Podcasts about wintroub

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Latest podcast episodes about wintroub

CreativeOps Podcast
Creative Ops Crystal Ball Gazing w/ Jeremy Wintroub of ICP

CreativeOps Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2024 58:27


Episode HighlightsJeremy's Definition of Creative Ops (2:00)Mix of people, process and technology to bring brand stories to life"Breathing oxygen" into historically fractured creative processesThe evolving relationship between scale and storytelling (12:00)Overcoming the tension between creativity and operational efficiencyUsing AI to break free from templatized approaches to scaling creativeCreating capacity for more blank slate "storytelling" briefsFostering empathy across marketing and creative teams (22:30)The importance of human communication and ceremonies around briefsInfusing creative ops with data and insights to align on objectivesJeremy's vision for cross-functional "pod" team modelsHow AI can augment creative roles and workflows (41:00)Outsourcing rote "thunking" tasks to AI to focus on higher value workUsing AI as a "data scientist in a box" thinking partnerTraining AI to understand brand governance as creative scalesBlending roles, blurring organizational boundaries (53:00)Bringing creatives closer to the "point of distribution" and performance dataWill functions like marketing ops and creative ops converge?Getting comfortable with iterating as the future is still highly uncertainPaying attention now to stay ahead of the curve (1:08:00)Why every team should operate like an "AI R&D lab"Overcoming the paralysis of perfection and the "blank screen" intimidationPractical first AI experiments for creative ops leaders and their teamsWho should creative ops hear from next? (1:12:30)Jeremy wants to hear from marketing and creative leaders on what makes a great creative ops partnerUnderstanding our strengths/weaknesses from those partnering perspectivesQuestions or a different point of view than what you heard today? Drop me a line nish@creativeops.fmStay Connected:Companion Newsletter: sign up at https://creativeops.fm/newsletterFollow Today's Guest: Jeremy WintroubFollow Me, Your Host: Nish Patel on LinkedInSubscribe:SpotifyGoogle PodcastsPlayer.fmPodcast addictRSS

Huntsman World Senior Games Active Life
#476 Find a Friend and Fight Gravity - Featuring Barbara Wintroub

Huntsman World Senior Games Active Life

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2024 25:50


Pickleball pioneer Barbara Wintroub brought the sport to Santa Monica, CA fifteen years ago and Palm Desert, CA the next year. As one of the best senior players the sport has to offer, Barbara is nationally ranked in pickleball and a tournament tennis player for 63 years. Beyond coaching and teaching pickleball, she is an active aging expert with a degree in kinesiology who has written a book that encourages “Fighting Gravity.” This book can be purchased on Amazon. She also is a master trainer Pilates instructor, one of the first women certified as a USPTA tennis teacher, former competitive bowler as a child, an IRONMAN triathlete, and is one of the first 40 women worldwide to have run a marathon on all seven continents.Additionally, Kyle introduced one of the new sports for the Huntsman World Senior Games this year: Disc Golf. 

Voices of eLearning
The Impact of EdTech Partnerships

Voices of eLearning

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2021 39:16


Voices of eLearning enjoys bringing success stories to listeners that demonstrate the power of technology, innovation, and opportunity. Host JW Marshall welcomed Anne Wintroub, Director of Social Innovation at the AT&T Foundation, and Max Tuchman, CEO and Co-Founder of Caribu. Wintroub leads the AT&T Aspire Accelerator program, which provides investments to early EdTech companies. She's been with the company for 10 years and previously worked with nonprofits in the space. Tuchman is a former 12th-grade teacher that started Caribu, an app that creates virtual playdates with interactive video calls that include books and activities. Caribu was a recipient of the AT&T Aspire Accelerator program. Wintroub said, “The platform and Max wowed us.”Tuchman then shared how AT&T made a difference during the pandemic. She said that once they realized children would be out of school, they decided to go free, which was on March 14. In 24 hours, subscribers grew by 10X. “I got a text from Anne on that Sunday asking how AT&T could help. I was so grateful and thought AT&T could sponsor subscriptions, and they did with a $560,000 investment.”Wintroub and Tuchman both realize there's still a huge inequity in education, calling in not a gap but a canyon. Tuchman added, “It's not going to be solved by one company or technology but by many.”That' sentiment was the catalyst to launch Caribu. As a 12th grade teacher, she saw that these almost adults weren't ready for the real world, which started in early childhood development. “It was a pipeline problem, and I knew I had to focus on early childhood literacy because we spend so much of our day reading. Every child needs equitable access to early childhood literacy experiences.”

