A Lap of Caulfield Park

By: Plus61JMedia and the Jewish Museum of Australia
  • Summary

  • Seasoned journalist Ashley Browne speaks with Australian Jews making an impact; from fashion to football, business to the arts. Tracing their lives and influences, these intimate conversations are the perfect companion for your daily walk – or lap of Caulfield Park.
    © 2023 A Lap of Caulfield Park
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Episodes
  • David Smorgon, businessman and adviser
    Mar 23 2022

    At its peak, in the early 1990s, Smorgon Consolidated Industries was one of the largest and most diverse family businesses in Australia.

    David Smorgon estimates that there were 25 family members across three generations working in the business, whose origins can be traced to a kosher butcher in Lygon Street, Carlton, in 1927.

    On top of that, there were another 200 family members who didn’t work in the business, but who were nevertheless involved as direct and indirect shareholders.

    The company was broken up in 1995 and the family members went their separate ways when it came to business, but in the case of David Smorgon, who many in Melbourne would know was the president of the Western Bulldogs Football Club from 1997 to 2012, a legacy of more than 30 years working in a family business led to a wealth of knowledge that he now passes on as the chief executive of Pointmade, a Melbourne-based family advisory firm.

    He and his fellow advisers counsel family businesses across a variety of issues, and in the latest Lap of Caulfield Park podcast, he tells Ashley Browne that communication issues often run at the heart of conflicts in family businesses.

    “Are you really calling a spade a spade? Are you really getting to the core of issues when you’re relaying messages to other members of the family or are you playing around the boundary line rather than being in the centre square,” he said.

    In a wide-ranging conversation, Smorgon discusses:

    • The need for open, honest and transparent discussion between family members, without boundaries.
    • Succession planning and how elderly family patriarchs and matriarchs can be convinced to finally cede control
    • Where the Smorgon family sometimes got it wrong
    • Some case studies where independent mediation has helped solve family business issues
    • The need for regular family business health checks?
    • Succession, the TV series and how many people in family business watch it religiously
    • His beloved Western Bulldogs and their prospects for 2022.

    You can subscribe to A Lap of Caulfield Park through Apple Podcasts, Spotify and your favourite podcast player.

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    39 mins
  • Julie Szego, journalist
    Dec 13 2021

    On the final Lap of Caulfield Park podcast for 2021, Ashley Browne is joined by fellow journalist (and fellow The Age alumnus) for a broad discussion and occasional deep dive into the news and views of the day and the year.

    On the agenda are:

    -       Memories of working for The Age and why she left.

    -       The weekly column that Julie still writes for the newspaper.

    -       COVID. Did 2021 become even harder to navigate than 2020? And what were her coping strategies?

    -       Her strong views on public versus private education and would a public model work for the Jewish community?

    -       Social media and its pitfalls.

    -       Her reading, listening and watching recommendations for the summer holidays.

    A Lap of Caulfield Park is presented by Plus 61J Media and is available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and your favourite podcast provider.

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    41 mins
  • Paul Fink, stroke survivor and podcaster
    Nov 25 2021

    What is it like to be 34, having just had your first job, just starting your dream job and then having it all ripped out of your grasp by a shocking, life-altering event?

    In the latest Lap of Caulfield Park podcast, stroke survivor Paul Fink tells Ashley Browne of his journey over the last eight years, from bending over to pick up his son from his cot, to not setting foot inside his house for the next six months. 

    Following his stroke, Fink underwent four brain surgeries and was in a coma for two weeks. He spent some time in a ward at the Alfred Hospital before moving to the Caulfield Hospital.

    And that was only the beginning. He had to learn to talk again. To walk again. To become a husband and a father once again. And he wanted to run again. He was an avid sportsman before falling ill.

    Nothing is off the table on the podcast as the inspirational Fink discusses his rehabilitation, the various goals he set for himself along the way and why, as his health solely improved, he decided to become an advocate and to increase awareness and visibility of and for stroke survivors.

    He blogs and he podcasts. And now he wants to work again. 

    A Lap of Caulfield Park is presented by Plus61J Media and is available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and your favourite podcast players.

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    34 mins

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