
Insights from recent episode analysis
Audience Interest
Podcast Focus
Publishing Consistency
Platform Reach
Insights are generated by CastFox AI using publicly available data, episode content, and proprietary models.
Total monthly reach
Estimated from 16 chart positions in 16 markets.
By chart position
- 🇺🇸US · Non-Profit#11M to 3M
- 🇨🇦CA · Non-Profit#29100K to 300K
- 🇦🇺AU · Non-Profit#38100K to 300K
- 🇫🇷FR · Non-Profit#13100K to 300K
- 🇰🇷KR · Non-Profit#2630K to 100K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
988K to 3.0M🎙 Biweekly cadence·Last published 4d ago - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
1.4M to 4.3M🇺🇸70%🇨🇦7%🇦🇺7%+13 more - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
423K to 1.3M
Market Insights
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Reach across major podcast platforms, updated hourly
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* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
Recent episodes
Bringing D-Day Veterans Back to Normandy with Drake Springer and Meredith Danluck (Why We Dream)
May 25, 2026
1h 03m 19s
Turning Pain into Purpose with Amy Looney Heffernan (Travis Manion Foundation)
May 18, 2026
43m 53s
Mike Pence on Reagan, Trump, and What Conservatives Believe
May 11, 2026
51m 34s
The Entrepreneur Who Challenged Canada's Healthcare Monopoly with Kip Woodward
May 4, 2026
59m 49s
How Love and Enterprise Are Rescuing Thousands with Becca Stevens (Thistle Farms)
Apr 27, 2026
40m 31s
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5/25/26 | ![]() Bringing D-Day Veterans Back to Normandy with Drake Springer and Meredith Danluck (Why We Dream) | In this episode of Going Big!, host Kevin Gentry sits down with producer Drake Springer and director Meredith Danluck to discuss Why We Dream, a documentary that follows World War II veterans returning to Normandy 80 years after D-Day. With many of the veterans now more than 100 years old, the film captures a vanishing generation’s memories of war, service, sacrifice, and the lives they built afterward.Together, they explore how to tell a World War II story in a way that feels fresh and deeply human; why the filmmakers fought to keep the veterans, not the brand, at the center; and how storytelling can preserve living memory before it disappears. The conversation also examines risk, leadership, and the hunger many people feel today for meaning, connection, and a renewed sense of duty to one another. | 1h 03m 19s | ||||||
| 5/18/26 | ![]() Turning Pain into Purpose with Amy Looney Heffernan (Travis Manion Foundation) | After losing her husband, Navy SEAL Lieutenant Brendan Looney, in Afghanistan, Amy Looney Heffernan could have stepped back from the world. Instead, she chose a harder path: building a life of service, leadership, and impact in his memory. On this episode of Going Big!, host Kevin Gentry talks with Amy, now President of the Travis Manion Foundation, about grief, resilience, Memorial Day, and how service can help turn pain into purpose. She shares the deeply personal story behind her journey, the values Brendan lived by, and how the Foundation is equipping veterans, families of the fallen, and young people to lead with character in communities across America. Learn more about The Honor Project | 43m 53s | ||||||
| 5/11/26 | ![]() Mike Pence on Reagan, Trump, and What Conservatives Believe | In this episode of Going Big!, host Kevin Gentry sits down with former Vice President Mike Pence for a conversation about faith, conviction, public service, and the moments that test a leader’s character. Pence reflects on his journey from a young Democrat inspired by John F. Kennedy to a Reagan conservative, the hard lessons he learned from early political defeats, and the principles that shaped his years in Congress, as governor of Indiana, and in the White House.They also discuss January 6, the constitutional duty Pence believed he was bound to uphold, and his continued work to defend traditional conservative ideas through Advancing American Freedom and his new book, What Conservatives Believe: Rediscovering the Conservative Conscience. For anyone interested in leadership under pressure and the future of the conservative movement, this is a conversation worth hearing. | 51m 34s | ||||||
