Bernard A. Flynn (born 8 January 1964) is an entrepreneur, businessman, investor and founder of a number of consultancy and advisory companies. These companies operate mainly in the areas of strategy, optimisation, innovation and creativity, working across a number of sectors in Europe, Asia and the Americas.
He is founder of Katawave, BeChange, Red Planet, Promech, Ideaz, Black Swan Global, Synecco and is a principal investor in Grid Finance.
Flynn is a sponsor of the cross Atlantic challenge, and has participated in several ironman challenges.
Other companies associated with Flynn included BeChange, Promech, Synecco, Ideaz, Global Blackswan, Boomerang Investments and Katawave. Katawave works with clients to "re-imagine Corporate, Business unit or Product Strategies".<ref name="droghedaind"/>
He is founder of Katawave, BeChange, Red Planet, Promech, Ideaz, Black Swan Global, Synecco and is a principal investor in Grid Finance.
Flynn is a sponsor of the cross Atlantic challenge, and has participated in several ironman challenges.
Other companies associated with Flynn included BeChange, Promech, Synecco, Ideaz, Global Blackswan, Boomerang Investments and Katawave. Katawave works with clients to "re-imagine Corporate, Business unit or Product Strategies".<ref name="droghedaind"/>
Pleasure Mob are London based indie electro-rock band formed in 2009 by Douglas Hall & Nathan Von Boventer, both from the Bath and Bristol area.
Playing a mix of New Wave & soulful Indie Electro, Pleasure Mob have had some critical successes with positive reviews & endorsements from blogs and websites including Noise collective, NME and Telegraph.co.uk
In 2010 they started their own label RMSMB Records and released several songs through distributor AWAL including "So Hard" and "Where's My Money" featuring the voice of Peter Dickson. They were also included on Centrepoint's Key To Change album release which featured other artists including Ian Brown and Johnny Marr.
Playing a mix of New Wave & soulful Indie Electro, Pleasure Mob have had some critical successes with positive reviews & endorsements from blogs and websites including Noise collective, NME and Telegraph.co.uk
In 2010 they started their own label RMSMB Records and released several songs through distributor AWAL including "So Hard" and "Where's My Money" featuring the voice of Peter Dickson. They were also included on Centrepoint's Key To Change album release which featured other artists including Ian Brown and Johnny Marr.
Rubber Tea is a Progressive rock band formed in 2017 in Bremen, Germany. The group consists of Vanessa Gross (vocals, saxophone, flute), Lennart Hinz (vocals, keyboards), David Erzmann (bass), Jonas Roustai (guitars) and Henri Pink (drums). In 2020 Rubber Tea published their debut studio album Infusion at Sireena records.
History
In 2019 Rubber Tea played on several festivals including the Burg-Herzberg-Festival, Europe's biggest outdoor hippie festival.
Since 2018 the band worked on their debut album Infusion. The album was released on 5 June 2020 digitally, as well as on CD and vinyl at their label Sireena Records. "Infusion" received very positive critics.
Discography
* 2020: Infusion (studio album, Sireena Records)
History
In 2019 Rubber Tea played on several festivals including the Burg-Herzberg-Festival, Europe's biggest outdoor hippie festival.
Since 2018 the band worked on their debut album Infusion. The album was released on 5 June 2020 digitally, as well as on CD and vinyl at their label Sireena Records. "Infusion" received very positive critics.
Discography
* 2020: Infusion (studio album, Sireena Records)
Nigel Golden is a wildlife ecologist and social justice activist at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. His research on ground squirrels has appeared in numerous media outlets.
Research
Golden's work in Denali National Park, Alaska, focuses on understanding how the Arctic ground squirrel (Urocitellus parryii) is responding to the rapidly-changing climate. Nigel's early research on these squirrels took place in Cherskii, Siberia as part of the Polaris Project, where he began to examine the role that these squirrels play in regulating greenhouse gas emission from thawing permafrost soils as they bury in the ground. His current research also combines geospatial analysis, occupancy modeling, and population genetics to track and predict the ecology of this keystone species, with the ultimate end-goal of helping resource managers in Alaska better track the squirrels .
Social Justice Activism
Nigel is one of the co-founders of the University of Massachusetts' BRIDGE program, which brings scholars from underrepresented groups to campus to present a research seminar, a journey through academia presentation, and a lunch with students.
Awards and Recognition
Nigel is the recipient of the National Science Foundation's Graduate Research Fellowship Program, the National Geographical Society's Explorer fellowship, and the Switzer fellowship. He was recently invited back to the Polaris Project to serve as a faculty advisor. His work has also appeared on the BBC, the Smithsonian Magazine.
Research
Golden's work in Denali National Park, Alaska, focuses on understanding how the Arctic ground squirrel (Urocitellus parryii) is responding to the rapidly-changing climate. Nigel's early research on these squirrels took place in Cherskii, Siberia as part of the Polaris Project, where he began to examine the role that these squirrels play in regulating greenhouse gas emission from thawing permafrost soils as they bury in the ground. His current research also combines geospatial analysis, occupancy modeling, and population genetics to track and predict the ecology of this keystone species, with the ultimate end-goal of helping resource managers in Alaska better track the squirrels .
Social Justice Activism
Nigel is one of the co-founders of the University of Massachusetts' BRIDGE program, which brings scholars from underrepresented groups to campus to present a research seminar, a journey through academia presentation, and a lunch with students.
Awards and Recognition
Nigel is the recipient of the National Science Foundation's Graduate Research Fellowship Program, the National Geographical Society's Explorer fellowship, and the Switzer fellowship. He was recently invited back to the Polaris Project to serve as a faculty advisor. His work has also appeared on the BBC, the Smithsonian Magazine.