logo
Richard Corey to Appear on Legacy Makers TV

Richard Corey to Appear on Legacy Makers TV

FL, UNITED STATES, June 12, 2025 / EINPresswire.com / -- Richard Corey, entrepreneur, attorney, and creator of the Enterprise Blueprint philosophy, is set to appear on Legacy Makers TV, where he will share insights on engineering success through purpose-driven action, overcoming adversity, and unlocking infinite potential through strategy and mindset.
Legacy Makers is a cinematic docu-series showcasing actors, athletes, entrepreneurs, and other iconic figures by capturing their personal and professional journeys and lessons. This unique TV show, hosted by Celebrity Entrepreneur Rudy Mawer, features many influential people from all walks of life, whose stories can be viewed on the show's website.
In his episode, Corey will explore how resilience, vision, and calculated risk transformed him from a broke law graduate to a powerhouse legal and business strategist. He breaks down how structured thinking, unwavering belief, and his signature Enterprise Blueprint model can help others bridge the gap between where they are and where they're meant to be. Viewers will walk away with a new lens for possibility—rooted in purpose, sharpened by discipline, and proven by action.
'I am the living embodiment of the American Dream,' said Corey.
Richard's episode will be available soon on Inside Success Network streaming platforms.
In the meantime, you can find out more by visiting https://www.legacymakerstv.com/richard-corey.
Richard Corey
Legacy Makers TV
email us here
Legal Disclaimer:
EIN Presswire provides this news content 'as is' without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

AI May Replace $100K Jobs But Create Even More Opportunities
AI May Replace $100K Jobs But Create Even More Opportunities

Time​ Magazine

timean hour ago

  • Time​ Magazine

AI May Replace $100K Jobs But Create Even More Opportunities

We are entering a new industrial revolution, powered not by steam or steel, but by artificial intelligence. The shift is rapid, relentless, and, for millions of Americans, deeply uncertain. AI is now automating white-collar jobs once considered untouchable: legal research, accounting, medical diagnostics, coding, and marketing. The $100,000 salary that once guaranteed security is, in many cases, being performed faster and cheaper by an algorithm. But if we act now with intention, compassion, and strategy, this technological disruption could become the greatest opportunity of our generation. We could use AI to create millions of new, dignified, middle-class jobs, empower the overlooked and underestimated, and, perhaps for the first time in a long time, rebuild the American Dream from the bottom up. AI will undoubtedly increase efficiency. But productivity is only half the equation. Roughly 70% of U.S. GDP comes from consumer spending. That means we need people with paychecks and purpose to keep the economy growing. Displacing 30% of workers without a plan doesn't grow the economy. It risks shrinking it. More profit, fewer customers. More automation, less inclusion. That's a dangerous imbalance. Read More: 'The Dead Have Never Been This Talkative': The Rise of AI Resurrection This summer, in partnership with Georgia State University, Operation Hope launched the AI Literacy Pipeline to Prosperity Project (AILP3). Fifty young people from Atlanta were trained in AI tools and use cases. More importantly, they were taught to believe that this future includes them. Imagine scaling that model across every city and rural town in America. The most exciting truth of the AI era is this: many of tomorrow's best-paying jobs won't require a four-year degree. They'll require skills, curiosity, digital fluency, and the ability to work with smart tools. We need AI-assisted logistics operators, financial coaches using smart tools, and health aides empowered by AI diagnostics. These jobs can ultimately pay more than $100K, but only if we build the pipelines to reach them. Access and education remain the barriers. We can break those down with public-private partnerships, community-based training, and AI literacy embedded into workforce programs. Inclusion is often framed as the right thing to do. It is. It's also the smart thing to do. If we empower just 30% more Americans, especially from underserved communities, to fully participate in the AI economy, we could unlock 2–3% additional annual GDP growth. That's not ideology. It's economic strategy. Read More: AI Can't Replace Education—Unless We Let It We must tie Community Reinvestment Act funding to AI education and access, incentivize companies to hire re-skilled workers from diverse backgrounds, back AI-for-good startups led by underrepresented founders, and make digital skills the new infrastructure—as essential as bridges and broadband. Let's stop talking about AI as if it's a threat to humanity. The real threat is leaving humans out of the opportunity it creates. We don't need another elite tech boom. We need a broad-based economic revival, one that restores dignity, grows wages, and expands ownership from the ground up. The American Dream isn't dead, but it does need a reboot. AI, used wisely and inclusively, can be the code that helps us run it again—this time, better than before.