| 5/4/26 | ![]() The Entrepreneur Who Challenged Canada's Healthcare Monopoly with Kip Woodward | In this episode of Going Big!, host Kevin Gentry talks with Kip Woodward, a Canadian business leader, investor, and public-policy advocate whose career has spanned family enterprise, ranching, health care governance, and reform efforts around some of Canada’s most entrenched institutional challenges. Kip reflects on what it takes to lead at scale, challenge broken systems, and take risks without losing perspective. From entrepreneurial pivots to public controversy, this conversation explores curiosity, resilience, governance, and the kind of leadership required when the answers are neither simple nor popular. | 59m 49s | ||||||
| 4/27/26 | ![]() How Love and Enterprise Are Rescuing Thousands with Becca Stevens (Thistle Farms) | Human trafficking and exploitation are often hidden in plain sight. In this episode of Going Big!, host Kevin Gentry sits down with Rev. Becca Stevens, founder of Thistle Farms, to explore how one home for five women became a survivor-led movement serving around 1,500 women each year through housing, employment, and long-term support. Stevens shares what most people still misunderstand about trafficking, why punishment alone cannot heal deep wounds, and how Thistle Farms built a distinctive model of restorative justice through social enterprise, community, and love put into practice. It’s a conversation about healing, entrepreneurship, faith, and what it takes to build something big enough to help women find their way home again. | 40m 31s | ||||||
| 4/20/26 | ![]() Why Retirement Culture Has Work Backwards with David Bahnsen | Most people spend their lives trying to escape work. David Bahnsen thinks that’s a tragedy — and a recipe for emptiness. In this episode of Going Big!, host Kevin Gentry sits down with David, founder and CIO of a wealth management firm overseeing more than $9 billion, to unpack a countercultural claim: human beings were made to contribute, not just consume. They talk about why the “non-essential worker” language of the COVID era still matters, why shorter work weeks and universal basic income can miss something deeper, and why “more purpose, more work, more endeavor” might actually be part of the solution to rising isolation and despair. Watch now if you're looking for practice advice for a life marked by meaning, responsibility, and contribution. | 46m 39s | ||||||
| 4/13/26 | ![]() How CarePortal Has Served 600,000+ Children and Families with Adrien Lewis | In this episode of Going Big!, host Kevin Gentry interviews Adrien Lewis, Founder and President of CarePortal, about building a “care-sharing network” that connects vetted needs for kids and families in crisis with local churches, businesses, and neighbors who can respond quickly.CarePortal connects the real-time needs of community members (submitted by caseworkers and agencies) with neighbors who can step in fast — strangers helping strangers.Adrien shares his personal origin story, the challenges of scaling a new model, and real examples of how one small need (like a crib) can become long-term support and stability.Learn how CarePortal works, why trust is central to the model, and how anyone can get involved in their own community. | 49m 13s | ||||||
| 4/6/26 | ![]() Going Big with Paul Atkins: Why Public Companies Have Been Disappearing—and What Comes Next | SEC Chairman Paul Atkins joins host Kevin Gentry on Going Big! to discuss his "minimum dose" philosophy of regulation—and why information overload can be just as harmful as too little disclosure.They cover the decline of public markets and Paul's push to revive IPOs, the role of institutional ownership and politicized shareholder activism, and why he believes crypto belongs under U.S. oversight with clearer rules rather than pushed offshore. | 34m 26s | ||||||
| 3/30/26 | ![]() Going Big with Heather Rice-Minus: Hope Behind Bars and the Power of Second Chances | Most people never step inside a prison. But what if some of the most compelling stories of change in America are happening there? In this episode of Going Big!, host Kevin Gentry interviews Heather Rice-Minus, President and CEO of Prison Fellowship, about what she has seen in prisons across the country and why she believes hope can grow in the hardest places. The conversation traces the origins of Prison Fellowship through the story of Chuck Colson, whose conversion and time in prison helped spark a movement that now serves incarcerated men and women, supports families, and partners with churches nationwide. Heather shares vivid, personal stories from inside prison walls, including a woman known as “Turtle” who is serving a life sentence yet has become a leader and mentor to others. She also challenges the “us vs. them” mindset and explains why defining people by the worst thing they’ve ever done can block real restoration. The episode also explores the scale of incarceration in the United States, the impact on children and families, and the growing focus on second chances through community engagement and practical next steps. Heather closes with a quote from Colson that captures the theme of the conversation: “My greatest humiliation being sent to prison was actually the beginning of God’s greatest use in my life.” | 47m 00s | ||||||
