Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Dave Goldberg Was Lifelong Women's Advocate



Photo Dave Goldberg and his wife at a tech conference in 2013. Both often left their offices at 5:30 to eat dinner with their children. Credit Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

Even as a high school student, Dave Goldberg was urging female classmates to speak up. As a young dot-com executive, he had one girlfriend after another, but fell hard for a driven friend named Sheryl Sandberg, pining after her for years. After they wed, Mr. Goldberg pushed her to negotiate hard for high compensation and arranged his schedule so that he could be home with their children when she was traveling for work.

Mr. Goldberg, who died unexpectedly on Friday, was a genial, 47-year-old Silicon Valley entrepreneur who built his latest company, SurveyMonkey, from a modest enterprise to one recently valued by investors at $2 billion. But he was also perhaps the signature male feminist of his era: the first major chief executive in memory to spur his wife to become as successful in business as he was, and an essential figure in Lean In, Ms. Sandbergs blockbuster guide to female achievement.

Over the weekend, even strangers were shocked at his death, both because of his relatively young age and because they knew of him as the living, breathing, car-pooling center of a new philosophy of two-career marriage.

They were very much the role models for what this next generation wants to grapple with, said Debora L. Spar, the president of Barnard College. In a 2011 commencement speech there, Ms. Sandberg told the graduates that whom they married would be their most important career decision.

In the play The Heidi Chronicles, revived on Broadway this spring, a male character who is the founder of a media company says that I dont want to come home to an A-plus, explaining that his ambitions require him to marry an unthreatening helpmeet. Mr. Goldberg grew up to hold the opposite view, starting with his upbringing in progressive Minneapolis circles where there was woman power in every aspect of our lives, Jeffrey Dachis, a childhood friend, said in an interview.

The Goldberg parents read The Feminine Mystique together in fact, Mr. Goldbergs father introduced it to his wife, according to Ms. Sandbergs book. In 1976, Paula Goldberg helped found a nonprofit to aid children with disabilities. Her husband, Mel, a law professor who taught at night, made the family breakfast at home.

Later, when Dave Goldberg was in high school and his prom date, Jill Chessen, stayed silent in a politics class, he chastised her afterward. He said, You need to speak up, Ms. Chessen recalled in an interview. They need to hear your voice.

Years later, when Karin Gilford, an early employee at Launch Media, Mr. Goldbergs digital music company, became a mother, he knew exactly what to do. He kept giving her challenging assignments, she recalled, but also let her work from home one day a week. After Yahoo acquired Launch, Mr. Goldberg became known for distributing roses to all the women in the office on Valentines Day.

Ms. Sandberg, who often describes herself as bossy-in-a-good-way, enchanted him when they became friendly in the mid-1990s. He was smitten with her, Ms. Chessen remembered. Ms. Sandberg was dating someone else, but Mr. Goldberg still hung around, even helping her and her then-boyfriend move, recalled Bob Roback, a friend and co-founder of Launch. When they finally married in 2004, friends remember thinking how similar the two were, and that the qualities that might have made Ms. Sandberg intimidating to some men drew Mr. Goldberg to her even more.

Over the next decade, Mr. Goldberg and Ms. Sandberg pioneered new ways of capturing information online, had a son and then a daughter, became immensely wealthy, and hashed out their who-does-what-in-this-marriage issues. Mr. Goldbergs commute from the Bay Area to Los Angeles became a strain, so he relocated, later joking that he lost the coin flip of where they would live. He paid the bills, she planned the birthday parties, and both often left their offices at 5:30 so they could eat dinner with their children before resuming work afterward.

Friends in Silicon Valley say they were careful to conduct their careers separately, politely refusing when outsiders would ask one about the others work: Ms. Sandbergs role building Facebook into an information and advertising powerhouse, and Mr. Goldberg at SurveyMonkey, which made polling faster and cheaper. But privately, their work was intertwined. He often began statements to his team with the phrase Well, Sheryl said sharing her business advice. He counseled her, too, starting with her salary negotiations with Mark Zuckerberg.

