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About the Guest: Marshall Goldsmith is the world-renowned leadership thinker and executive coach recognized as the only two-time Thinkers 50 #1 Leadership Thinker in the world. Over a celebrated career spanning decades, he has guided over 150 major CEOs and their management teams to reach new heights of effectiveness. Marshall has authored 56 books, including acclaimed titles such as "What Got You Here Won't Get You There," "Mojo," "Triggers," and "The Earned Life," selling over 3 million copies. He is currently pioneering MarshallGoldsmith AI, an initiative aimed at democratizing leadership learning through AI technology, a venture started even before the advent of ChatGPT. Episode Summary: Greg speaks with the celebrated executive coach, Marshall Goldsmith. The episode explores Marshall's journey from his modest beginnings in Valley Station, Kentucky, to becoming a preeminent executive coach and thought leader in leadership principles. The discussion captures the breadth of his experience, including coaching top-tier CEOs, authoring multiple bestsellers, and his latest innovative endeavor of integrating AI into leadership development. The conversation also explores common barriers leaders face in prioritizing what matters most and the indispensable value of creating a structure for continuous self-improvement. Key Takeaways: Courage, Humility, and Discipline: Successful leaders require these three qualities to enact meaningful change in their behavior. Daily Self-Assessment: Regularly asking oneself, "Did I do my best to…" can significantly improve personal and professional development. Impact of AI on Leadership: Marshall Goldsmith AI aims to make leadership training accessible globally, leveraging the latest in AI technology. Prioritizing Relationships: Improving team dynamics starts with individuals seeking betterment within themselves. Managing Overcommitment: Leaders often fall into the trap of believing things will calm down in the future, which can hinder immediate action on what truly matters. Notable Quotes: “Winners love winning. My whole coaching is not fixing losers. I'm in the helping winners business.” “If I have a coach, I've had someone call me on the phone almost every day for 27 years to try to help me.” “I thought when I got older, worrying about my health would be less important...actually it's sort of more important.” “Everyone I coach gets confidential feedback, picks important areas to improve, apologizes, and does rigorous follow-up.” “If you get rid of the mistakes you made, you get rid of everything you learned from the mistakes.” Resources: MarshallGoldsmith AI Books by Marshall Goldsmith: "What Got You Here Won't Get You There" "Triggers" "The Earned Life" Join my weekly newsletter. Learn more about my books and courses. Join The Essentialism Academy. Follow me on LinkedIn, Instagram, X, Facebook, and YouTube.
We had some fun thanks to Valley Station in this round of Little Kid or Drunk Adult!
Valley Station is in the spotlight for a hilarious Little Kid or Drunk Adult! In Group Therapy, Chrissie is thrown by finding out her new guy is moving when he invites her to his going away party! And another listener wants out of her wedding in a few weeks!
We're giving you 60 seconds to answer 10 simple pop-culture questions. Get them right and win!
Christina from Valley Station was all ready to play Little Kid or Drunk Adult for tickets to Jack Harlow!!
While Melissa is on maternity leave Ali is having guest hosts from our Patreon do their own episodes! Lauren Deborah of the My Dad Stole My Limelight Podcast joins Ali to discuss The Flora Valley Station Mystery. In 1986, two Australian teenagers vanished from an outback cattle station and their bodies were found months later under mysterious circumstances. Did they die from heat and exhaustion after being stranded in the desolate landscape or was murder involved? Webcrawlerspod@gmail.com626-604-6262Discord / Twitter / Instagram / Patreon / MerchSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/webcrawlers. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Shannon from Valley Station was all set to play "Little Kid or Drunk Adult!"
The new farm manager at one of New Zealand's biggest sheep and beef properties in North Canterbury has hit the ground running. As well as getting up to speed with a holistic grazing system established by the farm's US owners, Michael Whyte is also dealing with extensive damage to infrastructure caused by the devastating floods in June.
In the summer of 1973, Rita Joan Robbins and Ronald Shumaker were both abducted from the same place; a ticket booth at a Valley Station drive-in. This episode details the abduction, murder and arrest of the pair of killers responsible for their deaths, James Sefcheck and Danny Lee Tetrick. Follow the show on Instagram @ltcpod and on Facebook at Louisville True Crimes Podcast. Become a patron at patreon.com/louisvilletruecrimes to get each episode ad free and a week early, and if you like the show, leave us a rating and review wherever you listen to help the show grow our audience so we can produce bigger, better episodes and cases for you, dear listener. =)
Quarantined in Kentuckiana: A podcast about how those of us living in that little area of Kentucky and Indiana are dealing with the Covid 19 Pandemic and the restrictions put in place to stop the spread. Today's episode we check in with Tiffany from Valley Station. Her and her daughter went to NYC at the beginning of March when all of this really started to unfold. It's affected her life in so many ways since then. Hear her story.