| 3/23/26 | ![]() Going Big with Arthur Brooks: Finding the Meaning of Your Life in an Age of Emptiness | Millions of people say life feels empty, even when they’re achieving more than ever. Why is that happening, and how do you reverse it?In this episode of Going Big!, host Kevin Gentry sits down with Arthur C. Brooks — Harvard professor, bestselling author, and one of the world’s leading voices on happiness and meaning — to unpack what Brooks calls the “meaning gap.”Arthur shares his own journey of reinvention: from professional musician to public policy leader, and then a deliberate pivot into the science of happiness, purpose, love, and faith.They explore how modern technology can keep people trapped in “complicated problems,” while the biggest human questions live elsewhere — and why so many people feel they can’t even ask the right questions anymore.Along the way, Arthur gives listeners practical tools they can use immediately: a simple decision framework (excitement vs. fear vs. deadness), daily “phone protocols” that protect relationships, and a concrete way to reconnect with meaning when you’re feeling stuck.They also discuss Arthur's new book, The Meaning of Your Life: Finding Purpose in an Age of Emptiness, and his upcoming virtual event tied to the launch. Join Arthur’s free “The Meaning of Your Life Virtual Experience” on March 27, a live, immersive journey designed around the groundbreaking findings in his new book, The Meaning of Your Life: Finding Purpose in an Age of Emptiness. Throughout the day, Arthur will be joined by an extraordinary lineup of guests for deep, unscripted conversations that go far beyond the surface. Together, they will pull back the curtain on why the modern world—with its rapid technological and cultural shifts—has effectively rewired our brains to make meaning feel so elusive. Learn more about The Meaning of Your Life Virtual Experience at themeaningofyourlife.com | 57m 29s | ||||||
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| 3/16/26 | ![]() Going Big with Mayor Lily Wu: From Learning English at 8 to Leading a Major American City | On this special episode of Going Big!, released on March 16 -- Wichita's "316 Day" -- Wichita Mayor Lily Wu joins host Kevin Gentry for a conversation about civic leadership, immigrant grit, and what it looks like to “go big” as a true outsider.Without prior election experience — and without the backing of either major political party — Wu ran for mayor of Wichita in 2023 and won decisively. She explains why she believed the city needed a new direction, and how focusing on the core services of local government helped her connect with voters across the community.Wu also shares her family’s immigration story: born in Guatemala to parents originally from mainland China, she immigrated to Wichita as a child. She reflects on learning English after arriving at age eight, the responsibility she felt to help her family adapt, and how those early experiences shaped her work ethic and leadership style.The episode explores Wu’s approach to governing through presence and listening, including her commitment to extensive public engagement across Wichita. She also discusses the role of mentors and community organizations in her development, and why she encourages young people to get involved early.Wu speaks candidly about leading through crisis and grief, the importance of verified information in public moments such as the tragic 2025 Potomac River mid-air collision, and how faith and prayer factor into her decision-making and resilience. This conversation is for anyone interested in local leadership, public service, mentorship, and the personal journey behind a bold decision to step forward and serve. | 45m 30s | ||||||