I wanted Mark to really feel he stretched to get Sheryl, because she was worth it, Mr. Goldberg explained in a 2013 60 Minutes interview, his Minnesota accent and his smile intact as he offered a rare peek of the intersection of marriage and money at the top of corporate life.

While his wife grew increasingly outspoken about womens advancement, Mr. Goldberg quietly advised the men in the office on family and partnership matters, an associate said. Six out of 16 members of SurveyMonkeys management team are female, an almost unheard-of ratio among Silicon Valley unicorns, or companies valued at over $1 billion.

When Mellody Hobson, a friend and finance executive, wrote a chapter of Lean In about women of color for the college edition of the book, Mr. Goldberg gave her feedback on the draft, a clue to his deep involvement. He joked with Ms. Hobson that she was too long-winded, like Ms. Sandberg, but aside from that, he said he loved the chapter, she said in an interview.

By then, Mr. Goldberg was a figure of fascination who inspired a where can I get one of those? reaction among many of the women who had read the best seller Lean In. Some lamented that Ms. Sandbergs advice hinged too much on marrying a Dave Goldberg, who was humble enough to plan around his wife, attentive enough to worry about which shoes his young daughter would wear, and rich enough to help pay for the help that made the familys balancing act manageable.

Now that he is gone, and Ms. Sandberg goes from being half of a celebrated partnership to perhaps the business worlds most prominent single mother, the pages of Lean In carry a new sting of loss.

We are never at 50-50 at any given moment perfect equality is hard to define or sustain but we allow the pendulum to swing back and forth between us, she wrote in 2013, adding that they were looking forward to raising teenagers together.

Fortunately, I have Dave to figure it out with me, she wrote.

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/04/technology/david-goldbergs-lifetime-of-advocating-for-women.html



Continue Reading ..

How do Blackhawks prepare for games? Sewer ball, for some



In a hallway deep inside the United Center before a recent game, Blackhawks players are playing a boisterous contest of what many call "sewer ball."

Outside the dressing room, Patrick Sharp is sitting on the floor with his back against the wall, headphones on, bouncing a tennis ball off anything that catches his eye.

Inside the dressing room, captain Jonathan Toews sits at his stall deep in thought, visualizing making plays good and bad to mentally prepare himself for what lays ahead.

While pregame activities differ for each player, they serve a vital role.

"It's really important," Sharp said. "There are a lot of ups and downs throughout a season individually and as a team and that game preparation, whether you have a superstition or a routine, whatever you want to call it, it kind of puts you into that comfort zone and gets you ready to play the game and be ready for whatever can happen."

The most popular pregame warmup is sewer ball, also known as two-touch, and it usually starts with Andrew Shaw and Bryan Bickell departing the dressing room in search of an empty hallway. When they find one, whether at the UC or another NHL arena, the pair begins to kick around a blue soccer ball. Soon, Hawks teammates join in and the group becomes a circle.

It's great fun but also helps work out the kinks and gets their bodies warmed up for three hours of skating and hitting.

The objective of sewer ball is to keep the ball in the air with each player allowed two touches but not with their hands before sending it toward a teammate. If the ball hits the ground, the offending player is out and the game continues until one remains. In the process, some remarkable athletic feats often occur and hilarity can ensue as b***s ricochet off garbage cans, overhead lights and on occasion, passersby.

The origin of the name sewer ball is unclear, but some say it's because the game inspires a certain level of gamesmanship or dubious "rat moves" to succeed.

And, of course, then there is the chirping.

"We call (Marcus) Kruger 'the worst,'" Shaw said with a grin. "He isn't, but we try to get into his head a little bit."

The reigning sewer ball champion is Niklas Hjalmarsson, which makes sense because as a teenager the defenseman participated in Swedish national team tryouts for soccer and hockey.

