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"I always think, 'Jesus, this person could be reading War and Peace, and they picked up this dopey little book.' You know what I mean? So the best thing I could do is be interesting or helpful. I can't be boring, and I've got to try to be helpful," says Austin Kleon, author of Don't Call It Art: 10 Ways to Create Like a Kid Again.What a pleasure to welcome back Austin Kleon to the show to chat up his new book, his first in seven years, Don't Call It Art: 10 Ways to Create Like a Kid Again. It's published by Tarcher. Like Austin's previous books in Steal Like an Artist, Show Your Work, and Keep Going, this pink wonder is the size of those old double-album CD cases you'd get in the 90s and it's packed with insights and inspiration Austin learned from his two young boys about being an artist and how to be a creative person in times where creativity is needed more than ever. Fun stuff.So Austin is a funny, irreverent, sometimes cranky, but almost always inspiring based on his posture in the creative world. The stuff he curates and his generosity in sharing it is a big reason his Substack audience is 309,000 people strong and as of this taping, #5 in art & illustration on the stack. You can also learn more about him at austinkleon.com where he frequently blogs, though he's turned the dial down on that a bit in favor of the paid audience of his Tuesday newsletters. I've been plugged into the Kleon-verse since about 2014 right when Show Your Work came out and he made appearances on Creative Live with Chase Jarvis, so it's been cool to see the arc of his career to date.In this episode, we talk about: Place and his Ohio roots The farmer approach The idea of uncertainty Knowing less Getting back to that thing The most punk thing Metallica did What if Austin is the apprentice now? A revelation from Fiona Apple How his paid newsletter audience helped cook the book Researching in the open Knowing what weight class he's in Being interesting and helpful Going full-on Beast Mode The coveting of creative people How jealousy shows what's broken in you And how his kids brought punk back into his lifeIf you're going to pair this episode with anything, check out: Episode 146: Austin Kleon Episodes 169 and 433 with Chase Jarvis Episode 266 with Kristen Radtke Episode 369 with Akeem S. Roberts Episode 480 with Dana Jeri Maier Episode 486 with Roz Chast
Hey friends, Chase here Austin Kleon is back on the show, and this conversation is exactly the kind of reminder every creative person needs. You probably know Austin from Steal Like an Artist, Show Your Work!, and Keep Going, the books that have helped millions of people rethink creativity, sharing, influence, originality, and what it actually means to make things in public. But Austin's new book, Don't Call It Art: 10 Ways to Create Like a Kid Again, goes somewhere even more fundamental. It asks a question that feels especially urgent for creators, entrepreneurs, artists, writers, photographers, parents, and anyone trying to make meaningful work in a world that wants to turn everything into content: What if the way back to your best creative work is not becoming more serious, but becoming more playful? That question matters because most of us have made creativity too heavy. We have wrapped it in identity, pressure, productivity, platforms, metrics, perfectionism, and the fear of being judged. We get stuck asking whether we are real artists, serious writers, successful creators, or legitimate professionals. We worry about the noun before we do the verb. Austin's message is simpler, deeper, and more freeing: "Don't call it art. Don't worry about being an artist. Forget the nouns. Do the verbs. Just make stuff." That idea is the center of this episode. We talk about what kids can teach us about creativity, why play is not frivolous, how to build the conditions for your best work, why attention is your most valuable resource, and why some of the most important ideas in your life might come from goofing off. This conversation is about loosening the grip. It is about getting back to the part of you that makes before it judges, explores before it explains, and follows the energy before it knows exactly where the work is going. Why This Conversation Matters Right Now We are living in a strange moment for creative people. On one hand, there has never been more opportunity. An individual with a laptop, a camera, a newsletter, a sketchbook, a phone, a point of view, or a weird little idea can reach people directly. That is extraordinary. But it also comes with a cost. The pressure to turn every interest into a brand, every hobby into content, every project into a product, and every creative impulse into a strategy has never been stronger. We are constantly being asked to define ourselves: What do you do? What is your niche? What is your platform? What are you building? How are you monetizing it? What is the plan? Those questions can be useful at the right time. But when they show up too early, they can suffocate the very thing they are trying to organize. Austin's work reminds us that creativity begins before identity. Before "artist." Before "writer." Before "photographer." Before "entrepreneur." Before "content creator." Before the nouns, there are verbs. Drawing. Writing. Walking. Noticing. Building. Playing. Collecting. Tinkering. Making. Sharing. Kids understand this instinctively. They do not sit down and ask whether what they are making fits the market. They do not wonder whether they are allowed to call themselves artists. They do not freeze because the thing in front of them might not be good enough. They simply begin. And in that beginning, there is a kind of wisdom most adults have forgotten. What We Explore in This Episode Why kids can be some of the best creativity teachers because they make before they judge, label, or perform. How to reconnect with the feeling you wanted as a kid, not necessarily the exact childhood you had. Why play is not the opposite of serious work, but a form of creative research and development. How to create the conditions for creativity through time, space, materials, and permission. Why tools should feel more like toys if you want to stay curious and experimental. How phones fracture attention and why protecting the edges of your day can change the texture of your life. Why hobbies matter and how bikes, music, golf, drawing, and other forms of play can return us to ourselves. Why "don't call it art" can be liberating for anyone who feels trapped by labels or legitimacy. How to use jealousy, disgust, and frustration as creative information instead of letting them turn into bitterness. Why people pay attention when someone truly believes in what they are doing. The Core Idea: Forget the Nouns. Do the Verbs. The fastest way to get unstuck is often to stop asking what you are and start paying attention to what you do. That sounds simple, but it is one of the biggest traps in creative work. We get obsessed with identity. Am I an artist? Am I a real writer? Am I a serious photographer? Am I a professional? Am I successful enough to call myself this thing? Am I allowed? That kind of thinking can freeze you before you even start. Kids do not have that problem. They are not trying to become "artists." They are drawing. They are building. They are making noise. They are inventing stories. They are throwing materials around and seeing what happens. Austin's point is not that craft does not matter. It is not that ambition does not matter. It is not that we should abandon discipline. It is that the living center of creativity is action. The verb comes first. Make the thing. Move the pencil. Open the notebook. Pick up the guitar. Ride the bike. Take the walk. Make the zine. Shoot the photo. Write the sentence. Start the weird little project that begins with, "Wouldn't it be funny if…" That is where the energy is. Play Is Creative R&D One of the big tensions in this conversation is the voice many of us carry around that says play is not practical. That voice says: You have responsibilities. You need to make money. You need to be serious. You need to have a plan. You need to stop messing around. Austin's response is that play is not the opposite of serious work. Play is often what makes serious work possible. He talks about play as research and development. Any healthy company needs R&D. It needs space to explore, test, wander, fail, and discover things that cannot be found through pure efficiency. The same is true for a creative life. A lot of us start in explore mode. We are curious. We are trying things. We are learning. We are following our taste. We are discovering our voice. Then, if something works, we shift into exploit mode. We repeat the thing. We build a career around it. We systematize it. We professionalize it. We optimize it. That can be useful. But if you stay there forever, you eventually run out of juice. You need space to explore again. That is what play gives you. It returns you to the part of the process where you are not just producing, but discovering. And in creative work, discovery is everything. Create the Conditions, Then Get Out of the Way One of my favorite parts of this conversation is Austin's simple equation: Play = time + space + materials. That may sound almost too simple, but it is profound. When I look back at the most creative seasons of my life, the pattern is obvious. I had uninterrupted time. I had a place to go. I had the right materials around me. I had enough structure to begin and enough freedom to be surprised. That is what we often give kids when we want them to create. We give them a table, some paper, some markers, a chunk of time, and permission to make a mess. Then we grow up and deny ourselves the same basic conditions. We say we are blocked, stuck, confused, or uninspired, but often we have not created an environment where anything could actually emerge. No time. No space. No materials. No quiet. No room to tinker. The lesson is not complicated, but it is easy to forget: Set the conditions. Allow the work to happen. Get out of the way. That is not laziness. That is not indulgence. That is how the good stuff gets a chance to show up. The Best Ideas Often Come From Goofing Off I have said this before, and I mean it: so many of the best ideas in my life have come from goofing off. Not from trying to optimize. Not from grinding. Not from forcing. Not from staring at a blank screen and demanding genius. They came when I was tinkering. Playing. Walking. Talking with friends. Making something that had no obvious