The Global Crowd

Jose Palomares

The Global Crowd is a video podcast where I reconnect with brilliant friends and colleagues from the globalization, localization, and content community—not to talk shop, but to talk life. We dive into stories, surprises, strange trivia, and whatever else comes up in one-take, unfiltered conversations. No sponsors, no scripts, no agenda—just a little tribute to the curious, creative, and kind people I’ve met over 25+ years in this industry. Sometimes insightful, sometimes ridiculous, always real.

Episodes

  1. Hit with a brick at 59—Menopause, cultural intelligence, and never asking for permission—with Sophie Solomon

    3 FEB

    Hit with a brick at 59—Menopause, cultural intelligence, and never asking for permission—with Sophie Solomon

    Sophie Solomon has lived in four countries, spoken four languages, and worked at some of the biggest companies in the world.Autodesk, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Accenture. She quit a leadership track at 34 to raise four kids, started a company while pregnant with her fourth, and came back to corporate America like nothing happened.At 59, perimenopause hit her like a freight train. Debilitating brain fog. No real answers from doctors. No support from her company. So she did what Sophie does: she built it herself. With zero budget and zero mandate, she created a menopause education program inside an 800,000-person organization and turned it into a model that others are now following.But this episode is about way more than menopause. It's about what it takes to reinvent yourself, not once, but multiple times. About cultural intelligence and why most people in global business don't even know they're missing it. About the difference between empowerment and militancy. About being a people connector so relentlessly that you steal everyone's friends (Jose's words, not hers). And about a woman who has never once asked for permission to take up space and has no intention of starting now.This is one of the longest episodes we've done. Not a single minute was wasted.00:00 Intro03:39 Born in France, raised everywhere else10:59 Autodesk, four kids, and a disappearing act15:33 She helps businesses sell more candy22:10 Quitting when everyone says stay24:11 The most dangerous friend in the room31:13 How they actually became friends34:32 Hit with a brick at 5940:58 Building something from nothing46:37 Why men need to be in this conversation52:37 Talking to your mom thirty years later 57:03 Menopause is a billion-dollar business problem1:01:38 If not this, then Gaza1:03:47 Rapid Fire1:23:58 The child model who walked away at 141:29:37 Cultural intelligence and reading the room1:39:21 How to stay relevant when everything is changing1:44:56 Empowerment, not militancy1:52:07 The one thing she hasn't forgiven herself for2:02:59 The LLM sees the future (sort of)

    2h 3m
  2. Made in Africa—Continental dreams, practical collection & respectful disrespect—with Johan Botha

    24/06/2025

    Made in Africa—Continental dreams, practical collection & respectful disrespect—with Johan Botha

    Welcome back to The Global Crowd—still the podcast you definitely didn't need, but hopefully one you'll keep around. This is Episode 2, featuring Johan Botha—one of Africa's most influential voices in localization and co-founder of ALCA (Association of Language Companies in Africa). He's the guy collecting hundreds of comic books, co-founding an industry association to unite and open Africa, and prioritizing bedtime stories over business calls and prime networking. As you will notice, we also took some liberties with this episode and decided we'd treat each other exactly as we do in real life. What you'll hear is two friends competing for who can be more successful while simultaneously undermining each other's credibility. 🎙️ In this episode, we talk about: How one reluctant influencer became the voice of African localizationWhy Africa has been "the next big thing" for 10 years (and what's really happening on the ground)The trust gap between the "global north" and a continent tired of being told how to do businessChanneling your inner Batman, stealing Beatles vinyls, and the market opportunity for left-handed fountain pensHow braai is the great equalizer in South AfricaThe art of saying no (and why Johan struggles with it)How rapid-fire questions look like in African timeAs always, no sponsors, no script, no secret agenda. Just two friends, one take, and an improvised conversation that wandered from African intelligence to pottery meditation. Chapter List: 00:00 Welcome and roasting warnings01:41 Meet Johan Botha04:07 From translator to influencer08:33 Explaining your job to kids09:49 Begging your way to the top12:19 Africa's togetherness problem16:06 The curse of saying yes20:49 Collecting what you can't afford21:32 Left-handed fountain pen struggles25:23 Comics, vinyl, and Beatles theft29:31 Bedtime stories and troll cupcakes31:28 Braai 10134:21 Rapid fire (African time)40:37 Why care about Africa?48:39 The ALCA conference vision56:23 AI predictions for Johan59:08 Why Johan made episode 3 Thanks for listening.

    1 hr
  3. 05/06/2025

    Queen of AIs–Punk energy, realistic AI, and next level alchemies—with Olga Beregovaya

    Welcome back to The Global Crowd—a proudly unpolished podcast built on spontaneous conversations with leaders from the globalization and international growth community who refuse to take life too seriously. Today, we welcome Olga Beregovaya, VP of AI at Smartling, community pillar, music producer, horse whisperer—and one of those rare humans who can face chaos with elegance, curiosity, and great boots. From building AI programs to wrangling 22 punk rockers at a border crossing, Olga’s life reads like a setlist nobody could plan—but every track hits. 🎙️ In this episode, we talk about: How one structural linguist became the queen of AIs (with a side hustle in tour buses)Punk bands, border patrol, and the unexpected strength of expat communityThe disgusting biological betrayal that is the film on boiled milkWhy the best business strategy sessions might be happening in barsThe haunting disappearance of one very special pair of rocking socksWhat it’s like to live inside the AI hype—and still call BS on half of itAnd the repeated public shaming that comes from not watching your friend’s podcast before agreeing to guest on itIt’s been cut to a reasonable length, censored for safety, but remains unfiltered, a little weird, and occasionally tender. Olga made us laugh, made us think, and maybe made us cry a little. You’ve been warned. Thanks for listening. #TheGlobalCrowd #AI #globalization #international #machinetranslation #punkenergy #podcast #translation #thankyou List of chapters: 00:00 – An unscripted podcast with seven pages of pleases 02:25 – From syntax to stage lights 04:35 – Explaining AI to a five-year-old (and other impossible tasks) 10:37 – Things we wish we never had to localize 13:07 – The afterthought era must end 15:21 – The punk producer in a business suit 19:47 – Inside and outside the Soviet Union: Wherever you go, your music follows 24:27 – The most epic concert… she never got to hear 26:02 – Calling the socks private investigator 28:36 – Rock & roll? Yes. But someone has to do the paperwork 30:52 – Fighting ducks, meeting dead people in elevators, and upsetting the gods of keys 36:01 – Bungee jumping in Siberia and other great decisions 36:55 – Russian superstitions, ranked and feared 38:20 – AI’s future: less talk, more tools 38:53 – Practice what you preach (and benchmark it) 41:38 – Everything About Agentic AI with Olga Beregovaya 42:24 – Getting real about multilingual GenAI 45:29 – The data goldmine hiding in plain sight 47:00 – Learning AI, one sacrificed weekend at a time 50:11 – Consensual rabbits, ditching regret, and finding the way out 54:44 – How to make the Queen of AIs cry

    57 min

Ratings & Reviews

About

The Global Crowd is a video podcast where I reconnect with brilliant friends and colleagues from the globalization, localization, and content community—not to talk shop, but to talk life. We dive into stories, surprises, strange trivia, and whatever else comes up in one-take, unfiltered conversations. No sponsors, no scripts, no agenda—just a little tribute to the curious, creative, and kind people I’ve met over 25+ years in this industry. Sometimes insightful, sometimes ridiculous, always real.