"It was a tough choice for me when I was younger to decide what to play," Hjalmarsson said. "For a while, I thought about quitting hockey and going all in on soccer. I just liked the more physical aspect of hockey. It's more intense."

During sewer ball, Hjalmarsson doesn't display that intensity as much as Shaw and others do, and that can rankle those involved.

"His work ethic is questionable," Shaw said. "He's got a lot of skill, but I think guys like me and Bickell, guys who try to get every ball possible, sometimes it doesn't work in our favor. If (Hjalmarsson) doesn't think he can't handle it, he doesn't even try for it."

Of course, Hjalmarsson has a response.

"I don't move more than I have to," he said. "I save my energy for the hockey games while Shaw has too much energy so he's always all over the place, especially in sewer ball. He's really working hard."

While an occasional participant in the two-touch ritual, Sharp doesn't have a set routine for preparing for games.

"I'm a little different than most guys," he said. "I kind of go on that day based on how I feel. I do different things, whether it's stretching running, biking or jumping.

"One thing that is consistent is that I like to listen to music mostly Pearl Jam, they're my favorite band and I do have a tennis ball that's been with me since I started playing pro hockey. I just kind of throw that either off guys' backs when they're not looking or off the wall or play catch with somebody."

Wait a minute, Sharp uses the same tennis ball since breaking into the NHL in 2002?

"Same tennis ball," Sharp said. "It's pretty gross. We've had to put some sanitizer on to try to clean it as best we can, but it's the same one."

Not surprisingly, Toews takes a more serious tack during his pregame routine. There is no music or sewer ball.

"I just kind of sit around at my locker and visualize," Toews said. "It's not only to envision things that I want to do successfully, but sometimes it doesn't hurt to envision situations that maybe take your confidence away, like if you get scored on your first shift or if things don't go your way, how are you going to react? Are you going to try to bounce back and maintain your focus and say that it's all right, there's always a way out? That's a thing I've learned to focus on this year. I make sure the body is ready and my mind is in the right place and try to forget about anything else."

Whatever the formula, Kruger said the key for him and most players is to do the same things before each game.

"Most of the guys always try to do the same routine every day," he said. "You get here in the morning, skate and then you do a stretch and go home and maybe take a nap and then get ready for the game. It's getting mentally ready. If you do the same thing you know you're in game mode."

ckuc@tribpub.com

Twitter @ChrisKuc

Copyright 2015, Chicago Tribune

Source: http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/hockey/blackhawks/ct-blackhawks-pregame-ritual-spt-0504-20150503-story.html



Continue Reading ..

Monday, May 4, 2015

Spending a Gorgeous Saturday at Churchill Downs for the Kentucky Derby



SHARE ON WHATSAPPWHATSAPP

With a fewof my close friends, I did a quick, 48-hour trip to the Kentucky Derby. It was a blast, and an experience Id recommend to anybody thinking about it. Here are a few quick thoughts and observations about the weekend:

We stayed with my buddy in Louisville, who was gracious enough to host us as well as cooking jambalaya on Friday night, and slow-smoking briskets and ribs for 13 hours on Saturday. So, we were able to save big on hotel costs, which were predictably outrageous, and the total cost of the weekend was only about $200, which accounted for gas, meals, drinks, and infield tickets.

Evenif costs were equal, Id prefer to attend the Derby as opposed to having goneto Las Vegas for the Mayweather-Pacquaio fight, which wouldve cost several thousand dollars after airfare, tickets, hotel accommodations,food, drink, and gambling losses. While the Derby was of course not without its pomp and circumstance, it all felt so much more sincere and organic than any Vegas weekend does to me, let alone oneattended almost exclusively by celebrities and the ber-wealthy.

An anecdote which illustrates the laxness of security: The block outside of the entrance gate was cordonedoff from cars, and unlicensed vendors toted in coolers full of beer, which they were selling for $2. These entrepreneurs were operatingwith such impunity that they werent looking over their shoulders. It was fantastic.