point. Trying something because it felt fun, strange, or impossible to explain. Austin and I talk about this because it is one of the hardest things for ambitious people to accept. We want the path to be linear. We want effort to equal outcome. We want the best ideas to come from the most serious hours. But creativity often does not work that way. The mind needs room. The body needs movement. The soul needs a little nonsense. Goofing off is not always avoidance. Sometimes it is how the deeper intelligence gets a chance to speak. Tools Should Be Toys Austin says something in this episode that every creator should sit with: Tools should be toys. That does not mean your tools are unimportant. It means the best tools invite you into a state of play. They make you want to touch them, try them, misuse them, combine them, push them, and see what happens. A sketchbook can be a toy. A camera can be a toy. A guitar pedal can be a toy. A bicycle can be a toy. A cheap notebook, a box of crayons, a microphone, a drum machine, a kitchen table, a phone in airplane mode, a pile of index cards — all of it can become part of the creative playground. The danger is when tools become only professional instruments. When every object in your creative life carries the pressure of output, performance, monetization, or proof, it becomes harder to begin. A toy invites curiosity. And curiosity is one of the most reliable doors back into making. Attention Is the Beginning of Everything Another major theme in this episode is attention. Austin shares a simple practice: start and end the day without your phone. Not as a moral performance. Not as some extreme digital detox. Just as a way to protect the edges of the day from people and companies that do not care about you, but desperately want your attention. That hit me hard. Because attention is not just another resource. In many ways, it is the resource. What you give your attention to shapes your thoughts, your desires, your mood, your relationships, your sense of possibility, and your work. If the first thing you do every morning is hand your mind to the internet, you are letting someone else set the tone for your day. Austin's practice is simple. Coffee. Breakfast. Journal. Kids. Life. Then the phone. At night, the phone charges in the kitchen. Small boundary. Huge impact. Creativity requires attention. And attention has to be protected. Return to Who You Were Before All This There is a beautiful thread in this conversation about returning to the things that made you feel alive before life got complicated. For Austin, that includes riding a bike and playing in a band. For me, golf has become one of those things. Not because it is productive in the traditional sense, but because it gets me outside, off my phone, walking with friends, and fully present for hours. That matters. A lot of people feel lost because they are trying to think their way back into aliveness. But sometimes the way back is physical. Pick up the instrument. Ride the bike. Throw the baseball. Walk the dog. Draw badly. Make noise. Get outside. Do the thing you used to love before you thought it had to mean something. Austin brings up the question: Who were you before all this? Before the career. Before the metrics. Before the audience. Before the obligations. Before the identity got heavy. There may be clues there. Not because you need to go backward, but because some part of you may have been waiting to be invited forward again. Don't Call It Art The title of Austin's book is not a dismissal of art. It is a liberation from the weight we put on the word. For a lot of people, "art" has become intimidating. Sacred. Serious. Something that belongs to museums, geniuses, experts, critics, galleries, and people who have permission. But making is older and deeper than all of that. Kids understand this. They do not call it art. They just do things. And when we stop obsessing over whether something is art, we create more room to actually make. We get less precious. Less frozen. Less performative. Less worried about the label and more connected to the act. That is the invitation: Don't call it art. Don't worry about being an artist. Forget the nouns. Do the verbs. Just make stuff. It sounds almost too simple. That is why it works. Use What Bothers You Austin also offers a surprising creative tactic: pay attention to what you hate. Not publicly. Not performatively. Not as a way to become bitter or cynical. But privately, as information. Disgust can point toward values. Frustration can reveal desire. Jealousy can show you something you want. The things that bother you can become clues, if you are willing to ask what the opposite would look like. Instead of turning your irritation into a rant, turn it into a project. What would you rather see in the world? What is the opposite of the thing you cannot stand? What would it look like to make that? That shift is powerful because it transforms complaint into creation. It turns "I hate this" into "What if we made something different?" People Pay Attention to Belief Near the end of the conversation, Austin shares a line from Kim Gordon that I love: "People will pay to watch other people believe in themselves." That is true in art. It is true in music. It is true in entrepreneurship. It is true in leadership. It is true in life. We are drawn to people who are alive in what they are doing. Not perfect. Not polished beyond recognition. Not optimized into sameness. Alive. When someone believes in what they are making, that belief travels. This does not mean you will always feel confident. It does not mean you will never doubt yourself. It does not mean every idea will work. It means you keep returning to the work. You keep paying attention to what matters to you. You keep making the thing only you can make in the way only you can make it. That is where the signal comes from. About Austin Kleon Austin Kleon is the New York Times bestselling author of a series of illustrated books about creativity in the digital age: Steal Like An Artist, Show Your Work!, Keep Going, and Don't Call It Art. He is also the author of Newspaper Blackout, a collection of poems made by redacting the newspaper with a permanent marker. His books have sold over two million copies and have been translated into more than 30 languages. Austin's work has been featured on NPR's Morning Edition, PBS Newshour, The New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal. New York Magazine called his work "brilliant," The Atlantic called him "positively one of the most interesting people on the Internet," and The New Yorker said his poems "resurrect the newspaper when everybody else is declaring it dead." He has spoken for organizations including Pixar, Google, Netflix, SXSW, TEDx, Dropbox, Adobe, and The Economist. In previous lives, he worked as a librarian, a web designer, and an advertising copywriter. He lives in Austin, Texas, with his wife and sons. Follow Austin Kleon Website Don't Call It Art Newsletter Instagram X YouTube Timecodes 04:24 – Austin returns to the show and talks about the new book 06:17 – How Austin's kids became his best creativity teachers 07:04 – What it means to take care of a creative person 10:43 – The childhood question that reveals what makes time disappear 18:34 – Why play is creative research and development 21:43 – Finding what you were not looking for 23:06 – How a fixed vision can blind you to what is actually in front of you 28:13 – Chase reflects on creating the right conditions for creative work 31:37 – Austin's equation: play equals time plus space plus materials 32:48 – Why tools should feel more like toys 35:25 – Reconnecting with the activities that made you feel alive as a kid 38:53 – Who were you before all this? 43:08 – Protecting attention from companies that want to take it 44:17 – Starting and ending the day without your phone 47:08 – Why friendship, hobbies, and shared activities matter 57:17 – Where the title Don't Call It Art came from 58:32 – Forget the nouns, do the verbs, just make stuff 01:00:01 – Why "wouldn't it be funny if…" is a clue worth following 01:03:15 – Finding your creative family tree 01:06:36 – How to use frustration and disgust as creative information 01:08:31 – Why people pay attention when you believe in what you are doing 01:09:44 – Austin's newsletter, book tour, and where to find his work Questions to Ask Yourself If you want to turn this episode into action, take a few minutes with these questions: What did I do as a kid that made hours pass like minutes? Where am I making creativity heavier than it needs to be? What noun am I clinging to that might be keeping me from doing the verb? What conditions do I need in order to make more freely? Do I have time, space, and materials available on a regular basis? What tool in my life could become more like a toy? Where is my attention being stolen before I have a chance to choose? What hobby, activity, or form of play would help me return to myself? What bothers me enough that it might contain a creative clue? What would I make this week if I stopped worrying whether it counted as art? A Simple Practice for Making Like a Kid Again Here's something practical you can do this week. Set aside one uninterrupted hour. No phone. No audience. No outcome. No need to make something good. Choose a space. Put a few materials in front of you. Paper and markers. A camera. A guitar. A notebook. Clay. Index cards. A laptop with the internet off. Whatever feels inviting. Then begin with this prompt: Wouldn't it be funny if… Follow whatever comes next. Do not evaluate it too early. Do not ask what it is for. Do not decide whether it is art. Do not turn it into a brand, a strategy, or a pitch deck. Just make stuff. Then notice how you feel. Notice what surprised you. Notice whether something small wants to keep going. That is enough. Final Thought The longer I do this work, the more I believe that creativity is not something we need to earn. It is something we need to return to. It was there before the labels. Before the pressure. Before the metrics. Before the platforms. Before the fear of being judged. Before we learned to ask whether we were allowed. Austin's invitation in this conversation is simple, generous, and quietly radical: Stop making creativity so precious that you cannot touch it. Give yourself time. Give yourself space. Give yourself materials. Protect your attention. Find your friends. Pick up the toy. Follow the weird little idea. Let yourself begin before you know what it means. Until next time: forget the nouns, do the verbs, and just make stuff.