| 3/9/26 | ![]() Going Big with Andy Kessler: Productivity, Profits, and Innovation in the Age of Artificial Intelligence | What does it mean to find your unique skill set when technology is moving faster than most people can process? In this episode, Kevin Gentry sits down with _Wall Street Journal_ columnist and innovation optimist Andy Kessler to break down how high performers and high agency leaders can thrive through the biggest technology shift of our time. Andy lays out a simple but powerful framework for Going Big today: become relentlessly productive by doing more with less, pursue profit as a signal that you are creating real value for society, and most importantly, learn to spot major trends early so you can get the wind at your back. Kevin and Andy unpack how fast the world has changed since the smartphone revolution, why most people miss the first signals of disruption, and how to “see signposts in the fog” by thinking in five to ten year increments with scale, cost curves, and market elasticity in mind. They also dig into what “high agency” really means in 2026, why artificial intelligence is a productivity powerhouse that rewards action over credentials, and how the democratization of tools is about to reshape careers across coding, customer service, medicine, law, retail, and education. Andy shares his own unconventional career journey, from Bell Labs engineer to Wall Street analyst to investor to writer, and explains why the best careers are not plotted, they are built by staying curious, staying loose, and learning how to learn. If you want a more practical way to think about artificial intelligence, innovation, and your next big move, this conversation will help you stop fearing the waves of change and start riding them. | 55m 38s | ||||||
| 3/2/26 | ![]() Going Big with Asha Curran: Building GivingTuesday into a Shared Culture of Generosity | What happens when you stop trying to control a movement and instead design it to be owned by everyone? In this episode of the Going Big! Podcast, host Kevin Gentry sits down with Asha Curran, Chief Executive Officer of GivingTuesday, the global generosity movement that began as a simple idea and grew into a year-round force for good across more than one hundred countries. Initially conceived as a counter-movement against Black Friday, #GivingTuesday was invented to encourage people to do good through donations and acts of service every year on the Tuesday after Thanksgiving. Asha breaks down how it went from a hashtag to an open source movement by rejecting old rules around branding, permission, and control, and choosing radical trust, co-creation, and civic agency instead. You will hear how coalition campaigns and collaboration outperform competition, why small and medium nonprofit organizations often move faster than big institutions, and why people respond to authentic storytelling, not slick corporate messaging. Asha also explains how donors are influenced by social proof, why GivingTuesday creates net new giving instead of just moving donations around, and how generosity itself can be an antidote to anxiety. The conversation closes with practical wisdom on mentorship, skill building early in your career, and simple ways anyone can live a more meaningful life through everyday generosity behaviors. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, YouTube, Spotify, or wherever you listen, so you never miss an episode. | 55m 51s | ||||||
| 2/23/26 | ![]() Going Big with Bo Ghirardelli & Nicolas Cary: Sky’s the Limit and the American Dream | When people are able to apply their unique talents to real-world problems, we all benefit. But too often, talented entrepreneurs lack the practical tools, know-how, or relationships they need to turn a good idea into a working business -- and so they miss out on the essential seed capital to take those ideas to market. That’s the gap Bo Ghirardelli and Nicolas Cary built Sky’s the Limit to close. Together, serial builders and lifelong friends Bo and Nic (of Blockchain.com) developed a digital success platform that delivers tangible support for low-income, earliest-stage entrepreneurs to access education, mentorship, and capital. Now, they’re scaling it to truly Go Big. In this episode of Going Big!, Bo shares the origin story of Sky’s the Limit, which began as an idea during the Arab Spring, when Bo was stationed in Morocco and aspiring entrepreneurs kept approaching him with business ideas but no clear path forward. Nic connects those lessons to a massive challenge in the United States: millions of people with talent and ambition, but lacking know-how, community, and early access to capital -- and a growing sense that opportunity is slipping away. Bo and Nic explain how Sky’s the Limit scaled beyond a brick-and-mortar program into a tech-enabled platform, including “missions” that guide entrepreneurs step-by-step, mentor connections built through community and virtual events, and a funding system that helps founders practice pitching and compete for grants. The conversation also dives into mentorship as a force multiplier for both skills and character, and touches on Nic’s experience in the world of cryptocurrency and innovative financial models. The episode closes with a clear invitation: if you’re looking up at the sky and imagining a better future, Sky’s the Limit exists to help you build it. | 1h 01m 08s | ||||||
