Dani gore biography examples

FHC Alumni Dani Gore is turning her music industry dreams on the road into a reality

Music is something that everybody uses in their day to day life, but for 2005 FHC graduate Dani Gore, her large involvement in music and concerts is just a part of her everyday job. Working in the concert business may have been a dream at first, but through her hard work, she made her dream a reality.

“I wanted to [work in the music industry],” Gore said. “I didn’t think that was an option. I had no idea how to begin to take a path to get there. I got lucky for sure, but I worked really hard.”

While in high school, Gore was never involved in any musical ensemble, but she had a love for music. She quickly realized that she loved concerts and attended many throughout her high school years. After graduation, Gore attended a conservative Christian college for two years. However, that college was not a good fit for her. Gore moved back home and enrolled in classes at GRCC. There she was placed on a waiting list for the radiology program. When Gore was not taking classes, she began to look for something to do with her free time.

“I like college, and I like class, but I would rather be doing things,” Gore said. “So I would get bored a lot [since I was not in the radiology program].”

Gore was still attending many concerts in college, sometimes going to two or three in a single week. Since she was spending all this time at concerts, Gore decided to join a street team for a concert promoting company. In this street team, she handed out flyers and promoted future shows in exchange for concert tickets. Eventually, Gore contacted the company and got an internship working for them. In this internship, she learned how to work a live show and the box office for concert venues. This internship opened up many opportunities for Gore. She got jobs running shows and worked for many different concert venues, including The Intersection, Van Andel Arena, and The Palace. After working at The Inte

ERNEST DANIEL GORE

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  • Highly-rated Manchester United teenage midfielder Dan
  • Daniel Gore

    RBB Economics (London)

    Partner

    Daniel Gore is a partner based in RBB’s London office with 20 years’ experience in competition economics consultancy. He is a co-author of The Economic Assessment of Mergers under European Competition Law (Cambridge University Press 2013, translated and republished by Law Press China 2017). Daniel has appeared in the Who’s Who Legal Future Leaders and Thought Leaders surveys of competition economists, which noted his “great depth of knowledge and strong grasp of the details” and “technical excellence” in merger analysis.

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    Brussels

    The Global Antitrust Hot Topics: EU, US & Global Perspectives Conference organised by Concurrences in partnership with Baker Botts, Cornerstone Research, Oxera and RBB Economics, took place in Brussels on September 26th, 2024.

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    Brussels

    Law & Economics workshop organized by Concurrences in partnership with White & Case and RBB Economics.

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    Articles

    3128 Bulletin

    Daniel GoreMarket definition in merger control: An overview of EU and national case law

    1872

    Market definition has long lain at the heart of competition law and economics, and rumours of its death in recent years remain greatly exaggerated. Market definition remains a central topic of debate at the highest levels of competition policy : EU Commission President von der Leyen has reportedly mooted a reconsideration of how market definition is assessed, while Commissioner Vestager has announced that the first initiative of her second term will be a review of the 1997 Notice on Market Definition. This review is expected to encompass, inter alia, market definition for digital markets and the scope of geographic markets in light of continued globalisation.

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  • Gore Spent Undergrad Years Away From Politics

    Vice President Albert A. Gore, who graduated from Harvard College in 1969 with an honors degree in government, rarely talks about his life at the nation's most prestigious university in public, perhaps because of the elite image a Harvard education evokes.

    The capsule biography on Gore's Web site skips his Harvard education altogether, going straight from his adolescence in Carthage, Tenn. to his experiences in Vietnam. It does, however, mention his short stint at divinity school.

    Friends, teachers and colleagues who knew Gore during his four years at Harvard describe the Dunster House resident as a through-and-through Southerner, caught, like many of his peers at the time, between personal, parental and societal considerations.

    A quiet and studious undergraduate, Gore spent his weekends playing card games with his friends and courting his future wife.

    And other than a foray into student politics during his first year, the affable Gore avoided both political organizations and political discussions for the rest of his time.

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    Less than three months after graduating, Gore enlisted in the Army, much to the delight of his father, a U.S. Senator from Tennessee. The decision surprised his friends, who said that Gore had always opposed the war.

    At school, though, life was quiet, and Gore's manner was open and down-to-earth, his friends say.

    "He was extremely Southern oriented. He was definitely from Tennessee. I think you would have known he was from the South," says Robert A. Somerby '69, a Gore blockmate.

    Former roommates and teachers recall Gore's pronounced twang, as compared with the halting Middle Atlantic English he speaks today.

    One example of Gore's love of the South sticks out in Somerby's mind.

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    One night in 1966, Gore, his roommate Tommy Lee Jones '69 and Somerby performed a play in honor of Somerby's grandfather, a 19th-century traveling showman.

    Gore's role was to sell

  • Daniel Gore is a