The Learning Leader Show with Ryan Hawk www.LearningLeader.com New Book -- The Price of Becoming www.LearningLeader.com/Becoming Austin Kleon is the NYT bestselling author of Steal Like an Artist, Show Your Work, and Keep Going. He's a writer who draws, a former librarian, and one of the most original thinkers on creativity working today. His new book is Don't Call It Art: 10 Ways to Create Like a Kid Again. This is brought to you by Insight Global. If you need to hire one person, hire a team of people, or transform your business through Talent or Technical Services, Insight Global's team of 30,000 people around the world has the hustle and grit to deliver. Key Learnings Stay light. Bill Murray told ballplayers that if you stay light, loose, and relaxed, you can play at the highest level. Same with acting, writing, anything. Austin keeps a photo of Bill in his studio as a reminder. Play is the work. A lot of Austin's best work requires a sense of play. It's hard to tell where one ends and the other begins. Go to the analog desk first. Austin has a digital desk and an analog desk. Nothing electronic is allowed at the analog desk. He starts there with nothing and sees what comes. Most people never give themselves the time, space, and materials to make something of what's swirling inside them. People want to watch someone who is activated. "People will pay every night to show up and see somebody believe in themselves." (Kim Gordon, Sonic Youth) The market for something to believe in is infinite. (Hugh MacLeod) The world is full of people just doing their thing. They're hungry to see someone on fire for something. The writer's job: take what everyone is thinking and put it into words. "You gave me the words" is the highest compliment a reader can give. Effortless is earned. People say the Friday newsletter looks easy. Austin's reply: Do it every Friday for 13 years, then call me. A place to put things makes you notice more. Thoreau took morning walks knowing he'd write later, so he paid closer attention. Carry a camera, and you start seeing shots everywhere. Live for the living, not for the writing. There's a tension between living your life and documenting it. Don't lose yourself to the feed. Your attention is the most valuable thing you have. Everyone wants to take it. The real challenge of modern life is making sure you're the one who decides where it goes. The best teachers are perpetual students. You realize what you know and don't know only when you try to teach it. Toggle between knowing and not knowing. The moment you think you know what you're doing, the work gets stale. You start running on routine instead of need. To be an amateur is to be a lover. The French root means "lover of." An amateur does it out of love, not material reward. Every great CEO should be put in a room with a four-year-old. They'd both learn something. Kids knock the pompous certainty right out of you. "I don't know. How do you think we should figure it out?" Austin's kids taught him it's less important to know everything than to know how to find out. The leader isn't the one who speaks while everyone listens. The leader listens, asks questions, stays curious, and wonders how everyone is doing. Look for who's having fun, not who's successful. Fun is underrated. Serious people have a serious time. Do it with lightness and it's contagious. "A master in the art of living draws no sharp distinction between his work and his play." (Lawrence Pearsall Jacks) He hardly knows which is which. He simply pursues his vision of excellence through whatever he's doing and leaves others to decide whether he's working or playing. To himself, he always appears to be doing both. Ask "What does the universe want to show me today?" A useful fiction. Tell yourself the world is trying to send you messages and suddenly you see a hundred of them. Have the toy before you know what you'll do with it. Austin buys typewriters, then asks what to make. Get the bicycle first. In six months you'll know what kind you actually want. Steal an idea someone only did once and turn it into a whole thing. Austin saw a single typewriter interview, made it a series, and has done more than 20. Put the human hand in the work. Austin decided 20 years ago to make it obvious a human made his stuff. In the age of AI, it stands out more than ever. People want the imperfection. Writing is thinking. People think you gather your ideas then write them down. The act of writing is the act of figuring out what you actually think. That's the hard part. Differentiate yourself by reading a book outside your field. Swim a little further out than everyone else and you find new water. Focus on what you can control. A writer controls only what's between the covers. Did you do a good job? Were you clear? Were you helpful? The rest isn't up to you. Austin's champagne moment a year from now: his kids flourishing. The older he gets, the less the books mean and the more his family does. Reflection Questions Where is your analog desk? Do you have a space with no screens where you go to make something of what's swirling inside you? Are you activated? When people watch you work, do they see someone on fire for it, or someone just going through the motions? What's one idea from outside your field you could steal this week? Where could you swim a little further out and find new water? More Learning #676: Jesse Cole - Built for the Fans, Obsession & Excellence#687: Jim Collins - What to Make of a Life#241: Austin Kleon - How to Steal Like an Artist Podcast Chapters 00:00 The Price of Becoming - Pre-Order Now! 01:33 Meet Austin Kleon 02:53 The Bill Murray Photo: Stay Light 05:42 The Analog Desk: Where the Real Work Starts 08:51 People Want to Watch Someone Activated 15:22 Why "It Looks Easy" Is the Whole Point 16:28 The Newsletter as a Forcing Function to Notice 20:46 Who Owns Your Attention? 24:39 How Austin's Kids Became His Teachers 29:06 Why the Best Creators Stay Amateurs 31:33 Curiosity Is the Real Leadership Skill 34:09 What Does the Universe Want to Show Me Today? 35:02 Look for Who's Having Fun, Not Who's Successful 38:30 Do You Love to Write, or Love to Have Written? 41:00 The Typewriter Interviews: Stealing an Idea Done Once 47:18 The Interplay of Analog and Digital 49:02 AI and Why the Human Hand Wins 51:23 The Champagne Question: Family Flourishing 55:47 Walk-Ins Welcome 58:06 EOPC
Si crees que para ser creativo tienes que inventar algo desde cero, estás perdiendo el tiempo. Descubre por qué la originalidad es un mito y cómo los más grandes de la historia han construido su éxito "robando" las ideas correctas.
In this episode, I dive into Steal Like an Artist by Austin Kleon—a creative manifesto that encourages us to embrace influence, remix ideas, and find our own artistic voice.ChapterSide projects and hobbies are important: They're where experimentation happens and where your best ideas often emerge..Geography is no longer our master: The internet has made it possible to find and connect with your creative tribe, no matter where you are.Creativity is subtraction: Constraints and limitations can actually enhance creativity by forcing you to focus on what matters most.Who Should Read ThisAnyone feeling creatively blocked or unsure where to startArtists, writers, podcasters, and makers of all kindsPeople who want a fresh perspective on creativity and influenceListen to Show Your Work by Austin Kleon: https://www.honeyandhustle.co/i-read-a-chapter-of-show-your-work-by-austin-kleon-for-you/Listen to Hidden Potential by Adam Grant: https://www.honeyandhustle.co/i-read-a-chapter-of-hidden-potential-by-adam-grant-for-you/Thanks for listening! Let's keep the convo going: Join the community, Please Hustle Responsibly: https://pleasehustleresponsibly.com/Find all episodes here: https://www.honeyandhustle.coYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/AngelaHollowellLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/angelahollowell/Twitter: https://twitter.com/honeyandhustleMentioned in this episode:Download the free guide on How to get your first 1,000 subscribers here: https://www.angelahollowell.com/first1000Subscribe to the newsletter today: www.pleasehustleresponsibly.com
To make good creative work, you'll inevitably do a lot of bad work along the way. So building a thriving creative practice relies on showing up and doing the work consistently, whether you feel inspired or not. And we can get trapped into thinking that if only we had the perfect space, or the best pen, or right notebook, it would all be easier. This is a preview of a premium episode. To listen to the full interview, visit: https://designbetterpodcast.com/p/austin-kleon But our guest today, Austin Kleon, has built a remarkable creative practice around a deceptively simple toolkit: index cards, newspapers, scissors, and glue. He's the bestselling author of Steal Like an Artist, Show Your Work, Keep Going, and Don't Call it Art. What makes Austin's approach so valuable is how he's translated these ideas into a sustainable daily practice that's lasted over a decade. In our conversation, Austin shares why he starts every day writing in his diary before he picks up the phone, how constraints (time, space and materials) actually unlock creativity rather than limiting it, and why the path to doing your best digital work might start with picking up a pen. If you've ever struggled to maintain a creative practice, felt overwhelmed by tools and options, or wondered how to keep going when the work feels hard, this episode is for you. Bio Austin Kleon is the New York Times bestselling author of a trilogy of illustrated books about creativity in the digital age: Steal Like An Artist, Show Your Work!, and Keep Going. He's also the author of Newspaper Blackout, a collection of poems made by redacting the newspaper with a permanent marker. His books have sold over two million copies and have been translated into over 30 languages. He's been featured on NPR's Morning Edition, PBS Newshour, and in The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. New York Magazine called his work “brilliant,” The Atlantic called him “positively one of the most interesting people on the Internet,” and The New Yorker said his poems “resurrect the newspaper when everybody else is declaring it dead.” He speaks for organizations such as Pixar, Google, Netflix, SXSW, TEDx, Dropbox, Adobe, and The Economist. In previous lives, he worked as a librarian, a web designer, and an advertising copywriter. He lives in Austin, Texas, with his wife and sons. Visit him online at www.austinkleon.com
Instead of trying to invent everything from scratch, Igor shares how he built products, wrote emails, ran webinars, and closed high-ticket offers by studying what was already working and modeling it intelligently.
Instead of trying to invent everything from scratch, Igor shares how he built products, wrote emails, ran webinars, and closed high-ticket offers by studying what was already working and modeling it intelligently.
Most people think marketing, selling, and copywriting are mysterious skills you either "have" or you don't. In this episode, Igor explains why that belief is wrong and how discovering the right system completely changed his results.
Most people think marketing, selling, and copywriting are mysterious skills you either "have" or you don't. In this episode, Igor explains why that belief is wrong and how discovering the right system completely changed his results.
Austin Kleon is a writer who draws. He's the bestselling author of Steal Like An Artist and other books - Austin's essay on Meeker's work, The Comedy of Survival. - For an ad-free Weirdly Helpful listening experience become a helpful weirdo @ https://www.patreon.com/weirdlyhelpful Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
You walk in, and you should feel like a rockstar. Andy Koehn shares the secrets behind Koehn & Koehn's "rock concert" customer experience, and why the jewelry industry has failed to talk to the most important person in the room: the guy. Andy reveals how his no-BS book, The Inappropriate Guide to Buying an Engagement Ring, became the perfect training tool for his team and the guide guys didn't know they needed. He even drops a surprise book recommendation : Steal Like An Artist by Austin KleonFind Andy's book on Amazon and get ready to buy like a guy!Andy Koehn was also featured back in episode #74 of the Happy Hour podcast.
