
Insights from recent episode analysis
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Insights are generated by CastFox AI using publicly available data, episode content, and proprietary models.
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Total monthly reach
Estimated from 18 chart positions in 18 markets.
By chart position
- 🇦🇺AU · Careers#1165K to 30K
- 🇺🇸US · Careers#1475K to 30K
- 🇳🇱NL · Careers#3430K to 100K
- 🇰🇷KR · Careers#1221K to 10K
- 🇦🇷AR · Careers#3710K to 30K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
22K to 86K🎙 Daily cadence·107 episodes·Last published today - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
75K to 287K🇳🇱35%🇦🇺10%🇺🇸10%+15 more - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
30K to 115K
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* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
From 18 epsHost
Recent guests
Recent episodes
How To Try Again
Jun 24, 2026
Unknown duration
The One and the Ninety-Nine
Jun 16, 2026
Unknown duration
Signal To Noise
Jun 9, 2026
39m 13s
The Success Wound
Jun 2, 2026
24m 47s
Stop Hoarding Your Genius: Why Habits Precede Breakthroughs
May 26, 2026
32m 20s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/24/26 | ![]() How To Try Again | In this episode of Daily Creative, we explore the nuanced experience of failure and the creative courage required to start over. We open with a story about recognizing when to let go of failed dreams and the importance of closure—giving our abandoned ambitions the dignity of a “decent burial” rather than carrying emotional residue into our next ventures.We’re joined by Steve Kamb, founder of Nerd Fitness and author of How to Try Again. The conversation focused on the modern misconception that achievement is only about relentless forward momentum. Instead, we dig into what happens after things don’t go as planned, and how to move forward with intention.One concept discussed was identity and how the language of failure has shifted over centuries—from being seen as an event to being seen as a statement about who we are. We unpack the psychological weight behind this shift and how it can paralyze us from trying again.Steve shared research-backed approaches and a pragmatic framework called PACT: Pause, Accept, Change, Try. Rather than reflexively doubling down or giving up, this approach urges us to create space, honestly examine our circumstances, investigate what went wrong with curiosity (not self-loathing), and experiment with new methods.A key theme that emerged was the value of collective vulnerability and perspective—realizing our failures aren’t so unique, and that growth comes from standing on the shoulders of our setbacks, not being buried beneath them.Five Key LearningsClosure is Undervalued: If we don’t fully mark the end of a failed project or dream, we risk dragging its emotional baggage into our next pursuit. Sometimes “burying the butterfly” is what frees us for genuine renewal. (02:29)Failure and Identity are Not the Same: We too often internalize failure as a flaw in who we are, rather than seeing it as something that happened. Recognizing this distinction is critical for resilience. (09:08)Healthy Pausing Beats Reflexive Action: Jumping immediately back in or attempting more brute-force effort often leads to burnout and stagnation. Pausing creates space for honest self-assessment and recalibration. (13:44)Success Comes from Tactical Experimentation: Treating setbacks with the dispassion of a detective or scientist allows us to refine methods without self-judgment. Success stems from iterative learning, not from following a fixed blueprint. (15:27)Vulnerability is a Shared Human Experience: By sharing failures—both trivial and profound—we open ourselves to community, lessen stigma, and build collective strength. Our failures become data, not shames to be hidden. (11:32)Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com. | — | ||||||
| 6/16/26 | ![]() The One and the Ninety-Nine | In this episode of Daily Creative, we explore the tension between individuality and belonging, drawing inspiration from both jazz legend Miles Davis and the philosophical tradition extending back millennia. Our guest, Luke Burgis—author of The One and the Ninety-Nine—joins us to dig deep into why it's so hard to be part of a group without losing ourselves in the process.We discuss the perils of both extreme individualism and unthinking collectivism, highlighting how modern work environments (and even family structures) tempt us to trade authenticity for acceptance. Luke introduces the distinction between the "solid self"—rooted and consistent—and the "pseudo self" that constantly morphs to fit the crowd. We wrestle with the overload of information, opinions, and exposure in our hyperconnected age, calling out how these factors pressure us to conform and silence the