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Showing posts with label talent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label talent. Show all posts

Sunday, October 6, 2013

TED@NYC: TED’s talent search heads to Manhattan

News TEDTalks Joshua Prager speaking at TED@NewYork in 2012. Prager later spoke on the main stage at TED2013. Photo: Ryan Lash. Joshua Prager speaking at TED@NewYork in 2012. Prager later spoke on the main stage at TED2013. Photo: Ryan Lash.

Remember TED Talks by Joshua PragerJohn McWhorterSleepy Man Banjo Boys and Hannah Brencher? All fantastic finds from previous talent searches. Now, we’re running a similar event once again. Known as TED@NYC, the evening event will be held on October 8. It’s a chance to find fresh voices to ring out on the TED main stage and be heard on ted.com.

28 speakers from all walks of life will share their risky, quirky, provocative and fascinating talks during 6 minutes on stage. Some of these talks will be posted on TED.com; other speakers will be invited to expand on their talks on TED’s main stage in Vancouver next spring.

Check out this dazzling lineup:

When Simon Doonan is not working as creative ambassador for Barney’s, he offers up pithy and whimsical thoughts on fashion and life.

CDZA is a New York City-based collective featuring more than 130 professional musicians, all recent graduates of the world’s most prestigious musical conservatories. Their YouTube videos are viral cultural commentaries, featuring hyper-medleys of hits, shot in exhaustive one-take executions. They have amassed over 20 million views and a subscriber base of over 200,000 fans in less than two years.

Formerly the New Jersey Attorney General, Anne Milgram is a senior fellow at NYU Law School’s Center for the Administration of Criminal Law. She wrote a powerful piece in The Atlantic last year calling for the use of smart statistics in the criminal justice system.

Drawing inspiration from Kanye West and Adele, singer-songwriter Elle Varner writes about girl power and fun in an eclectic mix of hip-hop and soul.

Shantell Martin‘s stream-of-consciousness sketches and light projection drawings transform her physical surroundings into a canvas onto which she projects her world.

A dancer and a soldier, Roman Baca expresses the experience of war through his choreography.

Seth Porges is a technology journalist, entrepreneur, gonzo historian, co-founder of Cloth, and most interestingly, a treasure-hunter.

Botanist Marielle Anzelone is an urban ecologist who explores the daily connection between people and nature. She directs NYC Wildflower Week and has written legislation to support native biodiversity in public landscapes.

Humorist Dawn J. Fraser tells hilarious stories of culture and identity.

Philosopher S. Matthew Liao directs the bioethics program at NYU and has kicked off the discussion about bio-engineering humans to help combat climate change.

Chad Orzel is a quantum physicist who teaches science to his dog, Emmy.

A doctor specializing in obesity prevention and treatment, Scott Kahan incorporates his personal struggles with weight management into his work.

Spice therapist Lior Lev Sercarz will turn your notion of flavor on its head. He provides some of the world’s best chefs with their spices.

Sleepy Man Banjo Boys rocked the house at TED@NewYork... and later at TED2013. Photo: Ryan Lash. Sleepy Man Banjo Boys rocked the house at TED@NewYork… and later at TED2013. Photo: Ryan Lash.

Fereshteh Forough empowers Afghan girls to use technology to share their stories and ideas. She is a founding partner of the Afghan Citadel Software Company, a women-run company in Afghanistan that creates job opportunities for women in IT.

Computer scientist Amnon Shashua looks at the intersection between mind and machine. His latest project is OrCam, a sensor that harnesses the power of Artificial Vision to compensate for lost visual abilities.

Jeri Lynne Johnson wanted to see an orchestra that reflected the diversity of her neighborhood in Philadelphia, so she created the Black Pearl Chamber Orchestra, an interactive musical ensemble that encourages audience participation and community engagement.

Karen Levy is a Ph.D. student at Princeton who studies how law and technology regulate behavior. Her most recent project has been studying truckers and privacy.