Today's wisdom comes from Steal Like an Artist by Austin Kleon. If you're loving Heroic Wisdom Daily, be sure to subscribe to the emails at heroic.us/wisdom-daily. And… Imagine unlocking access to the distilled wisdom form 700+ of the greatest books ever written. That's what Heroic Premium offers: Unlimited access to every Philosopher's Note. Daily inspiration and actionable tools to optimize your energy, work, and love. Personalized coaching features to help you stay consistent and focused Upgrade to Heroic Premium → Know someone who'd love this? Share Heroic Wisdom Daily with them, and let's grow together in 2025! Share Heroic Wisdom Daily →
Steal Like an Artist by Austin Kleon is a short, practical, and creative guide for artists, entrepreneurs, and anyone who wants to live a more creative life. The central idea is that creativity isn't about creating something from nothing—it's about collecting ideas, influences, and inspirations, then transforming them into something uniquely yours.Here's a breakdown of the main themes from the book:Nothing is Original – Every artist borrows from others. The trick is to “steal” ideas in a way that honors, transforms, and builds upon them.Don't Wait Until You Know Who You Are – You find yourself through doing creative work, not by waiting for clarity.Write the Book You Want to Read – Create the kind of work you wish existed in the world.Use Your Hands – Step away from screens and use physical tools; it changes your thinking.Side Projects and Hobbies Are Important – They fuel your main work and often open new doors.The Secret: Do Good Work and Share It – Consistency and generosity matter more than “luck.”Geography Is No Longer Our Master – The internet connects creators everywhere; location doesn't limit opportunity.Be Boring (It's the Only Way to Get Work Done) – Stability in daily life creates space for creative risk.Creativity Is Subtraction – Constraints drive innovation; limit yourself to do more with less. The book is essentially a manifesto for creativity in the digital age, reminding us that influence is not theft—it's fuel.100 Books that will transform your life Paperback – June 4, 2025by Michael Mante (Author)https://www.amazon.com/Books-that-will-transform-your/dp/B0FC9QWD9Zhttps://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/100-books-that-will-transform-your-life-michael-mante/1147536571;jsessionid=26046FD2393F91A2373339A3F19EC083.prodny_store02-atgap14?ean=2940184358833
In The 1000 Hours Outside Podcast episode How to Foster Creativity in a World That Wants to Control It, Austin Kleon, author of Steal Like an Artist and Show Your Work, discusses the challenges of nurturing creativity in today's highly structured, outcome-driven world. He highlights how the pressure for perfection and the desire for certainty can stifle innovation, both for adults and children. Kleon shares his belief that the magic of creativity comes from embracing uncertainty, remaining open to failure, and allowing space for experimentation. For parents, particularly, he offers insights on how to support their children's creative growth in a world where schedules, expectations, and “rules” often get in the way. In this inspiring conversation, Kleon discusses the importance of maintaining an “amateur spirit,” even as we grow older and more experienced. He urges listeners to embrace their inner beginner, whether they're parents encouraging their children's creativity or adults rediscovering their own. Creativity thrives when we stop seeking validation and instead focus on doing the work that excites us. Kleon also encourages listeners to sign up for his weekly newsletter, where he continues to share his thoughts on creativity and inspiration. Listen to the full episode now to find out how to embrace uncertainty and foster a creative mindset in both yourself and your family. Sign up for Austin's weekly newsletter here Get your copy of: Newspaper Blackout Steal Like an Artist Show Your Work Keep Going Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Austin Kleon thinks stealing inspiration is a good thing — because it requires you to pay attention to the world. Austin is a self-proclaimed “creative kleptomaniac” and the author of five books, including Steal Like An Artist: 10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative. In his conversation with Chris, they discuss “scenius,” or the creative genius of a group, how children are invaluable creative teachers, and why he thrives in the tension between discipline and spontaneity.FollowHost: Chris Duffy (Instagram: @chrisiduffy | chrisduffycomedy.com)Guest: Austin Kleon (Instagram: @austinkleon | Website: https://austinkleon.com/) LinksAustin Kleon's SubstackSteal Like an Artist (Book)Subscribe to TED Instagram: @tedYouTube: @TEDTikTok: @tedtoksLinkedIn: @ted-conferencesWebsite: ted.comPodcasts: ted.com/podcastsFor the full text transcript, visit go.ted.com/BHTranscriptsWant to help shape TED's shows going forward? Fill out our survey here!Learn more about TED Next at ted.com/futureyou Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Join hosts Mike and Mark on the latest episode of the Moonshots Podcast as they delve into the insightful book “Steal Like an Artist” by Austin Kleon. In this episode, they uncover ten key insights about creativity that nobody told you about.Buy The Book on Amazon https://geni.us/iTKiGet the summary https://www.apolloadvisor.com/summary-steal-like-an-artist-by-austin-kleon/Become a Moonshot Member https://www.patreon.com/MoonshotsWatch this episode on YouTube https://youtu.be/Gqtc41jVxbEIn the introduction, Austin Kleon introduces Google (and listeners) to the fundamental concept of his book: “Nothing comes from nowhere”. The hosts explore how this idea challenges traditional notions of creativity and inspires a fresh perspective on artistic creation. They discuss the liberating aspect of realizing that all creative work is built upon the foundation of existing ideas and how embracing this truth can ignite innovation.Next, Clark Kegley introduces the concept of simplifying ideas, emphasizing that “Creativity is subtraction.” Through discussion, Mike and Mark explore how embracing simplicity can lead to more impactful and resonant creative work. They reflect on their own experiences of overcomplicating ideas and the power of distilling concepts down to their essence.Maxwell Nichols explains the value of focusing attention to uncover valuable ideas, urging listeners to “Sink into depth.” The hosts discuss how this principle can help individuals find clarity and direction in their creative pursuits. They explore practical strategies for honing focus and immersing oneself fully in the creative process to unlock deeper insights and breakthroughs.In the outro, Austin Kleon illustrates the concept of “Artist vs hoarder” by showcasing how his creative work builds upon previous ideas. Mike and Mark reflect on how this mindset shift can empower listeners to embrace and leverage their influences in their creative endeavors. They discuss the importance of curating inspiration and actively engaging with the work of others to fuel one's creative output.Buy The Book on Amazon https://geni.us/iTKiGet the summary https://www.apolloadvisor.com/summary-steal-like-an-artist-by-austin-kleon/Become a Moonshot Member https://www.patreon.com/MoonshotsWatch this episode on YouTube https://youtu.be/-ZXv_hKFbmgTune in to this episode of the Moonshots Podcast to unlock the secrets of creativity and learn how to apply them to your journey of self-discovery and innovation.About Moonshots Podcast:Moonshots Podcast is your guide to unlocking the potential within yourself. Hosted by Mike and Mark, the podcast explores the mindset, habits, and strategies of the world's greatest superstars, thinkers, and entrepreneurs. Through candid conversations and insightful analysis, Moonshots Podcast empowers listeners to overcome self-doubt and uncertainty and shoot for the moon in their personal and professional lives. Join us as we learn out loud and deconstruct success from the ground up. Thanks to our monthly supporters Jason Kumagai Natalie Triman Kaur Ryan N. Marco-Ken Möller Mohammad Lars Bjørge Edward Rehfeldt III 孤鸿 月影 Fabian Jasper Verkaart Andy Pilara ola Austin Hammatt Zachary Phillips Mike Leigh Cooper Gayla Schiff Laura KE Krzysztof Roar Nikolay Ytre-Eide Stef Roger von Holdt Jette Haswell venkata reddy Ingram Casey Ola Nicoara Talpes rahul grover Evert van de Plassche Ravi Govender Craig Lindsay Steve Woollard Lasse Brurok Deborah Spahr Barbara Samoela Jo Hatchard Kalman Cseh Berg De Bleecker Paul Acquaah MrBonjour Sid Liza Goetz Konnor Ah kuoi Marjan Modara Dietmar Baur Bob Nolley ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Bestselling author and artist Austin Kleon joins Ryan to discuss the challenges of raising kids in the digital age of social media and AI. He shares a recent Stoic lesson he taught his child about handling online validation, his strategies for making the most of car rides with his kids, and the key parenting advice he would offer to new parents.
Austin Kleon joins Ryan to talk about unleashing creative energy, the power of hobbies, and why he believes we've been trained to be machine-like in today's world. Austin talks about the driving force behind ambition, the culture of "cheap talk," and much more.Austin Kleon is a writer, author, artist, speaker, and blogger. He is most known for his five New York Times bestselling books Steal Like An Artist:10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative, Show Your Work!, Keep Going, Steal Like An Artist Journal, and Newspaper Blackout. You can follow his work at austinkleon.com, Instagram @austinkleon, and Twitter @austinkleon.
Ever find yourself drooling over a stunning photo and wishing you could create something just like it? You're not alone! But here's the thing—copying won't help you grow as a photographer. Instead, let's break down how to take inspiration and turn it into something uniquely yours. In this episode, we'll cover: Why copying other photographers' work won't help you develop your own style (and what to do instead!) The photography detective approach to analyzing and deconstructing an image How to pinpoint the key element that makes an image stand out—whether it's light, color, composition, or emotion The secret to using inspiration without losing your own creative voice A simple challenge to put this method into action right away! Plus, you'll get access to my free Mastering Natural Light Starter Guide—a game-changer for understanding how light shapes every image you create. Grab it here: https://livesnaplove.com/light-guide And if you're ready to truly master light and use it to create jaw-dropping photos, check out my Mastering Natural Light course! Learn more here: https://livesnaplove.com/light.
