Anonymous ID: 38ae90 July 9, 2019, 12:27 a.m. No.6964252   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Going to repost this because I think it's important.

 

Not sure if this has been dug up previously so I will post it considering how interesting it is.

 

Tom Steyers brother Jim Steyer

 

Jim Steyer - Steyer has been teaching courses as a professor at Stanford University in political science, education, civil rights and civil liberties for 28 years.[12][13] He also authored two books: The Other Parent: The Inside Story of the Media’s Effect on our Children, which focuses on the effects certain media and government regulators have on children, and Talking Back to Facebook: The Common Sense Guide to Raising Kids in the Digital Age.[14] His former students include New Jersey Senator Cory Booker, former National Security Adviser Susan Rice, and Chelsea Clinton, who he raved was such a “star student” that he hired her as a teaching assistant and research aide.[15]

 

Steyer founded his first child advocacy venture, Children Now, in 1988. Children Now was one of the main lobbying groups that fought for the three-hour-a-week educational children's programming quota which eventually became law. The group also became well known for publishing a “report card” on California’s children. This report card helped to shed light on important statistics. One of the red flags the report card raised was that one-fifth of California children lacked health insurance and only half were immunized.[16]

 

Shortly after starting Children Now, Steyer noticed a serious need for high-quality educational TV programs for kids. In response he started JP Kids in 1996, a for-profit company that produced such shows as "The Famous Jett Jackson", which aired on the Disney Channel. Steyer served as the company’s Chairman and CEO.[7] Under Steyer’s guidance, the company used various platforms to broadcast more educational and entertaining content. JP Kids also provided an online outlet for teens to share opinions, explore alternative points of views and discuss political and environmental topics.[17][9]

 

Steyer was awarded Stanford's highest teaching honor, the Walter J. Gores Award for Excellence in Teaching, which is awarded annually to three Stanford professors, in 2010. Stanford students also voted for him to be Class Day speaker during Stanford’s graduation exercises.[18] In 2011, the New York Times reported that Steyer was helping build the Center for the Next Generation, a nonprofit that aims to influence public policy debates focused on national children’s and energy issues.[9]

 

When Google announced in January 2012 that it would be compiling data about users from across its many sites, Steyer was quoted as saying that "Even if the company believes that tracking users across all platforms improves their services, consumers should still have the option to opt out — especially the kids and teens who are avid users of YouTube, Gmail and Google Search.[19] In 2012, the Department of Education and the F.C.C. recruited Steyer as the chairman of the Leading Education by Advancing Digital (LEAD) Commission, which enhances digital devices and curriculums in schools.[13][20] Steyer is also a partner with Hillary Clinton on the Too Small to Fail initiative.[21]

 

In June 2016, Steyer was included on Tech & Learning's 2016 List of the Most Influential People in Edtech.[22] That same year, Steyer launched the Common Sense Kids campaign through Common Sense Media creating "a mass army for kids" by focusing on children's issues in the political field.[23][13]

 

  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Steyer

 

This guy has his hands in a lot of pies including Disney. Hmm, I wonder if there is some connection between this guy and that kid from Disney and the movie Grown Ups.