Showing posts with label Gregory J. Chamberlain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gregory J. Chamberlain. Show all posts

Gregory J. Chamberlain

Gregory J. Chamberlain is a serial entrepreneur, mostly in the music business where it intersects with TMT (technology, media & telecom) and EMT (entertainment, media & telecom), music video programming, music business affairs and related IP (intellectual property) management including song publishing, merchandising & licensing rights and domain management & related infringement detection & resolution.

As a music video programmer, he recently acquired MusicTV.Com and merged it into a network of music video brands, where he is the founder and sole owner at Music Television at MusicTelevision.Com, the "Indies" at TheIndies.Com and it's growing Indies Network of "Indies" brands across multiple other sectors, The Quiet Storm at TheQuietStorm.Com, X Music TV at XMusicTV.Com, and several offshoots, all powered by FreeV at FreeV.Com and it's digital web and intellectual property management service.

He was a early adopter and lived through the rise of Silicon Beach as a tech hub where it met the music, film and television industries, but many years ago started exploring fresher opportunities outside of California, such as in liberty centric zones like Wyoming, South Dakota, and eventually Texas.

He is the founder of the Jackson Hole, Wyoming, based brain-trust known as Silicon Hole. If Silicon Valley and Silicon Beach is A440hz, Silicon Hole is more in line with nature's frequency of A432hz! With a focus on advancing new ideas and ventures in TMT (Technology, Media & Telecom), Silicon Hole has fingers on the pulse of unique future approaches to geothermal energy, preventative health care & longevity including medical ozone & non-pharma centric longevity platforms, smart disruptive low technology, and into many areas of business, civic enhancement and emerging trends in society that the vast majority of people have not heard of, yet.

He is the founder of I&RP (Intellectual & Real Property), a East Texas based corporate advisory & filing service that serves owners of large portfolios of intellectual & virtual property and real property & physical assets, with a wide variety of administration services. Specifically for IP owners, I&RP advises on the planning & implementation of real time chain of title & chain of custody logging & documentation systems, and can provide services in maintaining ongoing infringement detection, monitoring, resolutions and/or pre-litigation intelligence.

He is the founder of I&RP offshoot, Royalty Excavation, which serves intellectual property owners and mineral rights investors in discovering hidden uncollected royalties.

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Remembering Malcolm Forbes

Gregory J Chamberlain and Malcolm Forbes

34 years ago today, the late great magazine publisher and adventurer, Malcolm S. Forbes, passed away at age 70. "WHILE ALIVE, HE LIVED", reads his tombstone.

Had the distinct privilege of getting to know Malcolm starting in 1987. First met him in Los Angeles after writing several letters asking for his advice on how to start a magazine.

After meeting him in LA, he called with an invitation to come out to New York, where he introduced to me members of the Forbes Magazine staff to learn as much as I could about their particular departments. At night, he took me to events his company organized at one of his townhouses, as well as on his yacht, The Highlander, where he wined and dined major advertising executives and guests that included foreign dignitaries, rock stars, supermodels and other news makers. He schooled me on the fine art of wooing more money out of advertisers without actually asking for it.

Several interesting things happened through knowing Malcolm Forbes, such as him introducing Henry Kissinger and I. At the time, my greatest asset was a highly curated and comprehensive relational database of student leaders across the U.S. and abroad, which Kissinger was interested in tapping into for the World Economic Forum. The introduction and subsequent follow ups and education about the New World Order were monumental at the time. But in hindsight, I am glad I never shared my mailing list with Kissinger and his cohorts, for I am opposed to the globalist agenda of the Bilderberg Group and World Economic Forum of which Kissinger played a pivotal role while alive.

However, Malcolm was an amazing cat. He was the first to teach me the real virtues of the Libertarian Philosophy. And, for that, I am most forever grateful.