advertisement advertisement advertisement Before he cofounded ride-sharing company Lyft, CEO Logan Green learned the intricacies of public transportation as a director on the Santa Barbara Metropolitan Transit District board. Venture capitalist Bradley Tusk worked as a communications director for Sen. Chuck Schumer and served as deputy governor of Illinois. Aerospace engineer Aisha Bowe says her six years working at NASA were “instrumental” to founding STEMBoard, a tech company that serves government and private-sector clients. advertisement For these business leaders, “government service” isn’t a pejorative. Their work in the public sector helped shape their entrepreneurial journeys. And many executives from Silicon Valley to Wall Street have served at the highest levels in government, including Mike Bloomberg (a three-term mayor of New York), Megan Smith (former Google executive who served as Chief Technology Officer of the United States), and … [Read more...] about Introducing Fast Government, an exploration of innovation and talent in public service
Gina raimondo
‘Cancel Me, Daddy’ deflates the hysteria around cancel culture
advertisement advertisement advertisement Somebody is about to get canceled. Or so it would appear, anyway. advertisement advertisement “Who are we canceling today?” writer Katelyn Burns asks her cohost, audio producer Oliver-Ash Kleine , near the top of their new podcast. It’s a cheeky question, one that is destined—if not designed—to elicit livid responses such as Who died and made you the arbiters of cancellation ? It should be abundantly clear to anyone who listens to more than 10 seconds of Cancel Me, Daddy , though, that Burns and Kleine are asking this question (mostly!) ironically. In fact, it should be clear just from hearing the title—a play on the popular Barstool podcast Call Her Daddy —or from observing the show’s artwork, which depicts the hosts’ Twitter accounts slashed through with one of those giant red x’s that tend to accompany images of a “silenced” person, sometimes with tape over their mouths … [Read more...] about ‘Cancel Me, Daddy’ deflates the hysteria around cancel culture
How Trump’s return showed us what we’ve gained since he left
advertisement advertisement advertisement A few weeks ago, The Atlantic published a piece titled, “I Miss the Thrill of Trump.” advertisement advertisement It was a headline begging to be quote-tweeted with droll captions like, “I miss the thrill of polio” or “Ant misses the thrill of troubled boy with magnifying glass.” What struck me most about this opinion was not how much I didn’t miss Trump, which was entirely expected, but rather how much I hadn’t thought about him at all. Nobody should ever have to think about anybody as much as President Trump wanted everybody to think about him all the time. He was the galactic ambassador of the expression, “Living in your head rent-free” —his every move and utterance designed to leave as massive a neural footprint as possible. And then one day, after the climactic tragedy of the Capitol insurrection and subsequent social media ban, he was just gone. “Isn’t it satisfying, … [Read more...] about How Trump’s return showed us what we’ve gained since he left