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Daily Creative with Todd Henry

Daily Creative with Todd Henry

Formerly The Accidental Creative. Being a creative professional should be the greatest job in the world. You get to solve problems, express yourself, bring something new into the world and you get paid to do it. What's not to love. Yet every day, creative pros face, tremendous pressure and uncertainty. The temptation is just to play it safe, surrender to distraction and settle for less than your best daily creative is about making sure that's not your story. Each episode focuses on a topic relevant to creative pros, like how to come up with ideas under pressure, or how the...

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Of No Importance Whatsoever

Of No Importance Whatsoever

<p>In this episode, we explore the creative paradox that sometimes the best work begins when we stop trying to produce our "best work." We revisit the story of Richard Feynman, who rediscovered his passion for physics by indulging in what seemed like trivial curiosity—with world-changing consequences.</p><p>We’re joined first by Ian Bogost, author of The Small Stuff, professor, writer, and game designer, who unpacks the idea of “gratification”—the sensory enchantment of everyday life—and why chasing only the "big stuff" means missing the moments that actually comprise our experience . We examine the relentless march toward effic...

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Why Great Ideas Fail: Escaping the Pain Cave

Why Great Ideas Fail: Escaping the Pain Cave

<p>In this episode, we explore what really drives demand for creative products and services. Through the story of how OXO Good Grips was born—not from a brainstorm, but from noticing real pain in the kitchen—we examine why the most successful innovations aren’t invented; they’re observed in real-world frustration.</p><p>Our guest, Rob Snyder, introduces “the Pain Cave” and the concept of the “hell yes customer,” explaining why so many creative pros find their ideas fall flat—even when they seem objectively valuable. We dive into the core argument behind Snyder’s book, The Power of Pull: demand isn’...

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Saying, Wanting, Trying

Saying, Wanting, Trying

<p>In this episode, we explore the hidden dynamic that often derails creative professionals and leaders: the gap between what we say, what we actually want, and what we’re really building. We share the story of why some of the best music never makes it to radio, revealing how entire industries (and teams) quietly organize around mediocrity—chasing the safe middle, or as we call it, "the three." Drawing from lessons learned in Nashville’s music scene and patterns we've observed in organizations adopting new technologies like AI, we challenge listeners to confront and close this gap of dissonance. We dis...

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How To Try Again

How To Try Again

<p>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.</p><p>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 th...

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The One and the Ninety-Nine

The One and the Ninety-Nine

<p>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.</p><p>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...

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Signal To Noise

Signal To Noise

<p>In this episode of Daily Creative, we explore what it really takes to do meaningful, protected creative work in an age of perpetual noise and overwhelm. We kick off with a story from Claude Shannon, the mathematician whose revolutionary thinking about “signal vs. noise” in communication provides the perfect lens for today’s creative challenges.</p><p>First, we sit down with Ron Friedman, author of Superteams, who shares the non-obvious strengths that set high-performing teams apart—from deliberately managing time, energy, and attention, to building genuine interdependence, to treating recovery and feedback as critical components of ongoing excellence. Ron deta...

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The Success Wound

The Success Wound

<p>Why does the title never feel like enough? Why do so many of us hit every goal we set and still go to bed feeling like we came up short? My guest this week has a name for it. Brooke Taylor calls it the success wound, the pain that comes from mistaking our productivity and achievement for our worth. We get into where it comes from, why creative people are especially prone to it, and what it actually looks like to stay ambitious without running yourself into the ground. If you have ever caught yourself answering "How are you?"...

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Stop Hoarding Your Genius: Why Habits Precede Breakthroughs

Stop Hoarding Your Genius: Why Habits Precede Breakthroughs

<p>In this episode, we explore the often-overlooked gap between creating meaningful work and actually releasing it into the world. Starting with the story of Vivian Maier—the prolific street photographer whose life’s work was discovered only after her death—we examine why so many of us hesitate to share our creations.</p><p>We’re joined by Tina Roth Eisenberg, founder of Creative Mornings, who discusses the power of community, commitment, and collective bravery. She introduces Release Day, a campaign challenging creatives everywhere to choose a deadline, finish neglected projects, and courageously share them with the world—no matter how...

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When Bad News Is Good News

When Bad News Is Good News

<p>In this episode, we explore one of the most powerful—but counterintuitive—practices for sustaining high-performance teams: making it safe to bring bad news forward, early and often. Drawing from manufacturing history and deep space exploration, we examine the critical link between team culture and breakthrough solutions.</p><p>First, we hear from Lindy Elkins-Tanton, planetary scientist at UC Berkeley and author of Mission Ready. Lindy shares the harrowing experience of a near-catastrophic flaw discovered just twelve days before a major NASA launch, and how a culture that treats the "bearer of bad news" as a hero turned potential disa...

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Constraint & Uncertainty: David Epstein and Simone Stolzoff on Thinking Inside The Box

Constraint & Uncertainty: David Epstein and Simone Stolzoff on Thinking Inside The Box

<p>This week, we explore two forces that shape every creative journey: constraint and uncertainty. Drawing on the remarkable artistic reinventions of Hokusai, we look at how creative legends transitioned from running from the box to thriving within it—and how that same process plays out in creative work today.</p><p>Our first guest, David Epstein, author of Inside the Box, systematically dismantles the myth of the blank canvas and shows why true creative breakthroughs happen inside carefully constructed boundaries. He shares frameworks used by artistic innovators and practical strategies for leaders and teams to define the right limits—espe...

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