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- Date:
- 2019
- Main contributors:
- Caine, Paul J.
- Summary:
- No matter the endeavor, Paul J. Caine has always found himself at the helm. His career has spanned a spectrum of media and major companies, including well-known names like Time, WestwoodOne and Bloomberg. He has held the titles of president, chief revenue officer and CEO among others, but he doesn't define his career as "leadership." "I never thought about it as ending up in leadership roles. I just get very passionate about ideas and how to better serve people," Caine said. "When I see an opportunity in the market, I get very excited." Today, Caine is chairman of the boards of video advertising firm Telaria Inc. and global marketing agency Engine Group, and CEO/founder of investment advisory organization PC Ventures. He started his career in advertising at J. Walter Thompson after graduating from IU in 1986 with a degree in telecommunications and a minor in business. From there, Caine moved on to USA Today, where he was the company's then-youngest-ever salesman. He did a brief stint at Psychology Today before he was recruited to join the sales team of one of Time Inc.'s most coveted titles: People magazine. He spent over 23 years rising through the ranks at Time. He wrote the business plan and led the launch of Teen People, a publication that would become a major voice for American teens. Caine later served as publisher of Entertainment Weekly and People, where he spun off titles including People StyleWatch and People.com. By 2011, Caine was executive vice president, chief revenue officer and group president of Time Inc., overseeing all U.S.-based brands, including People, Time, Sports Illustrated, InStyle, Real Simple and many others. In 2013, he left Time Inc. to become CEO of Dial Global, the leading U.S. radio syndication company with an audience of over 250 million Americans per week. During his tenure, he renamed the company to WestwoodOne and helped orchestrate its sale to radio broadcasting company Cumulus Media. Today, WestwoodOne remains the largest audio network in the U.S. Caine left WestwoodOne and joined Bloomberg Media as global chief revenue and client partnerships officer. He left Bloomberg in 2016 and has since devoted his professional time to Engine Group, Telaria and PC Ventures. PC Ventures' investments include Blue Marble, an organic ice cream company that sells to companies like Starbucks and Whole Foods, and Wolf + Friends, a social networking and content platform for mothers of children with special needs. Caine has a particular passion for issues related to families, mothers and children. In 2007, Caine and his wife started Griffin Cares at Englewood Health in New Jersey in memory of their son, Griffin. Griffin Cares supports families who have experienced infant loss. "Pam and I always felt that everyone has the opportunity to help make other people's lives better. Griffin Cares was created to carry on Griffin's legacy and help support families in our community who have experienced this type of devastating loss," Caine said. Caine is a member of the Advertising Hall of Achievement and the MIN Hall of Fame, and has been recognized with many industry awards, including Radio Ink's 40 Most Powerful People in Radio, the Adweek 50, Crain New York's "40 Under 40" and the Advertising Club of New York's President's Award. In 2010, Caine received the Distinguished Alumni Award from IU's College of Arts and Sciences Alumni Association. Caine is proud to serve on The Media School's Dean's Advisory Board.
- Date:
- 2019-11-06
- Main contributors:
- Cameron, Jon
- Summary:
- One of the signature projects for Indiana University’s Bicentennial, the Bicentennial Oral History Project has produced a rich and extensive collection of oral history recordings with faculty, staff, and alumni. This presentation will describe the process of publishing this collection on the web with synchronized transcripts, keyword search, and streaming audio. Supporting software and services used will be detailed, including the Aviary oral history platform, the IU Libraries’ Media Collections Online, and custom scripts to process metadata and transcript information. Details about the information pipeline used to publish this collection on the web will also be discussed, as well as many of the technical considerations made along the way.
64. Oral History excerpt: "An opportunity for us to try and create this into a beautiful space" (01:16)
- Date:
- 2019-10-11
- Main contributors:
- Campbell, Arianne (narrator)
- Summary:
- Griffith resident Arianne Campbell describes the illegal dumping at the spring that inspired a 2016 community clean-up at the site. "...there's an area where we have a natural running spring," Campbell says, "and it had gone into horrible disrepair ... it was an opportunity for us to try and create this into a beautiful space." This was one of a group of excerpts gathered under the subject heading of Environmental Impacts for a digital and in-person exhibit of the Spring at Small Farms Oral Histories. The digital exhibit can be seen at https://iusbarchives.omeka.net/exhibits/show/spring-at-small-farms/home.