| 2/16/26 | ![]() Going Big with John Yates III: Faith, Leadership, and the Digital Age | What if Going Big doesn’t mean building a massive platform — but laying a foundation that lasts for generations? In this episode of Going Big!, host Kevin Gentry sits down with Reverend John Yates III, rector of Holy Trinity Anglican Church in Raleigh, North Carolina. The son of influential pastor John Yates II, Yates has chosen a different but equally ambitious path to live out and develop long-term faithfulness. Yates shares how his father’s steady leadership shaped him, what he learned working closely with renowned theologian John Stott, and why mentoring often happens not through formal instruction but through quiet proximity and example. He explains why playing the long game — investing in people over 10, 20, or 30 years — may be the most countercultural form of leadership in today’s world. The conversation turns to one of the most pressing challenges facing leaders today: the digital revolution. Yates argues that smartphones and social media are not just tools, but forces shaping our humanity at a scale comparable to Gutenberg’s printing press. He reflects on how this technological shift is transforming attention, community, and even the experience of faith. From lessons on mentorship and intellectual humility to navigating leadership during COVID and guiding a congregation through cultural change, this episode explores how leaders can remain grounded, curious, and faithful in an age of distraction. If you’ve ever wondered what the connection is between integrity and real impact — this conversation will challenge and encourage you to rethink what it truly means to Go Big. | 53m 31s | ||||||
| 2/9/26 | ![]() Going Big with Fr. Robert Sirico: Faith, Freedom, and the Formation of a Life’s Calling | In this episode of Going Big, host Kevin Gentry sits down with Fr. Robert Sirico — priest, thinker, and co-founder of the Acton Institute — to explore a remarkable life shaped by bold ideas, unexpected turns, and an unwavering commitment to the dignity of the human person. Fr. Sirico reflects on his early years in Brooklyn, his immersion in the social movements of the 1970s, and the intellectual journey that ultimately led him back to faith and into the priesthood. He shares how thinkers like Michael Novak, Cardinal Avery Dulles, and others helped him integrate theology, human freedom, economics, and moral reasoning into a unified vision. Together, Kevin and Fr. Sirico dive into the founding of the Acton Institute, the risks involved in challenging prevailing assumptions within religious institutions, and the decades-long effort to move global conversations about faith and economics toward a deeper understanding of freedom and virtue. This conversation also explores the role of mentors, the meaning of humility, lessons from serving as a hospital chaplain, and how suffering, truth, and compassion all shape the pursuit of one’s calling. Whether you’re interested in leadership, intellectual formation, personal transformation, or the intersection of faith and free societies, this episode offers a rare window into a life devoted to Going Big with purpose. | 55m 28s | ||||||
| 2/2/26 | ![]() Going Big with Aditi Goel and David Carroll: Taking On America’s Hidden Justice Crisis | In this episode of Going Big!, host Kevin Gentry sits down with Aditi Goel and David Carroll, the executive director and founder of the Sixth Amendment Center, to explore one of the most misunderstood crises in American law: the failure of many local courts to provide legal counsel to people who can’t afford it. Though the Constitution guarantees the right to an attorney, millions of Americans are being prosecuted, sentenced, and even jailed without ever speaking to one. In lower courts, the right to counsel often doesn’t exist. Goel and Carroll share their journey of building the only national organization dedicated solely to this problem. Their unique, nonpartisan model partners directly with states to identify structural gaps, uncover unintentional violations, and help governments meet their constitutional obligations without litigation. This episode offers a sobering look at what’s broken in America’s criminal justice system—and an inspiring path toward fixing it. If you care about civil liberties, smart governance, and how to go big with focused mission-driven work, this conversation is essential. | 1h 01m 18s | ||||||