Facing GOP skeptics, Republican Winsome Earle-Sears insists she can win the Virginia governor's race
Facing GOP skeptics, Republican Winsome Earle-Sears insists she can win the Virginia governor's race

CNN

time8 hours ago

  • CNN

Facing GOP skeptics, Republican Winsome Earle-Sears insists she can win the Virginia governor's race

At a Filipino restaurant tucked into a strip mall in southeast Virginia, Winsome Earle-Sears stood this week before a crowd of longtime friends and supporters and talked about her background as an immigrant, Marine and Christian conservative. 'In no other country is my story even possible,' she said, noting that she was paraphrasing former President Barack Obama. 'I am an unconventional candidate and this just tells us that this is the American dream.' But her dream of becoming Virginia's governor faces skepticism from her own party, with Republicans openly worried that she will lose one of this fall's marquee races. 'As a potential governor, she'd be extraordinary. As a candidate on a one-on-one basis or in a group, she's phenomenal. She's charismatic. But the campaign apparatus has been abysmal and they need to turn that around,' said conservative radio host John Fredericks. Democratic nominee Abigail Spanberger outraised Earle-Sears by nearly $5 million in the second quarter and had more than three times as much cash as her GOP rival at the end of June. One recent poll found Earle-Sears trailing Spanberger by double digits. Last week, Earle-Sears named a new campaign manager after the person who previously held the post was moved to a different role. Earle-Sears, the state's lieutenant governor, is defiant. Her campaign has previously acknowledged she's an underdog but, in her telling, it's no different than any other campaign she's run or the doubts that Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin confronted four years ago before his victory. 'This is a dynamic campaign. It's happening. We're going to win. We're marching towards victory,' Earle-Sears said in an interview with CNN, maintaining that she's always had to fight and that nothing in her life has come easy. 'We're meeting with the voters. We're listening to them. We're traveling everywhere. We're not taking any vote for granted,' she said. Earle-Sears focused during a long day of campaigning Monday on her economic message and her attacks on Spanberger over job creation and the participation of trans athletes in sports. But she offered one comment at the Virginia Beach restaurant that could be read as a message to critics in both parties. 'Those people who would like to divide us because their agenda is about control and then they swoop in to say they're going to save us from whoever, we don't need that,' she told the audience. 'We don't need that. We just need you to get out of our way so we can accomplish things, so our children can accomplish things.' A spokesperson for Spanberger shrugged off Earle-Sears' criticism. 'Abigail has built a reputation for working with both Democrats and Republicans to deliver results for Virginia,' the spokesperson said. 'As Governor, Abigail will continue to put petty political games aside to get things done, not cheer on a White House that is cutting Virginians' jobs, threatening Virginians' healthcare coverage, and hurting their bank accounts.' Earle-Sears has yet to receive the endorsement of President Donald Trump, who is unpopular nationally with independent voters but remains strong with conservatives Earle-Sears will need to turn out in November. In this fall's other major statewide race, Trump has endorsed Jack Ciattarelli, the GOP nominee for New Jersey governor. Earle-Sears has criticized Trump before. In 2022, prior to Trump launching his third campaign for the White House, she called for him to 'step off the stage,' saying in a television interview that 'a true leader understands when they have become a liability.' 