
The Unmistakable Creative Podcast
Candid Conversations about Creativity with Seth Godin, Tim Ferriss, Danielle Laporte, James Altucher and other artists, writers, entrepreneurs, and instigators
Srinivas Rao
Show overview
The Unmistakable Creative Podcast has been publishing since 2014, and across the 12 years since has built a catalogue of 1,739 episodes, alongside 1 trailer or bonus episode. That works out to over 1500 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a several-times-a-week cadence.
Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 49 min and 1h 1m — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. It is catalogued as a EN-language Society & Culture show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 2 weeks ago, with 36 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2022, with 199 episodes published. Published by Srinivas Rao.
From the publisher
Timeless Practical Wisdom For Living a Meaningful LifeInspiring stories and practical advice from creatives, entrepreneurs, change-makers, misfits, and rebels to help you become successful on your own terms Our listeners say, “If TEDTalks met Oprah you’d have the Unmistakable Creative.” Eliminate the feeling of being stuck in your life, blocked in your creativity, and discover higher levels of meaning and purpose in your life and career. Listen to deeply personal, insightful, and thought-provoking stories from the world’s leading thinkers and doers including best-selling authors, artists, peak performance psychologists, happiness researchers, entrepreneurs, startup founders, artists, venture capitalists, and even former bank robbers. Former guests have included Tim Ferriss, Seth Godin, Justine Musk, Scott Adams, Rob Bell, David Heinemeier Hansson, Elle Luna, Jordan Harbinger Brett Mckay, and Simon Sinek.Join The Unmistakable CollectiveThe Unmistakable Collective is a monthly membership for writers, bloggers, podcasters, and content creators that gives you access to workshops, AMA's, and accountability from other like-minded peers to help you accomplish any creative goals! Click here to become a member.Connect with Us On Social Twitter: @unmistakableceoInstagram: @unmistkablecreative Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Latest Episodes
View all 1,739 episodesApril Rinne: Thriving Through Change After Losing Both Parents at 20
Anna Lembke: Why Your Brain Mistakes Instagram for Heroin
Andy Molinsky: The Three Cs That Help You Step Outside Your Comfort Zone
Andrew Horn: Finding Your Grain of Truth Through Service and Emotional Mastery
Amy Edmondson: The Science of Failing Well and Why We Avoid Learning From Mistakes
Amy Blankson: Five Strategies to Find Happiness in a Tech-Saturated World
Alex Pang: Why Working Less Can Make You More Creative
B. Jeffrey: Why Obsession Is the Hidden Cost of Building an Empire
David Allen: Why Your Brain is a Terrible Office
Dan Lerner: Why Your Character Strengths Matter More Than Your Skills
Cyril Bouquet: How to Think Like an Alien to Unlock Creativity
Brad Stulberg: Why Stability Comes from Changing, Not Resisting Change
AJ Leon: The Defiance That Shapes a Life Worth Living
Chase Jarvis: Creativity is a Birthright, Not a Gift
Adam Gazzaley: Why Your Ancient Brain Struggles With Modern Tech
Austin Kleon: Transforming Disgust Into Art and the Power of Creative Maladjustment

Luke Burgis: Mimetic Desire, Fulfillment, and the Hidden Forces That Shape What We Want
Author and entrepreneur Luke Burgis joins us to explore the invisible architecture of human desire — and how understanding it can radically change our choices, ambitions, and sense of self. Drawing on his book *Wanting* and the mimetic theory of René Girard, Burgis unpacks how most of what we "want" is shaped not by independent reasoning, but by models — people we unconsciously imitate.From adolescent identity formation to startup culture, self-improvement traps, and curated social media personas, Burgis reveals how easily our values can be hijacked. He discusses the destructive loop of rivalrous desire, the myth of the autonomous goal-setter, and how most of us never pause to ask *why* we want what we want. The conversation also dives into the difference between thin vs. thick desires, how to build a life rooted in fulfillment rather than status, and the importance of discovering what only *you* can do. For anyone seeking clarity in a noisy, comparison-driven world, this episode is a wake-up call — and a blueprint for reclaiming your inner compass. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Kristin Neff: The Science and Practice of Self-Compassion
Kristin Neff, pioneering researcher and author of *Self-Compassion*, shares a groundbreaking case for why treating ourselves with kindness isn’t indulgent — it’s essential. Drawing on decades of academic research and personal reflection, Neff outlines how self-compassion transforms mental health, resilience, motivation, and even our relationship to ambition.The conversation spans parenting, education, culture, and the myth of the “perfect” self. Neff breaks down the differences between self-esteem and self-compassion, explores how shame and criticism undermine growth, and reveals how to rewire self-talk using neuroscience and contemplative practice. Her concept of self-worth isn’t built on achievement or performance — it’s rooted in humanity, connection, and presence.From emotional resilience and rumination to social comparison and cultural programming, this episode is a masterclass in learning to care for yourself — not as a reward for success, but as a prerequisite for thriving. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Kate Peterson: Redefining Success and What It Means to Live a Good Life
Kate Peterson, artist and author, shares her journey from chasing Instagram validation to defining success on her own terms. After spending 10 months in Greece, she realized that achievement itself was hollow—what mattered was building a life where small joys like pastries and coffee became the reward, not just checkpoints on a path to something else. Peterson explores how growing up across cultures shaped her identity, why social media creates superficial positive reinforcement loops, and how artists must navigate the spectrum between creating what they want and creating what pays. The conversation challenges Western individualism, explores Greek concepts of joy and togetherness, and questions whether the pursuit of an extraordinary life undermines the value of a perfectly good ordinary one. This is about defining the good life for yourself, not inheriting someone else's blueprint. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Kamal Ravikant: Rewiring Your Mind Through the Practice of Self-Love
Kamal Ravikant, author of "Love Yourself Like Your Life Depends On It," breaks down the neuroscience and daily practice of self-love as a transformative mental discipline. Drawing from his own journey through depression, Kamal explains how thoughts are just old mental loops running on autopilot, how we can consciously rewrite painful memories by changing their emotional charge, and why self-forgiveness is the necessary first step before transformation. He introduces the practice of layering one primal mental loop—I love myself—until it runs automatically and becomes the foundation from which your thoughts, feelings, and life arise. This conversation explores the malleability of memory, why the mind needs constant training like the body, and how seven minutes a day of internal work can compound into lasting change from the inside out. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.