The Job I Hate The Least: Emotional Labor and Professional Photography
You're not just a photographer. You're a plumber fixing overflowing toilets at lifestyle shoots. You're a therapist holding space while your client falls apart. You're a project manager, insurance provider, and emotional translator. This episode catalogs the actual work behind professional photography—the part that isn't pretty.
When the Algorithm Finds You: Attention as Mutation, Not Evolution
Attention doesn't evolve you. It mutates you. In hours, not months. You go from making something beautiful in silence—clumsy, flawed, real—to standing in front of a mirror calculating your 'brand voice.' This episode explores why going viral might be the worst thing that can happen to your creative work.
The Technician vs. The Artist: When You Become an Echo Machine
You can be technically perfect, commercially successful, and have no idea who you actually are. Patrick went from shooting for Taylor Guitars with prestige and steady income to sitting in his garage wondering if he's a technician who mimics brilliance or an artist with something real to say. This episode explores the slow death of voice and what happens when success becomes a golden cage.
Anger in the Garage: When You Can't Just Feel the Feelings
At 2 AM in his garage, surrounded by half-charged batteries and broken equipment, Patrick isn't burned out. He's angry. Angry at the industry. Angry at himself. Angry at the gap between who he is and who he wants to be. But maybe that anger isn't something to heal. Maybe it's fuel. This episode explores rage as creative energy and the exhausting work of choosing to show up anyway.
Insider/Outsider: Can You Stay True in a Game You Have to Play?
There's no clean way to be a photographer anymore. You're either inside the game, playing by the algorithm's rules, or you're outside it and potentially broke. This episode explores the impossible tightrope between art and survival, and why 'The Terrible Photographer' exists as an act of resistance against the hollowing of creative work.
Why Shapes How: Intent Over Execution in Photography
You can know every camera setting and still make work that feels like hospital food. Because how—the technical execution—is now easier than ever. But why—your conscious intent—is what separates memorable work from forgettable technical exercises. This episode adapts Patrick's book chapter on building the muscle of creative intention.
Photography as Witness: The Frame as Weapon
Photography has always been a weapon against power. From Kent State to Rodney King, the frame captures what authority wants to hide. But when protesters become content, when tear gas becomes aesthetic—that's when photographers have to ask: am I witnessing or performing? This episode examines the sacred responsibility of being the one who sees.
Algorithm vs Artistry: Escaping the Social Media Trap
Your brain is getting rewired by algorithms designed for addiction, not art. Every like is a dopamine hit that conditions you to chase compliance instead of creativity. This episode exposes how social media transforms photographers into content machines—and how 14 Russian artists walked away from guaranteed success to paint what they actually saw.
Boreout vs Burnout: When Creative Work Isn't Enough
You know burnout. But what about boreout—the soul-crushing paralysis of not doing the work you love? When your camera becomes a paperweight and silence fills the space where creation should be, that's when the real questions start. This episode uncovers the framework of 'unhappily unsuccessful' phases and why the silence might be the most important work you'll ever do.
Smelly Dead Mouse: Why Your Portfolio Suffocates Your Voice
You scroll through your portfolio and think: "Who the fuck took these?" Because you know it couldn't have been you. Not now. Not the you who's seen some shit. What's staring back is safe. Designed for approval. A perfectly built prison out of softboxes and brand guides. This episode is about letting your work breathe again and why the 60/40 rule saves your creative life.
3 AM Thoughts: When Commercial Success Kills Your Why
3 AM. Staring at the ceiling replaying a client's "make it more commercial." Wondering when photography became content creation, when you stopped being an artist and started being a creative professional. These are the questions that keep you up—not about technique, but about who you've become in the pursuit of financial stability.
Copy Machine: Why Following the Formula Kills Your Voice
You bought the course. You followed the template. You learned to shoot like your hero. Now 10,000 other photographers are doing the exact same thing. You're part of an assembly line where sameness is celebrated and your actual voice is invisible. This episode unpacks the psychology of copying, the economics of imitation, and how to break free from the template.
How Color Directs: The Science Behind Visual Storytelling
In Times Square drowning in aggressive reds and yellows, a woman in a cobalt trench coat stops the eye instantly. Not because it's louder. Because it's still. This episode breaks down the neuroscience and psychology of color, why culture shapes what hues mean, and how to use color as a tool for directing attention and emotion in your work.
Dim, Not Done: Recognizing Burnout Before the Dumpster
Behind a corporate building, throwing up from a panic attack you didn't know you were having. Not because of one crisis, but because you'd ignored every earlier signal. Your body was waving the white flag. The problem was, you stopped listening years ago. This episode is about recognizing burnout and why taking your power back isn't quitting—it's surviving.
Still Here: Survival Isn't Failure—It's Growth
In Biosphere 2, trees grew fast and beautiful but collapsed under their own weight. They were missing wind—the resistance that forces roots to grow deeper. You're not broken for struggling. You're just in a season where the roots are growing underground. The real story is about staying connected to your creative life while staying alive.
There Is No Secret Sauce: The Myth of the Magic Shortcut
Will Guidara left his post at the best restaurant in the world to buy a street vendor hot dog for a guest. Not because it was profitable. Because he'd listened. This episode is about the invisible work no one posts about—the emails, the test shoots, the jobs that don't move forward—and why consistency beats genius.
Stop Mentally Torturing Yourself: The Cost of Creative Rumination
You spend four hours editing a photo, not because it's difficult, but because you can't stop telling yourself it sucks. You live with the assumption you failed a client for a year based on nothing. Your brain's negativity bias processes criticism five times faster than praise. This episode reveals why self-criticism becomes creative self-harm and how to interrupt the spiral.
Photography Gatekeeping: Why Being Right Kills Your Voice
Photographers can be absolute dicks. Gear snobs. Unsolicited critique bros. Insecure middle-aged men treating Instagram comments like peer-reviewed journals. This episode unpacks why photographers use technical opinions as weapons, what separates real feedback from ego noise, and how the industry's most successful photographers never gatekeep.
Embrace the Gap: Why You're Not Terrible, Just Early
That gap between knowing what good looks like and being able to make it yourself? That's the most dangerous place in a creative career. It's where 90% of photographers quit. But it's also the only place where real work happens. This episode is about surviving the Valley of Despair and understanding that being early isn't the same as being terrible.