While I regret not taking pictures, Im really not sure that photographs could aptly capture the scene inside the infield. Southern belles and their bro counterparts. Shirtless Dadbods galore. Drunkenness,sure, but not to the point of excess, at least from the pockets we observed. There would have undoubtedly been much more pretense in the far-more-pricey grandstands, but our day was a great snapshot of earnest Americana.

If you ever go to the Kentucky Derby, it is imperative to bring enough cash to last you the whole day. None of the food and drink booths accept credit cards, and the ATM lines wereupwards of an hour long. Drinks werentcheap, but we werent gouged either. Woodford Reserve on the rocks was $9 for a single, and $16 for a double, which isnt terribly more expensive than it would be at most bars. Mint juleps, which were $11 and came with a souvenir glass, were probably a better value from an alcohol-volume-to-dollar ratio. However, in my opinion, theyre kind of gross.

This is probably a bad thing to admit on the Internet, where everybodyloves to gamble, but we didnt actually put any money on the race. Our mindsetwas that we werent willing to wager enough such that it would have been worth it to wait in a long line afterwards to collect our winnings if our horse(s) had comein. Instead, we beelined it out of there, caught an Uber within two minutes, and made it back to my friends place fast enough that he was astonished to see us. This left more than enough time for us to catch Spurs-Clippers, and, later, the inevitably craptacular Pacquaio-Mayweather fight.

While Ty was happy to skip out on watching the Derby altogether, I was thrilled to have attended, and the race willalways beappointment viewing for me. My grandparents hosted an annual party, filled with great food and people, for the event that was always a highlight of my familys year. My grandmother, who I promise you possessed a proven-statistically-significant ability to impact the weather, ensured that it would always be 75 and sunny that day whether the weatherman concurred or not. Though she passed a little over a year ago, she blessed us with a similarly gorgeousday at Churchill Downs on Saturday, and it was impossible not to think about her, and smile, all day.

[Photo via Getty Images]

SHARE ON WHATSAPPWHATSAPP Because you want to see it first!

Like and follow The Big Lead today!

blog comments powered by Disqus

Source: http://thebiglead.com/2015/05/04/spending-a-gorgeous-saturday-at-churchill-downs-for-the-kentucky-derby/



Continue Reading ..

Carl Edwards upset with NASCAR drivers not...



TALLADEGA, Ala. There was no yellow flag on the final lap of Sundays Geico 500, but Carl Edwards was angry that some Sprint Cup drivers didnt proceed with caution.

Edwards finished 32nd after a collision with Casey Mears that caused a spin by his No. 19 Toyota, which slidsideways down the track as the field whizzed by.

I really think thats the most dangerous thing in the sport right now, Edwards said. When theres a wreck, guys have to get on the brake or were going to have a lot of problems.

The biggest cause of injury is going to be one of us not checking up when theres a guy sideways. Ive got my door facing the field, and (Justin Allgaier) goes by at about 160, 180 mph. Thats not the way I try to race these guys when theres a wreck. Thats very frustrating.

Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Matt Kenseth said he did slow down so I didnt send Carl to the hospital. Im just dumbfounded that NASCAR didnt throw a caution. We were driving past wrecked cars for half a lap at 180 mph. It was a crazy ending.

NASCAR has shown a reluctance to throw the yellow on the last lap because it freezes the field without the possibility of another restart.

We make every effort to try to finish under green-flag conditions, Sprint Cup managing director Richard Buck said in a statement distributed by NASCARs media relations staff. We believe the circumstances that occurred allowed us to do that today.

Edwards said he planned to talk with his NASCAR peers about being more mindful around cars that are spinning.