'I met with the president in the Oval Office. We had discussions, and that's all I'm going to say,' she said this week when asked if she was concerned Trump's lack of support could dampen enthusiasm among Republican base voters. The White House did not respond to requests for comment. But one of Earle-Sears' most prominent Republican critics is Chris LaCivita, a Virginia political strategist who was Trump's 2024 co-campaign manager and is a top Trump ally. Asked by CNN to comment on the governor's race, LaCivita texted back with apparent sarcasm: 'Oh I didn't know there was one.' Fredericks has pleaded for Youngkin to get more involved in campaign operations and join Earle-Sears more frequently on the campaign trail. He believes Earle-Sears can win if there is massive turnout in southwest Virginia. 'They also have to embrace early voting, and it has to be a key linchpin of their campaign,' he added. Youngkin allies maintain he is fully engaged in the campaign, frequently on fundraising calls and serving as one of her biggest cheerleaders. 'She's been my partner the entire time since the day we were elected,' Youngkin told reporters this week. 'She understands what it means to drive economic growth and job growth. She understands what it means to stand with law enforcement and bring crime down.' Earle-Sears is steadfast in her socially conservative views, putting herself to the right of some Republicans. Last year she hand-wrote a note on a marriage equality bill that passed the general assembly signaling her moral opposition to same-sex marriage. She did the same on a reproductive rights bill. In 2023, Youngkin embraced a 15-week abortion ban with exceptions for rape, incest and to protect the life of the mother, but voters rejected that approach by denying the governor and his party the legislative majorities to enact his agenda. Earle-Sears was noncommittal when asked whether she would consider another push to restrict abortion rights. 'We got to get in a room and figure it out. That's what we have to do,' Earle-Sears told CNN, refusing to clarify if that meant she would push for more restrictions if elected governor. Earle-Sears and her allies maintain it's far too early for panic. They say they are confident in the compelling nature of her biography, a conservative with an immigrant story rooted in faith and entrepreneurship, and the record of the Youngkin-Sears administration, to carry her to victory. She touts returning $9 billion of taxpayer money and the creation of more than 15,000 new businesses, increasing teacher pay and investments in the construction of new projects as among the administration's accomplishments. As she greeted families and encouraged young volunteers at an aquarium after the Filipino restaurant stop, there was no indication Earle-Sears or anyone on her team, at least publicly, were getting worked up about her chances. 'She's pretty clearly an underdog in this race,' said Kyle Kondik of the University of Virginia's Center for Politics. 'It's also possible that the sort of level of doom and gloom might be a little overstated and maybe a little premature because there is plenty of time but there are just some big-picture factors that were working in Youngkin's benefit that just aren't working in her benefit,' added Kondik. Virginia's off-year elections have the potential to serve as a key bellwether heading into the 2026 midterm election. Typically, the party opposite of the party that controls the White House wins the Virginia governor's race. Youngkin's win in 2021 followed Joe Biden's presidential election a year earlier. The lone exception in recent decades: Democrat Terry McAuliffe's 2013 victory a year after Barack Obama was reelected to a second White House term. Back at the restaurant, Ron Taylor, who describes himself as 'Christ-centered and spirit-filled,' listened intently to Earle-Sears' remarks. He serves as the president of the Hampton Roads Black Caucus, which backed Youngkin four years ago. He doesn't know where the group's members will land this year and says they will make their endorsement after they receive the results from a survey sent to both candidates. But Taylor personally is leaning towards supporting her. 'She's a fighter,' he said.

