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The Ten Best Pharma Quotes of 2011: The CEO Edition


Last week, we unveiled our Ten Best Pharma Quotes of the Year. Here below is our special CEO Edition, with the ten best quips from, and about, drug company CEOs this year.

From 'On Pharma'

The Ten Best Pharma Quotes of 2011


This year, we introduced our Pharma Replay newsletter, a monthly review of the best quips and quotes coming out of the drug industry. (Subscribe here.) Here’s a look back, in no particular order, at the best quotes of 2011. From these quotes, it appears it was a rough year for J&J, and for jobs.

From 'On Pharma'

FDA Approves New Anti-Anti-Depressant


This has been "one of those days," so I had to chuckle (a little) about The Onion's latest deadpan video on FDA's approval of Despondex, a new "depressant"for the relentlessly chipper (thanks to Adam Fein of Drug Channels for pointing it out!) Click here to watch. 

AMS

From 'On Pharma'

New Scam Relies on FDA Impersonators


 

As if the Agency didn't have enough to contend with, today brought news of an extortion scam in which callers identify themselves as "FDA Special Agents" and pressure customers into buying drugs (which are never delivered) online.  Here's more from the source:

From 'On Pharma'

Girls Just Want to Have Fun


Why do men have all the fun when it comes to mid-life crises? With male mid-life crisis one pictures Harleys and trophy wives.  Think female mid-life crisis and you get  divorce, eldercare...

News came this week of a study (for a brief summary, click here) suggesting that, by mid-life, women are the sadder sex. The study's results were published in the improbably titled Journal of Happiness Studies.  Fortunately for some, there are pharmaceuticals to help with all this.  As for me, I'm taking the kids and grandma for a spin on the Harley.

--AMS

From 'On Pharma'

Reach That Peak, Baby


Kudos to Agilent Technologies for being a bit zany in its advertising. A new "music video" brings Barry White sound to the Mass Spec crowd (courtesy of Agilent Technologies)....and hat tip to Chris Truelove, Pharma Blogs in Review.

AMS

From 'On Pharma'

The Wit and Wisdom of Padma Perkish


 Haven't had much time for TV lately, so I was very late in discovering that the brilliant comedienne Tracey Ullman is back and in rare form in her satirical show, "State of the Union," in which she skewers everyone from A. Huffington and Andy Rooney to Beckham to Hollywood's A list.  Her aim is deadly.  (Consider this example----at 9 minutes it's a very long clip----skip the beginning, but please do watch the second skit, starting from about 1:52)

Among her characters is Padma, a pharmacist working in Tennessee, who breaks out into Bollywood-style song when reciting the potentially negative side effects of drugs.   If any of you have missed this inspired and politically incorrect silliness, here is one sampling from You Tube (one of several posted on YT). 

From 'On Pharma'

Off to BIO and A Blast from the Past


Just wanted to update this blog a bit; time has been extremely scarce, so I marvel at steady bloggers (Pharmagossip, Pharmalot, Mack et al), at our competitors (PharmTech editors are doing a nice job) and at Christiane Truelove and Bob Ehrlich who are now doing daily updates and e-newsletters on pharma blogging.  

Will be heading off to BIO next week and attempting  to provide a somewhat steady feed of impressions from the show.  For the first year, the group has launched an official blog, with FaceBook and LinkedIn groups, and a repository of photos on FlickR.  The organization is also making it easier for reporters to podcast and video at the show.   Maybe other pharma organizations should take note.

Maybe I'll run into one or two of you there?

Since it is Friday, and the end of another busy week, thought I'd leave you with something completely different....ever have one of those "whatever happened to so-and-so" moments?  I'd been wondering recently about why we never seemed to hear from Chris De Burgh....well-known in the 1980s, he wrote and performed some nice songs with nice, atmospheric lyrics.  Of course, he's Irish....best known in the states for "Lady in Red" (not one of his better songs), he is now singing in other, perhaps misunderstood parts of the world which share some characteristics with Irish culture: love of poetry and music, predominance (at times in their histories) of religious orthodoxy....for more, read on and watch.   Perhaps this may help end some stereotypes---please note the backup singers.

Until next week
AMS 

From 'On Pharma'

Followup on Drinking Water


Question of the day: What's EVIAN spelled backwards?

From 'On Pharma'

The Cure for Modern Life - A Novel About a Drug Company (With a Likeable Protagonist)?


Peter Rost says he's sworn off writing about pharma geeks and fat cats on his blog, but, one wonders, for how long?  Philadelphia-based writer Lisa Tucker, meanwhile, is writing about this crowd in a novel that will be published later this month in which the fictional pharma company, Astor-Denning, plays a role.

Tucker says she began her research with distrust....

More from her publicist:

"...Tucker began her research of pharmaceutical companies with distrust – disliking drug company advertising, feeling skeptical of many new medicines, and having problems with the high costs. Her initial research confirmed some of her concerns. Everything her bioethicist character reports on actually happened. But Tucker also made some discoveries that surprised her. She found that the scientists are some of the most brilliant people she’s ever encountered. She realized how much they want to find new medicines, and that the drug discovery process is much more difficult than most non-scientists can imagine. She came away with a new-found respect for the people who work for the industry, thinks many of them have been unfairly vilified, and wrote about them that way in her book.

The book is already garnering some great reviews:

"Matthew Connelly, very corporate pharmaceutical executive, has become everything Amelia Johannsen despises. Not only does she break off their engagement, but she goes after his company for unethical practices and starts a relationship with his best friend. But Matthew has a side he doesn't even know about when he's cleverly duped into helping two homeless children while their mother is in rehab. Amelia's "holier-than-thou" attitude gets a shakedown as she and boyfriend Ben are drawn into caring for the children too. A look at ethics and responsibility, sure to make book club lists, from the author of Once Upon a Day, 2006."

--Cincinnati Library

The book "should increase Tucker’s male readership and solidify her position as a gifted writer with a wide range and a profound sense of compassion for the mysteries of the human heart."

--Publishers Weekly, starred review

"With each new title, Tucker shows herself to be a natural-born storyteller who is developing an increasingly sophisticated technique. Here she seamlessly weaves together a touching and very modern relationship story with some compelling social issues, including medical ethics, homelessness, and corporate greed. Underlying the whole is a multifaceted analysis of what it means to be a good person in the twenty-first century. This fast-paced, funny, and smart novel is a sure bet for book clubs."

--Booklis

From 'On Pharma'