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Today I am joined by Tim Manning, an emergency response expert who served as the National Covid-19 Supply Coordinator for the White House Covid Response Team through May of 2022. Tim's unique role was created by President Biden to respond to the pandemic, a position he took on after previously serving as FEMA's deputy administrator for all eight years of the Obama White House. You'll want to hear Tim's fascinating experiences solving for the challenges in our nation's supply chain, how he made the tough decisions impacting the health and lives of Americans, and what still keeps him up at night on the supply chain horizon.
On this episode of Tim Manning (owner of Angler Tungsten) and Adam Spivey give us a look at how they won the 2021 Morris Town Marine 2021 Championship on Cherokee lake. Plus we get a look into their lives & how it all began from Bass fishing to the creation of Angler Tungsten by Tim Manning. What an awesome show filled with laughs & much more.
This week on New Mexico in Focus, The Line opinion panel addresses Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham’s decision to open New Mexico to full-time, in-person learning by April 5. Largely a local-control matter, the request nevertheless has the attention of school districts, which seem anxious to comply with the request. The panel looks at the role of unions in the return to school, as well as the matter of vaccinating newly prioritized educators, despite no additional vaccine allocations from the federal government. The Line also examines Mayor Tim Keller’s appointment of interim Chief Harold Medina to a permanent post atop the city’s Police Department. The mayor decided to split the duties of the top position, naming Sylvester Stanley as interim superintendent of police reform. The new system has been met with a mixed reaction. The panel also looks at New Mexico’s effort to form a cohesive strategy to get broadband internet service into homes across the state. Lawmakers are considering a handful of bills and capital outlay proposals to jumpstart what’s been a patchy effort to get critical infrastructure to all parts of the state. Our Land returns, as Laura Paskus travels to Clovis to speak with dairy farmer Art Schaap. Since the U.S. Air Force revealed in 2018 that it had poisoned groundwater near Cannon and Holloman Air Force bases with PFAS chemicals, Schaap has been pumping and dumping the milk from his cows at his dairy just outside the base. He’s also suing the government for damage done to his livelihood. Producer Matt Grubs talks to President Biden’s national supply chain manager for the White House Pandemic Response Team, Tim Manning. The former head of the New Mexico Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management under Bill Richardson, Manning explains the challenges of distributing PPE supplies and vaccine to remote parts of the United States. Host: Gene Grant Line opinion panelists: Diane Denish, former lieutenant governor Dan Foley, former House minority whip Serge Martinez, UNM Law School professor Segments: Biden’s COVID Supply Chain Pick Correspondent: Matt Grubs, NMiF senior producer Guest: Tim Manning, national supply chain coordinator, White House Pandemic Response Team Our Land: Art Schaap’s Dairy Dilemma Correspondent: Laura Paskus, NMiF environmental reporter Guest: Art Schaap, dairy farmer
I’m your host Matt Coyne and today we’re in conversation with Tim Manning, executive producer from Jack Morton Worldwide and lecturer at Instituto Marangoni discussing the future of brand strategy post covid and what we can learn from the corporate space to evolve our industry. I first met Tim at Event Tech Live and the Facetime Exhibitor Masterclasses a few years ago when we were in conversation about the similarities and maybe also disparities between events and the retail space, so I’m really looking forward to chatting about what else we could learn to engage our audiences of the future in my conversation with Tim.To give you a little bit of a background on Tim, he delivers magic moments through customer journeys, experiences and storytelling drawn from years of experience delivering to clients including the United Nations, Formula one and five star hotels to name but a few. Listen to the podcast to learn a little more about Tim. We discussA fresh perspective on how we curate and create great experiences for delegates and brandsHow we’ve all been schooled over the last 12 months…and that’s a good thing! We need to continue to learn to evolve. Few of us know the perfect formulae for success in virtual or hybrid, so we need to continue to learn. Understanding and bringing psychology into events to really understand consumer behaviorWhere are we going next? How to answer the question of on demand versus liveHow do you really get to the bottom of a client brief – how do you really understand their strategy? Finally we asked Tim what we (people) can do to help us look at what’s next. “Ask yourself what you stand for. Be specific. Does that rock my world and do I have passion for it? If so, dive into it and remind you where your true north is. With everything you do, is it helping you move to where you want to go?”There were a number of references mentioned in this episode, so please do see various links below. Miro.com https://miro.com/ Mural.co https://www.mural.co/ Intrado https://www.intrado.com/enON24 https://www.on24.com/Withoutfail Podcast https://gimletmedia.com/shows/without-fail User Journeys:- Uxpressia https://uxpressia.com/ - Lucid chart https://www.lucidchart.com/ Thaler and Sunstein, Nudge https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nudge_(book)Cialdini, Influence https://www.influenceatwork.com/principles-of-persuasion/Daniel Kahnemen on Sam Harris Waking Up podcast https://samharris.org/podcasts/150-map-misunderstanding/Daniel Ariely, unpredictably irrational on You Tube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wfcro5iM5vwJack Morton https://www.jackmorton.com/services/On having a common place