‘American Dream' making a comeback as President Trump makes country great again
‘American Dream' making a comeback as President Trump makes country great again

USA Today

time2 days ago

  • USA Today

‘American Dream' making a comeback as President Trump makes country great again

Opinions expressed in Letters to the Editor are those of our readers and not the Pensacola News Journal. In order for letters to be considered for publication, they must be 250 words or less and include your full name, address and phone number. Only your name and city of residence will be published. Submission does not guarantee publication. Email submissions to opinion@ 'American Dream' making a comeback because of President Trump President Donald Trump's skill as a negotiator is clearly illustrated by major companies, e.g., GE, IBM, J&J, Apple, Merck, and others planning to build factories in America. More jobs plus new tax deductions create opportunities for all Americans. Joe Biden's open-door policy released millions of illegal aliens into the United States. Remember the caravans of thousands of illegals walking from South America through Mexico to the U.S.? Many of the women and children were abused or killed. President Trump and his staff are working hard to arrest and deport the most dangerous illegals first. Unfortunately, liberal Democrats stand in his way at every turn. He has even had to call out the National Guard to maintain the rule of law in California. I for one am sick and tired of liberal Democrats doing nothing but complaining about Trump rather than helping to 'Make America Great Again.' God bless America. William Thomas, Pensacola Why can't utility companies share conduits already in place? For years we have had Cox underground cables in our neighborhood to locate every time we want to plant a bush. Then, this spring, AT&T puts in their fiber cable service by digging up patches of our yards, tunneling under driveways and installing separate cable conduits and access boxes (and incidentally busting the water main in two places on 12th Avenue). Now we learn that T-Mobile fiber is going to do the same thing AT&T did (hopefully not bust the water main). Who is approving these contracts? Why can't they make these companies share the conduits they already have in place? Will every company who wants to provide internet cable to our neighborhood have to chop up our lawns and add access boxes to my little 50 foot wide front yard? I already have a large Florida Power & Light transformer, a large Cox Cable box, an old AT&T phone box, a cover plate over the new AT&T box, and a street light post. I don't know where T-Mobile will put their box. I don't have any more room. I know all of this is on the utility easement, but there ought to be some type of compensation for having a utility center in half of my front yard! James Day, Pensacola No excuse not to fix Jefferson Street parking lot elevator As a local resident I pay for parking all the time. In spite of the parking income the city collects, the elevator at the Jefferson Street parking lot has remained broken for weeks. I have spoken to some of the local businesses, and they have unfortunately not gotten any help with it. The city needs to get it fixed. Stanford Morse, Pensacola Pace's U.S. 90 and Woodbine intersection is a mess To whoever designed the intersection at U.S. 90 and Woodbine in Pace, you can't fix stupid. Bill Helms, Pace Early learning development pivotal to healthy environment for kids Early childhood development is an ever-increasing mission. Over the years the wellbeing of our children must remain the highest priority, Understanding the ever-increasing needs of each individual child is crucial. Individual Educational Planning is of the upmost importance and should be based on each child's individual developmental need, and not a majority census. As the 'early learning teacher' we have a crucial role in the overall development of each child within the early learning environment. So, facilitating and understanding the child's needs, not only highlights the 'individual educational needs of children,' but through careful observations the teacher can also track the 'emotional, social, physical, and other needs associated with the child. This is pivotal. By providing a loving, safe, educational, and healthy environment for children to learn, grow, and develop, children have support and opportunities needed for years to come, regardless of their ethnicity, social, economic, educational, or religious background. This simple formula opens a gateway for children to receive the essential ingredients needed on so many levels. Elizabeth Wright, Cantonment 'Alligator Alcatraz' is nothing but Florida's concentration camp Florida has a concentration camp! Giving it a catchy name, "Alligator Alcatraz", does not change the fact that people are being swept up and placed into horrible living conditions without cause. Go online to contact your senators or call senators Rick Scott and Ashley Moody at 202-224-3121 in Washington, D.C. (This is the number for all federal senators). You get the switchboard and will be sent to their office, probably to leave a message, so have one ready. If you need to, borrow my message: "Close down Florida's concentration camp, Alligator Alcatraz. Shame on America. Shame on Florida". Are you afraid to call? Afraid this will put you on a "list"? That says it all, doesn't it. The way we lose our rights is by not standing up for others' rights. I am a proud Navy retiree who will never give up on America. Stand together or fall apart. Ruth C. Edwards, Pensacola Downtown Pensacola parking causing businesses to lose support In response to Jim Little's article on downtown parking and Mayor DC. Reeves, who thinks it's working: You have no idea how many people no longer shop or dine downtown Pensacola who live in Escambia County. You apparently can't put data to that number. But I, for one, no longer come and support local restaurants and shopping in downtown Pensacola because of it. Most of the people I discuss this with feel the same. We have 'Pensacola' in our addresses but feel we cannot support our city. So sad after all that Mr. Studer did to make it a viable downtown area. When the businesses begin to fail, maybe you will again address the 'data'. Kathy Cook, Pensacola History will look back on MAGA and 'Alligator Alcatraz' in shame While thinking of the unfortunate people locked up by Trump's ICE night riders in 'Alligator Alcatraz,' maybe think about what the average "illegal" has done. Things like put the roof on your house after a hurricane, picked crops in conditions no American will tolerate, cleaned your trashed hotel room, grunt work in the background of practically every DIY TV program, spent their money in town on food and shelter, not on financial planners, and picked feathers off of chickens and guts out of pigs on processing lines. All those jobs Americans won't do any more, but the "illegals" are eager to get. They showed up for a scheduled immigration hearing and were kidnaped by masked men with guns. They are "illegal" only by the arbitrary definition of powerful people with absolutely no empathy. The undocumented workers are simply poor people trying to get through the week, like on the Statue of Liberty, following a route traveled for 15.000 years. What is wrong with you Trump and MAGA people? Alligator Alcatraz is terrible. You should be ashamed, which is where history is going to put you. Grover Diehl, Gulf Breeze Never miss a story: Subscribe to the Pensacola News Journal using the link at the bottom of the page under Stay Connected.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store