voice that makes us distinctly ourselves.We also tackle practical disciplines for holding on to individuality, the power of true perception versus mere information, and the need for leaders to create environments where distinctive voices can thrive. If you’ve ever felt the quiet urge to blend in—or the anxiety of standing out—this conversation offers a roadmap for contribution without disappearance.Five Key LearningsReal Unity Is Not Sameness: Great teams, like great jazz ensembles, are unified not because everyone sounds the same, but because each person brings their full, distinctive self to the room.Solid Self vs. Pseudo Self: We risk exhaustion and detachment when we constantly negotiate or adjust our identities to fit group expectations, instead of rooting ourselves in deeper convictions and values.Information Isn’t Relationship: The overwhelming flow of information in our lives can fool us into thinking we have real connections, when what we really need are authentic, lived relationships.Protect Your Perception: Amid a culture obsessed with articulating opinions, it's critical to foster and trust our own perception and intuition—a distinctly human capability that no machine or collective can replicate.Leaders Build the Room: If we are responsible for others, our job isn't to enforce uniformity, but to build spaces where authentic voices and creative risks are both valued and protected.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:To listen to the full interviews from today's episode, as well as receive bonus content and deep dive insights from the episode, visit DailyCreativePlus.com and join Daily Creative+. | — | ||||||
| 6/9/26 | ![]() Signal To Noise✨ | creative worksignal vs. noise+4 | Ron FriedmanFred Marshall | SuperteamsThrive | — | creative worksignal vs. noise+4 | — | 39m 13s | |
| 6/2/26 | ![]() The Success Wound✨ | success woundproductivity+4 | Brooke Taylor | Google | — | success woundproductivity+5 | — | 24m 47s | |
| 5/26/26 | ![]() Stop Hoarding Your Genius: Why Habits Precede Breakthroughs✨ | creativityhabits+4 | Tina Roth EisenbergJohn Gordon | Creative MorningsThe Power of Positive Habits | — | creativityhabits+5 | — | 32m 20s | |
| 5/19/26 | ![]() When Bad News Is Good News✨ | team culturebad news+3 | Lindy Elkins-TantonGustavo Razzetti | UC BerkeleyNASA+2 | — | bad newsteam culture+6 | — | 35m 39s | |
| 5/12/26 | ![]() Constraint & Uncertainty: David Epstein and Simone Stolzoff on Thinking Inside The Box✨ | creativityconstraint+4 | David EpsteinSimone Stolzoff | Inside the BoxHow Not to Know+1 | — | creativityconstraints+5 | — | 38m 57s | |
| 5/5/26 | ![]() What's Running The Show? Henry Cloud and Owen O'Kane on Strategy & Anxiety✨ | leadershipcreativity+3 | Henry CloudOwen O'Kane | Your Desired FutureAddicted To Anxiety | — | leadershipcreativity+5 | — | 37m 35s | |
| 5/2/26 | ![]() Herding Tigers Bonus Episode! Optimizing: You're Probably Playing Different Games at the Same Table✨ | leadershiporganizational tension+3 | — | Herding Tigers Podcast | — | optimizationleadership+5 | — | 10m 56s | |
| 4/29/26 | ![]() Ceilings, Frames, & Churn: Breaking Invisible Barriers in Your Work and Relationships✨ | invisible barrierswork relationships+4 | Tom RathDr. Claude Steele | What’s the Point?Churn | — | invisible boundariesfour-minute mile+5 | — | 32m 08s | |
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| 4/21/26 | ![]() Rules and Play: The Invisible Boundaries That Limit Us, and How To Break Them✨ | cultural scriptscreativity+5 | Oliver SweetPiera Gelardi | IpsosRefinery29+2 | — | cultural scriptsinvisible boundaries+5 | — | 43m 14s | |
| 4/15/26 | ![]() Procrastination Proof: Why Jon Acuff Says Procrastination Is a Well-Funded Fear✨ | procrastinationfear+3 | Jon Acuff | Procrastination Proof | — | procrastinationfear+3 | — | 25m 06s | |
| 4/8/26 | ![]() Made With Love: Why You Need To Design Love In, Not Bolt It On✨ | trustbrand+4 | Marcus BuckinghamLifang He | TylenolJohnson & Johnson+5 | — | trustbrand+5 | — | 36m 10s | |
| 4/1/26 | ![]() Subtle Maneuvers and Big Outcomes✨ | creative breakthroughsleadership+4 | Mason CurreyEric Zimmer | Making Art and Making a LivingHow a Little Becomes a Lot | — | breakthroughscreativity+5 | — | 29m 57s | |
| 3/25/26 | ![]() Human Fracking and the Design of Creative Freedom✨ | creativityleadership+4 | Cassie McDanielPeter Schmidt | MediumStruthers School of Radical Attention+1 | — | creative freedomhuman fracking+5 | — | 37m 03s | |
| 3/18/26 | ![]() Unlocking Everyday Genius: From Memory Palaces to Getting Outside✨ | memory techniquescreative potential+5 | Nelson Dellis | Everyday Genius | — | memory palacecreative clarity+8 | — | 30m 36s | |
| 3/10/26 | ![]() Feeling Overwhelmed With Everything? Me too. Here's What to Do Next.✨ | overwhelmcreativity+3 | — | Endurance expedition | — | overwhelmcreativity+3 | — | 16m 32s | |
