CapeMay
x = independently organized TED event

Theme: Common Ground

This event occurred on
October 14, 2018
Cape May, New Jersey
United States

On Sunday, October 14, 2018, from 9:00am-3:30pm, TEDxCapeMay returns for its seventh season to explore "Common Ground" through 12 outstanding and innovative presenters from a wide variety of fields. The event takes place in a 1,000 seat performing arts theater and includes snacks, gifts, and an open bar lunch reception at the Congress Hall Hotel.

For more information, go to www.TEDxCapeMay.com

- Talks + Reception: Tickets are $60 per person.

- Just Talks: Tickets to the program only (not including the open bar lunch reception at Congress Hall) are $30.

- Students: Tickets for high school and college students are $10 (not including the open bar lunch reception at Congress Hall).

The Paul Schmidtchen Theater
687 U.S. 9
Cape May, New Jersey, 08204
United States
Event type:
Standard (What is this?)
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Speakers

Speakers may not be confirmed. Check event website for more information.

Debjani Biswas

Author
The #metoo campaign launched a social media movement. So… now what? Enter DebjaniBiswas, an Amazon #1 bestselling author and executive coach who regularly appears on CBS, ESPN and iHeart Radio. Her latest book, #Ustoo, centers on ways all of us -- yes, ALL of us -- can recognize gender biases and smash them with the contempt they deserve. Her frameworks for increasing inclusivity have been implemented in more than 20 countries, her insights are fresh, and her TEDx Cape May talk promises to be -- hashtag -- brilliant.

Dee Wallace

Actress
You likely know Dee Wallace as Mary -- aka, the mom from Steven Spielberg’s ET: The Extra-Terrestrial. (Ahem, the woman who knocked America’s favorite alien with a refrigerator door.) But this Kansas-teacher-turned-prolific-actor is also an internationally acclaimed speaker who knows a thing or two about perseverance -- when she booked her first of more than 200 commercials, she had only $4 in her bank account. “I left for New York, and my mom thought I’d be a goner in a week,” she said on the talk-show circuit following the release of ET. Instead, she went on to make 130 films, author five books and, now, grace the stage of TEDx Cape May.

James Mtume

Musician
Jame’s Mtume’s name means “messenger” in Swahili, which is a bit on-the-nose for this Grammy Award-winning musician. A former percussionist for Miles Davis, the prolific songwriter also headed the band Mtume, a group that helped define R&B’s jazz-funk roots. (Parts of their song “Juicy Fruit,” which you may recognize from the Grand Theft Auto soundtrack, have been incorporated into recordings by Snoop Dogg, Alicia Keys, Faith Evans, Jennifer Lopez and many more.) While the Philadelphia native’s pedigree also includes composing for motion pictures and producing for the likes of Mary J Blige and R Kelly, he’s equally well known for his activism. Formerly the host of the number one black talk radio show in New York, Mtume uses his platform to promote the role of music in defining a generation and advancing social progression, one song a time.

Jenn Graham

Social entrepreneur
Jenn Graham has a clear passion for raising awareness, understanding, and collective action around important issues from racial equity to transportation to early childhood education. This civic focus is on display throughout Civic Dinners and Aha! Strategy, the two companies she serves as founder and CEO. Her latest endeavor, Civic Dinners is an award-winning civic engagement platform that brings diverse voices together for conversations that matter. More than 500 dinners have taken place worldwide, from Atlanta to Auckland, and have sparked real and lasting change, including the launch of several nonprofits, new companies and newly elected civic leaders. Jenn has received numerous accolades for her innovative approach to business and civic matters.

Katya Simonsen

Student
If the children are our future, then the future’s looking bright. At least, that’s the case with Katya Simonsen, president of the junior class at Lower Cape May Regional High School. An honorstudent and three-season athlete, Katya is also an entrepreneur who sells her own paintings. It’s not just a side hustle -- it’s a business that thrusts the local community into greater identification with the power of art to connect: classmates, neighbors, even generations. Katya will take a break from dismantling millennial stereotypes to share her insights on the TEDx stage. Kids these days.

Logan Thomas

Student

Michael Eagle

Educator, Musician
Michael Eagle is a new voice in the revolution in education. Having taught for nearly 20 years in US public schools and academia including the University of Texas, New York University, and Stony Brook University, Michael left what he describes as the "exhausted" traditional system to design and develop innovative educational products that combine accessible technology with personal interaction. "To innovate inside the classroom, we must realize how we learn outside of the classroom." Michael is also a World Champion drummer and percussionist who teaches and performs all over the world focusing on cultural reflections in music. He is also the Co-Founder & CEO of Rhythm Monster, an online education company quoted as "The Khan Academy of Drumming and Percussion."

Paul Jaffe

Engineer
A satellite capable of harnessing solar power from outer space and beaming it back to Earth may be the tense sci-fi plot of the James Bond film “Die Another Day,” but if spacecraft engineer Paul Jaffe has his way, this uber-tech could become reality. Paul, who has held major roles in dozens of space missions, has a plan for implementing a space-based solar program that could result in the world’s only clean, constant and global energy supply -- rainy days bedamned. In other words: Houston, we have power. And Cape May? We have a seriously engaging talk.

Richard Crossley

Wildlife author & photogapher
While it’s impossible to know the exact number of birdwatchers in America (estimates range from 45 million to upwards of 60 million), it’s safe to say the hobby has… taken flight. And Richard Crossley, internationally acclaimed birder, has key insights into why. The award-winning author and photographer knows just how minimal our differences with other animals are -- despite what society believes -- and he advocates connecting with nature in order to rediscover our common ground. His lessons from the birding frontlines promise to engage not just those enamored by all things avian, but those who can’t tell the difference between a warbler and a wren. The fact that the talk is happening in Cape May, major migratory route and internationally renowned birding destination? That’s enough to put anyone in fine feather.

Richard Crossley

While it’s impossible to know the exact number of birdwatchers in America (estimates range from 45 million to upwards of 60 million), it’s safe to say the hobby has… taken flight. And Richard Crossley, internationally acclaimed birder, has key insights into why. The award-winning author and photographer knows just how minimal our differences with other animals are -- despite what society believes -- and he advocates connecting with nature in order to rediscover our common ground. His lessons from the birding frontlines promise to engage not just those enamored by all things avian, but those who can’t tell the difference between a warbler and a wren. The fact that the talk is happening in Cape May, major migratory route and internationally renowned birding destination? That’s enough to put anyone in fine feather.

Sanjana Buddi

Student

Sofia Graziano

Student

Organizing team

Norris
Clark

Cape May, NJ, United States
Organizer