The Jewish world has no regulatory body, no guidance, and no supervision when it comes to media
IFyou know my name, then you know that usually I try to inspire people. Today I’m aiming for something different.
My career trajectory started out in sports — I was a wet-behind-the-ears, twenty-something agent chasing NBA sign ups. I then segued into sports-related law and marketing and took a sharp turn and unusual from there. Today I am proud to say I am the founder and CEO of the Meaningful Minute.
Five years ago, in an effort to share my own search for inspiration, I started assembling short, one-minute inspirational videos from famous speakers and sent them out to what turned out to be an ever-expanding list of subscribers. Meaningful Minute grew organically and now the site provides a spiritual and emotional message to tens of thousands of Jews all over the world, every single day.
I also co-host of a weekly podcast called Meaningful People, whose mission is to introduce influential, impactful and meaningful people in the Jewish world to a broad audience. Suffice to say that I’ve had a lot of exposure to social media and I am positioned to bring up a very worrying and distasteful issue facing our contemporary Jewish community.
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