| 3/3/26 | ![]() Why The Best Ideas Come From a Marketplace of Ideas✨ | innovationcreativity+4 | Emily TedardsJason Wild+1 | Genius at ScaleCreativity’s Edge | — | collective geniusdemocratizing creativity+4 | — | 27m 21s | |
| 2/24/26 | ![]() The End Of History Illusion✨ | Agility Quotientchange management+3 | Liz Tran | AQ Learning LabAQ: A New Kind of Intelligence for a World That's Always Changing | — | Agility Quotientchange+3 | — | 21m 53s | |
| 2/17/26 | ![]() Seeing The Here and Now✨ | leadershipdecision making+3 | — | Lincoln | — | leadershipdecision making+4 | — | 7m 32s | |
| 2/11/26 | ![]() What Do You Do When You're (Actually) Working? | In this episode, we dive deep into the real value of creative work—what we truly get paid for, beyond our time and output. We bring together two insightful thinkers, Rebecca Hinds and Jen Fisher, whose perspectives on meetings and hope transform how we structure our work days and support our teams.We explore why most meetings sabotage productivity and how “visibility bias” tricks us into equating a full calendar with actual progress. Rebecca Hinds (author of Your Best Meeting Ever) challenges us to rethink meetings as products: expensive, important, yet often poorly optimized. She shares actionable strategies like "meeting doomsday" and the "rule of halves" to declutter calendars and refocus collaboration.Shifting gears, we unpack the often-overlooked topic of hope in organizational culture. Jen Fisher (author of Hope Is The Strategy) reframes hope as a strategic, action-oriented process, not just a feel-good slogan. We discuss Gallup’s finding that hope ranks higher than trust as what people want most from leaders, and how misaligned incentives erode both hope and well-being, leading to disengagement and burnout.Throughout, we challenge creative pros to rethink their real value—insight, intuition, and emotional logic—and encourage leaders to create environments where these qualities flourish.Five Key Learnings:Insight is Indispensable: Our unique perspectives, intuition, and courage—not just our time or output—are what make us valuable in creative roles.Meetings Need a Reset: Meetings often serve as a status symbol rather than a tool for progress. Treating meetings as products and regularly auditing their purpose and effectiveness can dramatically improve collaboration.Subtract to Add Value: Applying the “rule of halves”—cutting meeting length, attendees, agenda items, or frequency—forces us to focus on what’s truly essential and breaks the cycle of addition sickness.Hope Is Strategic, Not Sentimental: Hope is a cognitive, actionable process that drives teams forward. Organizations must foster strategic hope to encourage risk-taking and innovation.Alignment Drives Well-being: Stated values must match incentives and systems. Misalignment between what leaders say and reward creates dissonance, burnout, and disengagement.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:The Brave Habit is available nowMy new book will help you make bravery a habit in your life, your leadership, and your work. Discover how to develop the two qualities that lead to brave action: Optimistic Vision and Agency. Buy The Brave Habit wherever books are sold, or learn more at TheBraveHabit.com. | — | ||||||
| 2/3/26 | ![]() Ecosystems Of Brilliance | On this episode of Daily Creative, we explore the myth of the lone genius and make the case for why sustainable creative brilliance happens when we grow and nurture real relationships. We’re joined by Daniel Coyle, bestselling author and researcher, whose new book Flourish examines how true growth emerges not through competition, but through intentional connection and community.We discuss why relationships sit at the heart of creativity, what it means to build a meaningful circle, and how to design environments where both individuals and groups can grow. Daniel shares practical insights on “making meaning” and “group flow,” illustrating how small acts—like telling stories or organizing joyful gatherings—can catalyze shared energy and transformation. We reflect on why the most profound creative work, and indeed the solutions to our most complex problems, are more likely to be found at the neighborhood level than through grand top-down initiatives.This conversation isn’t just about feeling less alone; it’s a blueprint for intentional action in your creative life. We leave you with a challenge: take one step this week to strengthen your creative community, whether that’s reaching out to a peer, convening a group, or simply asking deeper questions.Five Key Learnings from the Episode:Community Is Creative Infrastructure: Creativity doesn’t thrive in isolation. The most resilient, sustainable creative work is built on relationships that provide stability, challenge, and honest feedback.Cultivate, Don’t Compete: Flourishing is about shared, meaningful growth—think gardens, not games. Real creative communities are spaces for nurturing, not just winning or accumulating.Design for ‘Beautiful Messes’: Innovation and group flow emerge when we intentionally create environments where people can experiment, collaborate, and bring out new facets in each other—even if things get a little messy.Deep Questions Build Trust: Asking ambiguous, personal “deep questions” unlocks vulnerability, connection, and trust far more quickly than waiting for trust to appear before opening up.Power With, Not Power Over: Leaders unleash real growth when they support, ask great questions, and give power away—moving from controlling outcomes to facilitating collective brilliance.