Because there was a wreck at the end of the Daytona 500, and I slowed down, and it cost us a bunch of positions, said the Joe Gibbs Racing driver, who finished 23rd in the season opener. I guess some people would say, Well, h**l, your job is to stay on the throttle and go race, but were all out there and are human beings. You get a guy wrecking, you cant just lay into his door. Thats pretty dangerous.Edwards did concede that he was making a nuanced point I come do all this complaining, and no one ran into me. But ooh. Its tough. Generally, if someone is spinning in front of you, you slow down a little bit, so if you do hit him, you dont break their legs or hurt them. I dont want to rant too much about it, but I was frustrated with that.

Source: http://nascartalk.nbcsports.com/2015/05/03/carl-edwards-upset-with-nascar-drivers-not-slowing-for-spin-thats-the-most-dangerous-thing-in-the-sport/



Continue Reading ..

Silicon Valley's Dave Goldberg dies



The Silicon Valley entrepreneur and SurveyMonkey Chief Executive Dave Goldberg has died suddenly at the age of 47, his family says.

Husband of Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg, Goldberg was a former Yahoo executive before joining Surveymonkey in 2009.

He expanded the online survey company leading to a valuation of $2bn (1.3bn), the Wall Street Journal says.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg described him as "an amazing person".

News of Goldberg's death was posted on Facebook by his brother, Robert.

"It's with incredible shock and sadness that I'm letting our friends and family know that my amazing brother, Dave Goldberg, beloved husband of Sheryl Sandberg, father of two wonderful children, and son of Paula Goldberg, passed away suddenly last night," he wrote.

Under Dave Goldberg, SurveyMonkey grew from a handful of employees to more than 450 and acquired 25 million customers.

His fortunes was closely linked to those of Silicon Valley - a media company founded by him, Launch Media, was taken over by Yahoo in 2001, just after the "dotcom bubble" burst.

In a profile by Business Insider, Goldberg describes how he and a friend started Launch Media, which delivered music online.

"I decided I had to start something. It was more the motivation to try running my own thing than because I had some brilliant idea."

Source: BBC

Source: http://starrfmonline.com/1.3406439



Continue Reading ..

Lindsey Vonn announces breakup with Tiger Woods



Skier Linsday Vonn announced Sunday that she and Tiger Woods are parting ways, citing the strain of their busy schedules.

After nearly three years together, Tiger and I have mutually decided to end our relationship, Vonn said in a Facebook post.

I will always cherish the memories that weve created together. Unfortunately, we both lead incredibly hectic lives that force us to spend a majority of our time apart. I will always admire and respect Tiger. He and his beautiful family will always hold a special place in my heart.

There was no immediate response from Woods.

In a 2014 interview with CNN, Vonn credited Woods with helping her get through a career-threatening knee injury.

The two were spotted together last month at the Masters Tournament in Augusta, Georgia.

Source: http://gantdaily.com/2015/05/03/lindsey-vonn-announces-breakup-with-tiger-woods/



Continue Reading ..

Sunday, May 3, 2015

Free Comic Book Day encourages reading



Fry sauce- Is this our claim to fame?

If our part of the country has its special food that is unique to us, I feel fry sauce could be a contender. You probably were thinking potatoes, but when it comes to something we feel is common and the rest of the country is clueless, then I think fry sauce is pretty special. You either love it or hate it. I love it. The combination of tangy, creamy, and savory. For me, it is actually a comfort food. I thought it was simply a mayo and ketchup mixture, but I was wrong. There is more to it than two plops and a stir. Now Im not trying to give the impression that there is something mysterious and complex about making fry sauce. As much as I enjoy it, it is still after all just a dip. But just like with many other recipes, a few ingredients can make all the difference. So, if you still feel that potatoes are our special food, then fry some up with a little fry sauce on the side.

Posted: April 27 | Comments (0)

Source: http://www.idahostatejournal.com/members/free-comic-book-day-encourages-reading/article_8c906e48-f172-11e4-b7f5-3bb5095433bc.html



Continue Reading ..