Here Comes Everybody features the innovators, policy-makers, and thought leaders imagining, designing, and living creative and professional lives driven by the pursuit of interesting work—work with people you admire and respect, on projects that matter.
Host: George Gendron
Producer: Patrick Mitchell
Never Nine to Five gets on the ground and in the spaces of experienced and dynamic indies to share the paths that led them here and their strategies for succeeding in the new world of work
Host: Nicole Dyer
Producer: Patrick Mitchell
Middle of Everywhere introduces you to the placemakers, civic leaders, and digital nomads who are pioneering remote work, untethering work from place, sparking new energy in towns and cities, and discovering new ways to live and work ... everywhere.
Host: Arjun Basu
Producer: Patrick Mitchell
Available on all major podcast platforms
Latest Episodes
Why award-winning book, magazine, web, and app designer Barbara deWilde left the city behind to forge a new identity as a bookseller in small-town New Jersey.
How (and why) architect and educator Bryan Boyer left Brooklyn and found life (and work) in the Motor City
Upwork’s chief economist Adam Ozimek has studied the numbers and is here to tell you how to think about the changes caused by remote work.
If you’re a musician aspiring to blockbuster success, this conversation is a must-listen. But really anyone seeking to push their creativity to a new level will draw inspiration here — this singer-songwriter’s insights can be applied to almost any solo endeavor.
Maybe home really is where the heart is
This upstate New York couple established Stony Creek Farmstead in 2005 with the simple aspiration of raising a family and living a little lighter on the planet. Their small farm has evolved in surprising ways but their mission endures. “The farm has allowed us to stay independent and lead the life we envisioned for ourselves.”
Most people think of Seth Godin as a marketing guru, and for good reason. But he’s much more than that. It’s entirely possible he’s done more to encourage Soloists than anyone we know. Ever.
Why did 33,000 people apply to move to northwest Arkansas in the last year? Spoiler alert: It wasn’t just the free mountain bikes.
A student checks in with her mentor to discuss shooting Kardashians, unexpected Covid pivots, and why working for free isn’t necessarily bad—sometimes.
As cities, regions, and countries around the world vie to attract Soloists, they’re coming up with all sorts of incentives: free burgers, free bikes, and lots and lots of cash.
Like many during the pandemic, Brooklyn gym owner Tommy Ardito discovered baking. Ever the entrepreneur, he was soon selling (via Instagram!) pizza from his apartment kitchen. Now know as the “Underground Pizza Boss,” Ardito is about to open a brick-and-mortar to share his artisanal slices citywide.
Dave Whorton spent decades in the Silicon Valley, the land of dreams of going public. His grand next act: creating a community of companies building for the next 100 years — and remaining private.
Sure Soloists are on the move, but not everyone is moving halfway across the country. Some of them aren’t moving far away at all. But even these small moves will bring big changes to our cities. And our suburbs. (Oh, and the world.)
In an audacious second act, long-time Silicon Valley exec Martin Babinec retuned to his tiny upstate New York hometown, determined to reimagine the region’s future.
What happens when a Brit moves to Spain to live and work, gains virtual residency in Eastern Europe, and then tells everyone about it? Perhaps the most Solo business ever.
A native son returned to the city he loved and created an industry. How Tulsa became the birthplace of a global movement.
“I’m willing to scrub toilets, or pet sit…. I’ve often had to augment and I’m not afraid to do crap work. I never want to do crap work again. But if somebody needed an article about how to express their dog’s anal glands, and I needed food, I will do that.”
“I enjoy long form. I don’t know if it’s good or bad for the algorithm or making money. I’m over the threshold for worrying about all those things. I’m just trying to create the best thing — and what I want to create. I really value authenticity.”
“It didn't matter if a paycheck was written to me, I was still a writer. I got zen about it. I thought, ‘well, this is my life, and if i failed to do exactly what I wanted to do, at least I succeeded somewhere and I’m cool about it.’ That’s what happened for me. I just let go and it happened for me.”
Introducing our new podcast that explores the importance of place — and how, like never before, you can chose how you want to work, where you want to live.