Scott Pinzon: Difference between revisions
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As a bus dispatcher in Los Angeles, Scott was responsible for dispatching the busses of extras used in Michael Jackson's "Beat It" video.<ref>ICANN 40 Interview</ref> | As a bus dispatcher in Los Angeles, Scott was responsible for dispatching the busses of extras used in Michael Jackson's "Beat It" video.<ref>ICANN 40 Interview</ref> | ||
== | ==Interviews== | ||
Scott talked with [[Raymond King]] at [[ICANN 42]] in Dakar, Senegal about the then-new [[ICANN]] website which was launched in early 2012. | |||
Scott | |||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 18:56, 8 September 2022
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Scott Pinzon is a consultant for Dell. Before that, he was the Director of Marketing and Outreach at ICANN until May 2012, overseeing the production of publications, branding, outreach, web development, sponsorships, and new gTLD communications.[1] He is a Certified Information Systems Security Professional (CISSP), an accredited NSA Information Assurance Methodology network security practitioner,[2] a writer, and an editor.[3]
Career History
Scott began at ICANN in 2009[4] as the Director of Policy Communications and Information Services.[5]
Prior to joining ICANN, Pinzon worked as the Product Marketing Manager and Editor-in-Chief at WatchGuard Technologies Inc. and as the Founder / Creative Director at Pilcrow Book Services.[6] He began writing as a teenager and had his first magazine article published at age 15. Since then, he has been published many more times in magazines, has published many short stories, has assisted on book projects, taught writing and book design at the community college level, and is currently working on his own novel.[7]
Education
He received his education from California State University-Fullerton.[8]
Fun Facts
Scott published a series of books and story collections that were targeted toward young adults in the 1980s and 1990s.
A publisher once asked Mr. Pinzon to ghost-write a book for Mr.T, but he turned down the offer.
As a bus dispatcher in Los Angeles, Scott was responsible for dispatching the busses of extras used in Michael Jackson's "Beat It" video.[9]
Interviews
Scott talked with Raymond King at ICANN 42 in Dakar, Senegal about the then-new ICANN website which was launched in early 2012.