- Date:
- 2019-10-11
- Main contributors:
- Campbell, Arianne (narrator)
- Summary:
- Griffith resident Arianne Campbell discusses the impact of pollution on Gary's waterways and how it has affected her life and hobbies. She describes fishing on the Little Calumet River on the same weekend that the news broke about the ArcelorMittal toxic spill. The steel plant released high levels of cyanide and ammonia-nitrogen into the east branch of the river near Portage, Indiana in August of 2019. This was one of a group of excerpts gathered under the subject heading of Environmental Impacts for a digital and in-person exhibit of the Spring at Small Farms Oral Histories. The digital exhibit can be seen at https://iusbarchives.omeka.net/exhibits/show/spring-at-small-farms/home.
- Date:
- 2019-10-11
- Main contributors:
- Campbell, Arianne (narrator)
- Summary:
- Griffith resident Arianne Campbell explains how the dilapidation within her hometown of Gary makes it difficult for her to fully appreciate its history. "So much of [Gary] is completely unrecognizable from what it used to be or it's just outright gone," she says. "And I think that that feeling of not really having that connection to one's history because it's missing is part of it for me." For Campbell, the Chase Street spring serves as one tangible connection to Gary's past. This was one of a group of excerpts gathered under the subject heading of Use of the Spring Today for a digital and in-person exhibit of the Spring at Small Farms Oral Histories. The digital exhibit can be seen at https://iusbarchives.omeka.net/exhibits/show/spring-at-small-farms/home.
- Date:
- 2019-10-11
- Main contributors:
- Campbell, Arianne (narrator)
- Summary:
- Kay Westhues interviews Arianne Campbell at Griffith Public Library in Griffith, Indiana, on October 11, 2019. Campbell first learned of the spring while employed by the AmeriCorps VISTA Program at the Paul H. Douglas Center for Environmental Education at the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore. She describes her research on the spring, a cleanup project she initiated, and the presentation on the spring that she prepared for Green Drinks Gary. Part of the Spring at Small Farms Oral History Project. See the full exhibit here: https://iusbarchives.omeka.net/exhibits/show/spring-at-small-farms/home
- Date:
- 2019
- Main contributors:
- Carl Lenthe
- Summary:
- Seven performance scenes with commentary documenting how David DeBoor Canfield’s “Concerto after Mendelssohn” for trombone and orchestra was ideated, composed and entered into the repertoire. Peripheral information includes interviews with the composer and collaborators.
- Date:
- 2019-03-19
- Main contributors:
- Caroline Sinders, Institute for Digital Arts & Humanities
- Summary:
- Caroline Sinders is an artist and researcher exploring how new kinds of data sets, be it emotional data, traumatic data, or political data can then affect algorithms. How can these outputs be actualized as an art piece? Can the creation of a data set help create equity in digital spaces? Her work explores the intersections of critical design, data, and AI as art. This talk will explore the methodology she's created to guide both her art and research practice, called 'research driven art.' Inspired by photojournalism, critical design, and open source software, research driven art is a process driven artistic methodology, focusing on question answering and question exploring, and how a research process can be an artistic practice as well as an artistic output.
- Date:
- 2019-10-25
- Main contributors:
- Castellanos, David (narrator)
- Summary:
- Little Calumet River Basin Development Commissioner David Castellanos credits Lake County Commissioner Roosevelt Allen for first bringing the Chase St. Spring to his attention. He talks with people who gather water there and describes several reasons why individuals use the spring. He also addresses the illegal dumping that takes place on Chase Street and the clean-up he helped organize there. This was one of a group of excerpts gathered under the subject heading of Use of the Spring Today for a digital and in-person exhibit of the Spring at Small Farms Oral Histories. The digital exhibit can be seen at https://iusbarchives.omeka.net/exhibits/show/spring-at-small-farms/home.