EdTech Today
Sal Khan and AT&T's Anne Wintroub Discuss Making EdTech Entrepreneurship More Inclusive

EdTech Today

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2021 26:42


In December, AT&T marked its third-annual Pitches with Purpose Event, celebrating the innovation and growth of eight ed-tech startups, receiving mentoring, resources and development through its Aspire Accelerator program to create solutions for the diverse needs of today's students.As the solutions from this minority and women-led cohort shows, the future of education, in the wake of COVID-19, demands more diverse perspectives than ever to develop more inclusive solutions for every student – regardless of backgrounds, needs and experiences.Eight education technology companies graduated from the Aspire Accelerator and competed in an all-virtual “Shark Tank” style “Pitches with Purpose” for two $25,000 prizes – one awarded by a panel of AT&T executive judges and another voted on by AT&T employees and for the first time, the general public.In the end, Social Cipher won the general public and employee vote with their captivating, fast-paced 3-minute pitch. They create video games that give players who are autistic a safe space to practice social situations and build social-emotional skills through play. “It feels amazing to win Pitches with Purpose, and it's so wonderful to see that there's so much support for our mission out there,” said Vanessa Castañeda Gill, founder of Social Cipher. “We've been through so many challenges this year–we've come out so much stronger with the help of the AT&T Aspire Accelerator and the incredible founders in this cohort. We're beyond excited to take on what's next with this funding!”The Aspire Accelerator was created in 2015 as part AT&T Aspire, a $600 million commitment since 2008 that leverages technology, relationships and innovation to improve education and prepare students for career success. Program participants have included 70% women-led companies and 51% minority-led companies.The 2020 Accelerator class shows how women and minority-led startups are transforming education, offering virtual solutions to the toughest issues facing students today: educational equity, disengagement in learning and lack of support for students with disabilities. And as educators look towards 2021, lessons from COVID-19 and distance learning will also drive the future of education. Key among these lessons is the need for diverse perspective to fuel innovation for more inclusive solutions regardless of backgrounds, needs and experiences.Learn more about the 2020 Accelerator class and why diverse perspectives are so important to the future of education in Charlene Lake's LinkedIn post here.

Pilates for PTs Podcast
Pilates For PTs Interview With Barbara Wintroub

Pilates for PTs Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2020 41:01


Today we have Barbara Wintroub, who are mine and Cheryl’s very first Pilates instructor. She took us from a newbie, to incorporating Pilates to every single one of my patients from 2002 to 2019. In this episode of Pilates for PTs with Barbara Wintroub: 02:00 - What got Barbara interested and involved in Pilates? 03:30 - Pilates during Barbara’s time went underground 07:00 - Did Barbara have her own studio before? 08:30 - How did Barbara and Stephen meet? 12:12 - What was Barbara’s first memory of Stephen and Cheryl? 19:30 - What brought Barbara out of California to Palm Springs? 24:00 - How does Barbara do her classes now? 27:00 – How do you get certified for Pilates? How do you reach out to Barbara? You can call her directly at 3109133333 or through email – blwintroub@gmail.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/stephen-dunn/message

Congregation Emanu-El
Bennett Wintroub sings OZI V'ZIMRAT YAH @ MLK Service, 2019

Congregation Emanu-El

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2019 8:12


Bennett Wintroub sings OZI V'ZIMRAT YAH @ the MLK service at Temple Emanu-El in San Franciscco on 1-18-2019

New Books in Science, Technology, and Society
Michael Wintroub, “The Voyage of Thought: Navigating Knowledge Across the Sixteenth-Century World” (Cambridge UP, 2017)

New Books in Science, Technology, and Society

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2017 58:17


If you are an enthusiast of The Cheese and the Worms (1976), The Great Cat Massacre (1984), or The Return of Martin Guerre (1983), then Michael Wintroub‘s The Voyage of Thought: Navigating Knowledge Across the Sixteenth-Century World (Cambridge University Press, 2017) is a must read. Simply put, this is a book that will lead you down a path of wonder, and possibly, saddle you with a good head scratch. However, no one ever said that an itch near the cranium translates to feeling lousy; in this instance, what we have here is a richly researched and thought-provoking (no pun intended) piece of scholarship. Wintroub, Professor of Rhetoric at the University of California at Berkeley, is interested in how ideas that are commonplace today (like information-gathering, expertise, confidence, scale, and replication) originated over four centuries ago. This is the story of two brothers who were tasked with a monumental, trail-blazing journey from their home in Dieppe, France all the way to Sumatra. How did two humanist ship captains prepare? What did they find along the way in their search for pepper, glory, and God? Part science, part poetry, part architecture, part mind job, this book probes the notion that physical and mental spaces can be traversed if we ask the right questions. Furthermore, through a connected history that cleverly interprets a letter from an eighty-year-old sailor, snatches the magnifying glass to reconstruct events on a beach in the Indian Ocean, focuses the microscope on a frieze in France, and backs the telescope off from the inner workings of the astrolabe, in this installment of New Books in Science you are in for a tour that will enliven the senses and tug on the heart. J.N. Campbell is an independent scholar and writer in Houston, Texas. He is the co-author with Steven M. Rooney of How Aspirin Entered Our Medicine Cabinet (Springer, 2017). They have a second book entitled, Numb: A Chemical History of Opioid Epidemic, which is due out in 2018. He has written for the International Journal of the History of Sport, Reviews in History, and is a featured writer for Good Grit Magazine. After receiving an M.A. in History from the University of Kentucky, he fashions himself as a life-long student of history. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in World Affairs
Michael Wintroub, “The Voyage of Thought: Navigating Knowledge Across the Sixteenth-Century World” (Cambridge UP, 2017)