Eli Trier's back with us today to discuss one of her favorite books. As she's a talented artist (+ community expert) it's no surprise she chooses the wildly popular Steal Like An Artist by Austin Kleon. We dive into the delights of embracing imperfection + the beauty of obscurity in the early stage of our creative journey. Eli shares her insights on how creativity is at the heart of business, encouraging us to stop waiting for the perfect moment + just get started. Look for more shows in the Book Huddle strand where experts share their fave books. This particular episode is also part of our December Daily episodes – where, you guessed it, the show is, gasp, daily for the whole month. Books discussed in this episode: Steal Like an Artist - Austin Kleon Show Your Work - Austin Kleon Keep Going - Austin Kleon Eli's Website: www.elinortrierstudio.com Eli's Newsletter sign-up: EleanorTriaStudio.com/keep-in-touch Eli's YouTube Channel: Zuzu's Haus of Cats ==== If you'd like my help with your Business go to www.lizscully.com/endlessClients ==== And don't forget to get your reading list of the 10 essential reads for every successful biz owner - these are the books Liz recommends almost on the daily to her strategy + Mastermind clients. This isn't your usual list of biz books, these answer the challenges you've actually got coming up right now. Helpful, quick to read and very timely. Click here lizscully.com/reading to get your book list
Ryan and Becca return for the third chapter of the podcast book club, diving into Steal Like an Artist: 10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative by Austin Kleon. Joined once again by Taylor Swilley, they explore key takeaways and connect the book's themes to their own lives and businesses.We'll announce our next book club selection later in the year with plans to release the episode in February 2025.A special thanks to Taylor for joining us again and for recording the ads in today's episode!Resources"Steal Like an Artist: 10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative" by Austin Kleon (e-book available on Libby)#267 - Embracing a Creative Life: Big Magic with Taylor Swilley-----Find more about Taylor's business below-----Instagram - @backyardkilnWebsite - https://backyardkiln.com/Etsy - https://www.etsy.com/shop/BackyardKilnListener QuestionsSend us questions so we can answer anything you've been thinking about on a future episode. Send those through Instagram @wheeltalkpodcast or email us at wheeltalkpodcast@gmail.com.SponsorsL&L Kilns - The durable kiln that potters trust to fire evenly & consistently. Find your L&L kiln at hotkilns.comSmith Sharpe Refractory - Find out which Advancer Kiln Shelves are right for you at kilnshelf.com.Support the show on Patreon for as little as $3 per month: https://patreon.com/WheeltalkpodcastFollow us on Instagram:@wheeltalkpodcast@rdceramics@5linespotteryVisit our website:www.wheeltalkpotcast.comWheel Talk YouTube ChannelSupport the show
I'm joined by Jordan Mix, Operating Partner at Late Checkout, to discuss how to build swipe files and how to remix successful strategies. Jordan breaks down why these marketing funnels work and the anatomy of a successful funnel. Episode Timestamps: 00:00 Intro01:27 Why build Swipe Files04:00 Example 1: Tweets08:40 Example 2: DTC Product 12:10 Example 3: Thumbnails14:47 Example 4: Landing Page18:46 The Anatomy of a Funnel22:22 Example 5: Email Followup 26:13 Example 6: Digital Lead Magnet28:57 Example 7: IRL Lead Magnet30:26 Creating a Got Got Swipe File31:14 Innovating on Pricing31:33 Micro SaaS idea: AI Agent Funnel Scraper 1) We see 4,000-10,000 ads daily. Turn that consumption into creation with a swipe file.The best way to learn how to sell? Study how YOU got sold.Create a "got got" file - save anything that makes you take action (click, share, buy).2) Use My Mind to easily save & organize inspiration:• Chrome extension for quick saves• Tag system for easy retrieval• Serendipity feature to surface random inspoBeats bookmarking tweets you'll never see again!3) Look for pattern interrupts & scroll-stoppers.Example: Not Fried chicken ice cream Lessons:• Combine unexpected elements• Use high contrast visuals• Mix hot & cold conceptsApply this thinking to your digital products!4) Anatomy of a killer funnel:• Top: Free value (content, lead magnets)• Middle: Nurture (email sequences, surveys)• Bottom: Convert (calls, buy buttons)Key: Top should be ALL about THEM. Only talk about yourself at the bottom.5) IRL to URL: Don't forget offline lead gen!Tiago Forte's "Building a Second Brain" book:• Bonus chapter accessed via URL in book• Segments readers for targeted offersThink: How can you bridge physical & digital worlds?6) Innovation isn't just about product. Consider:• Marketing innovation• Pricing model innovationExample: Sublime app's "pay what you want" modelCould this work for your biz?7) Micro SaaS idea: AI Agent Funnel Scraper Automatically collect & analyze:• Email sequences• Sales funnels• Marketing tacticsBuild a searchable database of winning strategies to remix!8) Remember: Everyone's seeing "cool stuff" daily. You just need to train yourself to notice & capture it.Want more free ideas? I collect the best ideas from the pod and give them to you for free in a database. Most of them cost $0 to start (my fav)Get access: https://www.gregisenberg.com/30startupideas Work with me and my team: LCA — world's best product design firm to build apps, websites and brands people love. https://latecheckout.agency/BoringAds — ads agency that will build you profitable ad campaigns http://boringads.com/BoringMarketing — SEO agency and tools to get your organic customers http://boringmarketing.com/Community Empire - a membership for builders who want to build cash-flowing businesses http://communityempire.co/FIND ME ON SOCIALX/Twitter: https://twitter.com/gregisenbergInstagram: https://instagram.com/gregisenberg/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gisenberg/FIND JORDAN ON SOCIALX/Twitter: https://x.com/jrdnmix
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit cocomocoe.substack.comIf you enjoyed this book advice episode, let me know in the podcast reviews on Apple + Spotify for more!Did you know that “The Beatles” started as a cover band? A lot of the greatest creatives of every generation learn the difference between plagiarizing and inspiration early on and use that to break through the noise of their competition.In this episode of “Ahead of the Curve with Coco Mocoe”, I will be breaking down the advice from Austin Kleon's best-selling book, “Steal like an Artist” and applying it to those of you who are creators online. How can you use the advice to make better videos and find your life-changing format, without copying the work of others, in a trend-based algorithm?Buy the book on Amazon: HereCreatives that I have found inspiration from online:* “Chicken Shop Date” by Amelia Dimoldenberg* “Hot Ones” by Sean Evans* “Colin & Samir Podcast”* Robyn DelMonte (GirlBossTown on TikTok)Only paying members of the official Substack can listen to the extended episode of the podcast.Susbcribe to the Substack to unlock all of the extended episodes at cocomocoe.substack.com“Ahead of the Curve with Coco Mocoe” is a marketing podcast that covers internet and pop culture but from a branding angle. Coco Mocoe is a trend forecaster and marketing expert who loves diving deep into why things go viral on the internet and how you can apply that to your own brand or creator journey.Thank you for reviewing the podcast on Spotify and Apple Podcasts!Follow Coco Mocoe on TikTok, Instagram and YouTube!* IG: @cocomocoe* TT: @cocomocoe* YT: coco mocoeEmail: cocomocoe@gmail.com
This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try at betterhelp.com/MACHINE and get on your way to being your best self. Gary Henderson, a seasoned digital marketing professional with over 10 years of experience in the industry, has worked with various clients ranging from small businesses to Fortune 500 companies, helping them grow their online presence and achieve their marketing goals. Joining us on The Greatness Machine, Gary shares his deep understanding of the latest digital marketing trends, and techniques, and how to use them to drive results. In this episode, Darius and Gary talk about digital marketing, building strong client relationships, the rise of digital currencies, and what the future looks like for the creator economy. Topics include: How Gary started helping creators monetize their personal brands Understanding your audience and having a strategic approach to marketing Building strong client relationships by providing a concierge-style service Understanding the reasons why people buy How to get your marketing cut through the noise The benefits of stepping outside of your comfort zone What is Gary Coin and how it works Gary looks back on founding the Giraffe Tower NFT project What Gary thinks the creator economy looks like in the future The rise of digital currencies and the ability to operate in a global space around the clock The benefits of using tokens instead of fiat currency to pay for products and services And other topics… Resources mentioned: Steal Like An Artist: https://www.amazon.com/Steal-Like-Artist-Things-Creative/dp/0761169253 Layered Money: https://www.amazon.com/Layered-Money-Dollars-Bitcoin-Currencies/dp/1736110527 Connect with Gary: Website: https://gary.club/welcome Website: https://www.digitalmarketing.org/ LinkedIn: https://pr.linkedin.com/in/garyhenderson Connect with Darius: Website: https://therealdarius.com/ Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dariusmirshahzadeh/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/imthedarius/ YouTube: https://therealdarius.com/youtube Book: The Core Value Equation https://www.amazon.com/Core-Value-Equation-Framework-Limitless/dp/1544506708 Sponsors: Indeed - Get a $75 sponsored job credit at Indeed.com/DARIUS. Shopify - Sign up for your one-dollar-per-month trial period at shopify.com/darius. Timeline - Timeline is offering 10% off your first order of Mitopure. Go to timeline.com/GREATNESS. Write a review for The Greatness Machine using this link: https://ratethispodcast.com/spreadinggreatness Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What was the secret weapon that made Star Wars successful? (No, it wasn't the Death Star.) And, which Oscar-winning film's script was almost not even written, if not for some harsh words from a friend?In this episode, we delve into the importance of healthy relationships, radical candor, and effective communication in the creative process. We hear stories of challenging relationships and transformative conversations that led to breakthroughs in creativity and collaboration. We learn about the pivotal role others play in our creative work and the significance of becoming the type of person others need in their creative journeys. Guests include Kim Scott (author of Radical Candor), Charles Duhigg (author of the new book Supercommunicators), and Ausin Kleon (author of Steal Like An Artist).Key Learnings:1. Healthy relationships can play a crucial role in the creative process, and the input of others can be transformative for our work.2. Radical candor, the balance between caring personally and challenging directly, is rare but incredibly impactful in creative collaboration.3. Understanding the kind of conversation we're having, whether practical, emotional, or social, is essential for effective communication and connection.4. It's crucial to be attuned to others' needs and perspectives, and to engage in conversations that foster understanding and alignment.5. Effective communication involves proving that we are genuinely listening and understanding the perspectives of others, which can mitigate conflicts and foster meaningful dialogue.Get full interviews and daily content in the Daily Creative app at DailyCreative.app
