Showing posts with label ABPA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ABPA. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 07, 2009

Kutner (Kal Penn) gets "killed off" on "HOUSE, MD" goes to WHO / EOP (the 'White House' to the little people)

Mr. Obama welcomes actor Kal Penn to the world of Public Affairs (hear, hear!) SHOW BIZ + POLTICS collide again - 24 x 7 x 365 ....this must have been coming for quite some time. (sure! Barack picked up the phone and said, Kal, I have a job for you, ala JFK and Edward R Murrow with USIA)....Mr. Penn has been tweeting that he has been lecturing at the University of Montana and other college venues... great gig...perhaps prepping for this. I admit I am green with envy, and more. But he is smart, a fine actor and a good communicator, which is the major need. At this level, this can,  and will,  work. -- HVCG - ABPA

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Actor Kal Penn joins White House team

 
Actor Kal Penn of the television show 'House' and the 'Harold and Kumar' movie series is joining the staff of the White House. Here, Penn is seen with President Obama - then President-elect Obama - on the National Mall in Washington on Jan. 18 during inauguration festivities.
By Justin Sullivan, Getty Images
Actor Kal Penn of the television show 'House' and the 'Harold and Kumar' movie series is joining the staff of the White House. Here, Penn is seen with President Obama - then President-elect Obama - on the National Mall in Washington on Jan. 18 during inauguration festivities.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House has hired actor Kal Penn as a liaison between President Obama's administration and Hollywood.

White House spokesman Shin Inouye said Tuesday that the actor who had a recurring role on the Fox TV showHouse and has starred in several movies would join the staff as an associate director in the Office of Public Liaison. His role will be to connect Obama with the Asian-American and Pacific Islander communities, as well as arts and entertainment groups.

Penn starred as Kumar in the movie, Harold and Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay.

Penn was an Obama supporter during the campaign. The White House says a start date for Penn has not been set.

The hire was first reported by Entertainment Weekly.


Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.  

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Saturday, April 04, 2009

THE JOB SHOW: Jobless make TV ads pitching themselves for work

Unemployment rate highest since 1983 Play Video AP  – Unemployment rate highest since 1983

Producer/director Kristyn Silk tracks the monitors inside the control room on AP – Producer/director Kristyn Silk tracks the monitors inside the control room on the set of 'The Job Show' …

CHELMSFORD, Mass. – Jayna Dinsmore dressed in a sharp pink blouse and black slacks and made the pitch she hoped would end her five months of unemployment: Experienced marketing manager and analyst. Diverse background. Trade show experience.

Only she wasn't talking to an interviewer. She was talking to a TV camera.

After sending resumes, attending networking events and blogging about her search for employment, Dinsmore joined a small but growing number of unemployed people who have made television commercials about themselves to try to get directly into prospective employers' living rooms.

"I figure any exposure I can get is a great thing," said Dinsmore, a 33-year-old married mother with a newly minted master's degree in marketing from Bentley University.

"The New England Job Show," a new public cable access production, allows hungry job seekers to record 30-second commercials in a studio at a middle school in Chelmsford, near the New Hampshire state line. Volunteers — all also unemployed — then put the commercials into a half-hour episode that includes discussions on dressing professionally, personal finances and health care options.

About a dozen job seekers have taped commercials, and none has landed a job yet. But the first commercials just started airing last week.

The job show airs on at least five area public access stations. Comcast spokesman Jim Hughes said the cable company, which operates in many of the Massachusetts towns, didn't have viewership numbers.

Creator and executive producer Ken Masson said the show's uniqueness will catch eyes. "Everyone talks about being cutting edge. Well, this is cutting edge," said Masson, himself an unemployed community banker.

The commercials are different from personalized online videos that have exploded on YouTube because employers don't have to actually search for these.

But the commercials cast a wide net: There's no guarantee that hiring managers in the jobseekers' industries will see them. Those taping the spots said they were hoping to get lucky with the TV ad while also pursuing more targeted and traditional job search methods.

Other cable access stations have job programs: For two decades the state of Michigan has produced its own cable access job show featuring experts talking about employment trends, personal finance and career tips; and KSAR-15 TV, the public access station in Saratoga, Calif., airs a show on job hunting for California's Bay-area viewers.