Sociomedical scientist Mindy Thompson Fullilove studies the psychology of place — the link between mental health and environmental factors like violence, segregation, urban renewal and mismanaged toxins.

Urban designer Diana Balmori believes in the promise of green roofs, floating islands, temporary landscapes and zero-waste cities. She’s landscaped buildings on four continents.

After 16 years as a grassroots community organizer, Sally Kohn made an unexpected move into the media and was hired to be a progressive talking head on Fox News. Sally regularly writes about politics and social change for outlets including the Daily Beast, Salon, New York Magazine and more.

Terry Plank, a geochemist and volcanologist, is interested in what literally lies beneath the surface — magma. She won a MacArthur Fellowship in 2010 for her research into how tectonic processes create the most destructive natural disasters.

Singer-songwriter Tiara Thomas is a musician whose R&B hip-hop career ignited when she was featured on rapper Wale’s mixtape “More About Nothing.”

Christopher Emdin uses the culture and ideas of hip-hop artists like GZA and Mos Def to transform the urban classroom. He co-created the #HipHopEd social media movement, an online arena to continue the discussion of hip-hop education.

As a researcher at MIT and the founder and managing director at Choson Exchange, Geoffrey See has dedicated his work to teaching entrepreneurship to North Koreans.

Susan P. Crawford is worried about the growing inequality of the Internet. A professor at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, she served as President Barack Obama’s Special Assistant for Science, Technology, and Innovation Policy in 2009. She is also a columnist for Bloomberg View and was a visiting professor at Harvard Law in 2012.

Professor of Business Psychology at University College London and personality expert Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic is fascinated by the many facets of confidence — and he knows the tricks for harnessing it.

In 1990, Zak Ebrahim‘s father assassinated Rabbi Meir Kahane; he was later convicted of involvement in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. Having not spoken to his father in 10 years, Zak will be at TED@NYC to share his story and promote nonviolence and peace.

For 20 years, Jacob Greenshpan has been using his cognitive science and psychology background to inform his user-experience projects. He co-founded UI, Israel’s largest business for defining and implementing UX design.


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Friday, July 27, 2012

Playlist: Stories of survival from the TED2013 Talent Search

Amsterdam, Bangalore, Doha, Johannesburg, London, Nairobi, New York, São Paulo, Seoul, Shanghai, Sydney, Tokyo, Tunis and Vancouver. TED headed to 14 cities on six continents for the 2013 Talent Search, looking to bring you fresh perspectives for TED2013. Despite the fact that the 293 speakers who participated in the search came from wildly different backgrounds, we couldn’t help but notice some themes emerge in their talks. Here, their moving tales of survival.

Vanessa Berlowitz: How to survive filming extreme nature documentaries
TED@London
Producer Vanessa Berlowitz has spent 22 years making wildlife films for the BBC. She’s camped out in a live volcano and traveled frequently to polar regions, where you can throw a cup of boiling water in the air and have it freeze before hitting the ground. She gives tips on making it through both, as well as for avoiding bear attacks.

Rupinder Bains: Living with Crohn’s disease
TED@Vancouver
In 2011, Rupinder Bains was supposed to die. While she started out her hospital stay being concerned about missing spring break, she had soon had 10 surgeries and whittled down to 74 pounds. In this powerful talk, she reveals had a radical surgery led her to remission.

Hyeonseo Lee: Escaping North Korea
TED@Seoul
Hyeonseo Lee calls growing up in North Korea like living “in a virtual prison.” She recalls witnessing her first public execution and beginning to doubt her government, before deciding to leave in 2008. In this talk, she describes the difficult journey to China and eventually to South Korea.

Eleanor Longden: Learning from the voices in my head
TED@London
When Eleanor Longden headed to college, someone joined her—a voice in her head, narrating her life in third person. She explains how she fought the voices, and a system ready to write her off as “crazy,” to get back her sense of self-worth … as well as a Masters in psychology.