New Books in World Affairs

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2017 58:17


If you are an enthusiast of The Cheese and the Worms (1976), The Great Cat Massacre (1984), or The Return of Martin Guerre (1983), then Michael Wintroub‘s The Voyage of Thought: Navigating Knowledge Across the Sixteenth-Century World (Cambridge University Press, 2017) is a must read. Simply put, this is a book that will lead you down a path of wonder, and possibly, saddle you with a good head scratch. However, no one ever said that an itch near the cranium translates to feeling lousy; in this instance, what we have here is a richly researched and thought-provoking (no pun intended) piece of scholarship. Wintroub, Professor of Rhetoric at the University of California at Berkeley, is interested in how ideas that are commonplace today (like information-gathering, expertise, confidence, scale, and replication) originated over four centuries ago. This is the story of two brothers who were tasked with a monumental, trail-blazing journey from their home in Dieppe, France all the way to Sumatra. How did two humanist ship captains prepare? What did they find along the way in their search for pepper, glory, and God? Part science, part poetry, part architecture, part mind job, this book probes the notion that physical and mental spaces can be traversed if we ask the right questions. Furthermore, through a connected history that cleverly interprets a letter from an eighty-year-old sailor, snatches the magnifying glass to reconstruct events on a beach in the Indian Ocean, focuses the microscope on a frieze in France, and backs the telescope off from the inner workings of the astrolabe, in this installment of New Books in Science you are in for a tour that will enliven the senses and tug on the heart. J.N. Campbell is an independent scholar and writer in Houston, Texas. He is the co-author with Steven M. Rooney of How Aspirin Entered Our Medicine Cabinet (Springer, 2017). They have a second book entitled, Numb: A Chemical History of Opioid Epidemic, which is due out in 2018. He has written for the International Journal of the History of Sport, Reviews in History, and is a featured writer for Good Grit Magazine. After receiving an M.A. in History from the University of Kentucky, he fashions himself as a life-long student of history. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in History
Michael Wintroub, “The Voyage of Thought: Navigating Knowledge Across the Sixteenth-Century World” (Cambridge UP, 2017)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2017 58:17


If you are an enthusiast of The Cheese and the Worms (1976), The Great Cat Massacre (1984), or The Return of Martin Guerre (1983), then Michael Wintroub‘s The Voyage of Thought: Navigating Knowledge Across the Sixteenth-Century World (Cambridge University Press, 2017) is a must read. Simply put, this is a book that will lead you down a path of wonder, and possibly, saddle you with a good head scratch. However, no one ever said that an itch near the cranium translates to feeling lousy; in this instance, what we have here is a richly researched and thought-provoking (no pun intended) piece of scholarship. Wintroub, Professor of Rhetoric at the University of California at Berkeley, is interested in how ideas that are commonplace today (like information-gathering, expertise, confidence, scale, and replication) originated over four centuries ago. This is the story of two brothers who were tasked with a monumental, trail-blazing journey from their home in Dieppe, France all the way to Sumatra. How did two humanist ship captains prepare? What did they find along the way in their search for pepper, glory, and God? Part science, part poetry, part architecture, part mind job, this book probes the notion that physical and mental spaces can be traversed if we ask the right questions. Furthermore, through a connected history that cleverly interprets a letter from an eighty-year-old sailor, snatches the magnifying glass to reconstruct events on a beach in the Indian Ocean, focuses the microscope on a frieze in France, and backs the telescope off from the inner workings of the astrolabe, in this installment of New Books in Science you are in for a tour that will enliven the senses and tug on the heart. J.N. Campbell is an independent scholar and writer in Houston, Texas. He is the co-author with Steven M. Rooney of How Aspirin Entered Our Medicine Cabinet (Springer, 2017). They have a second book entitled, Numb: A Chemical History of Opioid Epidemic, which is due out in 2018. He has written for the International Journal of the History of Sport, Reviews in History, and is a featured writer for Good Grit Magazine. After receiving an M.A. in History from the University of Kentucky, he fashions himself as a life-long student of history. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books Network
Michael Wintroub, “The Voyage of Thought: Navigating Knowledge Across the Sixteenth-Century World” (Cambridge UP, 2017)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2017 58:43


