of which he happens to be the COO. Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share! Here’s How » Join the Your First Thousand Clients Community today: mitchrusso.com Mitch Russo LinkedIn Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Hosts Brendan McGuire and Marcus "Chunky" Adams visit with maritime guest and legendary western Canadian broadcaster Rick Chapman to address the CFL to Halifax movement.
Rick Chapman is not just a highly acclaimed professional photographer, but he is the epitome of why I started the Vicariously Podcast. Rick is most commonly known for his work featured in the National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution highlighting ESPN's ESPY award winners. These unique portraits include some of Americas most iconic sports legends including Muhammad Ali, Cal Ripken, Lebron James, Kobe Bryant, Serena Williams and more. Rick's accomplishments and diverse portfolios are not solely dedicated to sports, they spread across a wide variety of genres and styles, encapsulating the true essence of photography and the stories behind the picture. Please tune in as Rick shares solid career advice, entrepreneurial wisdom and how to take control of your own life and story.
I consider myself very fortunate is being able to interview established tech leaders and people at the beginning of their startup journey every night. If I have learned anything in 150+ interviews its that there are two very different sides to the tech world. There is the hype, billion dollar valuations and then there is the reality which I think is summed up perfectly in the TV show Silicon Valley. I'm quite excited about chatting with tonight's guest. He has worked in the high technology and software industries since 1978 as a programmer, salesman, field sales engineer, marketer and now author! Having worked in tech all his life and seeing how the industry has evolved, meeting Steve Jobs and being amused by the adulation and obsession that surrounded him. He wrote a fantastic satirical tale called Selling Steve Jobs’ Liver?” But rather than get into too much detail now, let's get Rick Champman on the show. It's time to beam your ears all the way to Connecticut in the US to speak with Rick Chapman who has a few great stories to share. And he is also the author of “In Search of Stupidity: Over 20 Years of High-Tech Marketing Disasters,” too. But that is just one side of how he also juggles his time and passions, as away from the typewriter he is also the editor of Softletter, and happens to also be the COO of a new SaaS startup too.
My guest today, on the Steve Jobs inspired Join Up Dots free podcast interview is a man who was introduced to the show by a previous guest and personal friend of mine Laura Steward. She said to me “David, why the hell have I not introduced you to this amazing guest before?” And I said “I dont know Laura, only you know the answer to that!” Well, introduced us she did, and aren't I glad that he is now here, as he is a man who is doing things in a very different way to many people that I have spoken to on the show. He has worked in the high technology and software industries since 1978 as a programmer, salesman, field sales engineer and marketer and has joined up many dots that has now allowed him to start living a life full of passion. He is the author of Selling Steve Jobs' Liver?” which is a bizarre title for a book, but seems a perfect one for Join Up Dots once you start reading it. And he is also the author of “In Search of Stupidity: Over 20 Years of High-Tech Marketing Disasters,” too. But that is just one side of how he also juggles his time and passions, as away from the typewriter he is also the editor of Softletter, and happens to also be the COO of a new SaaS startup too. So has writing about startups and entrepreneurial legends given him the secret steps that guarantee success? And does he see an explosion of entrepreneurs coming our way due to the success of shows like this, where quite frankly they should stay as far away as they can from being the next startup? Well let's find out as we bring onto the show to start joining up dots with the one and only Mr Rick Chapman.
In the first episode of this SaaS series we talk about the history of SaaS, and how it evolved from ASP's ashes to become one of the largest and most profitable business formats. We talk with SaaS expert Rick Chapman as he discusses the history and keys t Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Rick Chapman (president) and Cory Bradford (national sales manager) from Coronado Brewing Company are in Charlotte talking San Diego beer. Hear how this California iconic brewery got its starts in the lonely island of Coronado, CA. The post Episode 125- Coronado Brewing Company appeared first on Cheers Charlotte Radio | Craft Beer and Homebrew Podcast.
Don Bacigalupi, President of Crystal Bridges Museum, and Board Member, Rick Chapman, discuss Stanton MacDonald-Wright's Au Cafe (Synchromy).