Sarath Champati: Eye to eye with wild animals
TED@Bangalore
Ecotourism enthusiast Sarath Champati recalls coming face to a face with a wild tiger, and soon after with a wild Sambar deer. Instead of getting eaten alive, it sparked what Champati calls a “25-year love affair with wild animals.”

Rosie Garthwaite: How to survive in a war zone
TED@Doha
Former British Army officer Rosie Garthwaite saw her future as a journalist and headed to Iraq in 2003. She quickly learned that missteps could get herself and members of her team killed. In this talk, she gives away knowledge she’s learned about staying safe in war zones, as well as tips gleaned from a Somali pirate and a hostage negotiator.

Lee Swan: What I lost on the way to the North Pole
TED@Johannesburg
Chocoholic Lee Swan took part in the Polar Race, becoming the first South African woman to make it to the magnetic North Pole. She explains how she navigated her way through the 650 kilometer race … and won.

Ana Maria Saad: My story of mental illness and awareness
TED@SaoPaulo
A filmmaker, producer and screenwriter, Ana Marie Saad recalls falling into deep depression as a result of being sexually abused. She explains how meditation helped her through, and how she started an NGO to help lessen the stigma of mental disorders.

Richard Turere: My invention that outsmarted lions
TED@Nairobi
Richard Turere, now 13, has been tasked since age 9 with keeping his family’s cattle safe. While he calls lions “my enemy,” he knew that he would never be able to take one on in a hand-to-paw fight. And so he created a brilliant light system that scares the animals away.

Stayed tuned for more playlists from the TED Talent Search, coming at you over the next month.

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Saturday, March 31, 2012

TED’s Worldwide Talent Search: Sign up in Vancouver!

From April to June 2012, TED will be throwing 14 events around the world to search for unheard voices that need to be seen onstage at TED2013. Learn more about TED2013 Worldwide Talent Search >>

Just announced: Applications are open now to appear at the event in Vancouver! If TED@Vancouver is the closest event to you geographically, apply online to appear. Online signups for TED@Vancouver are open from now until April 12; to sign up, you’ll need to fill out a form and send a one-minute video.

Signups are also open now for Worldwide Talent Search events in:

Shanghai, China: Signups close March 29; event is May 17
Bangalore, India: Signups close April 1; event is May 20
Seoul, South Korea: Signups close April 4; event is May 23
Sydney, Australia: Signups close April 8; event is May 27
Tokyo, Japan: Signups close April 10; event is May 29
Vancouver, Canada: Signups close April 12; event is May 31

And coming up:

New York, United States: Signups open March 30 and close April 19; event is June 7
São Paulo, Brazil: Signups open April 4 and close May 2; event is June 11
Amsterdam, Netherlands: Signups open April 12 and close May 2; event is June 20

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Thursday, February 2, 2012

Announcing a global talent search for TED2013 speakers

The best moments at TED have often come from unexpected places. But this year, we’re pushing that to an entirely new level. We’re staging a global talent search to bring together the most remarkable lineup in TED’s history. A series of public auditions in cities around the world will reveal voices, talents and ideas that delight and surprise. As a result, at least half of our TED2013 program will literally be crowd-sourced through what we’re calling the TED2013 Worldwide Auditions.

Public auditions will be happening in 14 countries on six continents — in Amsterdam, Bangalore, Doha, Johannesburg, London, Nairobi, New York, São Paulo, Seoul, Shanghai, Sydney, Tokyo, Tunis and Vancouver — between April and June 2012. The auditions will be official TED events, and we’ve tapped local TEDx organizers in each city to produce.

Online audition applications, which include the option to upload a short video, will be available for each city at least two months before the audition. From those submissions, TED will invite 30 of the best applicants to each audition, where speakers will have 3-6 minutes to deliver a proposed talk in English. Anyone – with the exception of those who have already spoken at an official TED Conference or have a talk on TED.com – is eligible to apply to auditions in his or her nearest city. In some exceptional cases, TED will contribute to travel costs.

Learn more about TED Worldwide Auditions >>

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