Join hosts Mike and Mark on the latest episode of the Moonshots Podcast as they delve into the insightful book “Steal Like an Artist” by Austin Kleon. In this episode, they uncover ten key insights about creativity that nobody told you about.Buy The Book on Amazon https://geni.us/iTKiGet the summary https://www.apolloadvisor.com/summary-steal-like-an-artist-by-austin-kleon/Become a Moonshot Member https://www.patreon.com/MoonshotsWatch this episode on YouTube https://youtu.be/Gqtc41jVxbEIn the introduction, Austin Kleon introduces Google (and listeners) to the fundamental concept of his book: “Nothing comes from nowhere”. The hosts explore how this idea challenges traditional notions of creativity and inspires a fresh perspective on artistic creation. They discuss the liberating aspect of realizing that all creative work is built upon the foundation of existing ideas and how embracing this truth can ignite innovation.Next, Clark Kegley introduces the concept of simplifying ideas, emphasizing that “Creativity is subtraction.” Through discussion, Mike and Mark explore how embracing simplicity can lead to more impactful and resonant creative work. They reflect on their own experiences of overcomplicating ideas and the power of distilling concepts down to their essence.Maxwell Nichols explains the value of focusing attention to uncover valuable ideas, urging listeners to “Sink into depth.” The hosts discuss how this principle can help individuals find clarity and direction in their creative pursuits. They explore practical strategies for honing focus and immersing oneself fully in the creative process to unlock deeper insights and breakthroughs.In the outro, Austin Kleon illustrates the concept of “Artist vs hoarder” by showcasing how his creative work builds upon previous ideas. Mike and Mark reflect on how this mindset shift can empower listeners to embrace and leverage their influences in their creative endeavors. They discuss the importance of curating inspiration and actively engaging with the work of others to fuel one's creative output.Buy The Book on Amazon https://geni.us/iTKiGet the summary https://www.apolloadvisor.com/summary-steal-like-an-artist-by-austin-kleon/Become a Moonshot Member https://www.patreon.com/MoonshotsWatch this episode on YouTube https://youtu.be/-ZXv_hKFbmgTune in to this episode of the Moonshots Podcast to unlock the secrets of creativity and learn how to apply them to your journey of self-discovery and innovation.About Moonshots Podcast:Moonshots Podcast is your guide to unlocking the potential within yourself. Hosted by Mike and Mark, the podcast explores the mindset, habits, and strategies of the world's greatest superstars, thinkers, and entrepreneurs. Through candid conversations and insightful analysis, Moonshots Podcast empowers listeners to overcome self-doubt and uncertainty and shoot for the moon in their personal and professional lives. Join us as we learn out loud and deconstruct success from the ground up. Thanks to our monthly supporters Ron Chris Turner Margy Diana Bastianelli Andy Pilara ola Jez Dix Fred Fox Austin Hammatt Zachary Phillips Antonio Candia Mike Leigh Cooper Daniela Wedemeier Corey LaMonica Smitty Laura KE Denise findlay Krzysztof Diana Bastianelli Nimalen Sivapalan Roar Nikolay Ytre-Eide Stef Roger von Holdt Jette Haswell Marco Silva venkata reddy Dirk Breitsameter Ingram Casey Nicoara Talpes rahul grover Evert van de Plassche Ravi Govender Craig Lindsay Steve Woollard Lasse Brurok Deborah Spahr Chris Way Barbara Samoela Christian Jo Hatchard Kalman Cseh Berg De Bleecker Paul Acquaah MrBonjour Sid Liza Goetz Rodrigo Aliseda Konnor Ah kuoi Marjan Modara Dietmar Baur Ken Ennis Bob Nolley ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
I am SO thrilled that Austin Kleon joined us!!! This explore is about the essence of creativity and the unexpected sources of creativity. In this episode, we talk about all the following topics: Austin shares his journey as a voracious reader, emphasizing the pleasure and richness of reading. Austin and Ginny discuss the importance of quitting books to enhance your reading experience. Influences and inspirations are dissected, advocating for a deeper understanding of the sources that shape our creativity. Austin's upbringing in a non-artistic environment highlights the notion that true creativity lies in crafting one's life. The concept of an analog workspace is explored, offering a sanctuary for disconnected reflection and creative thinking. Austin stresses the significance of engaging the whole body in creative pursuits, from walking to hands-on activities. Embracing uncertainty as a catalyst for creativity is a recurring theme throughout the conversation. Austin encourages a multidisciplinary approach to life, rejecting the pressure to specialize and advocating for the preservation of diverse interests. The episode concludes with insights on boredom, stillness, and the rediscovery of outdoor spaces as avenues for creativity. Tune in to uncover how uncertainty, diverse experiences, and embracing the mundane can ignite your creative spark. ** Purchase your copy of Steal Like an Artist here >> https://amzn.to/49EyVt1 Learn more about Austin here >> https://austinkleon.com/ ** Download your free 1000 Hours Outside tracker here >> https://www.1000hoursoutside.com/trackers Find everything you need to kick off your 1000 Hours Outside Journey here >> https://www.1000hoursoutside.com/blog/allthethings Order of copy of Ginny's newest book, Until the Streetlights Come On here >> https://amzn.to/3RXjBlN Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode we interview San Fernando Valley / LA Native, Cash Ali. From dancing, drawing, and to the mic. Being a fast learner came easy to Cash Ali but we learn how to translate this into making moves to grow in to the art/music industry.
Robert and Chris talk with Hendrik Ewerlin, a threat modeling advocate and trainer. Hendrik believes you can threat model anything, and he recently applied threat modeling to the process of threat modeling itself. His conclusions are published in the document Threat Modeling of Threat Modeling, where he aims to help practitioners, in his own words, "tame the threats to the threat modeling process." They explore the role of threat modeling in software development, emphasizing the dire consequences of overlooking this crucial process. They discuss why threat modeling serves as a cornerstone for security, and why Hendrik stresses the importance of adopting a process that is effective, efficient, and satisfying. If you care about secure software, you will want to listen in as Hendrik emphasizes why the approach to threat modeling, as well as the process itself, is so critical to success in security.Links:=> Hendrik Ewerlin: https://hendrik.ewerlin.com/security/=> Threat Modeling of Threat Modeling: https://threat-modeling.net/threat-modeling-of-threat-modeling/Recommended Reading:=> Steal Like An Artist and other books by Austin Kleon https://austinkleon.com/books/FOLLOW OUR SOCIAL MEDIA: ➜Twitter: @AppSecPodcast➜LinkedIn: The Application Security Podcast➜YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@ApplicationSecurityPodcast Thanks for Listening! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It's not just our tech-enabled world that runs by algorithm. We meat machines, we humans, we one and all have our own programming, our deeply embedded rules that determine the decisions we make, the paths we walk, and who and how we show up in the world. Often the first part of growth and development is figuring out what our rules are, finding language for our own programming. The second part of growth and development is often unbugging the program and rewriting the maxims, so you become the person you want to be rather than the person you once were. So, here are three rules, three algorithms, three maxims that I bet you haven't considered, at least not fully. Number one, don't wait until you know who you are to get started. Number two, learn to take a punch. And number three, the ordinary plus extra attention equals the extraordinary. Each one of these is taken from a different book written by our guest today, Austin Kleon. Get book links and resources at https://www.mbs.works/2-pages-podcast/ Austin Kleon is a prolific writer and artist known for his innovative approach to creativity and self-expression. He is the author of several bestselling books, including "Steal Like an Artist," "Show Your Work," and "Keep Going." Austin reads two pages from “What It Is” by Lynda Barry. [reading begins at 49:24] Hear us discuss: The importance of finding inspiration and guidance from mentors and teachers in one's field."The great thing about dead masters is they can't refuse you as a student." [36:18] | The significance of community and how it can shape one's creative journey. [21:25] | The impact of encountering individuals who open doors to new creative possibilities. [42:31] | The value of simplicity and restraint in creative work. "Creativity is subtraction." [49:12] | The power of self-reflection and questioning in the creative process. "Is this good? Does this suck?" [50:14] | The transformation from enjoying creative work to feeling pressure and self-doubt. [50:45] | The importance of maintaining a sense of play and joy in creative endeavors. [51:53]