Jim Johnson and Jamie McMillin interview Don Ray Smith. Don Ray Smith is a Kentucky native, with degrees from Morehead State and Western Kentucky Universities. He is a journalist who has written for the Louisville Courier Journal, Louisville Magazine, Kentucky Living Magazine, African American Journal and Business First newspapers. He has three books to his credit including humor the short collections Feel My Humerus and Kentucky Shorts, as well as a comic-romance novel, Racebook, or How He Found His Nubian Princess (Amazon books). He has written satirical radio humor for the University of Washington and was a regular commentator on WFPL, Louisville's NPR news station. He has performed at numerous storytelling events in Kentucky and continues to write a weekly piece, "Monday Humor", which appears on Facebook and email sites. Don’s transition from a boy growing up in what was, at that time, lily-white Valley Station, Kentucky, and graduating from Valley High school, to an adult who embraces civil rights and support for the African American community is a fascinating story in and of itself.
It was a rough start when Ben tried to figure out what year was 122 years ago...then we went to Florida a few times, Dairy Freeze in Valley Station for a #MissedConnection involving a lady who let a pup lick her ice cream, and we found about/learned the correct way to eat both a banana and wings. #HumpDay
We go to a service station in Clarksville and the Dairy Freeze in Valley Station...that is where the hotness scale comes into play. Is she hot enough to let what he saw slide??
Nadeem Saddiqui and his family recently moved to Valley Station, in the southeastern part of Louisville. "It's stereotypically not the most multi-cultural area of Louisville," he said. So it surprised him to see a street named Omar Khayyam Blvd. "It was a medieval Persian poet," he said. "Growing up my parents had a lot of books of his poetry." Nadeem wanted to know how this street came to be, in this neighborhood. So we went looking for the answer.
Nadeem Saddiqui and his family recently moved to Valley Station, in the southeastern part of Louisville. "It's stereotypically not the most multi-cultural area of Louisville," he said. So it surprised him to see a street named Omar Khayyam Blvd. "It was a medieval Persian poet," he said. "Growing up my parents had a lot of books of his poetry." Nadeem wanted to know how this street came to be, in this neighborhood. So we went looking for the answer.
We’re carbing up here on EatDrinkTalk with Amici owner Don Reinhardt. He’s got a great story, one that originates in Valley Station, detours all across the country and end up a year ago in Old Louisville, where he bought Amici Cafe. His changes include all-new marketing which puts the spotlight on Mama, and a highly-entertaining […]
Green Valley Station - Rádio Atlantida FM (14/10/2017)
"These buses came back from the West End with these little kids on them, and they were crying, there were windows knocked out. They had been beaten with baseball bats, they had been called every horrible racial name you can expect, right here in this town." It sounds like a scene we'd expect to see in the deep South, but this happened in Louisville in the middle of the 1970s, when public schools implemented the busing system. That's how performing artist Teresa Willis remembers it, and it makes up part of her one-woman show, Eenie Meanie. Because Louisville itself was so segregated, neighborhood schools were largely either black or white. Busing was designed to achieve greater diversity within school, but was met with resistance. "Racism really came out of the closet in my community," Teresa remembers. "There's crosses burning at the football field. Literally, we're at a football game and a cross gets lit on fire. It was not pretty in 1975, '76 around here at all. Dixie Highway at Valley Station road were thousands and thousands of people rioting. We made the national news. People were so angry." Teresa also lived in L.A. during the 1992 riots. Eenie Meanie looks at racism in the baby boomer generation and in her own life. She joined us this week to talk about the piece, which is part of the Slant Culture Theatre Festival going on this weekend and next (she's also the festival's director). In our Juicy Fruit segment this week, we talk about the horrible case of Renisha McBride, the 19-year-old black woman who was shot in the face by a white man when she went to his door for help after a car accident. Friend to the show Dr. Brittney Cooper, covering the story for Salon, pointed out the similarities between this incident and the recent shooting of Jonathan Farrell, who was also shot and killed while seeking help after an accident. She also points out how this case is different from recent white-on-black killings: because the victim in this case is a woman, and, "we have somehow come to believe that black women’s femininity exempts them from what Kiese Laymon has called 'the worst of white folks.'" Kaila also breaks down 12 Years a Slave with some historical analysis, and shares her reactions to the film. Among many other issues, the film demonstrates how lack of access to reading and writing tools was used as a weapon against enslaved people. "The fact that I'm sitting there as an African American, as a free person with a doctorate, watching this film about a man who was prevented from writing," she says, "It's a really really awful story. It was tough." ► VIDEO: 1975 Busing Riots
Join a real outback cattle muster at one of the principal filming locations for Australia the Movie, Home Valley Station in the heart of the Kimberley.