Épisodes

  • 7x Sports Emmy Award Winner: Navigating the Unpredictable Paradox in Sports Media
    May 4 2026

    In our latest episode, we analyze the decline of the "subjective shield," or old belief system, where performance measures are based on tradition versus data. We analyze the latency crisis, where there is almost zero distance to events and the ability to profit from them, along with the volatility paradox arising from the extraordinary increase in gambling in the industry, while most traditional sports organizations have gone out of business.

    Jeff Bennett, creator of ESPN Analytics, an industry leader in sports wagering analytics, has been a major contributor, from the 1994 tape room through the current executive suite. We explore the arts and sciences of content creation, but we will demonstrate mathematically how traditional storytelling will be replaced by mathematics. Also, we will see an industry move to an all-direct-to-consumer model without reliance on the traditional RSN model or fractional executive leadership.

    Finally, we articulate a "Free Agent Playbook" for the modern professional by helping them to understand that layoffs are strategic decommissions and not individual failures. We will help to close the gap between academia and a high-stakes economy by developing specialized skill sets that, based on innovative development through "Just in Time" methods, will retain their usefulness into the future.

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    59 min
  • Finals Review (Entr'acte)
    2 min
  • Championship Pivot
    2 min
  • The College Athlete-Executive: Navigating the World of Modern Sports
    Apr 29 2026

    As UCLA Athletics dominates the national stage, the traditional "Amateur Shield"—a century-old barrier that once kept college sports isolated from the professional market—has officially collapsed. With student-athlete compensation projected to hit $6 billion by 2030, the role of the athletic director has fundamentally shifted from a rule enforcer to a builder of professional career foundations. This episode explores "institutional lag," which is the dangerous gap between slow university policies and the lightning-fast world of AI-driven branding and revenue sharing. We examine UCLA’s transition toward Continuous Career Support, where the university acts as a lifelong partner that regularly updates an athlete’s business skills.

    By moving beyond simple "4-year eligibility" and focusing on immediate market readiness, UCLA ensures its 700+ student-athletes graduate as business-ready leaders rather than just players.

    In addition to addressing the reality that 68% of all athletes have contracts worth less than $1,000 by offering professional development opportunities to help them succeed in the marketplace after their careers and preparing for the shift in 2027 through the elimination of traditional industrial age-based systems (i.e., basic resume writing courses), the university is investing in new forms of technology to create digital skills and brand-building programs. Finally, UCLA is creating a new model for the student-athlete executive by training its students to be able to successfully navigate the future where over 70% of jobs will require entirely different skill sets than they do now. This paper will describe how the university is creating a sustainable model for a degree long after the current decade of sports will end.

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    36 min
  • The Academic Boardroom Theme Song
    Apr 26 2026

    The Official Theme of the Academic Boardroom.
    Blending the precision of an ivory tower with the rhythm of an executive suite.

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    2 min
  • Is the College Degree Dead?
    Apr 20 2026

    Media Inquiries: support@TheAcademicBoardroom.com
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    Co-Hosted by Dr. Eli Joseph & Dr. Janice Gassam Asare
    Guest: Dean Angie Kamath (Dean of the New York University School of Professional Studies)
    Credits: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt41892604/?ref_=nm_knf_t_1

    Episode Synopsis:
    For decades, the American university degree served as an "academic shield"—a form of professional insurance that provided a consistent buffer against economic volatility. But in 2026, that shield is thinning. Join The Academic Boardroom co-hosts, Dr. Eli Joseph and Dr. Janice Gassam Asare, for a high-stakes dialogue with Dean Angie Kamath of the NYU School of Professional Studies (NYU SPS) as we explore the evolving value of higher education in an AI-driven economy.

    From the "entry-level vacuum" created by automation to the collapse of institutional trust, we dissect why a "utility-based" mandate is forcibly replacing the traditional "prestige-based" model of education. The Erosion of the Academic Shield. The data is unmistakable: the "automatic privilege" once associated with a degree has largely dissipated. The Shrinking Gap: The unemployment gap between college degree holders and high school graduates has plummeted from 6% in 2010 to just 1% today.

    The 5.8% Reality: Young professionals (ages 22-27) now experience an unemployment rate of 5.8%—nearly double that of the overall university-educated workforce. The Entry-Level Vacuum: In sectors like finance and insurance, youth hiring has decreased by 14% as algorithms complete routine tasks 40% faster than human graduates.

    The Internal Crisis: Prestige vs. Competence. Beyond external market pressures, higher education faces a self-inflicted "trust crisis." As highlighted by recent reports, elite institutions are struggling with a "signaling failure."

    The Grade Inflation Trap: With 79% of grades at elite institutions now issued as an A or A-, the GPA has lost its power as a differentiator for employers seeking top-tier talent.

    The Digital Baseline: 78% of young workers now require digital competencies that were once considered "exclusive" benefits of a degree, but are now the bare minimum requirement for entry. NYU SPS:

    The Shift to Utility-Based Education. As a recognized powerbroker at the intersection of industry demand and economic mobility, Dean Angie Kamath discusses how NYU SPS is redefining the institutional mission.

    Beyond the "4-Year Closed Cycle": We examine the death of the "load and release" model—where students are loaded with theory for four years and released for a 40-year career—and the pivot toward a continuous adaptation process.

    The "Live Lab" Experience: Discover how NYU SPS uses internships and real-world applications to ensure students are "producers of value" rather than just consumers of theory.

    The Subscriber Model: Could the future of elite education look like a lifelong "portal" for skill verification and professional "state management"? The Boardroom Directive: 2027 and Beyond. By 2027, most occupations will require entirely different skill sets than they do today.

    This episode serves as a directive for students, educators, and executives alike. We conclude that while the degree is not dead, it is no longer sufficient on its own. It must become a "starting point" for a lifelong career event—a persistent network of industry logic that ensures the student remains the architect of the new economy rather than its casualty. Key Discussion Points:

    The AI Efficiency Gap: How students can remain indispensable when machines outperform them in the first 24 months of a career. Contextual Intelligence: Why "human skills" like empathy and complex problem-solving are now the decisive factors for 63% of employers.

    Reclaiming the ROI: Justifying the high-risk financial decision of a degree in the face of $1.7 trillion in national student debt.

    To hear the full 42-minute deep dive on the 'Academic Shield' with Dean Angie Kamath, listen to the latest episode of The Academic Boardroom here.

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    42 min