
Jake Goodman
Articles
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Dec 6, 2024 |
harbus.org | Jake Goodman
Jake Goodman (MBA ’26) shares thoroughly unelaborate musings from the Grille. Ah, 2025. As the descent into the end of this quarter century approaches, I stand, or rather sit, poised in a calm crimson booth in Harvard Business School’s Grille, musing on the year ahead, a pepperoni polka-dotted pizza beside me. As I stare into the viscous oil lazily glazed upon my slice, I am reminded of the oh so obvious parallel to the future – viscous enough to be murky but translucent enough to peer through it.
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Oct 31, 2024 |
harbus.org | Jake Goodman
The app HBS needs for last-minute tickets. And indeed there will be timeTo wonder, “Do I dare?” and, “Do I dare?”Time to turn back and descend the stair- T.S. Eliot, “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”As the beginning of the semester unfolded in a flurry, a veritable resale marketplace for ticketed events sprung up across the dual horsemen of intra-HBS communication – WhatsApp and Slack.
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Oct 2, 2024 |
harbus.org | Jake Goodman
Protein is reinventing legacy CPG categories. Once relegated to the pantry shelves of bodybuilders and health buffs, protein has risen to become a staple ingredient in your waffles, pasta, and even gummies. In an era where consumers demand more from their food – more nutrition, more function, and more convenience – protein-packed products have lately become rising stars of the consumer packaged goods (CPG) industry.
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Oct 1, 2024 |
thepulseofnh.com | Youri Benadjaoud |Mary Kekatos |Jake Goodman |Liz Neporent
(NEW YORK) -- The number of kids dying from influenza in the 2023-2024 season has set a new record for a regular flu season, after one new death was reported last week, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). There were 200 pediatric flu-related deaths in the 2023-2024 season, compared to the previous high of 199 during the 2019-2022 season. About 80% of the kids that died from flu this season were not fully vaccinated against influenza, CDC data shows.
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Sep 29, 2024 |
thepulseofnh.com | Mary Kekatos |Jake Goodman |Liz Neporent |Scott Gummerson
While the United States has made considerable progress fighting the HIV/AIDS crisis since its peak in the 1980s, headway has not been equal among racial/ethnic groups. Overall, HIV rates have declined in the U.S. and the number of new infections over the last five years has dropped among Black Americans and white Americans. However, Hispanic and Latino Americans have not seen the same gains.
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