But the personal pitches from job seekers appear to be a new twist, said Robert Thompson, a professor of television and popular culture at Syracuse University's S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications.

"So many Americans are now comfortable with making a short video. It seems like a natural progression," Thompson said. "And TV, in spite of all the technology, is still the dominant medium."

Masson said he and friends from a networking group launched the show with $100 and the help of a local rotary club.

Kristyn Silk, who was laid off from Fidelity Investments in November, immediately volunteered to direct.

"Basically, this is a project and we all have some project management experience," said Silk, of Merrimack, N.H. "Our goal is to get people jobs."

The show's host, Ajita Perera of Shrewsbury, is a recently laid off market manager who worked as a reporter for CNN in Sri Lanka in the 1980s.

"It feels like coming home," Perera said.

So far, the group has recorded four episodes. The first show aired March 23 and will rerun on participating stations for two weeks. Stations will get two new shows every month, Masson said.

Thompson compared the 30-second commercials to speed-dating lunches. But like speed dating, it's unclear if lasting matches can be made.

That doesn't bother Libby Dilling, 42, of Stow, who has been looking for a nonprofit job for eight months. During a recent taping, Dilling recorded her pitch, but spoke too long and slightly fumbled over her words.

After some coaching, the group decided her third take was what she needed to land a job in the nonprofit world.

"I've never done something like this before," Dilling said. "We'll see what happens."

Related Searches:

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

WAPO: Veterans Groups Denounce Private Insurance Proposal

("Shame on you, Mr. President.") About our Vets and their Benefits

Veterans Groups Denounce Private Insurance Proposal


Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, March 18, 2009; Page A04

An Obama administration proposal to bill veterans' private insurance companies for treatment of combat-related injuries has prompted veterans groups to condemn the idea as unethical and powerful lawmakers on Capitol Hill to promise their opposition.

Nevertheless, the White House confirmed yesterday that the idea remains under consideration, and Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel and leaders of veterans groups are scheduled to meet tomorrow to discuss it further.

The proposal -- intended to save the Department of Veterans Affairs $530 million a year -- would authorize VA to bill private insurance companies for the treatment of injuries and medical conditions related to military service, such as amputations, post-traumatic stress disorder and other battle wounds. VA already pursues such third-party billing for conditions that are not service-related.

Veterans groups said the change would be an abrogation of the government's responsibility to care for the war wounded. And they expressed concern that the new policy would make employers less willing to hire veterans, for fear of the cost of insuring them, and that insurance benefits for veterans' families would be jeopardized.

Lawmakers explicitly ruled out the proposal yesterday in budget recommendations from the Senate and House veterans' affairs committees.

The chairman of the Senate panel,  Daniel K. Akaka (D-Hawaii), said a majority of the committee members say the plan is fundamentally unfair.

"America's veterans and their families pay the true cost of war everyday, and we must pay for the care and benefits they have earned. I look forward to working with my colleagues and the Administration to pass a budget worthy of their service," Akaka said in a statement.

 Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), a senior member of the Veterans' Affairs and Budget committees, warned VA Secretary Eric K. Shinseki last week that the idea would be "dead on arrival," and she vowed yesterday that any budget containing the provision "is not going to pass."

"The VA has an obligation to pay for service-related care, and they should not be nickel-and-diming vets in the process," she said in an interview. "This proposal means that family members will be hurt because, if a vet meets the maximum [benefit amount] for their insurance, their wife and kids would not be able to get insurance [benefits] anymore. . . . God forbid a wounded vet from Iraq has a wife who gets breast cancer."

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said yesterday that the Obama administration has not made "the final . . . decision on third-party billing as it relates to service-related injuries."

At the same time, Gibbs noted that the administration is seeking an 11 percent increase in discretionary spending in the VA budget, a decision lawmakers and veterans groups have praised. "This president takes very seriously the needs of our wounded warriors that have given so much to protect our freedom on battlefields throughout the world," Gibbs said at a White House news conference.

VA and the Office of Management and Budget did not respond to requests for more details on the proposal.

Veterans groups said the plan was a puzzling political misstep by the new administration in its relations with the 25 million Americans who have served in the military. Obama heard firsthand about such objections Monday when he met with leaders of the groups at the White House.

"To ask veterans to save $500 million in a [VA] budget of over $100 billion is not only bad policy, it is bad politics," said Paul Rieckhoff, executive director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, who attended the meeting.