| 1/26/26 | ![]() Going Big with Dr. Rand Paul: Independent Leadership from the Operating Room to the Senate Floor | What if going big in politics meant doing less? Dr. Rand Paul is a U.S. Senator from Kentucky—and one of the most consistently independent voices in American government. In this episode of Going Big!, we talk about how his commitment to liberty, limited government, and constitutional principles have shaped every step of his unconventional journey. You’ll hear how growing up in the household of Ron Paul formed his early worldview, how medicine taught him the value of real-world outcomes, and why his 2010 Senate run nearly started with a political headline and a trip to the doghouse. Rand unpacks the deeper philosophy behind his contrarian stands, from COVID policy to federal spending, and what it takes to speak truth when the easier path is silence. He makes the case that the job of a legislator isn’t to pass laws—it’s to defend freedom. Even when liberty is the harder argument to sell. And if you’re wondering how to make a difference? Rand offers a roadmap: start by reading, get a real job, and show up where your voice matters most—especially in primaries. | 28m 43s | ||||||
| 1/19/26 | ![]() Going Big with Dr. Michael Crow: Redesigning the American University | What if excellence in higher education wasn’t about who you exclude—but about how many you can empower to succeed? In this episode of Going Big!, host Kevin Gentry sits down with Dr. Michael Crow, President of Arizona State University and one of the most visionary university leaders in America. Over the past two decades, Dr. Crow has led a sweeping transformation of ASU—turning it into the nation’s largest research university, dramatically expanding access, and pioneering a new model of continuous innovation. They explore how ASU scaled from 55,000 to over 200,000 degree-seeking students without compromising quality, why the university now graduates more engineers than nearly any institution in America, and how it became a driving force behind the largest foreign direct investment in U.S. history. Dr. Crow also unpacks the cultural resistance he faced, the radical accountability embedded in ASU’s charter, and how universities can become true engines of national progress. If you care about the future of higher education, institutional transformation, or what it means to lead boldly at scale—this conversation will reset your expectations. | 48m 00s | ||||||
| 1/12/26 | ![]() Going Big with Governor Glenn Youngkin: From Basketball to the Boardroom to the Capitol | In this episode of Going Big!, host Kevin Gentry sits down with Governor Glenn Youngkin for a wide‑ranging and deeply personal conversation that goes far beyond politics. From growing up in a working‑class Virginia family shaped by resilience, to leading one of the world’s most influential investment firms, to answering an unexpected call to public service, Governor Youngkin shares the defining moments that prepared him for leadership. He reflects on the mentors who challenged him, the role of faith in shaping his marriage and decision‑making, and the lessons sports taught him about teamwork, discipline, and results. Kevin and Governor Youngkin explore what it really means to go big as a leader—why listening matters more than talking, how values guide hard decisions, and why execution ultimately separates good ideas from real impact. The conversation connects business leadership, public service, and personal purpose in a way that’s practical, honest, and deeply human. Whether you’re leading an organization, discerning a calling, or simply asking what meaningful service looks like in your own life, this episode offers a compelling blueprint for leading with clarity, conviction, and purpose. | 57m 23s | ||||||
| 1/5/26 | ![]() Going Big with Gay Gaines: The Woman Behind the GOP Revolution and the Revival of Mount Vernon | What does it take to launch a revolution—twice? In this episode of Going Big!, host Kevin Gentry sits down with Gay Gaines, one of the most influential civic leaders of the last half-century. She helped build GOPAC into the engine that propelled Newt Gingrich to the speakership in 1994. Then she went on to raise over $100 million to transform Mount Vernon into the national treasure it is today. Gay’s story is about more than political strategy or philanthropy—it’s about fearlessness. From befriending Margaret Thatcher and Bill Buckley to organizing with Rush Limbaugh and inspiring thousands to give generously, she shows what it means to commit fully to a cause you believe in. Tune in to hear how she built movements, mentored leaders, and raised money the old-fashioned way: by asking big, bold, unapologetic questions. This is a masterclass in conviction, contribution, and Going Big. | 39m 33s | ||||||