From March 15, 2022: Austin Kleon made a return appearance to talk about STEAL LIKE AN ARTIST: 10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative -10TH ANNIVERSARY GIFT EDITION.About the author: AUSTIN KLEON is the New York Times bestselling author of Steal Like an Artist, Show Your Work!, The Steal Like an Artist Journal: A Notebook for Creative Kleptomaniacs, and Keep Going. His work has been translated into over twenty languages and featured on NPR's Morning Edition, PBS NewsHour, and in the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. New York magazine called his work “brilliant,” the Atlantic called him “positively one of the most interesting people on the Internet,” and the New Yorker said his poems “resurrect the newspaper when everybody else is declaring it dead.” He speaks about creativity in the digital age for organizations such as Pixar, Google, SXSW, TEDx, and the Economist. In previous lives, he worked as a librarian, a web designer, and an advertising copywriter. He lives in Austin, Texas, with his wife and sons. Website: www.austinkleon.comTwitter and Instagram https://austinkleon.comFacebook @Mr.Austin.Kleon
What was the secret weapon that made Star Wars successful? (No, it wasn't the Death Star.) And, which Oscar-winning film's script was almost not even written, if not for some harsh words from a friend?In this episode, we delve into the importance of healthy relationships, radical candor, and effective communication in the creative process. We hear stories of challenging relationships and transformative conversations that led to breakthroughs in creativity and collaboration. We learn about the pivotal role others play in our creative work and the significance of becoming the type of person others need in their creative journeys. Guests include Kim Scott (author of Radical Candor), Charles Duhigg (author of the new book Supercommunicators), and Ausin Kleon (author of Steal Like An Artist).Key Learnings:1. Healthy relationships can play a crucial role in the creative process, and the input of others can be transformative for our work.2. Radical candor, the balance between caring personally and challenging directly, is rare but incredibly impactful in creative collaboration.3. Understanding the kind of conversation we're having, whether practical, emotional, or social, is essential for effective communication and connection.4. It's crucial to be attuned to others' needs and perspectives, and to engage in conversations that foster understanding and alignment.5. Effective communication involves proving that we are genuinely listening and understanding the perspectives of others, which can mitigate conflicts and foster meaningful dialogue.Get full interviews and daily content in the Daily Creative app at DailyCreative.appMentioned in this episode:NEW BOOK! The Brave Habit is available nowRise to important moments in your life and work by developing the habit of bravery. Available in paperback, ebook, or audiobook wherever books are sold. Learn more
Ryan speaks with his longtime friend fellow father Austin Kleon during a stop along his book tour for The Daily Dad: 366 Meditations on Parenting, Love, and Raising Great Kids. They discuss the life habits that they maintain in order to help fuel their creative success, why the most effective form of parenting is indirect, what parenting skills they are working on right now, how adopting a daily journaling habit vastly improved their lives, and more.Austin Kleon is a writer, author, artist, speaker, and blogger whose work focuses on creativity in the modern world. Although he is most known for his five New York Times bestselling books Steal Like An Artist:10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative, Show Your Work!, Keep Going, Steal Like An Artist Journal, and Newspaper Blackout, Austin has spoken for organizations such as Pixar, Google, SXSW, TEDx, and The Economist. He lives in Austin, Texas with his wife and sons. You can follow his work at austinkleon.com, Instagram @austinkleon, and Twitter @austinkleon.You can listen to a few of Austin's other appearances on The Daily Stoic YouTube channel:Ryan Holiday & Austin Kleon Discuss Stoicism, Creativity, Journaling & MoreRyan Holiday and Austin Kleon On How To Increase Creativity With Stoicism ✉️ Sign up for the Daily Dad email: DailyDad.com
In today's episode we are talking about author, Austin Kleon and his book and concept of "Steal Like An Artist" BUT with content repurposing. And no we are not talking about plagiarizing, because that is a huge no-no. But I do promise that you actually have everything you need to repurpose and create fresh content. This is also an episode of hope, because I know the travel space seems saturated and may give you a sense of hopelessness and even imposter syndrome in your content journey. But in today's episode, I hope I can give you the creative inspiration you needed to hear, because there is only ONE of you. Remember that!FREE Resources:FREE Creator Wildfire Co-Working Community:https://travelcontentwriting.hbportal.co/public/65f1dece8139f500190c30caFREE DIY Content Repurposing Guide: https://travelcontentwriting.hbportal.co/public/64c11bc09da87f002b3e2b4aFREE Travel Creator Newsletter Template: https://travelcontentwriting.hbportal.co/public/64c541cc034b1a032be4479bTry ConvertKit for FREE:https://app.convertkit.com/users/signup?plan=free-limited&lmref=-G3vDwThis podcast features an affiliate link. This means I might earn a small commission if you choose to sign-up for a ConvertKit paid plan.No Fluff Travel Guides:Get my no BS travel guides: https://www.thatch.co/@noflufftravel Follow No Fluff Travlers for no BS destination guides for digital nomads: https://www.instagram.com/noflufftravelers/ Follow Me On:Sign up for my newsletter, the Content Compass to receive free tips and t...
"10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative"
I share some reflections from Austin Kleon's book, Steal Like an Artist, that are relevant to data professionals, particularly those who make data visualizations. Join the coolest Data Professionals' community here. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/communicatingdata/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/communicatingdata/support
Growing up amongst the airbrushed t-shirts and dolphins of Destin, Florida, muralist TAYLOR SHAW learned how to hustle to make the most of the tourist season. Years of hard work in restaurants and side gigs honed many of the skills that have enabled Taylor to make a career creating site-specific murals which have become their own tourist attractions. But how Taylor got out of the kitchen, through an MFA program and into a custom van ready to install a 120-foot mural is a great yarn best told by Lazerchef himself. Find Taylor: Website: www.lazerchef.studio Instagram: @lazerchef Mentioned:DABSMYLA / Australian husband-and-wife visual artists (learn) “Rise and Decline of the Redneck Riviera: An Insider's History of the Florida-Alabama Coast,” Harvey H. Jackson (read) Invader / street artist (learn) Austin Daily Press / restaurant, Austin Texas (visit) “Steal Like An Artist,” Austin Kleon (read) Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts / Gatlinburg, Tennessee (explore) John C Campbell Folk School /Brasstown, North Carolina (visit) Penland School of Craft / Penland, North Carolina (explore)Doodle Grid method (explore) Justin Barker / artist, illustrator (learn) Montana Cans / artist-quality spray paint (learn) Dewey Destin's / seafood restaurant, Destin, Florida (visit) Find Me, Kristy Darnell Battani: Website: https://www.kristybattani.com Instagram: kristybattaniart Facebook: kristybattaniart Did you enjoy this episode? If so, please take a moment to leave a rating and a comment: https://lovethepodcast.com/artishplunge Music:"Surf Guitar Madness," Alexis Messier, Licensed by PremiumBeat.comSupport the show
New York Times besetselling author Austin Kleon joins Joe to discuss how all of us can become more creative people. In this episode Joe and Austin talk about:The importance of reading widelyWhy routines matterThe power inside of our old green notebooks"Scenius" is better than geniusTension makes us betterHow uniforms influence our behaviorBeing present in our personal and professional livesAustin Kleon is the New York Times bestselling author of a trilogy of illustrated books about creativity in the digital age: Steal Like An Artist, Show Your Work!, and Keep Going. He's also the author of Newspaper Blackout, a collection of poems made by redacting the newspaper with a permanent marker. His books have been translated into dozens of languages and have sold over a million copies worldwide. He's been featured on NPR's Morning Edition, PBS Newshour, and in The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. New York Magazine called his work “brilliant,” The Atlantic called him “positively one of the most interesting people on the Internet,” and The New Yorker said his poems “resurrect the newspaper when everybody else is declaring it dead.” He speaks for organizations such as Pixar, Google, SXSW, TEDx, and The Economist. In previous lives, he worked as a librarian, a web designer, and an advertising copywriter. He lives in Austin, Texas, with his wife and sons. (Bio Courtesy of www.austinkleon.com)
(VERSIÓN EN ESPAÑOL: https://www.jaimerodriguezdesantiago.com/kaizen/174-espanol-austin-kleon-creatividad-paternidad-y-el-quijote/)(FULL SHOWNOTES: https://www.jaimerodriguezdesantiago.com/kaizen/174-english-austin-kleon-creativity-parenting-and-don-quixote/)This first interview of the season is very, very special. It's not everyday that you get the chance to chat with one of your favorite authors. Let alone when that author is foreign and has sold over a million books. My guest in this episode is Austin Kleon, the author of a fantastic trilogy on creativity, which started with "Steal Like An Artist", continued with "Show Your Work", and concluded, at least for now, with "Keep Going". All three are small, square-format books that blend text and illustration. Austin describes himself as a writer who draws. They're books that can be read in just over half an hour, but are worth revisiting multiple times. They're packed with nuggets of wisdom on how to find your own style, develop creative habits, expose yourself to criticism, or persevere when things get tough. Many of these ideas, moreover, go far beyond the world of creativity: they're useful for life in general.But Austin isn't just a great author, something I already knew; he's also a delightful person. Kind, accommodating, and a good conversationalist. We talked, of course, about creativity, but also about parenting, Don Quixote, video games, and even how to visit museums. I thoroughly enjoyed our chat, and I think it shows. Now, I hope you also enjoy this conversation with Austin Kleon!