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:The Brave Habit is available nowMy new book will help you make bravery a habit in your life, your leadership, and your work. Discover how to develop the two qualities that lead to brave action: Optimistic Vision and Agency. Buy The Brave Habit wherever books are sold, or learn more at TheBraveHabit.com.Apply for Creative Leader Roundtable What if you had a space every month to sharpen your leadership edge without the fluff? The Creative Leader Roundtable is where smart, driven, creative leaders gather to exchange ideas, solve real challenges, and grow together. So if you lead a team of thinkers, makers, or dreamers, this is your lab. We're launching soon with a new group of leaders. So, if you're interested, check it out and apply at CreativeLeader.net. | — | ||||||
| 1/27/26 | ![]() The Compounding Advantage: Leveraging AI for Smarter Creative Work | In this episode, we dive deep into the evolving relationship between human creativity and artificial intelligence. Inspired by Ada Lovelace's early vision of creative machines, we explore how the boundaries between expertise and common sense have been reshaped by modern AI, from expert systems to today's generative models. We sit down with pioneers and practitioners—Vasant Dhar, a longtime AI researcher and author of Thinking With Machines; Christopher Mims, technology journalist and author of How To AI; and the creators of Tachi AI, Aden Bahadori and Brett Granstaff—to discover how AI is shifting not only what we make but how we make it.We unpack the promise and the pitfalls of treating AI as a true thinking partner, not just a tool for automation. Our guests share practical strategies for using AI to augment creative work, streamline tedious tasks, and enhance idea generation—while emphasizing the necessity of human framing, expertise, and judgment. Whether you're a leader, designer, marketer, or filmmaker, we reveal why using AI thoughtfully is the real competitive edge in creative fields and business.Five Key Learnings:AI’s Compounding Edge: Utilizing AI consistently and benchmarking progress gives creatives and teams a multiplying advantage—not by replacing human originality, but by amplifying it through incremental improvements.Framing Questions Matter: The ability to ask the right, nuanced questions remains fundamentally human, and is essential when using AI as a partner in ideation, research, and strategy.Context and Expertise Are Critical: Experts benefit most from AI—leveraging their knowledge to dig deeper, validate outputs, and push beyond generic solutions, while ensuring originality in their work.AI as Scaffolding, Not a Substitute: The greatest value of AI today is in reducing friction and clearing time for creativity—whether it’s summarizing information, managing knowledge, or prepping film edits—so humans can focus on what matters.Human-Centric, Supportive AI: Tools like Tachi AI demonstrate that supporting creativity is more transformative than automating it; AI as infrastructure enables faster iteration and more creative decision-making, not just higher productivity.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:To listen to the full interviews from today's episode, as well as receive bonus content and deep dive insights from the episode, visit DailyCreativePlus.com and join Daily Creative+.The Brave Habit is available nowMy new book will help you make bravery a habit in your life, your leadership, and your work. Discover how to develop the two qualities that lead to brave action: Optimistic Vision and Agency. Buy The Brave Habit wherever books are sold, or learn more at TheBraveHabit.com. | — | ||||||