"It could be a rookie mistake," he said. "Ultimately, it's only going to hurt the president."

Another problem, critics said, is that the proposal could hurt wounded veterans' employment opportunities, particularly with small businesses.

"A small company is not going to want to take on the burden of increased premiums" by hiring a wounded veteran, said Craig Roberts, media relations manager for the American Legion. He added that the proposal could make buying private health insurance prohibitively expensive for these veterans.

Details of the proposal remained unclear yesterday, and a spokesman for the health insurance industry said its potential impact is difficult to assess. "We are going to carefully evaluate any proposal that is made," said Robert Zirkelbach, spokesman for the trade association America's Health Insurance Plans.

Lawmakers and veterans advocates said VA could save $500 million by simply collecting from private insurers all that it is authorized to bill for non-service injuries each year.

More broadly, the issue underscores a significant challenge confronting the administration: ballooning health-care costs for veterans and active military members taking up an ever-larger share of VA and Pentagon budgets.

It is uncertain how many veterans would be affected by the proposed change, which would concern only those with private health insurance. As many as 7 million veterans are enrolled in the VA health-care program, and about 5 million use VA facilities each year.

Some veterans groups voiced concern that the administration's plan could represent a move toward privatizing VA benefits.

Other experts said it reflects the broader dilemma of how to increase cost-sharing for medical care in comprehensive programs such as the VA one. "There has been no change in cost-sharing features for 10 or 12 or more years," said William Winkenwerder Jr., the Pentagon's former top health official, who runs a private health strategy and consulting firm in the Washington area. "That is what is most responsible for driving up the cost of those programs to the government," he said.

Still, any proposals to increase cost-sharing "tend not to be very popular politically, especially at this time," Winkenwerder said.


Tuesday, February 24, 2009

The Pres. Speaks to Congress - ((( and we will rebound with Optimism ))) YES, WE CAN DO IT!

wp logo letter icon Feedback
News Alert
9:15 p.m. ET Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Obama: 'We Will Rebuild, We Will Recover'
In an address to Congress tonight, Obama pushes efforts aimed at creating jobs, encouraging lending and investing in energy, health care and education -- "even as we make hard choices to bring our deficit down." According to prepared text, Obama also vows to crack down on bonuses at financial institutions that get government aid.

For live coverage, video and instant analysis, visit washingtonpost.com

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Dear Mr. Obama, Dear Gov. Kaine: you asked for my economic crisis - recovery story

For BJ Mesterman, wherever you are:

--- On Tue, 2/24/09, Abbe Buck ABPA (703) 753-4100 wrote:
From: Abbe Buck ABPA (703) 753-4100
Subject: Re: Your economic crisis story - I borrowed $10 K from a 19 year old
To: info@barackobama.com
Cc: abbe@highviz.net
Date: Tuesday, February 24, 2009, 6:55 AM


Dear Mr. Obama, Mr. Plouffe, Mitch, Gov. Kaine (D-VA),
 
I almost lost my business after 10 years.
 
My husband and I borrowed $10,000 from our son's college savings for our morgage. AFTER he lost $10,000 of this money in his mutual fund. Fortunately, we took out the entire $22,000 that was left when we borrowed the 10K.
 
It proves we raised our boy well. Why? He has decided to go for his doctorate - in History.
 
My son is 19.
 
Bleak times. But!  I wish I could help you bolster your boss to speak more optimistically.

((((How about the 'seedlings of recovery" stories?)))))
 
Thanks, Mitch!
 
Abbe Buck,
DC Metro (703) 753-4100
 
ABPA "We Can Do It!"
 
Abbe Buck / APR / PAO / ABPA
fyi* HighViz is now doing business as Abbe Buck Public Affairs
1-800-380-2825  / (703) 753-4100
 
   
 
 LinkedIn     
 


--- On Mon, 2/9/09, Mitch Stewart, BarackObama.com wrote:
From: Mitch Stewart, BarackObama.com <info@barackobama.com>
Subject: Your economic crisis story
To: "Abbe Buck "
Date: Monday, February 9, 2009, 1:23 PM

Organizing for America
Abbe --

Americans have organized Economic Recovery House Meetings in all 50 states -- including 382 in California, 255 in Florida, 115 in Ohio, 199 in New York, 105 in Washington, and 149 in Texas.