| 12/29/25 | ![]() Going Big with Tyler Cowen, the Information Billionaire: The Future Belongs to the Non-Complacent | Tyler Cowen returns to Going Big! for a sweeping conversation on ambition, disruption, and how to think clearly in a world moving faster than ever. From his early days studying Austrian economics at George Mason to running one of the most influential economics blogs in the world with Marginal Revolution, Cowen reflects on the personal choices that shaped his path—and the broader trends that will shape the future. Along the way, he shares what drives his relentless curiosity, why ambition is underrated, and how to keep growing intellectually in a rapidly changing world. He also offers insights into the rise of AI, the future of education, the bureaucracy of philanthropy, and the subtle dangers of social comfort. Plus: how he reads 5–10x faster than most people, how he chooses podcast guests, and why ”not going crazy” is one of the most overlooked traits of long-term success. If you’re curious about what it takes to build a life of impact—and how to stay sharp, bold, and useful in the AI era—this episode is for you. | 59m 13s | ||||||
| 12/22/25 | ![]() Going Big with Scott Beaulier: Rethinking Higher Ed with a First-Gen College Dean | Host Kevin Gentry sits down with Dr. Scott Beaulier, Dean of the University of Wyoming College of Business, for a conversation about what it takes to keep going when life and leadership get hard. Dr. Beaulier shares how growing up in Iron Mountain, Michigan, working his way up at McDonald’s, and being the first in his family to pursue college shaped his grit, discipline, and drive to pursue something bigger. From marathon miles to major decisions, he unpacks the moments that define you, including “hitting the wall,” facing pressure, and pushing through when quitting feels easier. He also shares how mentors changed his trajectory, why higher education needs real innovation, and what it looks like to lead with purpose, resilience, and a willingness to challenge the status quo in order to create opportunity for others. | 55m 35s | ||||||
| 12/15/25 | ![]() Going Big with Tim Busch: Serial Entrepreneurship, Faith, and Cultural Renewal | Host Kevin Gentry sits down with entrepreneur and philanthropist Tim Busch to explore how faith, hard work, and vision shaped his journey from working in a Michigan supermarket to leading several major businesses and founding influential institutions. Tim shares how early discipline, entrepreneurial grit, and a commitment to openly living his Catholic faith guided him as he built enterprises in law, real estate, hospitality, and beyond. They discuss the creation of Legatus, the Napa Institute, the Magis Institute, and the Tim and Steph Busch School of Business at the Catholic University of America, along with Tim’s belief that leaders should bring their faith into the marketplace to renew culture and strengthen communities. He closes with a challenge inspired by John Paul II: whatever your tradition, be a good one. | 51m 21s | ||||||
| 12/8/25 | ![]() Going Big with Rev. Dan Marotta: Small Faithfulness and Big Impact | Host Kevin Gentry sits down with Rev. Dan Marotta of Redeemer Anglican Church in Richmond, Virginia, for a powerful conversation about what it truly means to go big by first being faithful in the small things. Rev. Marotta shares his unexpected journey from studying marine biology to entering ministry, shaped through heartbreak, loss, and a renewed encounter with the hope of Jesus Christ. He explains how most people discover their calling through steady obedience rather than dramatic signs, and why paying close attention to what God has already placed in front of you can lead to life-changing purpose. Kevin and Rev. Marotta explore the role of mentors, the beauty and challenge of church planting, and how to pursue ambition that is rooted in humility and service instead of platform. Along the way, Rev. Marotta unpacks the meaning of Advent, the identity of Jesus Christ, and why the Christian story offers such profound hope for leaders who want to make a difference. His message is unmistakable: going big starts with showing up, loving well, and trusting that God often does His biggest work through simple, faithful steps. | 1h 03m 31s | ||||||
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