| 1/20/26 | ![]() Stop Renting Your Creative Process | Episode 92: OwnershipDaily CreativeIn this episode, we dive into the nuanced meaning of ownership in creative work and leadership. As the landscape is rapidly transformed by AI and powerful new tools, we explore the temptation to offload not just labor but also the very thinking that gives our work its unique signature. We unpack what it means to retain genuine ownership of process, relationships, and output—moving beyond merely curating machine-generated results and instead staying empathetically engaged in the creative process.Our guest, Greg Hawks, joins us to challenge the difference between “owners”, “renters”, and “vandals” in organizations. He brings fresh perspective on why many disengage, how environments subtly encourage or discourage ownership, and what teams and leaders can do to foster a climate where true creative engagement thrives.Some of the themes we touch on include:The fine balance between leveraging technology for efficiency and maintaining our emotional logic in creative decisionsWhy struggle and friction are the crucibles of meaningful, resonant workHow organizations inadvertently suppress ownership—and how to change that dynamicConcrete strategies for shifting from a renter to an owner mindsetThe powerful impact of reducing toxic “vandal” behavior on overall team engagementFive Key Learnings:Offloading too much of the creative process—especially decision-making—can hollow out our unique voice and intuition.Emotional logic, shaped by lived experience and intuition, is irreplaceable and differentiates meaningful work from mere output.Vandals—self-centered, divisive team members—can demotivate large segments of an organization, and removing them often unlocks higher engagement.True ownership requires us to understand the personal “returns” we seek (emotional, financial, relational, opportunity, growth) and articulate them courageously.Struggle and friction aren’t just obstacles—they’re where creative insight emerges and individual judgment is strengthened.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:The Brave Habit is available nowMy new book will help you make bravery a habit in your life, your leadership, and your work. Discover how to develop the two qualities that lead to brave action: Optimistic Vision and Agency. Buy The Brave Habit wherever books are sold, or learn more at TheBraveHabit.com. | — | ||||||
| 1/13/26 | ![]() The Drive To Create | In this episode, we dive deep into the human urge to create—what fuels it, why it feels so essential, and how we can harness it more intelligently in our work. We are joined by psychologist George Newman (author of How Great Ideas Happen) and philosopher Rebecca Newberger Goldstein (author of The Mattering Instinct), who guide us through both the mechanics and meaning of creativity.We explore why creativity is not just a talent or an act, but a fundamental human response that pushes back against chaos and entropy. George Newman unpacks the myths of the "lone genius," showing us that real creative breakthroughs emerge from collaboration, exploration, and persistent engagement—not isolation. He introduces smart frameworks for idea development, including gridding, transplanting, and overcoming the “originality ostrich effect” and the “creative cliff illusion.”Rebecca Newberger Goldstein takes us a level deeper, exploring why our drive to create is intimately tied to our need for meaning and validation. She discusses the “mattering instinct”—the pursuit of significance—and explains why conflict, resistance, and friction in organizations are often expressions of this core human need. Together, these conversations reveal how creativity is both an existential response and a practical tool for leadership and team health.Five Key Learnings:Great ideas aren’t conjured in isolation. Creative breakthroughs come from ongoing engagement, trial and error, and exposure to new perspectives—not from waiting for inspiration alone.Originality is often misunderstood. Striving to be radically original can backfire; the most resonant ideas have personal freshness but build on approachable, recognizable foundations.Guiding questions and iterative refinement matter. Defining and regularly reframing your creative questions ensures you’re solving the right problems and making meaningful progress.Discomfort signals opportunity, not failure. The “creative cliff illusion” means our best ideas may arrive late in the process, and discomfort is often a sign that transformation is near.Creativity is deeply connected to our need to matter. According to Rebecca Newberger Goldstein, our drive to create stems from our longing for meaning and significance—making every act of creation a resistance to insignificance and entropy.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:The Brave Habit is available nowMy new book will help you make bravery a habit in your life, your leadership, and your work. Discover how to develop the two qualities that lead to brave action: Optimistic Vision and Agency. Buy The Brave Habit wherever books are sold, or learn more at TheBraveHabit.com. | — | ||||||
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Chart Positions
18 placements across 18 markets.
Chart Positions
18 placements across 18 markets.
