Sari is joined by Megan Collins (@VirgoLikeBeyonce on TikTok/@themanicuredshelf on IG) to discuss their final Summer Book Club selection of 2023, Steal Like An Artist by Austin Kleon.Sari and Megan are both critical of the book's premise as a blanket philosophy for succeeding in the art world, and they point out the problematic consequences of adopting a one-size-fits-all approach to art making (and in fact art stealing) that Kleon proposes.This show is sponsored by Not Sorry Art School and Not Sorry Art.FREE 7-Day Painting Bootcamp by Not Sorry Art SchoolEmail Sari at notsorryart@sari.studioFollow Sari: @not_sorry_artSHOW NOTES:Girls that get it, get it
Steal Like An Artist https://www.amazon.com/Steal-Like-Artist-Things-Creative/dp/0761169253
Unlock the secrets of creativity with Mike in this Free Thinking Friday episode, as he delves into Austin Kleon's bestseller, "Steal Like an Artist". This episode promises to take you on a compelling journey, exploring the book's principles that inspire creativity in this digital era. You'll hear how to draw inspiration from others, begin your creative journey, and the power of producing work that captivates. Mike also reveals his personal podcasting journey and how he channeled Kleon's principle of “writing the book you want to read.”Mike uncovers the importance of side projects and hobbies in achieving work-life balance and talks about the power of showcasing your work. In this digital age, we are provided boundless opportunities for creating, no matter where we live. Mike also underscores the value of being kind and remaining consistent in your work. Whether you're an emerging creative or an established one, this episode offers insights that will keep you inspired and motivated. To Connect with Mike: Website LinkedIn Instagram Twitter YouTube Coaching Get Mike's book: Owner Shift Please LIKE
Ryan speaks with his longtime friend fellow father Austin Kleon during a stop along his book tour for The Daily Dad: 366 Meditations on Parenting, Love, and Raising Great Kids. They discuss the life habits that they maintain in order to help fuel their creative success, why the most effective form of parenting is indirect, what parenting skills they are working on right now, how adopting a daily journaling habit vastly improved their lives, and more.Austin Kleon is a writer, author, artist, speaker, and blogger whose work focuses on creativity in the modern world. Although he is most known for his five New York Times bestselling books Steal Like An Artist:10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative, Show Your Work!, Keep Going, Steal Like An Artist Journal, and Newspaper Blackout, Austin has spoken for organizations such as Pixar, Google, SXSW, TEDx, and The Economist. He lives in Austin, Texas with his wife and sons. You can follow his work at austinkleon.com, Instagram @austinkleon, and Twitter @austinkleon.You can listen to a few of Austin's other appearances on The Daily Stoic YouTube channel:Ryan Holiday & Austin Kleon Discuss Stoicism, Creativity, Journaling & MoreRyan Holiday and Austin Kleon On How To Increase Creativity With Stoicism✉️ Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail
Sari speaks with Sam Remboldt, an offer strategist/creative small business expert who is the founder of her business, Passionland. Through her business, Sam helps guide creative small business owners to the resources and solutions to help their presence stand out from the crowd.Sam is not only incredibly knowledgable of business best practices as the founder of multiple small businesses in her career, but she also has a great outlook on social media on work-life balance that is very valuable for the modern solo-preneur; I can attest that I'm not always the best at maintaining that work-life balance, so it was great to hear Sam's lessons for giving yourself the space to rest as a way to grow your business and increase productivity.This show is sponsored by Not Sorry Art School and Not Sorry Art.Email Sari at notsorryart@sari.studioFollow Sari: @not_sorry_artSHOW NOTES:Follow Sam: Passionland, TikTok, InstagramSam's book recommendations: Steal Like An Artist by Austin Kleon, Chill and Prosper: The New Way To Grow Your Business, Make Millions, and Change the World by Denise Duffield-Thomas, Creative Act by Rick Rubin
Gary Henderson, a seasoned digital marketing professional with over 10 years of experience in the industry, has worked with various clients ranging from small businesses to Fortune 500 companies, helping them grow their online presence and achieve their marketing goals. Joining us on The Greatness Machine, Gary shares his deep understanding of the latest digital marketing trends, and techniques, and how to use them to drive results. In this episode, Darius and Gary talk about digital marketing, building strong client relationships, the rise of digital currencies, and what the future looks like for the creator economy. Topics include: How Gary started helping creators monetize their personal brands Understanding your audience and having a strategic approach to marketing Building strong client relationships by providing a concierge-style service Understanding the reasons why people buy How to get your marketing cut through the noise The benefits of stepping outside of your comfort zone What is Gary Coin and how it works Gary looks back on founding the Giraffe Tower NFT project What Gary thinks the creator economy looks like in the future The rise of digital currencies and the ability to operate in a global space around the clock The benefits of using tokens instead of fiat currency to pay for products and services And other topics… Resources mentioned: Steal Like An Artist: https://www.amazon.com/Steal-Like-Artist-Things-Creative/dp/0761169253 Layered Money: https://www.amazon.com/Layered-Money-Dollars-Bitcoin-Currencies/dp/1736110527 Connect with Gary: Website: https://gary.club/welcome Website: https://www.digitalmarketing.org/ LinkedIn: https://pr.linkedin.com/in/garyhenderson Connect with Darius: Website: https://therealdarius.com/ Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dariusmirshahzadeh/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/whoompdarius/ YouTube: https://therealdarius.com/youtube Book: The Core Value Equation https://www.amazon.com/Core-Value-Equation-Framework-Limitless/dp/1544506708 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kristen & Jolenta respond to listener questions about Steal Like an Artist: 10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative, by Austin Kleon. Join the By The Book Patreon Community! For $5 per month, you receive a new book summary, including all the rules we live by, each week. For $10 per month, you receive that PLUS a weekly affirmation podcast hosted by Jolenta and Kristen! Learn more at https://www.patreon.com/listentobythebookKristen and Jolenta's new book How to be Fine is available now [amazon.com].You can subscribe to Jolenta and Kristen's show, We Love You (And So Can You) on Stitcher, Apple Podcasts [podcasts.apple.com], or wherever you listen to podcasts.We love hearing from you! CALL us at 302-49B-OOKS. Email us at kristenandjolenta@gmail.com, or tweet us @jolentag, @kristenmeinzer, or @bythebookpod.And if you haven't already, please join our By The Book Facebook community! https://www.facebook.com/groups/116407428966900/?source_id=475465442806687To get By the Book merch, head over to PodSwag.com: https://www.podswag.com/collections/by-the-bookCheck out Kristen's other podcasts! The Pursuit of Happier on Knowable https://knowable.fyi/courses/happiness [knowable.fyi]Innovation Uncovered https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/innovation-uncovered/id1516667844Movie Therapy with Rafer & Kristenhttps://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/movie-therapy-with-rafer-kristen/id1508455193
Kristen & Jolenta live by Steal Like an Artist: 10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative, by Austin Kleon. Can they learn to kickstart their imaginations? And where will that creativity lead?Join the By The Book Patreon Community! For $5 per month, you receive a new book summary, including all the rules we live by, each week. For $10 per month, you receive that PLUS a weekly affirmation podcast hosted by Jolenta and Kristen! Learn more at https://www.patreon.com/listentobythebookKristen and Jolenta's new book How to be Fine is available now [amazon.com].You can subscribe to Jolenta and Kristen's show, We Love You (And So Can You) on Stitcher, Apple Podcasts [podcasts.apple.com], or wherever you listen to podcasts.We love hearing from you! CALL us at 302-49B-OOKS. Email us at kristenandjolenta@gmail.com, or tweet us @jolentag, @kristenmeinzer, or @bythebookpod.And if you haven't already, please join our By The Book Facebook community! https://www.facebook.com/groups/116407428966900/?source_id=475465442806687To get By the Book merch, head over to PodSwag.com: https://www.podswag.com/collections/by-the-bookCheck out Kristen's other podcasts! The Pursuit of Happier on Knowable https://knowable.fyi/courses/happiness [knowable.fyi]Innovation Uncovered https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/innovation-uncovered/id1516667844Movie Therapy with Rafer & Kristenhttps://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/movie-therapy-with-rafer-kristen/id1508455193
If you love someone's chocolate cake, you'd ask them for their recipe without question. It's not stealing, it's taking something and making it your own. If you ask the author of Steal Like An Artist (which is celebrating its 10th anniversary!), he'd say we don't take inspiration from others enough. Austin Kleon wrote the book 10 years ago that still rings true today about creativity. He says that taking inspiration from others and “stealing” ideas to create something yourself that is different is a true show of love and respect. He's here today to talk about how to be more creative in your life and how to find inspiration.During our headline segment, we're talking about crypto and the stock market. Are they becoming more aligned? We'll dive in and share the specifics on the returns for each. Then we'll Magnify Matt's money and talk about grocery store and gas rewards programs. Do you share a grocery reward number with others? Matt does and he asked our Facebook group, the Basement, for their thoughts. We'll share some of those answers. And don't worry, we didn't forget about Doug. He'll share his amazing trivia in the middle of the show.Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.