In this episode, I chat with legendary snowboard film maker Tim Manning. We discuss growing up in the Bay Area in the early 80's, skating ditches, getting into punk rock, and his journeys up to Lake Tahoe where he fell in love with snowboarding and film making. This episode is packed with stories of the early days of snowboarding and snowboard films. Tim came up in the snowboard industry as a pro rider and eventually found his way behind a camera, working with Standard Films and Burton Snowboards to name a few. There's a ton of great info in this episode, so kick back and listen! To learn more about Tim, check out: www.timanning.com For more info on this podcast, check out: www.creativesonboard.com
Birk O'Halloran leads us in a toast to “getting drunk with the right people at the right time” – and it’s so forking appropriate for this episode (and, heck, the past 68 episodes too)! Birk is the owner of winemaker Iconic Wine, the author of Eat Ink, and a former sommelier. When Birk started writing Eat Ink, he was trying to answer an age-old question: Why do all chefs look like pirates? It ultimately became a cookbook, but it began as a photo story about tattoos, misfits, and the culinary world. He didn’t come up with a definitive answer to his question, but he did come away with a book full of delicious recipes and incredible photos. “I like to say I owe my whole career to getting drunk with the right people at the right time.” –Birk O'Halloran We also discuss: Slowly drinking his way up the supply chain Why the younger generation is currently making wine like their grandparents The wines they make at Iconic Wines: Heroine, Sidekick, and Secret Identity Geeking out on comics & recruiting comic artists to create wine labels Making a delicious and affordable wine, Sidekick The decision factors that go into why people buy a wine Being a Virgo Selling things you’re passionate about The three ways to get into owning a wine brand Working with Pour Management Why affordable wines have to be produced in a large volume Pouring wines at charity events Resources: Check out iconicwine.com Connect with Birk: Instagram | Twitter Eat Ink: Recipes. Stories. Tattoos. Birk O'Halloran’s Bio: Birk O’Halloran founded Iconic Wine with a focus on producing world-class California chardonnay. Since the first release in 2010, the wines have been very limited, but have found their way to some of the top restaurants in the country including Eleven Madison Park, Saison, Husk, Daniel and Tribeca Grill. The top wines remain very limited, with as little as 50 cases of the top cuvée produced per vintage. In fall of 2015, Iconic expanded production. The new series “Sidekick” was created with the goal of producing that great everyday wine under $20 a bottle. A continuing entrepreneur in the wine industry, O’Halloran has also opened three fine wine shops, is the published author of Eat Ink, a photo essay and cookbook that explored the tattoo culture in the professional chef industry, and in 2017 founded Pour Management, an international winemaker talent and marketing agency where he advises and invests in new winemaker talent the world over. The first project under Pour Management, a collaboration with Tuscan based winemaker Tim Manning called Vinaccio, will be released August. Just Forking Around is produced by Podcast Masters
In this episode, we discuss the technology promising to change how we shop in-store. Join our guest Tim Manning, Swarm, Pete Trainer, US Ai, and Melanie Pittham, The BIO Agency, as they discuss what retailers must do to avoid the pitfalls of adopting technology for technology's sake and ensure developments stay focused on meeting shopper needs. Plus, we visit New York to discuss the big topics at NRF Big Show 2018.
In this episode Monty Waldin interviews Tim Manning owner of Vinochisti Winery in Tuscany. Tim tells Monty all about his experiments with Italian native grape varieties such as Sagrantino, Erbaluce, Vernaccia di San Giminiano, and Lacrima di Morro d’Alba. Tune in to discover another exciting wine-making and ‘wine-anarchist’ story from the heart of Tuscany!
"Traditional normal" and "the new up is flat" are examples of terms and sayings used to express what's been happening to the U.S. Federal Government budget... stuff that's been far from normal for some time. With so much local and state success in emergency management riding on grants like EMPG, HSGP, PDM and others, we brought back old friend and former FEMA Deputy Administrator to discuss federal funding vehicles, processes and outcomes.
Tim Manning worked the last eight years as a FEMA Deputy Adminstrator in charge of Protection and National Preparedness. Emergency management and homeland security have dramatically changed since he took office in 2009. In this episode, we revisit what he saw going into Washington DC, what he and FEMA were able to accomplish and what he sees for the future of our profession.
Sunday Morning Magazine - 9-6-15 - Tim Manning by Warm1069