That's more than 3,587 meetings in 1,579 cities and 429 congressional districts.

This past weekend, meeting hosts and guests watched a video of Governor Tim Kaine answering your questions about the president's recovery plan. Then they shared their own stories about how the crisis has affected them.

Watch Governor Kaine's video and share your economic crisis story.

Watch the video

The media is filled with numbers about the economic crisis. But the numbers do not tell the full story.

The story of this crisis is in homes across the country -- homes where a family member has lost a job, where parents are struggling to pay a mortgage, and where college tuition has slipped out of reach.

That's also where the story of our recovery begins -- in communities where repairing roads and bridges, manufacturing green technologies, and rehabilitating our schools and hospitals will directly impact the lives of ordinary people and their families.

President Obama's recovery plan will help struggling families right now by saving or creating up to 4 million jobs. But it will also help strengthen our economy for the future by investing in crucial infrastructure projects in health care, education, and energy.

Share your story about how this economic crisis is affecting you and your family and join your fellow Americans in supporting bold action to speed our recovery:

http://my.barackobama.com/sharestories

Thank you for organizing so much support at this crucial moment for our country,

Mitch

Mitch Stewart
Director
Organizing for America



Paid for by Organizing for America, a project of the Democratic National Committee -- 430 South Capitol Street SE, Washington, D.C. 20003. This communication is not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.

This email was sent to: ABBE

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Saturday, January 17, 2009

HighViz Introduces Abbe Buck Public Affairs

HighViz Introduces Abbe Buck Public Affairs

Washington, DC, Sat., January 17, 2009: HighViz / (ABBE  BUCK  PUBLIC  AFFAIRS) is focused on providing attention to detail and the specific needs of each project that is delegated to us. We recognize the unique situations of every effort that we are consulted on. As HighViz would say, "there is no "one size fits all" in any of the work that we do!"

HighViz/ABPA sees their strong marketing, research and journalism backgrounds as providing them with an edge over most public relations/marketing communications service providers, This is most particular in the areas of crisis management, public outreach and awareness campaigns.

A "stealth" approach: HVCG/ABPA thrives when a client should need "not for public knowledge" information within non-penetrated [market] areas where they will have a need for their own growth and expansion. We also like to determine different paths that a customer may seek to travel on via "needs analysis" and full strategy audits within public and private sector organizations. We build on several years of research in many areas, both Federal and Commercial to create and implement results-driven business. This leads us to working to market public outreach programs for a variety of target audiences in order to define our own customer's goals. We also initiate intensive press and publicity efforts designed to shape and define image, reputation and leadership position for public and private sector organizations. We have achieved significant results, both in media attention and public responsiveness.

As HVCG/ABPA Sstarts work with each new client, the company works in a "storyboard" process: from the beginning we discover: what goals do they seek to accomplish? What "sequence of events" is vital to get them there? The objectives that we have in this template become part of each organizations backbone, and is continued to be references upon.

Abbe Buck Public Affairs/HighViz Federal
: In HighViz's past performance (ten years) within the Federal Government, they have focused their efforts with the Department of Defense, Health and Human Services and other Civilian "service - based" agencies. As Government Agency Laision and seasoned facilitator, Abbe Buck (principal HighViz) has worked with top DC law firms, associations, organizations, foundations, information management and technology offices, and major Fortune 1000 Corporations. Ms Buck has developed a knowledge base of expertise within federal agencies that reached non-profits to all facets of federal contracting including security (NISPOM).  Note: Abbe Buck is a Registered Shipley Consultant and has secured  $50 MM contracts (ALLIANT) for firms from ASSYST to BearingPoint, Inc.

SERVICES SNAPSHOT: In recent work with top government contractors, HVCG/ABPA has specialized in consulting to contractors whom provided government agencies, law fims, Service Disabled Veteran Owned Businesses, Federal agencies, including Health and Hunman Services, Department of State, Education and the US Army, and prime information technology, (networking products and services). We have then gone a step further to act in a communications "matchmaker", strategic alliance-type-capacity with smaller, but equally reputable companies that seeks to bring their services to market, and will have a healthy effect on the "prime"return on investment within the first year of service.

QUESTIONS? Contact Abbe Buck Public Affairs at 1-800-380-2825

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