Bay Area Innovators

The FIFA World Cup's Effect on Private Aviation & the Pilot Behind the US's Fastest-Growing Carrier

36 min · I går
episode The FIFA World Cup's Effect on Private Aviation & the Pilot Behind the US's Fastest-Growing Carrier cover

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What happens when the world's biggest sporting event collides with one of the fastest growing sectors in private transportation? In this episode of Bay Area Innovators, host Steve Ispas sits down with Barry Shevlin, CEO of Fly USA, America's fastest growing private aviation company for two years running. Barry shares how the FIFA World Cup has driven record demand for private aviation, with international clients from England, Spain, Brazil, and Germany traveling between host cities for weeks at a time — a surge that is set to make June Fly USA's biggest month ever. The conversation goes deeper than the World Cup, covering how Barry and his wife founded Vology in a garage in 2002 during the dot-com bust, grew it from $1 million to $175 million in revenue, and applied those same business lessons to launch Fly USA with his son-in-law in 2020. Barry also breaks down what private aviation actually costs, how the boarding experience works, and why he believes the business is less about luxury and more about giving clients control of their time. Watch the full episode for a wide-ranging conversation about entrepreneurship, private aviation, and building businesses that grow even when the economy doesn't.

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36 episoder

episode The FIFA World Cup's Effect on Private Aviation & the Pilot Behind the US's Fastest-Growing Carrier cover

The FIFA World Cup's Effect on Private Aviation & the Pilot Behind the US's Fastest-Growing Carrier

What happens when the world's biggest sporting event collides with one of the fastest growing sectors in private transportation? In this episode of Bay Area Innovators, host Steve Ispas sits down with Barry Shevlin, CEO of Fly USA, America's fastest growing private aviation company for two years running. Barry shares how the FIFA World Cup has driven record demand for private aviation, with international clients from England, Spain, Brazil, and Germany traveling between host cities for weeks at a time — a surge that is set to make June Fly USA's biggest month ever. The conversation goes deeper than the World Cup, covering how Barry and his wife founded Vology in a garage in 2002 during the dot-com bust, grew it from $1 million to $175 million in revenue, and applied those same business lessons to launch Fly USA with his son-in-law in 2020. Barry also breaks down what private aviation actually costs, how the boarding experience works, and why he believes the business is less about luxury and more about giving clients control of their time. Watch the full episode for a wide-ranging conversation about entrepreneurship, private aviation, and building businesses that grow even when the economy doesn't.

I går36 min
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From the Founders' Genius to Today's Debates: How the Constitution Was Built to Last

What makes the U.S. Constitution different from every other governing document in history—and is it still working the way the founders intended? In this episode of Bay Area Innovators, host Steve Ispas sits down with Ilan Wurman, constitutional law professor at the University of Minnesota and author of the upcoming book "The Constitution of 1789." Raised in Palo Alto and educated at Stanford, Wurman is one of the leading voices on the original meaning of the Constitution and the structure of American government. The conversation covers the revolutionary origins of written constitutionalism, the genius behind the separation of powers, and how the founders designed each branch of government to function well—not just to prevent tyranny. Wurman explains the rise of the modern administrative state, often called the "fourth branch," and argues that today's independent agencies operate in ways the Constitution never intended. The discussion also tackles judicial power and its limits, what happens when the Supreme Court gets a major decision wrong, the constitutional tools meant to address corruption, and the ongoing debate over birthright citizenship and the 14th Amendment. Watch the full episode for a wide-ranging conversation about the structure, history, and enduring relevance of America's founding document.

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In this episode of Bay Area Innovators, host Steve Ispas sits down with Jeremy Levin, a South African-born physician and one of the most influential leaders in global biopharmaceuticals. Levin shares an extraordinary personal journey—from fleeing apartheid as a child to watching his journalist father escape arrest twice for speaking the truth to being admitted to Oxford on the strength of a single conversation despite near-failing high school grades. The discussion goes deep on a question at the center of public debate: Why has trust in the pharmaceutical industry collapsed, and who is actually responsible? Jeremy draws a sharp and often surprising distinction between the biotech companies quietly innovating in the lab every day and the powerful middlemen—pharmacy benefit managers and insurers—who he says consume roughly 50 percent of the price of every drug without delivering meaningful value to patients. The conversation also covers the future of cancer treatment, the role of alternative medicine, why he believes biotech is one of America’s most critical and misunderstood strategic assets, and what the industry must do differently to earn the public’s trust back. Watch the full episode for a candid and sweeping conversation about medicine, purpose, and the human cost of a broken system.

5. juni 202643 min
episode How a 14-Year-Old Turned Heartbreak Into a $650,000 Nonprofit cover

How a 14-Year-Old Turned Heartbreak Into a $650,000 Nonprofit

What does it take to turn personal loss into global impact—before you can even drive?In this episode of Bay Area Innovators, host Steve Ispas sits down with Olivia Zhang, founder and CEO of Cancer Kids First, a nonprofit she launched at just 14 years old following the loss of two of the most important people in her life to cancer. The organization seeks to normalize the hospital experience for child cancer patients.Now a Harvard student and one of the youngest Forbes 30 Under 30 honorees in history, Olivia shares the full story behind Cancer Kids First—how it started at 3 a.m. with 87 research articles, how her founding team nearly gave up after 70 rejection emails, and how she learned to pitch her mission by leading with vulnerability rather than credentials.The conversation covers what it means to build a youth-led organization from the ground up, the real barriers young founders face when opening a bank account or approaching investors, and how Olivia balanced a 4.6 GPA, competitive swimming, and running a nonprofit simultaneously in high school.Olivia also reflects on earning the Princess Diana Legacy Award, being named a 2025 L'Oréal Paris Women of Worth honoree, and what comes next—including her decision to step down as CEO before graduating Harvard to keep Cancer Kids First truly youth-led.Watch the full episode for an inspiring conversation about resilience, leadership, and why age should never be a limit on purpose.

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