If you are an enthusiast of The Cheese and the Worms (1976), The Great Cat Massacre (1984), or The Return of Martin Guerre (1983), then Michael Wintroub‘s The Voyage of Thought: Navigating Knowledge Across the Sixteenth-Century World (Cambridge University Press, 2017) is a must read. Simply put, this is a book that will lead you down a path of wonder, and possibly, saddle you with a good head scratch. However, no one ever said that an itch near the cranium translates to feeling lousy; in this instance, what we have here is a richly researched and thought-provoking (no pun intended) piece of scholarship. Wintroub, Professor of Rhetoric at the University of California at Berkeley, is interested in how ideas that are commonplace today (like information-gathering, expertise, confidence, scale, and replication) originated over four centuries ago. This is the story of two brothers who were tasked with a monumental, trail-blazing journey from their home in Dieppe, France all the way to Sumatra. How did two humanist ship captains prepare? What did they find along the way in their search for pepper, glory, and God? Part science, part poetry, part architecture, part mind job, this book probes the notion that physical and mental spaces can be traversed if we ask the right questions. Furthermore, through a connected history that cleverly interprets a letter from an eighty-year-old sailor, snatches the magnifying glass to reconstruct events on a beach in the Indian Ocean, focuses the microscope on a frieze in France, and backs the telescope off from the inner workings of the astrolabe, in this installment of New Books in Science you are in for a tour that will enliven the senses and tug on the heart. J.N. Campbell is an independent scholar and writer in Houston, Texas. He is the co-author with Steven M. Rooney of How Aspirin Entered Our Medicine Cabinet (Springer, 2017). They have a second book entitled, Numb: A Chemical History of Opioid Epidemic, which is due out in 2018. He has written for the International Journal of the History of Sport, Reviews in History, and is a featured writer for Good Grit Magazine. After receiving an M.A. in History from the University of Kentucky, he fashions himself as a life-long student of history. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Intellectual History
Michael Wintroub, “The Voyage of Thought: Navigating Knowledge Across the Sixteenth-Century World” (Cambridge UP, 2017)

New Books in Intellectual History

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2017 58:17


If you are an enthusiast of The Cheese and the Worms (1976), The Great Cat Massacre (1984), or The Return of Martin Guerre (1983), then Michael Wintroub‘s The Voyage of Thought: Navigating Knowledge Across the Sixteenth-Century World (Cambridge University Press, 2017) is a must read. Simply put, this is a book that will lead you down a path of wonder, and possibly, saddle you with a good head scratch. However, no one ever said that an itch near the cranium translates to feeling lousy; in this instance, what we have here is a richly researched and thought-provoking (no pun intended) piece of scholarship. Wintroub, Professor of Rhetoric at the University of California at Berkeley, is interested in how ideas that are commonplace today (like information-gathering, expertise, confidence, scale, and replication) originated over four centuries ago. This is the story of two brothers who were tasked with a monumental, trail-blazing journey from their home in Dieppe, France all the way to Sumatra. How did two humanist ship captains prepare? What did they find along the way in their search for pepper, glory, and God? Part science, part poetry, part architecture, part mind job, this book probes the notion that physical and mental spaces can be traversed if we ask the right questions. Furthermore, through a connected history that cleverly interprets a letter from an eighty-year-old sailor, snatches the magnifying glass to reconstruct events on a beach in the Indian Ocean, focuses the microscope on a frieze in France, and backs the telescope off from the inner workings of the astrolabe, in this installment of New Books in Science you are in for a tour that will enliven the senses and tug on the heart. J.N. Campbell is an independent scholar and writer in Houston, Texas. He is the co-author with Steven M. Rooney of How Aspirin Entered Our Medicine Cabinet (Springer, 2017). They have a second book entitled, Numb: A Chemical History of Opioid Epidemic, which is due out in 2018. He has written for the International Journal of the History of Sport, Reviews in History, and is a featured writer for Good Grit Magazine. After receiving an M.A. in History from the University of Kentucky, he fashions himself as a life-long student of history. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices