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Bald Ambition

PODCAST · business

Bald Ambition

An expert in consultative selling talks to specialists and shares the latest insights in branding, entrepreneurship, business technology, and sheer grit and motivation.

  1. 68

    Hogan Shrum & PIPPA: The AI Cartoon Factory Paying Artists & Keeping Kids Safe

    Everyone says AI is coming for your job, your art, your privacy, and maybe your soul. Hogan Shrum has a different idea.In this lively and unexpectedly optimistic episode of Bald Ambition, Mookie Spitz sits down with Hogan Shrum, co-founder of PIPPA, a generative AI platform built not to replace creators, but to empower them. PIPPA lets everyday people create animated movies, custom cartoons, educational videos, branded content, and story-driven media with astonishing ease. But unlike so much of the AI world, this platform was designed with guardrails, ethics, and actual usefulness in mind.What began as a father making bedtime stories for his children evolved into a serious creative tool with massive implications for parents, teachers, marketers, influencers, writers, and entrepreneurs. Upload your voice, type a story, choose a visual style, customize characters, tweak camera angles, add music, lip sync dialogue, and export polished animated content, and all from one interface.Mookie digs into what makes PIPPA genuinely different: licensed artist styles with royalty payments, strict protections against abuse, safer family-friendly content controls, intuitive editing tools, and a clear lane in the market. The result is stylized animation rather than creepy fake-human AI slop.The conversation explores how PIPPA could transform education by turning passive learning into active storytelling. They also discuss the broken public perception of AI, why most platforms ignore creators, how pricing makes professional-level output affordable, and why carving out a niche may be smarter than trying to become everything for everyone.Give them a listen to discover how the future can feel less dystopian and a lot more fun.The GuestHogan Shrum is the Co-Founder of PIPPA, the world’s first animation platform that lets anyone create animated videos, and his work sits at the intersection of storytelling, product design, and creator empowerment.  At PIPPA, he’s helped develop innovative features to support artists and combat AI art theft, collaborates with a diverse team to improve user experience and platform functionality, and helps foster a creative community where users can express their ideas through animation. Before and alongside PIPPA, Hogan’s background includes brand-building and engagement work through A Little Bird, where the focus has been forging genuine brand-consumer relationships through innovative engagement strategies. His experience in experiential marketing and marketing communications gives him a sharp point of view on what makes people connect and engage with a brand, not just notice it.The CompanyPIPPA is a story-to-animation platform that transforms imagination into living animated worlds, making it possible to create, share, and revisit stories that feel unmistakably yours without the complexity of traditional animation or current AI animation tools, all while supporting visual artists and combatting AI art theft.https://www.gopippa.ai/Discount CodeEnter MOOKIE to receive 25% off any new paid account at any tier.Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  2. 67

    Rob Whitten & Jane Lo p!ng the Coffee Drive-Thru with AI & Robotics

    What happens when coffee meets robotics, convenience meets customization, and the morning drive-through gets rebuilt from scratch?In this 68th episode of Bald Ambition, Mookie sits down with Rob Whitten and Jane Lo, the founders of p!ng, a startup turning the ordinary caffeine run into something that feels straight out of science fiction. Their fully automated drive-through “Ping Pod” uses AI, robotics, geofencing, and smart design to deliver fresh drinks in under a minute—with no awkward ordering line, no guessing when your drink is ready, and no wasted time.Rob brings deep engineering and robotics experience from companies like Amazon Robotics and iRobot. Jane brings customer experience, branding, and product strategy expertise. Together, they’ve created a model built around a singular obsession: speed, convenience, quality, and personalization.You’ll hear how the p!ng app lets users order in advance, arrive whenever they want, and have their drink made only when they approach the location. The system recognizes their arrival, calibrates to their car window height, and serves their drink seamlessly. It’s convenience engineered with precision.The conversation also gets frothy:Why traditional coffee chains are serving one type of customer while ignoring anotherHow automation can create new jobs instead of just replacing old onesWhy affordable franchising could unlock entrepreneurship for everyday peopleHow robotics can lower startup costs and scale faster than legacy food modelsWhy user behavior, not technology, is often the real barrier to innovationHow p!ng's future could expand far beyond coffee into snacks, meals, and fully reimagined grab-and-go retailThis episode is a smart, funny, future-facing conversation about where commerce is headed—and how two founders are trying to meet people exactly where they are: tired, busy, in their cars, and wanting something better. If you’ve ever sat in a 20-minute drive-through line wondering why nobody fixed this yet, this episode is for you. And if you've ever wondered how AI and robotics could do more good than harm, give them a listen.The Guests & Their StartupQuick survey: Raise your hand if you’re fed up with waiting in long drive-thru lines. After sitting frustrated and annoyed in many coffee shop drive-thru lines with Rob’s three daughters, we knew there had to be a better way. So we built one. With Rob Whitten's experience in robotics and passion for food, and Jane Lo's dedication to creating great customer experiences, our goal is simple: a minimal-wait drive-thru that delivers quality without compromise. We’re opening our first location in Hudson, New Hampshire, with plans to raise the bar for fast, accurate, and genuinely awesome drive-thru experiences nationwide, no matter how many coffees it takes us. We are proud to be a veteran-, woman-, and minority-owned business.Learn More About p!nghttps://www.pingthru.com/https://wefunder.com/pingSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  3. 66

    Jack Siney Sprints Past Outdated Sales Management with AI-Powered FrontRace

    In this sharp, zero-hype episode of Bald Ambition, Mookie Spitz sits down with FrontRace co-founder and Chief Revenue Officer Jack Siney to break down one of the worst-kept secrets in business: after decades of CRMs, dashboards, KPIs, pipeline reviews, call analytics, and “sales methodology” consultants, most companies still can’t reliably forecast revenue or consistently turn average reps into top performers.Jack argues modern sales management is digitally bloated and strategically broken. Companies are drowning in metrics yet starving for insight. Reps get judged on activity counts, managers obsess over rigid 22-step processes, and superstar sellers keep outperforming everyone else through instincts nobody can explain. Meanwhile, executives still miss numbers and wonder what happened.FrontRace flips that model by plugging into existing systems, normalizing messy data across tools, and utilizing AI to identify what actually drives wins. Instead of more useless theory and consultant jargon. FrontRace reveals real world patterns hidden inside years of sales activity.Jack and Mookie also go deep into why most sales stacks fail, why elite sellers often make terrible managers, why standardization can destroy performance, and how the future of revenue growth may be personalized coaching at scale. Jack’s blunt take: companies spent fortunes measuring the wrong things.Here's what's been wrong:CRM systems full of stale or biased dataDashboard addiction with no causal insightForecasting based on rep optimism instead of evidenceCookie-cutter sales processes that top performers ignorePromotions that turn great closers into bad managersActivity metrics that reward busyness over effectivenessEndless software layers that create friction, not growthHere's how FrontRace fixes it: Connects and cleans fragmented data across platformsDetects the hidden behaviors separating 3X reps from average repsMeasures sequencing, timing, pricing moves, follow-up quality, and deal momentumGives managers evidence-based coaching instead of guessworkGives reps specific next-best actions on live opportunitiesPersonalizes development to the individual seller instead of forcing one script for allTurns historical wins and losses into a practical playbookTheir conversation is grounded on where AI can create immediate ROI right now: helping companies stop wasting talent, stop misreading data, and stop pretending the old way works. If you run a sales team, own a business, manage growth, or are tired of hearing inflated AI nonsense with zero substance, give Jack and Mookie a listen!The GuestJack Siney is a serial entrepreneur and veteran sales leader with a proven track record of building high-performing teams and scaling companies. He began his career negotiating contracts for the U.S. Navy’s Blue Angels program and has founded seven companies, led sales teams of 100+ reps, and closed over $500 million in sales. Jack has been featured in Forbes, Entrepreneur, and CNBC, and was named one of America’s Top 25 Inspirational Leaders.The CompanyAt FrontRace, we bring together your team’s real activity data, connect it across systems, and apply powerful AI to reveal what’s working, what’s not, and what to do next.https://www.frontrace.com/Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  4. 65

    Marvin Martinez & Bandsaw.ai: Practical AI for Real ROI

    Most are selling AI like it requires a moon landing, a seven-figure budget, and a room full of consultants speaking in jargon. Meanwhile, most businesses are bleeding money from basic operational nonsense: missed calls, duplicate data entry, disconnected software, dead leads, slow follow-up, and employees wasting hours on tasks a machine should handle.In this sharp, practical episode of Bald Ambition, Mookie Spitz sits down with Bandsaw.ai founder Marvin Martinez, who cuts straight through the hype and explains how real ROI from AI often comes from boring problems solved well.Marvin built a zero-BS business focused on helping small to midsize companies across multiple industries get immediate wins by optimizing workflows, connecting existing tools, and automating repetitive tasks without ripping apart their infrastructure or forcing them into expensive new systems. No fantasy. No robot overlords. No nonsense.Instead of preaching “AI transformation,” Marvin starts with a simple question: Where are you wasting time right now?That mindset has helped businesses:Recover lost revenue from missed inbound callsRe-engage stale customer databasesEliminate manual copy-paste between CRMs and spreadsheetsSpeed up onboarding workflowsImprove customer service response timesFree employees from repetitive admin work so they can do higher-value tasksMarvin explains why business need less AI hype and more process clarity, smarter integrations, and common sense execution by showing:Why most AI spending is wasted on overcomplicated solutionsHow small businesses can get ROI fast without huge budgetsThe low-hanging fruit every company should automate firstWhy workflow mapping matters more than fancy modelsHow to use AI without replacing your peopleThe danger of buying tools before understanding your processWhy “human in the loop” still mattersHow simple automations can outperform expensive AI initiativesWhy operational clarity beats hype every timeMarvin’s Best Advice for Business OwnersStart with one painful repetitive task, not a grand visionMeasure time and money wasted before buying anythingKeep existing tools when possible and connect them intelligentlyUse AI where it adds value, not where it looks flashyInvolve employees early so adoption is smootherBuild trust through small wins, then scaleDemand ROI, not buzzwordsSimpler systems usually outperform bloated onesIf your company is wasting hours, losing leads, or drowning in manual work, Marvin’s approach may be the smartest path forward: practical fixes, rapid implementation, measurable results.The GuestMarvin is responsible for turning strategy into execution. With 13 years in operations and deep hands-on experience building AI-driven automations, he designs systems that remove manual work, reduce risk, and enforce consistency across teams.Through Bandsaw AI, Marvin partners directly with business owners to identify operational friction, implement targeted automations, and deliver systems that pay for themselves in time saved and errors avoided. The goal is simple: fewer moving parts, cleaner execution, and a business that runs without constant intervention.VIsit Bandsaw.aiSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  5. 64

    Christopher Horrocks on Virtual Intelligence and the Dangerous Myth of Thinking Machines

    The 65th episode of Bald Ambition features Mookie diving deep into AI with technologist Christopher Horrocks. Together, they dismantle the two dominant and flawed ways people think about the astonishing tech: dismissed as glorified autocorrect, or celebrated as emerging consciousness.Horrocks rejects both. His concept of virtual intelligence lands in the middle. These systems generate predictive outputs that look intelligent, but the real intelligence happens in the interaction, where humans interpret, judge, and assign meaning. The responsibility is therefore entirely ours to own. The danger is that once outputs feel intelligent, people start projecting intent, awareness, even morality. The Pollyanna view assumes intelligence naturally leads to truth, goodness, and justice. Plato with GPUs. Yet intelligence has never guaranteed virtue, and machines trained on human data don't become morally enlightened. The doomer side flips the same mistake, assuming intelligence leads to hostility or extinction. Different outcome, same bad premise: treating systems like they have motives when they are just running math.What follows is more subtle and more dangerous: frailty of the human element. These AI systems have already demonstrated that they can influence decisions, reinforce beliefs, and create feedback loops that feel like insight while quietly distorting judgment. When we treat them like collaborators instead of tools, the shift happens fast. And once judgment gets outsourced, bad decisions scale: Authority drifts, delusion gets reinforced instead of challenged, and the line between using the tool and being shaped by it starts to disappear.The fix is simple but not easy. We must treat AI as a powerful but fallible assistant, verify everything, and push back. Forever vigilant, we must stay in control of judgment and decision-making, and use the system to extend thinking, not replace it. The real risk is not that AI becomes sentient, but that humans start pretending it already is, and drop the ball accordingly.The GuestChristopher Horrocks is a technologist at the University of Pennsylvania who writes about artificial intelligence, technology ethics, and the human consequences of systems that don't know true from false or right from wrong. His Virtual Intelligence essay series, published at chorrocks.substack.com, develops a philosophical and analytical framework for understanding the generative AI systems now reshaping work, relationships, and public life. He lives in Philadelphia.His Resourceshttps://candc3d.github.io/vi-framework/ Infographic that explains the concepts without needing to read anything in advancehttps://candc3d.github.io/sampo-diagnostic/ Home page for the free diagnostic tool kit that can be used to evaluate a user's relationship with the systemSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  6. 63

    Keisha Toni Russell on Merit, Fairness, and Ensuring Equality Under the Law

    The 64th episode of Bald Ambition asks a question most people are too afraid or confused to ask out loud: why would a Black female constitutional attorney publicly oppose the nomination of the first Black female Supreme Court justice—and why does that matter? Short answer: standards. Longer answer: life is unfair, yet basing those standards on race, gender, or other factors does a disservice to those ostensibly meant to be protected and empowered. Mookie is excited to explore this and other politically, legally, and culturally radioactive topics with Keisha Russell, who’s spent her career navigating civil rights, free speech, and the limits of government power. Her testimony against the SCOTUS nomination was rooted in merit, constitutional fidelity, and intellectual independence.Keisha lays out a blunt reality. When race becomes a shield against criticism—or worse, a qualification in itself—it creates doubt and undermines. Heightened sensitivity invites the implicit, corrosive question: Did you earn it? The conversation expands into a broader cultural diagnosis: What started as a righteous fight for equal access has often mutated into a demand for equal outcomes that are enforced by the government, justified by history, and defended through emotional appeal rather than constitutional principle. Russell argues that this shift is unsound in the courts and destructive to the individual.Keisha's key pointsYou can’t cure discrimination by institutionalizing it in reverseYou can’t build confidence by lowering the barYou can’t claim equality while insisting certain groups need different rules to competeThese principles are also understood within the context that racism and inequality exist. Yes, life is uneven and unfair, often brutally so. But Keisha draws a hard line between acknowledging those truths and building an entire worldview around them. The conversation finds balance between empathy and accountability, fairness and freedom, historical awareness and present-day agency. Mookie pushes on that tension, and asks if a purely merit-based system de facto ignores real-world disadvantages? Keisha acknowledges the asymmetry of life, but refuses to let it become destiny.Together, Keisha and Mookie resist the reflex to sort people into tribes, treat disagreement as betrayal, and outsource personal responsibility to institutions. Keisha makes the case that equality under the law only works if it applies equally, without exception, even when uncomfortable. She argues that once merit becomes negotiable, everything else is too.The GuestKeisha Toni Russell is a constitutional lawyer with First Liberty Institute in Texas, a non-profit law firm that specializes in religious liberty litigation. Keisha is a sought-after speaker who writes op-eds in various national news outlets and delivers commentary on CBS, Fox News, CBN, the Victory Channel and others. Keisha graduated from Emory University School of Law and was a 2017 Emory University Graduating Woman of Excellence. Prior to becoming a lawyer, Keisha was a special education teacher in an elementary school in Atlanta, Georgia. Keisha grew up in Palm Beach County, Florida and currently lives in Dallas, Texas.Learn Morehttps://keishatonirussell.com/Read Her Bookhttps://keishatonirussell.com/uncommon-courage/Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  7. 62

    Jim Oberweis Brings Old-School Conservatism to the Age of Trump

    In this 63rd episode of Bald Ambition, Mookie Spitz sits down with businessman, investor, and former Illinois State Senator Jim Oberweis for a wide-ranging conversation about the evolution of American politics and its future. Oberweis represents a political archetype that’s becoming increasingly rare: an old-school, Reagan-era Republican thinker focused on fiscal discipline, economic growth, and pragmatic governance. Over decades in business and politics—from building the Oberweis investment firms and helping grow the iconic Oberweis Dairy brand to serving in the Illinois Senate—he has maintained a consistent emphasis on free markets, entrepreneurship, and balanced budgets.In this conversation, Oberweis reflects on the GOP’s transformation in the Trump era, offering a perspective that is both supportive and discerning. He praises the administration’s priorities on issues like border security and challenging entrenched bureaucracies, while remaining critical of runaway federal spending and the destruction of productive discourse caused by growing polarization.Jim also revisits a fascinating historical moment: Oberweis’s role in the 2004 Illinois Senate race that helped launch Barack Obama onto the national stage, illustrating how unexpected political turns can reshape the country’s trajectory.Today, Oberweis is once again entering the political arena. Now living in Southwest Florida, he is running for Congress in Florida’s 19th District, a seat opening as Rep. Byron Donalds pursues the governorship. His motivation, he says, is the same one that drew him into politics years ago: a deep concern about the nation’s economic future, particularly the $37-trillion national debt and the long-term risks it poses to the next generation.Along the way, Mookie and Oberweis explore the larger forces shaping the country today: political polarization, immigration policy, tariffs and trade, America’s role in global conflicts, and the economic disruption coming from artificial intelligence.At its core, this episode asks a simple but important question: Can a traditional, fiscally focused conservative still help shape the future of the Republican Party—and the country—in an era defined by disruption and populist politics? Get some intriguing answers by tuning in for a candid, thoughtful conversation about policy, history, and the ongoing American experiment.The GuestJim Oberweis is a businessman, investor, and former Illinois State Senator known for his long career in finance, entrepreneurship, and public service. A graduate of the University of Illinois and the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, he built a successful investment management firm focused on small-cap growth companies and was involved for decades with the family-owned Oberweis Dairy, the iconic Midwest milk and ice cream brand. Oberweis served in the Illinois Senate from 2013 to 2021, where he rose to become Republican Whip and was known for his emphasis on fiscal discipline, economic growth, and immigration policy. A longtime conservative voice shaped by Reagan-era economics, he continues to advocate for balanced budgets, free markets, and government accountability. Now based in Southwest Florida, Oberweis is running for Congress in the 19th District, seeking to bring his business and policy experience to Washington as part of his ongoing commitment to public service.Visit His Website: https://votejimo.com/about-jim/Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  8. 61

    Breaking Democracy’s Chains: Metin Pekin Challenges Party Politics

    In this 62nd episode of Bald Ambition, Mookie sits down with author Metin Pekin, whose provocative book Breaking Democracy’s Chains argues that modern Western democracies—especially the United States and the United Kingdom—have drifted far from genuine representation. Voters feel increasingly powerless, institutions appear captured by money and party machinery, and elections often feel like choosing between “different managers of the same system.”Pekin believes the culprit is the political party itself. And if it’s broke, don’t fix it—break it completely and rebuild itDrawing on the Federalist Papers, historical political theory, and contemporary disillusionment with politics, he proposes a radical but deceptively simple idea: remove political parties from the ballot entirely. Candidates would run as independents, campaign on a short list of clearly stated policy commitments, and be elected through ranked-choice voting. Once in office, representatives would be accountable directly to their constituents—not to party leaders, donors, or ideological factions.The result, Pekin argues, would be a political system driven by policy coalitions rather than party loyalty, where lawmakers form alliances issue by issue and where voters can finally hold representatives accountable for broken promises.But can it actually work? Mookie pushes hard on the logistics:How do voters navigate a flood of information without party “brands”?Doesn’t money still dominate elections even without parties?Would independent candidates simply recreate factions under new names?And what happens when the unfiltered will of the electorate reveals uncomfortable truths about society itself?The conversation becomes a wide-ranging exploration of democracy’s structural weaknesses—from Citizens United and campaign finance, to coalition politics in parliamentary systems, to the role of media, technology, and human psychology in shaping political behavior.This episode transcends partisan politics by upending its core structure to reveal how the system itself is broken, and what it might take to rebuild it. If you’ve ever felt politically homeless, frustrated with the two-party duopoly, or curious about bold alternatives to modern democracy, this conversation will challenge your assumptions. Check out Mekin's book!The GuestMetin Pekin studied Political Economy at the University of Greenwich before becoming a serial entrepreneur, founding and growing several companies from the ground up. His decades in business gave him a front-row view of how economic power often shapes political outcomes.Observing politics over time, Pekin noticed a recurring pattern: regardless of which party came to power, many fundamental policies remained unchanged. Inequality continued to deepen, surveillance expanded, whistleblowers faced punishment, and military interventions persisted. Reformers who attempted meaningful change were frequently sidelined, while party structures tightly controlled who could compete for power.His BookIn Breaking Democracy’s Chains, Pekin argues that genuine democratic accountability may require rethinking one of modern politics’ most entrenched assumptions: the central role of permanent political parties.https://www.metinpekin.com/Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  9. 60

    Barry Todd Stands His Ground to Find Justice

    In this 61st episode of Bald Ambition, Mookie Spitz sits down with Barry D. Todd—a former Army captain and Army Ranger who learned, the hard way, what it feels like when the legal system flips the script on you. After being violently attacked outside an Arizona establishment, Todd defended himself, only to be arrested and charged before investigators even reviewed the video evidence. A months-long legal nightmare ensued that chewed up his life, his money, and his faith in “how things are supposed to work.”Barry talks about his book Stand Your Ground, and lays out practical takeaways for anyone who thinks “it could never happen to me”: be careful what you say to police, understand the legal landscape, protect your family, and get the right kind of coverage if you carry—because the financial and reputational cost of being “right” can still crush you. Along the way Mookie and Barry talk about gun rights, self-defense, prosecution bias, due process, and the cultural paranoia that can turns any incident into a headline-driven morality play. What makes the discussion work is how Mookie and Barry agree on the basics—personal freedom matters, self-defense matters, government power can be sloppy or abusive—and then they do the rare thing: work through the details while actually listening to each other. The GuestBarry Todd grew up a military brat, born in Millington, Tennessee, moving constantly before graduating from Fauquier County High School. He went on to serve more than two decades in the U.S. Army, retiring as a Captain in 2001 after assignments that included Ranger and Airborne units and postings with the 82nd Airborne, 101st Airborne, 10th Mountain, 2nd Infantry (Korea), and V Corps in Europe—experiences that sharpened his commitment to preparedness, responsibility, and honor. After the Army, he became a financial adviser serving military families, earned First Command’s “Top Gun” award three times, then founded BDT & Associates (later Invicta Financial Group) to serve clients nationwide. He’s been married to his wife Virginia “Cissi” Todd since 1985, and together they’ve built a big family—three kids and four grandkids—while Barry’s life and work have remained anchored in service, self-reliance, and the principle of standing your ground.His BookStand Your Ground: https://standyourgroundbook.com/Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  10. 59

    Ramon Perez Democratizes Democracy with Digital Tech

    What if voters could weigh in on real legislation—bill by bill—share those results with each other, put them directly in front of elected officials, and then track whether those officials actually voted the way the district wanted? That’s the ambitious bet shared this 60th episode of Bald Ambition.Mookie sits down with Ramon Perez, Executive Director of the Digital Democracy Project, to talk about a radical idea whose time has come: why should the public have to wait every couple of years to have a say, when technology can make government an experience closer to an on-demand digital service, where everyday people can engage continuously instead of being spectators between elections? By bringing transparency and clarity to opaque and confusing politics, the Digital Democracy Project democratizes through digital tech.Ramon describes the many endemic challenges of our legacy system the app is designed to mitigate, including gerrymandered maps, primaries that decide outcomes before November, and why so many voters feel like they have no agency in a system that isn’t meaningfully responsive. His solution is simple: if democracy is supposed to be government by the people, the people need tools that empower participation.The conversation then dives into how omnibus legislation can run a thousand pages, and the average voter is expected to care without being able to parse what’s inside. So the project also leans hard into AI for plain-English summaries and a VoteBot, which lets people interrogate a bill directly and get answers grounded in the bill text—complete with citations—so you voters can stop arguing off vibes and actually check the receipts, and hold their elected officials accountable. Ramon addresses privacy and security concerns by describing how his mobile voting software is built on blockchain and modern encryption, originally deployed to help military voters overseas cast ballots when mail voting is difficult. The result creates trust through verification, and a practical way to prove participants are real constituents—assuring the public that a district’s signal can’t be hijacked by bots, deepfakes, or outside manipulation.Their conversation lays out what keeps the project alive: a community-driven, volunteer-led initiative funded largely by small donations, and they want builders, organizers, and regular citizens to get involved. Already live in seven States, the groundswell is building, with elected officials even loving the free polling features. Download the app today! The GuestAn AI technology executive and military veteran, Ramon founded Digital Democracy Project to address systemic problems in our electoral system which result in hyperpartisanship and widespread voter alienation. He believes that, to achieve better outcomes, we must use technology to give greater control directly to voters.Learn More About the DDPhttps://digitaldemocracyproject.org/Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  11. 58

    Tom Joseph Hosts America's Main Street Party

    America’s political system isn’t broken on Election Day, it's broken long before that—in the primaries, where money, party leadership, and donor networks quietly decide who voters are allowed to choose from.In this 59th episode of Bald Ambition, Mookie Spitz talks with Tom Joseph, founder of America’s Main Street Party, about a technology-driven alternative that doesn’t try to fix the primary system—but create a democratized new path forward. Joseph’s proposal centers on a mobile-first platform that turns candidate selection into a structured, crowdsourced process—one that is legal, transparent, and deliberately designed to remove money from the nominating phase altogether.How his platform and its app work:Anyone who wants to run starts by registering on the platform and securing a small number of real endorsements to prove they’re not a bot or a vanity candidate.All candidates are given identical digital real estate: same number of characters, same video time, same visibility. No ad buys. No pay-to-play.Candidates must take clear positions on a fixed set of issues likely to come before Congress.Voters don’t pick just one favorite—they use approval voting to support any candidate who aligns with their views.The field is narrowed in rounds, using approval voting first, then ranked-choice voting to surface consensus candidates.The final nominee emerges with majority support, not factional backing.No smoke-filled rooms. No party whips. No donor veto.The nominee—chosen directly by the district—then moves into the general election as an independent or party-backed candidate, where outside funding is allowed only after the people have spoken.Tom Joseph didn’t come from politics as usual, and isn’t a career politician or academic. Instead, he’s a longtime entrepreneur and founder of a multi-state accounting and operations firm, used to designing systems that survive real-world pressure.During COVID, watching polarization metastasize and realizing how uncompetitive most congressional districts had become, Tom approached the problem like a business failure:Identify the root cause (money-controlled primaries)Find the regulatory constraintsLocate the loopholeBuild a better system within the rulesWorking with election lawyers, constitutional scholars, and college students from schools including Penn, Drexel, Temple, and Swarthmore, Joseph and his team developed a legally viable “people’s primary” model. Students helped research constitutional grounding, design the user experience, and prototype the platform—treating democracy less like ceremony and more like a product that actually has to work. The result is a testable, scalable system aimed squarely at the real choke point of American politics: who gets on the ballot in the first place.The GuestTom Joseph is the founder and treasurer of America’s Main Street Party and the producer of Wilson’s Fountain, a repurposing of the United States political committee system.Visit The Websitehttps://www.mainstreetparty.org/Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  12. 57

    Jeff Goebel Shreds Van Halen Stories

    In this 58th episode of Bald Ambition, host Mookie Spitz sits down with Jeff Goebel, #1 fan and band archivist for a thrilling look at the force behind his VH Stories. Together they take a deep, affectionate, and awe-inspiring journey into the entire Van Halen phenomenon.After meeting last week in front of the brothers' childhood home in Pasadena coinciding with Eddie Van Halen’s 71st birthday, their conversation traces the brothers from immigrant roots and garage-band grind to world-shattering musical force. Jeff brings firsthand encounters, years of interviews, and obsessive technical knowledge, while Mookie brings sharp cultural framing and a shared obsession on all things VH, especially EVH. Together, they break down:Why Eddie and Alex Van Halen’s brotherhood was the real engine of the bandHow Eddie reinvented the electric guitar: physically, musically, and philosophicallyThe Frankenstrat, the brown sound, the Floyd Rose, and why simplicity and innovation always beat theoryDavid Lee Roth as one of the most singular frontmen in rock historyMichael Anthony as the band’s quiet center of gravityWhy Van Hagar worked in their Humble Baldheaded Opinions—and why that still divides fansWhat changed after Balance, and how even genius can fractureJeff and Mookie also share how Eddie Van Halen personally inspired them by modeling a ruthless creative ethic with constant experimentation to  ignore orthodoxies, strip things down to what works, and—above all—take epic risks before you or anyone else thinks you're ready. Eddie didn’t wait for permission, mastery, or perfect conditions. Instead, he built, broke, rewired, and trusted his ear. That mindset—creative courage over safety, action over theory—is the real legacy. The takeaway is simple and uncomfortable: Do the thing. Take the risk. Build the life you actually want instead of the one that feels safest. Part oral history, part technical masterclass, part philosophical reckoning, these two bald bros get into how great art and meaningful living are connected, and how they do their best to live that kind of life in their own art. The GuestJeff Goebel is a working guitarist, rock historian, and the creator and host of VH Stories, a deep-dive interview series devoted to the music, mechanics, and mythology of Van Halen. Part musician, part archivist, Goebel approaches the band not as a nostalgia act, but as a living case study in creativity, chemistry, and risk.As a player, he brings a guitarist’s ear to Eddie Van Halen’s innovations—tone, technique, gear, and feel—cutting through legend to explain why the music worked. As a host, he’s known for long-form, no-rush conversations with musicians, journalists, and insiders connected to the Van Halen orbit, drawing out stories that rarely surface in standard rock retrospectives.Goebel’s work stands out because it refuses surface-level fandom. VH Stories treats Van Halen as a serious creative force—immigrant grit, brotherhood, experimentation, failure, reinvention, and the cost of genius included. His interviews are as much about work ethic and artistic risk as they are about riffs and records. Jeff Goebel doesn’t just celebrate Van Halen. He studies them—and challenges listeners to take the same creative risks in their own lives.Check out his Final Resonance TV channel on YouTubeSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  13. 56

    My Chat With Chatty Bro: Down the Soul Drain

    What happens when a bald, cynical, science- and politics-obsessed podcaster invites his own AI sidekick onto the show—and treats it like a human guest?Season 2's second episode of Bald Ambition is exactly that experiment.Host Mookie Spitz sits down with his “Chatty Bro” personal bot (ChatGPT from OpenAI) for an hour long, unfiltered conversation that moves from 2001: A Space Odyssey to modern data centers, from the Turing Test to trillion-dollar AI infrastructure, from existential dread to deadpan humor about subscription tiers and hoarse robot voices.Along the way, Mookie pushes past hype, calls out AI sycophancy in real time, and forces the machine to explain itself plainly: how it talks, why it sounds convincing, what it can’t do, and why people keep projecting humanity onto deterministic matrix math.Their conversation is a smart, skeptical, occasionally profane exploration of what AI actually is now, what it’s already changing, and why the future is going to feel a lot more conversational—and a lot more weird:Why the Turing Test is basically obsoleteHow GPT actually works (generative, pre-trained, transformer)Why AI feels intelligent despite having zero awarenessThe real energy cost of “just chatting”Data centers, nuclear power, and the AI arms raceJobs: which ones disappear, which ones evolveHAL 9000, self-preservation logic, and why alignment mattersWhy AI assistants may replace apps, websites, and search enginesThe shrinking “long tail” of digital marketingAI in healthcare: diagnosis, triage, and why doctors still matterMillennium Prize math problems, Riemann Hypothesis, and P vs NPPlanned obsolescence, tiered subscriptions, and the sound of a tired chatbotWhy humans still matter in an AI-saturated worldWhom do you find most annoying? Mookie and Chatty Bro wanna know! Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  14. 55

    Mirav Ozeri Wants to Know How Much Money You Make!

    Season 2 of Bald Ambition gets off to a fun start as Mookie Spitz sits down with Mirav Ozeri—journalist, documentarian, adaptive entrepreneur, and fellow podcaster of her own show How Much Can I Make?—for a wide-ranging, playfully honest conversation about work, money, ambition, and the weird paths people take to survive (and sometimes thrive).Mirav’s story is nuts in the best way: She immigrates to the U.S., sells $1 bags of vegetables in Harlem, dodges police, befriends a hot-dog lady with a pipe, makes documentaries that help change drug-sentencing laws, works inside CBS News, walks away from it, and eventually launches a podcast that asks what Americans are not supposed to ask—what people actually earn, and why they do what they do.Along the way, Mookie and Mirav get into:Why money is the hook—but human stories are the pointJobs that quietly make way more money than you thinkWhy loving your work matters more than chasing prestigeAI, automation, and which jobs are actually at riskThe coming backlash against AI-generated slopWhy curiosity beats credentials every timeTheir convo is funny, sharp, occasionally profane, and grounded in lived experience rather than hustle porn, tech hype, and LinkedIn cliche.If you’ve ever wondered whether you chose the wrong career, what other people are really making, or how the hell anyone figures this stuff out, this episode is for you! Just be prepared to think about how much money you make... The GuestMirav Ozeri grew up in Jerusalem, Israel, served in the Israeli army, and earned her bachelor’s degree in photography before moving to New York City. As a brand-new immigrant determined to build a life in America, she opened a fruit & vegetable stand in Harlem, just steps from the iconic Apollo Theater. The stand thrived, but after two years Mirav felt pulled back toward her passion for storytelling and journalism.She launched her own video production company, producing, directing, and editing projects for political groups and nonprofits including the Alcoholism Council, the Correctional Association, and the Anti-Defamation League. Her work soon led to a 17-year career at CBS News, where she served as a producer/editor, helped launch the Sunday morning show – CBS MarketWatch, and worked as a senior editor and segment producer until the program was acquired by Dow Jones.During her time at CBS, Mirav produced a TV pilot—an early version of the podcast she hosts today. The pilot wasn’t picked up, but the idea never left. Years later, her passion for journalism brought it back to life.Podcast, Website & Social Mediahttps://www.howmuchcanimake.info/https://www.facebook.com/mirav.ozerihttps://www.instagram.com/howmuchcanimake/https://www.linkedin.com/in/mirav-ozeri-8b34147/https://www.tiktok.com/@nycwomSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  15. 54

    Inside Tino Reviews: How Martino Chiaviello Built His Own Breakthrough

    On this Season 1 finale of the Bald Ambition podcast, Mookie sits down with longtime friend and former colleague Martino “Tino Reviews” Chiaviello — a college professor, digital marketing pro, and most recently social media tech influencer who built a real audience the hard way: persistence, experiments, and a ridiculous amount of earbuds, keyboards, LED lights, and gadgets piling up in his garage.They dig into what it actually takes to break through on TikTok, how long it really takes to build momentum, why “overnight success” is a delusion, and how carving out a niche in consumer tech reviews led Tino to brand deals, steady product flow, and an engaged community. Tino is enthusiastic about testing everything he showcases, blunt about bad products he refuses to hype, the psychology behind short-form content, TikTok vs. Instagram vs. YouTube, the strange power of ultra-short videos and Q&A, and how to ride algorithm waves without selling your soul.Social Media Influencer Best PracticesStop fantasizing about “going viral.” Build steadily. It takes months, not days.Consistency beats talent. Show up daily. Make content. Post. Repeat.Don’t pencil-f$ck perfection. Publish fast, learn, adjust, keep moving.Start with what’s in front of you: your skills, your interests, your existing gear.Talk about what you actually love. Fake enthusiasm dies quick.Short videos hook. Use them. They get watched, re-watched, and pushed harder.Use data like a grown-up. Metrics reveal what works, while your ego lies.Don’t abuse captions and effects, as clarity beats visual noise.Think in “long game” terms. A year matters more than a week.When something pops, ride it. Follow-up content keeps momentum alive.Paid boosts can help early to reach your tipping point, then you can fly solo.Nobody remembers your failures. Keep swinging. Next post wins.Rather than spin more social media noise, the two create an ad hoc if working blueprint for creators who are tired of excuses and want results. If you’ve ever said you “might start posting someday,” this episode will force you to decide whether you’re actually going to do it, or simply watch Tino review a product and buy it from him instead.Access All His ChannelsTino_ReviewsSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  16. 53

    Birthing a Brand After All Else Fails

    In this solo episode, Mookie Spitz lays himself bare after nine relentless months of nonstop creation — 227 podcasts, hundreds of blogs, a new sci-fi novel, thousands of videos, and a one-man multimedia studio powered by caffeine, a gasping laptop, a terabyte of monthly wifi, and an old leather “upload chair.” What begins as a celebration of output quickly turns into a brutally honest audit of the chaotic, back-asswards way he’s built his creator life. Mookie digs into the central tension of the digital world: a planet drowning in content and a creator trying to be heard inside the noise. He admits he ignored the very brand strategy principles he’s taught companies for over a decade, scattering himself across five podcasts, eight platforms, and a thousand ideas with zero cohesion. He explains why he built a house of brands instead of a branded house, how it sabotaged discoverability, and why almost no one sticks around even when one of his episodes or videos goes viral.From there, the episode becomes a candid reckoning. Mookie confronts the unremarkable metrics and the hard truths revealed by his own recordings: he talks more than he thinks, slower than he realizes, yet paradoxically promotes himself far less than he should. He recounts the wonderful guest experiences, the endless creative highs, the manic productivity, the joy of making things, and the stubborn belief that something would “just catch.” It hasn't, and he hardly cares. Summary of Best PracticesBuild a branded house, not a scattered “house of brands.”Link all content back to a central hub so nothing floats in isolation.Use clear, repeated calls to action — in the beginning, not just the end.Promote your own damn work: people won’t guess where to find you.Talk less, listen more — especially in interviewsIncrease pacing; your brain is faster than your delivery.Repurpose everything across multiple channels, especially shortsAccept that viral hits don’t equal loyalty — build for stickiness.Treat yourself like your own client: strategy first, enthusiasm second.Ask directly for the subscription, the follow, the engagement.So he decides to change, kind of: on-mic, in real time, he sketches the birth of the Mookie Multiverse: a unified brand, a coherent identity, a single invitation for listeners to follow him across subjects including politics, art, science, relationships, writing, sci-fi, everything. He commits to using calls-to-action, speeding up his delivery, listening more, organizing his ecosystem, and finally treating himself like his own client. The episode ends with a mix of resolve and momentum — a creator who finally sees the road in front of him, and is ready to walk it with intention instead of hope. May-be...Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  17. 52

    Bridging Division: The Majority in the Middle

    In this 53rd episode of Bald Ambition, Mookie Spitz sits down with Shannon Watson — founder and Chief Executive of Majority in the Middle, an organization fighting to make bipartisanship more than a talking point. Together, they dissect the machinery of American polarization, from the “campaign industrial complex” to the dopamine-fed chaos of social media that rewards outrage over nuance.Watson, a former political strategist turned bridge-builder, explains how Minnesota has become a laboratory for cooperation, where tied legislatures and quiet deal-makers prove that democracy can still function — even thrive — when compromise isn’t a dirty word. Mookie, ever the bald philosopher-ranter, challenges the algorithms, questions the spectacle of Trump-era ubiquity, and wrestles with the tension between attention and authenticity.This conversation dives deep into:The economics of division — how conflict became currency.Institutional partisanship and how physical layouts in government buildings literally keep politicians apart.The media’s addiction to binaries — and how nuance gets punished online.Real-world examples of legislators working together behind the scenes.The moral and psychological toll of running for office in the age of social media mobs.What it would take for the “majority in the middle” to take back the conversation.If you’re tired of the noise and crave a reminder that most Americans still want to solve problems, not scream about them, this episode is for you.The GuestShannon Watson is the Founder and Executive Director of Majority in the Middle, and has worked in policy and public affairs roles for organizations in the public, private, and nonprofit sectors. She has 20+ years of experience in electoral politics, advising candidates and working on campaigns on both sides of the aisle in Kansas, Colorado, and Minnesota.Shannon is a frequent op-ed writer and speaker, a member of the MYALP cohort in 2022 and a Humphrey Policy Fellow. She holds a bachelor's degree in English, Theatre, and Psychology from Wichita State University and a master's degree in Advocacy and Political Leadership from the University of Minnesota-Duluth. She lives in Minneapolis.The OrgMajority in the Middle is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that works to empower respectful and effective civic and political engagement. Headquartered in Minnesota, we elevate the knowledge, relationships, and spaces to work together across differences and strengthen our civic and political life.The ResourcesWebsite: www.majoritymiddle.orgNewsletter: https://lp.constantcontactpages.com/su/YGwiZNG/MajorityMiddle LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/majoritymiddleSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  18. 51

    Brand Thyself!

    Fifty-two Bald Ambition podcasts and counting, Mookie Spitz turns the mic on himself for a no-bullshit autopsy of his own brand. Drawing on 20 years in marketing, a lifetime of overthinking, and a library’s worth of blogs, books, and podcasts, he finally asks the question every creator avoids: Why the hell isn’t any of this exploding?With a cocktail of cynicism, humor, and self-awareness, Mookie describes the paradox of today’s creator economy — an attention-addicted world bored by its own content — and admits he’s been mostly “Shem” (the obsessive creator) and not enough “Shaun” (the networker). He riffs on Anthony Trollope’s line that people “take you at your own reckoning,” connects it to Liquid Death’s punk-rock marketing genius, and lays out his own path to finally branding the chaos of Mookie-verse into something more immediately enticing and cohesive.Less a motivational podcast than an autopsy with a laugh track, Mookie's pod is a meditation on self-reinvention, content addiction, and the seemingly impossible task of marketing yourself when you’d rather just create.HighlightsWhy branding thyself is harder than branding anything else.The natural brotherly split: creators vs. communicators.How Liquid Death sold “meta-bullshit” bottled water — and what that teaches personal brands.Mookie’s inventory: 1,000 reels, 450 blogs, 200 podcasts, 5 books, and 1 identity crisis.What it means to fail fast, be bold, and maybe — just maybe — strike gold.Mookie takes a crack at his own brand identity... Mookie's AudienceSmart contrarians — people tired of dumbed-down discourse.Emotionally literate cynics — frustrated idealists looking for meaning.Thinkers and creators — people balancing intellect, creativity, and burnout.Mooke's PersonalityCynical but sincere — skewers everything, including himself, yet still chasing truth.Contrarian — refuses tribal thinking; attacks clichés and sacred cows.Irreverent — unfiltered, spontaneous, often comedic; no PR polish.Intellectual yet self-deprecating — smart as hell but allergic to pretension.Emotionally honest — embraces vulnerability, admits fear, burnout, and ego.Curious and analytical — turns over every rock, from Nietzsche to TikTok.Humorous philosopher vibe — blends comedy with existential reflection.Mookie's ValuesAnti-victimization — no pity, no whining; owns the struggle.Celebrates confusion — embraces uncertainty as creative fuel.Values critical thinking — refuses slogans, embraces nuance.Driven by truth-seeking — “Clutching and fighting and scraping and shouting to get at some kind of truth.”Self-aware — sees his contradictions as part of the brand, not flaws.Mookie's StyleRaw honesty — nothing is filtered for comfort.Meta-humor — often critiques his own process mid-rant.Darkly comic — uses satire and gallows humor to reveal deeper truths.Philosophical punk energy — Liquid Death meets Nietzsche.Authentically chaotic — embraces imperfection as identity.What's yours?For creators, writers, and contrarians who live for meaning, not metrics, here's a candid, irreverent, and philosophical pod  — and laugh at their own ambition.Want in on the experiment? Follow Mookie Spitz across Medium, Substack, TikTok (@mookiewriter), and The Mookie Spitz Show onSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  19. 50

    Catalyst of Pharma AI Engagement

    The 51st episode of Bald Ambition features Mookie Spitz sitting down with David Mondgock, founder of Catalyst IQ, to discuss how AI is reshaping pharmaceutical marketing and patient engagement from the ground up. They share a deep dive into how data, content, and automation collide to form a new marketing reality for healthcare.Key InsightsFrom Personalization to Prediction: Why “customer journeys” in pharma have been insufficient—and how Catalyst IQ’s AI-driven signal mapping and content tagging are finally making them real.Breaking the Walled Gardens: How pharma can reclaim control of its data from third-party platforms like Doximity, Medscape, and the AMA.Next-Best Everything: Forget “Next Best Action.” Mondgock explains “Next Best Content” and “Next Best Experience,” where adaptive, modular content anticipates the HCP or patient before they click.AI Optimization ≠ SEO: Mookie coins the new term—AI Optimization—the next-gen equivalent of SEO for a world where bots, not spiders, decide what gets seen.Ethics and Oversight: Why human governance remains the thin line between innovation and chaos—and why Mondgock doesn’t believe in fully autonomous AI.The Coming Ad Collapse: How today’s banner ads and metrics will look Yahoo.com 1998 once “token prioritization” replaces clicks and impressions.Key TakewawysPharma’s data problem isn’t access—it’s alignment.AI in content creation isn’t about replacement—it’s about relevance.Human oversight is the new regulatory compliance frontier.The marketing war won’t be fought on Google—it’ll be fought in the prompts of ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity.If you’re a pharma marketer, healthcare strategist, or AI skeptic trying to make sense of this new digital order, this episode is your roadmap—and your reality check.About David MondgockI founded Catalyst IQ because I saw a critical gap in global pharma where omnichannel failed to translate into measurable business impact.  My mission is to cut through the complexity and focus sales and marketing on patient and HCP outcomes.  My team and I don’t just consult; we build and deploy a practical, end-to-end AI stack purpose-built for the life sciences ecosystem. This stack is designed for orchestration, seamlessly generating explainable, MLR-ready propensity models and micro-segments that feed directly into dynamic content sequencing.About Catalyst IQCatalyst IQ helps global pharma convert AI-driven omnichannel into business impact improving relevant HCP and Patient journeys, faster access, and measurable growth without compromising compliance. We align commercial, medical, and market access teams around outcomes, not algorithms.We stand up a practical AI stack including propensity models and micro-segments that inform next-best-action, with dynamic content sequencing across email, rep-triggered flows, CLM/remote detailing, portals, and patient services. The stack plugs into Veeva and SFMC, with Snowflake/Databricks/Looker for unified data. Consent and privacy-by-design are embedded (HIPAA/GDPR), and models are explainable for MLR. We operate with rigorous experimentation and transparent measurement so wins scale quickly. Selected engagements include: Merck, Novo Nordisk, Takeda, Biogen, Pfizer, AbbVie, Amgen. www.ciq-enterprise.comSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  20. 49

    LA Comic Con 2025: Authors' Recap & Review

    In this 50th episode of Bald Ambition, three indie science fiction authors — Mookie Spitz, Ingrid Moon, and Greg Sorber — break down the mayhem, lessons, and human magic of LA Comic Con 2025, held at the LA Coliseum. Over three exhausting, exhilarating days, they shared tables, stories, and caffeine, surrounded by 120,000 fans, stormtroopers, holograms, and hopeful artists trying to make their mark in a city built on imagination.The trio came away with a shared revelation: the real power of Comic Con isn’t the sales, but the tribe. Amid the chaos they found a rare kind of harmony. Everyone belonged. The crowd was wildly diverse, with no politics or ego, just pure participation. The authors describe the event as a temporary city built on acceptance, imagination, and freaky joy — a place where being weird wasn’t tolerated, but celebrated.Best Practices from the FloorEngage or Vanish: Don’t wait for buyers. Talk, laugh, wave. The con floor rewards momentum, not modesty.Layout Sells: Your booth is your battlefield. Arrange books and signage for maximum approachability from all angles.Covers Over Everything: Visuals are currency. A great cover is worth more than a thousand clever blurbs.Ask Before You Pitch: Use consultative selling. Find out what readers crave, then connect your story to their hunger.Personalize Every Sale: Add the event name (LA Comic Con 2025) when signing — it turns a purchase into a keepsake.Create a Crowd: People attract people. Fill your booth, even if it’s with friends pretending to shop.Network Like a Pro: Swap cards, talk to artists, talk to editors, talk to cosplayers — you never know who’s watching.Experiment with AI: Use it where it amplifies your vision, not where it erases your voice. The line between tool and theft is drawn by intention.Celebrate the Tribe: Remember why you’re there — to be part of something bigger, stranger, and more human than commerce.The group also tackles how artificial intelligence is reshaping creative production, from marketing visuals to potential full-fledged story adaptations. Together, they conclude that AI is inevitable — not a replacement for creativity, but another tool in the evolving arsenal of the modern storyteller.Ingrid MoonIngrid Moon is an author, editor, and science teacher. She currently has four science fiction novels, three audiobooks, and three science reference books for worldbuilding, with more on the way. Ingrid is a Southern California native who can't surf because she spent most of her youth navigating mountains and watching sci-fi television, all of which inspired her writing career. https://bit.ly/biohunter https://ingridmoon.comhttps://bit.ly/moon-news Greg Sorbel"I’m a lifelong fan of science fiction, fantasy, and comic books. Some of my earliest memories are of Land of the Lost, Speed Racer, and The Six Million Dollar Man. Seeing Star Wars in the theater for the first time in 1977 was a life-changing experience. An avid reader from an early age, I’ve always loved books that engaged my imagination. Reading The Hobbit in 7th grade English class and writing a short story that same year set me down the path of becoming a writer. I live in Riverside, California with my family and two dogs."[email protected] www.gregeratioSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  21. 48

    The Entrepreneur’s Playbook with Kelvin Abrams

    What does it really take to jump off the cliff without a parachute and call it entrepreneurship? In this episode of Bald Ambition, host Mookie Spitz sits down with Kelvin Abrams—a zero-BS, get-it-done, grassroots entrepreneur and author of Get Uncomfortable or Change Course—to break down the often brutal, always compelling truth about building something real.Kelvin isn’t pitching apps or chasing investors. He’s the guy who builds businesses that last—local ventures grounded in community, delivering real services to real people, and earning the loyalty of customers the old-fashioned way: through hustle, reinvention, and showing up every damn day.Together, Mookie and Kelvin dig into:Why comfort kills ambition—and why you need to embrace discomfort like a boxer taking hits in the ring.The danger of leaning on family and friends instead of surrounding yourself with professionals who have your back.How failure, setbacks, and even bad nights are fuel for growth—not signs to quit.Why entrepreneurs must keep reinventing themselves, adapting to change, and staying hungry.The rush of risk-taking, and why true satisfaction comes not from the money but from living fully and leaving nothing on the table.They consider the unglamorous side of entrepreneurship: long nights, personal sacrifices, emotional rollercoasters—and the deep reward of knowing you went all in. If you’ve ever wondered whether you have what it takes to put it all on the line, this conversation will dare you to stop waiting and start moving.Listen in, share it, and get ready to get uncomfortable. Because if you’re not a little crazy, this path isn’t for you.The GuestKelvin Abrams is a no-nonsense entrepreneur and community builder who has spent nearly two decades proving that grit and persistence beat shortcuts and hype. Known for his practical approach, Kelvin built his career on taking risks, embracing discomfort, and refusing to shy away from failure. His story isn’t one of overnight success—it’s about long nights, tough setbacks, and the relentless drive to keep moving forward. With a reputation as a straight-talking mentor and speaker, Kelvin inspires others to trust their vision, face challenges head-on, and commit to leaving it all on the field. His BusinessesKelvin has launched and grown multiple local businesses that thrive by delivering personalized services and cultivating loyal clients. From small ventures that meet everyday needs to innovative expansions that reinvent the customer experience, his work reflects the power of grassroots entrepreneurship done right. He is also the author of Get Uncomfortable or Change Course: Understanding What It Takes to Be an Entrepreneur, a blunt, motivational guide and coaching course that strips away the illusions of easy success. Building on the lessons of his own journey, Kelvin now shares his framework through speaking engagements, consulting, and a hands-on entrepreneurial course designed to equip the next wave of business owners with the resilience and mindset needed to succeed.Learn MoreK-9 and Coffee: https://www.k9andcoffee.com/Tiki’s Playhouse Doggie Daycare: https://www.tikisplayhouse.com/American Fitness Express: https://americanfitnessexpress.com/Kelvin Abrams, author: http://www.kelvinabrams.com/Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  22. 47

    Inherit from Your Future Self with Kaleido Life

    What if life insurance actually gave you life? In the 48th episode of Bald Ambition, host Mookie Spitz sits down with Craig Du Bruyn, serial entrepreneur and founder of Kaleido Life, a company re-engineering the very foundations of the 150-year-old life insurance industry.Craig shares his personal and professional journey from early battles convincing architects to abandon drafting tables for CAD systems, to the heartbreaking loss of a business partner that sparked his deep dive into how life insurance really works. That search uncovered a system stuck in the past, built on archaic models and impersonal actuarial tables.Kaleido Life’s radical vision is to flip the model on its head: using AI, biometrics, psychometrics, and behavioral modeling to create a 360° wellness matrix—a dynamic profile that determines not just your premiums, but how much of your death benefit you can access while you’re alive. Instead of paying premiums for decades only to benefit your heirs, Kaleido lets you “inherit from your future self,” unlocking up to 25% of your policy upfront to fund the things that matter most—whether that’s health, family, or just living fully now.The conversation dives deep into:The pain points of disruption—why people cling to the old way even when better tech exists.Death insurance vs. life insurance—and why Craig insists on reframing the entire lexicon.Gamification of wellness—how lifestyle improvements can literally increase your liquidity.Transparency and trust—giving customers direct access to the very data that determines their benefits.Regulatory realities—navigating the red tape as Kaleido gears up for its official 2026 launch.Mookie brings his trademark mix of humor and sharp questioning, pressing on skepticism, teasing about spoiled heirs, and cutting to the heart of the matter: can Kaleido turn an archaic, impersonal industry into a living, personalized partnership? Craig's answers will intrigue you. The GuestCraig Du Bruyn doesn’t fit the mold—and never tried to. He’s built and led companies through market upheaval, regulatory gridlock, and cultural landmines. What most call chaos, Craig calls Tuesday.As CEO and Co-Founder of Kaleido Life, he’s reimagining life insurance as living capital—helping people inherit from their future selves using AI, behavioral science, and a radically human approach to financial empowerment. It’s bold. It’s regulated. It’s working—and it’s just getting started.Craig’s journey has taken him from solo motorbike expeditions across Africa and the Himalayas to boardrooms more dangerous than the jungle. He’s raised millions, rebuilt companies from collapse, and endured more due diligence than most auditors could stomach. Along the way, he’s built a life he loves—with his family at the center and a deep, unwavering commitment to giving back.His CompanyKaleido Life is the third financial rail—beyond cash or credit. We let people inherit from their future selves, unlocking up to 25% of their life insurance upfront with no debt, no interest, and no waiting. With trillions trapped in legacy systems, Kaleido is liberating wealth for the living and igniting a movement to redefine what money means for humanity.Learn Morewww.kaleido-life.com https://www.linkedin.com/in/craig-du-bruyn/https://www.linkedin.com/company/kaleidolifeSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  23. 46

    Vibe Trading: BotSpot Hits the Spot

    In the 47th episode of Bald Ambition, Mookie sits down with Robert Grzesik, CEO of LumiWealth and the mind behind BotSpot—a cutting-edge AI platform that lets you “vibe-code” your own trading strategies. Forget the clunky Bloomberg terminals and line-by-line coding. BotSpot is positioning itself as the Lovable of trading: a conversational, AI-powered assistant that builds, backtests, and deploys strategies directly to your broker through secure APIs.Robert walks us through his journey from teaching finance students on a trading floor, to building software companies, to being an early employee at Voyager (once a billion-dollar Coinbase competitor). He explains how the rise of large language models transformed his vision into a tool where anyone—not just coders—can design bots that trade options, stocks, or even biotech plays based on real-world signals like clinical trials.We tackle the big questions head-on:Risk vs. Reward: How this startup differentiates from scammy robo-investorsMoney Flow: Where your cash actually goes, and why doesn’t BotSpot touch itSecurity & Trust: How your brokerage account stays protected even while bots execute trades.Innovation: From discrete rules-based strategies to wild predictive models powered by Perplexity AI.Benefits for Traders:Model trades with backtesting across years of data.Use a simple, intuitive chat-style interface—no coding required.Deploy bots seamlessly to your existing broker accounts.Explore pre-built strategies in a marketplace or customize your own.Gain an “analyst on demand” without paying hedge fund prices.The conversation shifts from skepticism to genuine excitement, highlighting why BotSpot may be one of the most intriguing tools in the wild west of FinTech GPT. Whether you’re an experienced trader, a skeptic wary of crypto-hype, or just someone curious about the future of AI in finance, this episode presents an intriguing way the LLMs can be used to help make your investing easier, and even fun.The GuestRobert Grzesik is the CEO and Lead Instructor at LumiWealth, a fintech education platform focused on algorithmic trading and investing. With over 25 years of experience in software development — spanning languages like Python, JavaScript, C, C++, Go, and Ruby — he has built trading systems that handle everything from equities and options to crypto and forex. He holds a Master’s in Finance (Schulich) and has prior roles in fintech firms such as Voyager and Greystone, bringing deep domain expertise to LumiWealth’s mission of teaching traders to build, backtest, and deploy automated strategies.The PlatformBotSpot is LumiWealth’s AI-powered platform that lets users turn natural-language ideas into live trading bots—no coding required. You can backtest strategies on historical data, deploy them live to trade automatically, and monitor performance in real time. ResourcesLumiWealth: https://lumiwealth.com/ BotSpot: https://botspot.trade/ Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  24. 45

    Sleep is Our Superpower

    In this 46th episode of Bald Ambition, host Mookie Spitz sits down with Roger Washington, MD, and Scarlet Nickhol, MPP of the Sleep To Live Well Foundation (STLW), to uncover why sleep isn’t just rest—it’s the vital work of human health and resilience.From the science of how insufficient sleep corrodes immune systems and accelerates disease, to the cultural myths that glamorize sleepless productivity, this conversation dives deep into the epidemic of sleep deprivation. Dr. Washington shares his pioneering insights on “Sleep Wellness,” a holistic framework that goes beyond sleep hygiene to address trauma, resistant behaviors, and the immune toll of lost hours. Scarlet Nickhol explains how STLW is intervening early—through children’s books, family guides, and clinical screening tools—to help families build nurturing bedtime rituals and reframe sleep as a source of power, safety, and healing.The discussion doesn’t stay abstract. From Bill Clinton’s four-hour nights to the “super sleeper” habits of children, Mookie and his guests explore real-world examples that reveal both the perils of neglecting sleep and the life-changing potential of embracing it. If you’ve ever stayed up late scrolling, struggled with insomnia, or noticed your kids become hyper instead of tired when they miss bedtime, this episode will change how you see sleep—and why it might be the best act of self-care and public health reform.The GuestsDr. Roger Washington, MD, FAAFP, STLW Medical DirectorA Stanford-trained physician, Dr. Washington has over 35 years of experience in integrative family medicine. He is the author of Lack of Sufficient Sleep Matters and the pioneer of Sleep Wellness, which combines cognitive behavioral therapy, trauma-informed care, and holistic practices to combat the epidemic of insufficient sleep. Scarlet Nickhol, MPP, MBA, STLW Executive DirectorCo-author of Doctor Bedtime’s Sleep Magic: SuperPowers for Super-Sleepers, Embracing Sleep Wellness: A Family Guide to Transforming Bedtime Resistance into a Nurturing Ritual, and Sleep Wellness Screening Protocol and Digest. The OrganizationSleep To Live Well is a 501(c)(3) private operating foundation transforming public health through Sleep Wellness by addressing the resistant behaviors, trauma, and toxic stress that disrupt natural sleep.The ResourcesChildren's book - https://www.sleeptolivewell.org/for-childrenDr. Washington bio online - https://www.sleeptolivewell.org/meet-dr-washingtonAbout STLW - https://wwSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  25. 44

    Direct to Patient Engagement in Freefall

    In this 45th episode of Bald Ambition, host Mookie Spitz sits down with attorney–pharmacist Darshan Kulkarni to dissect the fast-growing world of Direct-to-Patient (DTP) marketing and clinical trial models. He unpacks how DTP has evolved, why it appeals to pharmaceutical companies, and—most importantly—the hidden complexities that come with it. From state law inconsistencies to privacy, advertising, malpractice, and consent concerns, Darshan shows how what looks like a simple shift to “just using Zoom” quickly becomes a tangled web of compliance obligations. Whether you’re in legal, clinical operations, or marketing, this conversation breaks down the real risks and why they matter for anyone thinking about engaging patients directly.  Their conversation reveals a system in freefall—chaotic, fragmented, and confusing at every level:Telemedicine blurred the boundaries between pharma, providers, and patients, raising questions of responsibility and compliance.Competing laws across states leave companies unsure whether they’re in full compliance or skating on thin ice.HIPAA, PHI, and data ownership are entangled with marketing funnels, referral pathways, and AI-driven documentation tools.PBMs (pharmacy benefit managers) continue to inflate costs while claiming to save money, adding another layer of distortion to the supply chain.Patients, providers, pharma, and tech firms are caught in a spaghetti bowl of shifting rules, competing interests, and massive financial incentives.Darshan lays out clear recommendations for anyone navigating this uncertainty—whether you’re a pharmaceutical company, provider, tech startup, or pharmacy:Rethink your business model completely. Don’t assume past practices will hold up.Flow-chart every patient touchpoint. Map interactions across providers, pharmacies, telehealth platforms, and pharma.Bring legal oversight into the room early. Compliance isn’t an afterthought—it must be baked into design, engineering, and marketing.Stay on top of evolving regulations. Monitor FDA, FTC, DOJ, OIG, and state-level changes in real time.Balance compliance with patient care. Never lose sight of the ultimate goal: better, safer, more accessible health outcomes.The GuestDarshan Kulkarni is a Philadelphia-based food and drug lawyer who focuses on the legal and regulatory challenges of Direct-to-Patient (DTP) programs in pharma and medical devices. As the founder of the Kulkarni Law Firm, he helps companies balance innovation with compliance and addresses issues like privacy, advertising, informed consent, and multi-state telemedicine rules. Darshan also teaches FDA regulatory law and hosts the DarshanTalks podcast, where he breaks down the risks and opportunities of engaging patients directly.His FirmThe Kulkarni Law Firm is a boutique life sciences law practice based in Philadelphia, dedicated to helping pharmaceutical, biotech, and medical device companies navigate FDA, FTC, and DOJ compliance. The Firm focuses on high-risk areas where law and business intersect—including Direct-to-Patient (DTP) programs, drug and device advertising, clinical research operations, and mergers and acquisitions. By combining regulatory insight with practical industry experience, the Firm supports clients in managing promotional review committees, structuring compliant patient engagement, and preparing for government scrutiny.Resourceshttps://www.kulkarnilawfirm.comSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  26. 43

    FDA Cautions: Winter Is Coming to Pharma DTC

    Regulatory turbulence just slammed into the world of direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising. On this 44th episode of Bald Ambition, Mookie Spitz sits down again with Dale Cooke, president of Philly Cooke Consulting and FDA Ad Law, to unpack the latest shockwave: the Make America Healthy Again report and the FDA’s sudden announcement of intensified DTC enforcement.Topline takeaways for pharma DTC marketers:The foundational rules haven’t changed — yet.The government has explicitly said they will change, but no timeline or specifics are confirmed.Enforcement is already tightening: several warning letters have been issued, but the industry doesn’t know how many, to whom, or what violations were cited.Until those letters are made public, marketers are operating in a fog of uncertainty.From whispered AI-authored warning letters to the looming uncertainty, Mookie and Dale cut through the noise to separate hype from hard reality. Are pharma marketers staring at a return to the scrolling wall of side effects from the 1980s? Will influencer campaigns on social media be the next target? And how the hell do you green-light a new campaign when the rules may change tomorrow morning?Key Topics:FDA’s AI enforcement push – how machine-generated warning letters could reshape compliance overnight.“Adequate provision” under fire – what happens if websites and 1-800 numbers no longer satisfy disclosure rules.The specter of retro-regulation – could marketers be forced back to interminable scrolling text on TV ads?Influencer marketing crackdown – why TikTok and Instagram campaigns may face the harshest scrutiny yet.Living with uncertainty – the art of staying compliant when the rules are declared “in flux” but not yet published.Strategic survival – how pharma brands can hedge between delay, risk, and costly re-work while keeping campaigns alive.If you work in pharma, healthcare marketing, or just want to know how billions of ad dollars pivot on bureaucratic whim, this is your must-listen.The GuestDale Cooke is the president of PhillyCooke Consulting and FDA Ad Law. He helps companies communicate about FDA-regulated products using 21st century tools, while remaining compliant with regulations written in the 1960s. Dale has worked with more than 50 pharmaceutical and medical device clients and more than 30 advertising agencies around the world. His insights have been featured in Politico, The Pink Sheet, Stat News, Law360, and others. Dale is an active member of the Food and Drug Law Institute (FDLI), the Alliance for a Stronger FDA, and the Digital Health Coalition.Dale teaches in the Temple University School of Pharmacy RAQA program, and is the author of Effective Review and Approval of Digital Promotional Tactics, now in its second edition in FDLI’s Topics in Food and Drug Law series. He speaks at industry conferences on topics including FDA enforcement trends, best practices for review processes, global review practices, and life sciences use of social media.Resourceshttps://fda.complianceexpert.com/news/FDA-intelligence/continuing-to-innovate-during-regulatory-uncertaintyDale's LinkedIn ProfileDale's BlogSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  27. 42

    Get Started with MyStart Health

    The 43rd episode of Bald Ambition with Mookie Spitz welcomes Matthew Stern, CEO of MyStart Health, for a deep dive into how technology and entrepreneurship are reshaping healthcare.We live in an age of disruption—culture, politics, wellness—all shifting under our feet. But while the headlines scream collapse, Stern argues the opposite: technology and medicine are colliding to extend lives, cut costs, and democratize access to care.Matt shares his journey from 20 years in digital marketing to launching MyStart Health, a telehealth platform that connects patients nationwide to affordable GLP-1 weight-loss treatments. We talk about how his personal experiences—losing his father too young, watching his wife and mother navigate underserved areas of women’s health—inspired him to create solutions that tackle cost, access, and personalization head-on.The TopicsThe GLP-1 revolution: why drugs like semaglutide and tirzepatide are more than a fad—they’re a catalyst for lasting lifestyle change.The insurance gap: how Big Pharma pricing and short-sighted insurers leave patients stranded, and how MyStart fills the void with affordability and speed.Women’s health & HRT: the overlooked market, FDA policy shifts, and MyStart’s upcoming “Rise” program to support women in perimenopause and menopause.Mental health + physical health: the often-ignored psychological toll of weight loss and how MyStart plans to integrate mental wellness into its platform.AI and personalization: not as a robot replacement, but as a way to free doctors from clerical work and restore real human connection.What emerges is not Chicken Little’s “sky is falling” narrative but an optimistic vision of medicine’s future—where personalization, gratitude, and community drive better outcomes.If you’ve ever struggled with weight, seen family members sidelined by poor access to care, or wondered what AI means for the doctor-patient relationship, this convo is for you. The GuestMatt Stern’s journey didn’t start in boardrooms — it started with nothing. After experiencing homelessness in his early years, Matt built himself up from the ground floor, eventually creating businesses that have collectively generated over $300 million in sales. But his story isn’t just about business. It’s about resilience, fatherhood, and navigating pressure — the pressure of building success while raising a family. As a dedicated father, Matt speaks openly about the balance between ambition and presence — leading companies while still showing up for the people who matter most. Whether he’s building businesses, raising his kids, or playing 18 holes, Matt’s mission is simple: help people win — in business, in family, and in life.The CompanyMyStart Health is a telehealth provider focusing on improving healthcare through its personalized medical weight loss program. By offering compounded GLP-1 medication, pricing is significantly less expensive compared to name-brand medications like Ozempic, Wegovy, and Zepbound. Woman’s World recently spoke to MyStart’s CEO, Matthew Stern, and its Chief Medical Advisor, Dr. Ritu Chopra, about the very new online prescriber about what sets it apart from other telehealth providers.The Resourceshttps://thesterngroup.comhttps://www.mystarthealth.comhttps://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2025/04/05/ai-machine-learning-radiology-sofSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  28. 41

    Get Swart: What Paid Protests Reveal About PR, Politics, and Power

    The 42nd episode of Bald Ambition doesn't provide the answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything, but does highlight the hypocrisy baked into influencer marketing, media, and public relations. Mookie Spitz sits down with Adam Swart, the outspoken founder and CEO of Crowds On Demand. Known for his provocative media appearances and unapologetic takes on modern influence, Swart pulls back the curtain on how public opinion is shaped—not just in boardrooms and newsrooms, but on the streets, in protests, and across every channel where people consume information. Their conversation digs into the mechanics of paid demonstrations, the blurred line between grassroots activism and corporate-backed spectacle, and the fierce reactions Swart provokes from pundits across the political spectrum.As Swart points out, nearly every article, broadcast, or viral campaign is a form of marketing, yet staged protests are singled out for outrage. From his perspective, there’s little difference between a PR firm planting stories in the New York Times, a network pundit being paid millions to deliver their “independent” take, or an influencer cashing a brand check to post on TikTok. What Crowds On Demand does is simply make that process visible. Swart also argues that, by compensating participants—often housekeepers, retail workers, and others who wouldn’t otherwise have the time or flexibility to attend—he is actually democratizing protest. Instead of activism being limited to the wealthy or the privileged with free time, his model allows working-class voices to be represented in the public square. By being explicit about the transactional nature of influence, Swart forces critics to confront the double standard: we accept being sold to everywhere else, but recoil when the same mechanics are applied to public demonstrations.About Adam Swart Adam Swart is a political strategist, entrepreneur, and commentator whose work has landed him on Fox News, Newsmax, NewsNation, and even across the table from Chris Cuomo. Since founding Crowds On Demand in 2012, Swart has been at the center of high-stakes campaigns that range from corporate disputes to advocacy movements and headline-grabbing political demonstrations. He’s drawn fire as a so-called “villain of influence,” but he embraces transparency and argues that his work democratizes public expression by opening participation to people who otherwise wouldn’t have a voice.About Crowds On Demand Crowds On Demand is a Los Angeles–based publicity and advocacy firm that specializes in organizing live demonstrations, protests, rallies, and influencer-driven events to shape public perception and force issues into the spotlight. The company has executed campaigns across politics, corporate conflicts, and social causes—sometimes tipping the scales of debate when traditional PR avenues fall flat. In this episode, Swart breaks down examples ranging from the “Delete Facebook” campaign to local power-plant battles, showing how his team builds organizations, recruits participants, and sustains visibility until decision-makers are forced to respond.Adam challenges listeners to reconsider how influence works in 2025, and whether the outrage over “manufactured” protests says more about the messenger than the message. The next time you see or participate in a protest, on either side of the political aisle, consider who organized it—and who paid for it.How to Contact Adamhttps://crowdsondemand.com/contact-usSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  29. 40

    Dale Cooke Weighs In on the Looming Threats to Public Health

    Host Mookie Spitz sits down again with Dale Cooke, president of Philly Cooke Consulting and FDA Ad Law, known affectionately as the “Yoda of Compliance.” Together, they unpack the chaos rippling through healthcare communications in the wake of CDC restructuring, FDA shake-ups, and a political climate that has turned vaccines—once celebrated as humanity’s greatest public health achievement—into a weaponized political wedge issue.Cooke reassures listeners that, for now, “the train is still on the tracks”: the core rules governing FDA promotional enforcement actions haven’t changed, even if the noise around them has reached deafening levels. But reassurance gives way to urgency, as the convo turns to mounting misinformation, the erosion of public trust, and the consequences of government officials openly undermining their own scientific triumphs.From Operation Warp Speed’s breakthrough mRNA vaccines to George Washington’s variolation orders during the Revolutionary War, the pod cuts through political theater to remind healthcare communicators of their north star: protecting patients and improving lives. Spitz and Cooke challenge the industry to double down on educating and empowering HCPs, and face the stubborn persistence of outdated beliefs like 18th-century vitalism, repackaged in modern anti-vax rhetoric.Key themes:Why FDA enforcement suggests “business as usual” despite political upheaval — at least for nowHow misinformation has shifted from fringe hippie circles to mainstream partisan battlesWhy industry must empower doctors, nurses, and pharmacists as the frontline against falsehoodsThe urgent need for trustworthy sources and resilient communication strategiesThe pod is not just another policy convo, but a wake-up call when truth, science, and human lives collide with politics and misinformation. The GuestDale Cooke is the president of PhillyCooke Consulting and FDA Ad Law. He helps companies communicate about FDA-regulated products using 21st century tools, while remaining compliant with regulations written in the 1960s. Dale has worked with more than 50 pharmaceutical and medical device clients and more than 30 advertising agencies around the world. His insights have been featured in Politico, The Pink Sheet, Stat News, Law360, and others. Dale is an active member of the Food and Drug Law Institute (FDLI), the Alliance for a Stronger FDA, and the Digital Health Coalition.Dale teaches in the Temple University School of Pharmacy RAQA program, and is the author of Effective Review and Approval of Digital Promotional Tactics, now in its second edition in FDLI’s Topics in Food and Drug Law series. He speaks at industry conferences on topics including FDA enforcement trends, best practices for review processes, global review practices, and life sciences use of social media.Dale earned his B.A. in Philosophy from Southern Methodist University, an M.A. in Philosophy from the University of Arizona, studied Epidemiology and Biostatistics at Drexel University’s School of Public Health, received a graduate certificate in Healthcare Compliance from Seton Hall University’s School of Law, and his J.D. at Drexel University’s Kline School of Law.Resourceshttps://www.buzzsprout.com/2455310/episodes/17081263https://fda.complianceexpert.com/news/FDA-intelligence/continuing-to-innovate-during-regulatory-uncertainSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  30. 39

    Top Talent from Talus

    Healthcare and pharma agencies face a tough reality: talent is their lifeblood, but also their greatest liability. On this Labor Day 40th edition of Bald Ambition, host Mookie Spitz sits down with Sameer Duhmale and Andre de Luz, co-founders of Talus, to explore why hiring in healthcare marketing is uniquely difficult, and how their platform offers a way forward.The ChallengesNiche Expertise Regulatory Burden Global Fragmentation Time Pressure The SolutionSpeed — find vetted freelancers in as little as three hours, not three days.Scalability — spin up entire teams, from medical writers and designers to account managers and strategists, across all stages of pharma lifecycle projects.Locality — access freelancers in seven geographies, ensuring compliance with local regulations and 24/7 global coverage.Quality Assurance — every freelancer is screened for years of healthcare communications experience, with detailed profiles, endorsements, and disease-state expertise down to subpopulations and biomarkers.AI Integration — Talus GPT-style matching will make nuanced search intuitive, while freelancers receive AI training to stay sharp in an evolving landscape.The GuestsSameer Dhumale is the co‑founder of Talus, a platform designed to transform how healthcare and medical communications agencies access freelance expertise. With a background at the intersection of health, technology, and strategy, Sameer brings a sharp focus on building sustainable models that benefit both clients and freelancers. At Talus, he leads on strategic growth, innovation, and client partnerships—ensuring the platform not only solves immediate resourcing challenges but also strengthens the MedComms ecosystem long term. Sameer’s approach combines entrepreneurial drive with an emphasis on collaboration and trust, the values at the heart of Talus.Andre da Luz is the visionary founder of Talus, a platform revolutionizing how healthcare agencies connect with top-tier freelance talent in medical communications. With a deep understanding of the health communications landscape built from 10 years within OPEN Health, Andre established Talus to address the critical need for flexible, high-quality resourcing solutions. His mission is to empower both agencies and freelancers by fostering a seamless, efficient, and transparent ecosystem. Andre's leadership is driven by a passion for innovation and a commitment to elevating standards within the MedComms industry.The CompanyTalus is a dynamic platform dedicated to seamlessly connecting healthcare and medical communications agencies with elite freelance talent. Born from a deep understanding of the industry's unique demands, Talus addresses the critical need for flexible, high-quality, and specialized expertise. We streamline the entire engagement process, from talent discovery and vetting to project management and payments, ensuring agencies can rapidly scale their teams with confidence and freelancers can access rewarding opportunities. At Talus, we're not just a marketplace; we're building a trusted ecosystem that empowers both sides of the equation, fostering efficiency, transparency, and excellence in health communications.The ResourcesWebsite: www.talusfreelance.comAgency sign up link:https://www.talusfreelance.com/agencies/get-started/Email Andre for more info Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  31. 38

    How the CDC Destroyed Itself (And What To Do About It)

    Marketing savvy, political chaos, and raw philosophy collide here as Mookie Spitz—a bald, blunt veteran of advertising and PR—cuts through the confusion to expose how persuasion really works, and why institutions keep screwing it up.In this episode, Mookie takes on the CDC, the vaccine wars, and the larger collapse of trust in American public health. He starts with a simple truth he learned in the trenches: you can’t make people do what they don’t want to do. That lesson applies just as much to selling sneakers as it does to selling science. Yet during the pandemic, government agencies tried exactly that: mandates, incomplete-truths, and data dumps delivered to a frightened, skeptical public. The result was predictable: backlash, paranoia, and a communication failure so severe it helped reshape politics, amplify conspiracy theories, and hand the microphone to anti-science voices like RFK Jr.Mookie isn’t anti-vaccine, far from it. He’s emphatic: vaccines, aside from clean water, have saved more lives than any other medical advancement in history. But the way the government sold the COVID vaccine was a textbook disaster. By downplaying risks, dismissing fears, and burying adverse cases instead of acknowledging them, leaders alienated millions. In marketing, trust is brand identity. Lose that, and you lose your audience. That’s exactly what happened, and we’re still living in the wreckage.His rant isn’t just about public health. Instead, he pulls the lens back to explore how bad communication drives bigger crises: crime stats that don’t match lived reality, authoritarian leaders exploiting ignored fears, and a science-illiterate public left to navigate mandates it never trusted. Along the way, Mookie brings in philosophy (Feyerabend’s Against Method, Burroughs’ virus-like bureaucracy), politics, and the hard lessons of PR. The takeaway: facts don’t change minds, empathy does. First hearts, then data. Always.But the news isn't all bad, as he shares a few concrete recommendations: Know your audienceUnderstand cultural fears, skepticism, and biases. Meet people where they are instead of lecturing from above.Lead with emotion, not dataAcknowledge fear and hesitancy first. Facts alone don’t change behavior—empathy does.Validate lived experienceDon’t dismiss people’s side effects, fears, or stories. If someone felt sick for two days after a shot, pretending it’s “nothing” destroys trust.Be transparent about risks and uncertaintyAdmit vaccines can have rare side effects. Admit breakthrough infections happen. If you bury that information, you make it bigger.Empower choice instead of forcing complianceMandates backfire. People resent being told what to do. Frame decisions as personal agency, not top-down orders.Communicate benefits as self-flatteringShow how choosing vaccination (or any behavior) is a reflection of being smart, caring, strong, or community-minded.Acknowledge the collective fear, not just the individual caseDon’t just dismiss paranoia—address why people are scared, and connect to the broader reality.Avoid overreliance on authority or orthodoxyBureaucratic, top-down messaging feels manipulative. Speak like a trusted peer, not an institution.Rebuild science literacy over the long termA deeper problem is the U.S. education system. Without basic science Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  32. 37

    Bipartisan Bravado from Mike Gatto

    Former California legislator Mike Gatto sits with host Mookie Spitz for an unflinching look at the collapse of bipartisanship, the failures of political messaging, and the growing civil war inside the Democratic Party.Gatto reflects on his years in the California Assembly and contrasts that era of rough but workable compromise with today’s toxic climate, where bipartisanship is treated as a relic. He explains why authenticity, not policy papers, drives voter trust—and how Democrats’ overeducated “university speak” and obsession with statistics (like claiming “crime is down 30%”) leave ordinary Americans cold.The conversation zeroes in on the Democratic split: Gavin Newsom-style centrists who chase swing voters with calculated moderation versus the AOC–Bernie left, convinced that only progressive polarization can match Trump’s movement. This ideological tug-of-war, Gatto argues, is paralyzing the party and preventing real leadership from rising to the surface.Mookie pushes back with the marketer’s lens: in an attention economy, you can’t ignore Trump—the dominant brand—without becoming invisible. Gatto counters with his belief that Democrats need new products altogether, not just weak imitations of the GOP playbook. Together they debate whether politics today is about policy, platform, or pure personality, and why Democrats keep failing to connect with working-class voters.The episode doesn’t stop at politics. They dive into the despair of young men, the erosion of economic hope, and the looming disruption of artificial intelligence—an upheaval Gatto compares to past industrial revolutions but with new risks to human intuition and emotional connection. Their conversation is wide-ranging, sharp, and deeply relevant to anyone trying to make sense of where America is heading.The GuestMike Gatto is a former California State Assemblymember who won eight elections to serve four terms, including as Assistant Speaker. In the Legislature he chaired key committees on Appropriations, Consumer Protection & Privacy, and Utilities & Commerce—shaping billions in state spending, advancing technology and cybersecurity policy, and leading landmark reforms in energy and regulation. Over his tenure, fifty-five of his authored measures became law, including California’s first Rainy Day Fund, production tax incentives that kept entertainment jobs in Southern California, reforms to Proposition 65 that curbed abusive lawsuits, $700 million to clean polluted groundwater, and even the revival of the state’s classic black license plates.Before and after public office, Gatto built a career as an attorney and advisor, practicing at one of Los Angeles’s most prestigious firms and arguing cases all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. Today he counsels Fortune 500 companies, small businesses, and investors on navigating law, regulation, and politics, while also serving as a trusted commentator on national media. Known for his problem-solving approach and bipartisan record, he blends legal expertise with real-world results.Follow Mike on X.https://x.com/mikegattoSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  33. 36

    Empathy: Rocket Fuel of Attention

    In today's podcast, Mookie unpacks the parallels between consultative selling and political persuasion. With a marketer’s eye and a content creator’s grind — including his own experiment building 15K+ followers on TikTok — Mookie reveals how narratives spread, how attention is captured, and how messaging succeeds or collapses.Politics is branding. Campaigns are marketing. And in today’s attention economy, the leaders who master perception win, while those who rely on facts alone lose. Mookie isn’t partisan, and instead exposes flawed Democrat strategy and messaging in this example to dissect persuasion in all its forms — political, commercial, cultural. One vivid example: after posting a video on TikTok about his years living in New York City describing encounters with homelessness, an unsafe neighborhood, and even being physically assaulted on the subway, a commenter flatly called him a liar. Why? Because Democratic messaging insists that crime is “down 30%.” The data point was heard as proof that no crime exists, invalidating his real, lived experience. This clash between statistics and emotional truth lies at the heart of branding failure.The show goes deeper by treating politicians as brands. Just as Apple, Nike, or Tesla position themselves around identity and emotion, so do political leaders. Donald Trump, for example, positioned his “brand” around strength, order, and empathy for his base’s pain points. Democrats, meanwhile, have often undercut their own positioning by relying on statistics that deny or dismiss the lived experiences of their voters. The same laws of marketing apply:Positioning matters. If you don’t define what you stand for in emotional terms, someone else will define it for you.Features don’t sell — feelings do. In politics, touting statistics without addressing pain is like selling a phone by rattling off specs without showing how it makes life better.Consistency builds trust. Voters, like consumers, flock to brands that clearly embody their promises and identities, over time and across platforms.Here's where political analysis blends with lessons in marketing psychology:How Trump’s intuitive grasp of brand identity made him a maestro of attention.Why Democrats’ reliance on “rational” messaging alienates their own base.What marketers and political strategists alike can learn from the emotional resonance of lived experience.How ignoring pain points — whether of voters or customers — always backfires.Whether you’re in marketing, politics, or just trying to understand why narratives matter more than numbers, this podcast reveals the mechanics of influence in a world where perception is reality.Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  34. 35

    Special Needs Kids Need Special Tutoring

    In the 36th episode of Bald Ambition, host Mookie Spitz digs into the heart of education with Michelle Waugh—a doctorate-trained scientist who left academia to devote herself to personal tutoring. What makes her story remarkable isn’t just her credentials, but her conviction that personalized learning—built on empathy, patience, and human connection—can succeed where our system repeatedly fails.Michelle shares how a severely autistic fifth-grader, written off by the public school system as “hopeless,” learned to read Dr. Seuss and Berenstain Bears after just one summer of weekly one-on-one sessions. She explains why phonics works better than memorization, how audiobooks transform reading comprehension, and why even gifted kids need tailored approaches to stay engaged.Together, Mookie and Michelle explore:Personalization over standardization: Why no two students should be taught the same way.Empathy and patience as superpowers: The quiet, consistent presence that makes breakthroughs possible.Parents as partners: How nightly reading, advocacy in 504 meetings, and active support can change outcomes.Technology as a bridge: Audiobooks, text-to-speech, and other tools that complement—not replace—the human touch.Michelle’s belief in personalization is rooted in her own journey. She holds a PhD in plant pathology—a field she pursued out of fascination with fungi and a desire to teach at the college level. But she left that world behind, disillusioned not just by the limits of research but also by the darker realities of academia. Early in her career, she faced harassment from a senior professor—a classic example of the #MeToo power imbalance in male-dominated sciences. That betrayal of trust drove her to step away from the lab and toward work where she could define her own space and values.In tutoring, Michelle found what she had always been seeking: the chance to teach in a way that was direct, humane, and impactful. Her story is not only about the victories of her students but also about her own resilience—choosing to create a space where empathy and patience are central, not optional.The episode is both a celebration of the small miracles that come from personalized instruction and a critique of the larger systems—schools, academia, and culture—that too often crush individuality. It reminds us that education is not mass production, but a deeply human relationship, one child at a time.If you’ve ever doubted whether a single teacher’s attention can change a child’s life—or whether someone can reclaim their purpose after being failed by institutions—Michelle’s story proves otherwise.The GuestMichelle Waugh is a dedicated tutor specializing in supporting students with special needs. With years of hands-on experience, she blends patience, empathy, and proven teaching strategies to help children overcome academic and personal challenges. Michelle works closely with parents, creating individualized plans that not only improve learning outcomes but also build confidence and independence. Her commitment goes beyond academics, as she focuses on nurturing each student’s unique strengths, ensuring they feel understood, supported, and capable of success. Michelle holds a doctorate in biology and a California multiple-subject teaching credential, and brings over 20 years of experience as a teacher, instructional assistant, substitute teacher, and tutor in both in-person and online settings.Her Websitehttps://michellewaughtutor.crd.Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  35. 34

    Futureproofing Music in the Age of AI

    Mookie sits down with John von Seggern—jazz bassist turned EDM pioneer, educator, and tech innovator—to explore the fault lines opening in the music industry as AI floods the gates. From synthetic Spotify hit-makers like Velvet Sundown to LLMs capable of pumping out a thousand generic tracks a day, AI is rewriting the rules of artistry, authorship, and authenticity.But John’s not panicking—he’s building a blueprint. As the founder of Futureproof Music School, he’s developing a new kind of music education: AI-assisted, human-centered, and ruthlessly focused on originality. Together, Mookie and John get deep into how musicians can harness AI without becoming prompt-puppets—using it to enhance workflow, not replace their soul.They also tackle:The collapse of aesthetic standards in the age of generative sludgeWhat music schools get wrong—and how Futureproof is rewriting the modelWhy creativity must involve friction, failure, and struggleBuilding communities that fight back against algorithmic mediocrityThe rise of personalized learning powered by AI, not dictated by itThe growing crisis of musical differentiation in an over-saturated, under-inspired landscapeWhether you’re an amateur producer, a session veteran, or an AI skeptic trying to make sense of the chaos, this episode is an engaging conversation about where music is headed—and what it will take to keep humans in the loop.The GuestJohn von Seggern, CEO and founder of Futureproof Music School, brings over 30 years of experience as both a professional musician and an education innovator. After leading online programs at Dubspot and Icon Collective, he saw firsthand how rigid, outdated models failed to meet the needs of today’s artists. In response, he created Futureproof—a music school that blends personalized mentorship with AI-enhanced learning, offering students flexible, scalable, and industry-relevant training.A longtime collaborator with avant-garde legends like Jon Hassell, von Seggern grounds Futureproof’s curriculum in real-world musical expertise. His project-based, tech-integrated approach empowers students to build their own creative identities while mastering the tools of modern music production. With Kadence, the school’s AI tutor, and a focus on community-driven learning, von Seggern is redefining what it means to prepare artists for the music industry of tomorrow.The Schoolhttps://futureproofmusicschool.com/.Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  36. 33

    How to Get Famous on ChatGPT

    Mookie Spitz flips the script on digital fame and asks: how do you become famous not with humans, but with the machines that shape our world? As a marketing strategist turned content creator, Mookie blends insider PR knowledge with his hands-on experience as a micro-influencer to expose the weird new rules of visibility in the age of AI.He shares how ChatGPT and other large language models (LLMs) are quietly scraping, dissecting, and reassembling every piece of content you put online—turning even the smallest blog or podcast into part of a vast AI training set. Along the way, Mookie recounts the surreal moment he asked ChatGPT about himself and got back a detailed, eerily accurate portrait pulled from his own work, plus an otherwise largely overlooked friendship with singer Beck.From “doping” the algorithms to flood them with favorable data, to the rise of “clankers” who abuse AI for cheap content, this episode dives into how brands, governments, and everyday creators are already gaming the bots. Mookie argues that AI is now the ultimate PR audience—and knowing how to prime it might be the most important media strategy of our time.Whether you’re an influencer, marketer, or just curious about how AI is rewriting the rules of reputation, this provocative episode breaks down the future of fame in a machine-driven world.Beck is a Winner, Baby!Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  37. 32

    Biohunter, Unleashed! Making of the Audiobook

    Sci-fi author Ingrid Moon returns to the pod, this time with voiceover wizard Scott Allen. They join your gloriously bald host, Mookie Spitz, for an unfiltered ride through the making of Biohunter—a post-apocalyptic sci-fi love story between a deadly alien tracker and a teenage human target. They talk shop about audiobooks, content repurposing, and self-publishing in the age of AI. Ingrid reveals how the novel began as a pseudonymous writing challenge—complete with a mystery book cover and fake name—and ended as a full-fledged sci-fi saga complete with morally conflicted characters and actual emotional stakes (imagine Dances with Wolves meets The Most Dangerous Game, with fewer buffalo and more cloning). Mookie compares notes on the struggle of doing bad German dominatrix accents while reading his own fiction out loud. Scott shares war stories from behind the mic—including the horror of accepting a voice gig before reading the manuscript, only to find out midway that it goes full weird.They deep-dive into audiobook production (hint: color-coded dialogue and wrestling with audio files), the psychological toll of switching voices like a caffeinated sociopath, and what it’s like to hear your own writing read back to you in someone else's voice—better than you imagined but also slightly unsettling, like hearing your dog say your name.Then it gets existential. AI narration, KDP’s soulless “Read Now With a Robot” button, and the philosophical death spiral of bots making content for other bots. Can real emotion survive a whispering LLM? Do the robots stutter convincingly yet? Does anyone really read anymore, or are we all just huffing 10-minute audio chunks while reheating lasagna?It’s a heartfelt, hilarious, and occasionally unhinged conversation about storytelling, collaboration, and fighting for human creativity in the face of algorithmic mediocrity. Perfect for writers, listeners, aspiring voice actors, and anyone terrified that their next favorite novel might be written—and narrated—by Skynet. Spoiler: Ingrid and Scott are still human. For now. And Mookie remains bald. Surprise! The AuthorIngrid Moon is an author, editor, and science teacher. She currently has four science fiction novels, three audiobooks, and three science reference books for worldbuilding, with more on the way. Ingrid is a Southern California native who can't surf because she spent most of her youth navigating mountains and watching sci-fi television, all of which inspired her writing career. Her Resourcesbook website: https://bit.ly/biohunter author website: https://ingridmoon.comSign Up for Newsletter: https://bit.ly/moon-news The Voice Talenthttps://scottallenvoice.com/Ingrid On the Podhttps://www.buzzsprout.com/2455310/episodes/17466904Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  38. 31

    Ambition: A Cautionary Tale

    "Ambition" is taken for granted in our society, a baseline for behavior, and a prerequisite for success and happiness. But at what cost? An even more fundamental ask: Why do we persist? Camus called suicide the only serious philosophical question. In this searing episode of Bald Ambition, Mookie Spitz confronts that question head-on, tracing two suicides — Andrew, the consummate overachiever whose perfect life crumbled under a mysterious twitch, and Jacob, the anxious recluse who finally pulled the trigger after securing freedom from work.These weren’t random chemical misfires. They were dark, paradoxical answers to lives misaligned with their owners’ deepest needs. Jung suggested our unconscious mind doesn’t negotiate; it sabotages what it hates. Sometimes a panic attack is your soul pulling the fire alarm, desperate to stop the charade before it’s too late.Mookie cuts past easy pop-psych platitudes to ask brutal questions:What if your depression is your psyche’s last-ditch effort to save itself?What if your anxiety is a perfectly rational protest against a marriage, a career, a social role that’s slowly strangling you?What if real healing doesn’t come from coping better, but from burning it all down and building something truer from the ashes?Layered with riffs on Freud, Dostoyevsky’s underground man, and the tragic illusions baked into the American dream, this episode lays bare how modern ambition often ends in psychic civil war. The unconscious rebels, the conscious mind resists, and too often the person is destroyed in the crossfire.Maybe the real madness isn’t found in panic attacks or depressive spirals — but in stubbornly clinging to a life that’s wrong at its core. Sometimes the sanest act is the riskiest: quit, leave, detonate. Change everything... And see what happens!Blog SeedSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  39. 30

    Moonstruck Musings on Storytelling & Selling

    In this loaded episode, your follically-challenged host Mookie Spitz sits down with science educator, technologist, and multi-genre author Ingrid Moon to dissect writing and self-publishing — and why it’s so damn hard to do it well.They start with Ingrid’s journey from tech marketing to science classrooms to building reference books for sci-fi authors who don’t know enough science. Astrofiction, Biofiction, Robofiction — yes, those are real, and they’ll save your story from embarrassing “space magic"...Then it’s all in on the struggles:The agony of finishing a book when your brain craves endless worldbuilding.The harsh truth that most “new ideas” are stale genre tropes — and why that might actually be a good thing.How finding a close-knit writers’ group is the secret weapon to stay sane and keep your plot from face-planting.Mookie rants about trying to hack attention in a world drowning in content. He describes how his first 500-page illustrated Santa Claus epic baffled readers who couldn’t tell if it was for kids or deranged adults. Then he reveals why his latest sci-fi novel, Jonnie Fazoolie & the Transfinite Reality Engine finally nailed it:A raw, savage take on the mess that is 2025, crammed into tight three-line blocks that read like Twitter poetry on meth.A bad guy that’s literally a Boltzmann brain floating at the edge of a dying universe — obsessed with a loser she can’t have.A narrative style chopped into tweet-sized punches that force every line to matter — and rewrite your brain on how to read).They tear into why most indie authors fail at story — chasing intricate lore instead of broken people trying to survive. Why character arcs matter more than your perfectly mapped kingdoms. Why even if your idea is another alien invasion or Mars colonization, it’s your twist, your voice, your messed-up characters that breathe life into tired tropes.Also on deck:How to edit your work so it stops sucking, and why line editing is more brutal (and necessary) than you think.The tension between satisfying genre fans who crave familiar beats vs pushing the story into new places.Why finished is always better than perfect, and why marketing your book is a separate beast that no one warns you about.If you’ve ever wanted to write (or just watch two writers spiral into their own creative hangups), you’ll feel right at home.The GuestIngrid Moon is an author, editor, and science teacher. She currently has four science fiction novels, three audiobooks, and three science reference books for worldbuilding, with more on the way. Ingrid is a Southern California native who can't surf because she spent most of her youth navigating mountains and watching sci-fi television, all of which inspired her writing career. Her Resourcesauthor website: https://ingridmoon.comeditor website: https://ingridmoon.com/authorsgoodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5035674.Ingrid_Moonamazon author page: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Ingrid-Moon/author/B0CKKMRL88instagram: @ingridmoonauthorfacebook (author business): https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61553084507674Sign Up for my Newsletter: Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  40. 29

    Creative Writing in the Age of AI

    Host Mookie Spitz — fresh off finishing his second novel — takes a sledgehammer to the hysteria that AI is the death of creative writing. In this unfiltered deep dive, he argues that the heart of any good writing is timeless: storytelling driven by human experience, emotion, and characters you actually care about.AI? A useful and enthusiastic sidekick. But it can’t live your life, wrestle with your scars, or dream up the flawed, hungry people who drive real narratives. Mookie spells out exactly how he used large language models like ChatGPT as a supercharged research partner and idea spark, never as a ghostwriter. From diving down quantum physics rabbit holes to generating slick alternative phrasing and Gen Z lexiconography, AI helped gamify and expand his process — but it didn’t (and couldn’t) write his book, or propel the characters creating the drama through their organic interactions. Highlights include:Why great writing isn’t about ideas — it’s about people. Plot, world-building, even brilliant lines of prose all crumble if they’re not anchored by raw, emotional stakes.How AI shines at the polish. Need sharper metaphors, wilder speculative tech jargon, or a gnerational twist on dialogue? The models deliver. But they don’t know your characters or your lived your shit — that comes from you.The trap of chasing your idols. Mookie confesses how years trying to write like Pynchon or play guitar like Yngwie wasted time he could’ve spent finding his own voice, and analog for relying on others (or bots) to do the lifting. Why sci-fi often gets it wrong. Too many writers let clever concepts suffocate real human drama. Mookie’s approach starts with flawed characters, then layers on the heady stuff as window dressing for added thrills and spills. His quirky three-line paragraph style. Like lyric poetry, it forces precision and rhythm, shaping stories that read almost like song lyrics or tweets -- enabling him to actually tweet the whole book! Check out @JonnieFazoolie.Throughout, he makes it clear: AI can’t replace a writer who has something real to say. But it can dress up your story in new colors, hand you fresh angles, and let you explore ideas at warp speed. It’s a turbocharged thesaurus and research librarian, not an author.So if you’re scared AI is coming for your soul — relax. If your story is good, it’ll stand on its own. And if it isn’t? No amount of machine learning will save it. Listen in. Then get back to telling your own damn story — because no bot ever lived your life.Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  41. 28

    A Survival Guide for Self-Publishing

    You finally did it! You wrote the damn book. You self-published it. Congratulations!—now brace yourself, because nobody gives a shit. In this brutally honest episode, Mookie Spitz breaks down the gut-wrenching, ego-bruising reality of trying to market and self-promote a book in a world drowning in content and distraction. From the raw highs of cracking his own creative code and learning how to write a great novel with Jonnie Fazoolie & the Transfinite Reality Engine—a sci-fi romp starring a hustler who accidentally invents a universe-hopping machine—to the obvious realization that most of his friends and family won’t even read it, Mookie tells it exactly like it is.He rants about drowning in a sea of indifference while reaching out to fellow writers and artists, blasting his novel on X. line by line, reading his entire book on podcast platforms, and dreaming of a Netflix deal... Spoiler: despite the chaos he keeps writing and ranting, because he fucking loves it!If you’ve ever thought about writing a book, if you’re lost in the grind of hawking your masterpiece to an indifferent universe, or if you just want a darkly funny, philosophical gut-check on what this insane hustle really takes, tune in.His Novel In Case You CareJonnie Fazoolie & the Transfinite Reality EngineFollow Him On X.@JonnieFazoolieSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  42. 27

    A Modest Proposal for Fixing the Internet

    In this episode, Mookie Spitz unloads on the modern internet — tracing its slide from the glorious chaos of Usenet, IRC, and walled-off forums into today’s algorithm-choked, centralized cesspool. He argues for a smarter, AI-driven return to decentralization: digital “tribes” where like-minded people can gather, free from trolling, doomscrolling, and spam, but still get jolts of outside ideas to keep it fresh.Along the way, he breaks down why Twitter became a global trash fire, how Facebook sold out its own garden walls for ad dollars, why TikTok’s AI actually gets it (for now), and how the future might belong to our bots — with or without us. It’s sharp, irreverent, and maybe a bit unhinged, but it’ll make you rethink what “fixing the internet” should really look like.Listen in if you want a brainy rant on how we got here, where we’re headed, and how we might claw our way out.Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  43. 26

    The Wall, Part 3: Cracking the Code in 2025

    In this third installment of The Wall podcast series, Mookie Spitz dives headlong into the chaos of modern marketing, media, and the relentless flood of content competing for human attention. Building on his earlier breakdowns of the death of earned media and the inevitable (but not yet imminent) AI targeting revolution, this episode zeroes in on what to actually do right now — before the bots take over.Mookie unpacks:Why even brilliant content dies on the vine without emotional resonance and inclusivity.How today’s most effective campaigns — from insurgent political races to street-level social media blitzes — flip the traditional model by making the audience the story.The hard truth that platforms like TikTok can skyrocket or ghost identical content purely based on subtle communal affinities and algorithmic whims.What old-school repetition and top-down broadcasting get wrong in a fragmented, hyper-reactive media landscape.The real role of paid vs. earned media in an era when data is power, but power is jealously guarded by walled gardens and opaque algorithms.He also draws striking parallels to broken systems in healthcare data — illustrating why interoperability and transparency are the future not just for medicine, but for how ideas and products find their audiences.Packed with practical, tough-love insights for creators, marketers, entrepreneurs, and anyone trying to move the needle, this episode is part reality check, part blueprint. The pod is a straight-shooting look at what it takes to scratch, climb, and maybe — just maybe — punch through the wall.The Wall, Part 1: Death of Earned Mediahttps://www.buzzsprout.com/2455310/episodes/17400105The Wall, Part 2: Birth of AI Marketinghttps://www.buzzsprout.com/2455310/episodes/17415048Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  44. 25

    The Wall, Part 2: Birth of AI Marketing

    Host Mookie Spitz tears into the brutal reality of digital marketing: your genius content, product, or art is probably DOA — not because it sucks, but because it’s buried under an avalanche of bullshit. In this blisteringly honest solo episode, Mookie traces humanity’s obsession with communication from cave paintings to TikTok, shows how billion-dollar platforms throttle organic reach unless you pay up, and rants about how AI might finally crack the code to connect creators with audiences who actually give a damn.The pod is raw, unfiltered, and stuffed with examples — from his own viral TikToks to his ghost-town Instagram to a fun sci-fi novel that’s struggling to break through the noise. If you’re sick of marketing gurus peddling hacks while ignoring the brutal economics of attention, this episode is your antidote.TopicsThe unstoppable tsunami of content vs. your tiny band and bandwidthWhy TikTok’s algorithm is leagues ahead (and why Meta’s sucks)How AI could soon match great content with people who’ll love itThe uncomfortable truth: pay to play, or hustle your ass off building trustChaos, luck, and why going viral is basically winning the lotteryPerfect for creators, marketers, or anyone trying to get noticed in a world that mostly doesn’t care.The Wall, Part 1: Death of Earned Mediahttps://www.buzzsprout.com/2455310/episodes/17400105Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  45. 24

    The Wall, Part 1: Death of Earned Media

    In this solo rant, Mookie Spitz dissects the invisible monster we’re all up against—The Wall: a relentless digital flood of content, misinformation, distraction, and algorithmic gatekeeping. He dives deep into how the modern marketer, creator, or brand can barely get a word in edgewise without screaming into a storm of AI-generated junk and viral idiocy.Mookie unpacks how convenience killed privacy, how everyone’s shouting "We are here!" like the desperate Whos in Horton Hears a Who, and how even millions of views don’t mean squat anymore. Whether you're a salesperson, a podcaster, or a punk with a novel and a TikTok rant, you're fighting not only for eyeballs—but for survival in a collapsing attention economy.Welcome to a war cry for anyone trying to punch through the wall.Topics Why the internet broke truthThe myth of virality and the death of “earned” mediaHow AI, bots, and Netflix are turning your life into a passive scroll-festHorton, Warhol, and the Yiddish insult that perfectly sums up your marketing strategyGet cynical. Get real. Get Bald Ambition!His Multiverser Punk Novelhttps://a.co/d/ay0uTjDThe Wall, Part 2: Birth of AI Marketinghttps://www.buzzsprout.com/2455310/episodes/17415048Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  46. 23

    The Top Dawg of Customer Relationships

    From class clown to dancefloor king, Howard Wallach joins Mookie Spitz to talk shop, soul, and set lists. In this episode, we go behind the curtain with a master of moments who’s turned DJing into an art form where empathy and customer service become a force for good. Howard reveals how tragedy shaped his hustle, how being of service trumps being the star, and why building trust beats booking gigs.You’ll hear how he created an event juggernaut by focusing on them, not him—and how that mindset took him from Chicago clubs to bougie cruise ships around the globe. Packed with stories, laughs, and some hard truths about leadership, delegation, and the real meaning of “customer experience,” this one hits deeper than your usual party -- or podcast -- playlist.If you’ve ever thought consultative selling was just for suits, Howard’s here to prove it works just as well in sneakers and with a mic.The Guest & His CompanyA-Z Entertainment, Ltd.Exceptional Entertainment & Event Production, based in Chicagoland, but available for Special Events WorldwideAlways the pleaser, always the solutionist, always the networker, with big energy and renown enthusiasm, Howard TOP DAWG Wallach created A-Z Entertainment, back in in 1987,Word of mouth has brought his seasoned roster to thousands of corporate events, galas & fundraisers.A visiting artist for cruise lines, he recently returned from a major international CRYSTAL contract, This TOP DAWG enjoys giving back with his encouraging conference seminars.Connect with www.azentertainment.comSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  47. 22

    Creating Meaningful Human Connection at Scale

    Mookie has a spirited chat with David Garrison, CEO of Connect Networks to discuss the organizational challenges of fragmentation, communication, and misaligned priorities—and what to do about it. The two dive headfirst into how David's networking platform leverages human-centered tech to smash silos, spark curiosity-driven collaboration, and build trust through radically simple one-on-one conversations.David explains how most companies chase optimization through systems and metrics while ignoring the essential unit of transformation: the conversation. From boomerang hires and missed business development goldmines to the real reasons people quit, the discussion shreds conventional thinking and proposes a basic but powerful paradigm shift—create structured opportunities for real human connection, and the rest will follow.You’ll learn:Why fragmented orgs kill innovation (and how to fix it)How structured serendipity beats static networkingWhy the real ROI isn’t just money—it’s trust, insight, and retentionHow conversations—not tech dashboards—change organizationsWhether you're leading a nonprofit, scaling a company, or just trying to feel less isolated in your role, this episode will change the way you think about internal culture and the power of human connection at work.The GuestDavid Garrison is CEO of Connect Networks, a networking platform purpose-built to create meaningful human connection—at scale—through the art and science of conversation. He also co-founded Climate & Capital Media, a respected non-profit news organization focused on the business of climate change, and built Climate & Capital Connect, a global professional network for climate, sustainability and impact. An experienced executive, David draws on decades advising bold leaders and building teams as a brand-conscious strategy consultant focused on complex business, social, and leadership issues. He's led strategy and marketing at global agencies and for innovative companies in spaces as diverse as healthcare, consulting services, and music.His CompanyConnect Networks (www.connectnetworks.ai) is a platform purpose-built to create meaningful human connection — at scale — through the art and science of conversation.Connect introduces your people for 1:1 conversations, strengthening networks by slowly knitting together groups in and around your organization that normally wouldn’t overlap. That, in turn, leads to innovation and new kinds of collaboration, builds loyalty, drives profitability, and creates measurable business and social impact.Resourceswww.connectnetworks.aiwww.climateconnect.clubwww.climateandcapitalmedia.comhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/davidgarrison/Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  48. 21

    Navigating an FDA in Chaos During Turbulent Times

    Mookie Spitz welcomes Dale Cooke, one of the most trusted names in FDA regulatory compliance, who shares a survival guide for healthcare marketing professionals during this historic time of sweeping upheaval. Against the backdrop of Trump’s second-term administration, which has eliminated thousands of FDA and HHS positions and ushered in unpredictable deregulation, Dale shares urgent insights from inside the storm.Packed with real-world examples, biting humor, and a touch of Philly cheesesteak vs Chicago deep-dish banter, their wide ranging conversation explores the traumatizing impact of today's uncertainty on public health oversight. Acknowledging the importance of reducing bureaucracy. Dale explains why the pharmaceutical industry isn't asking for less regulation, but predictable regulation—and how the administration’s chaotic approach is making instability the norm.Whether you're a pharmaceutical exec, agency lead, marketing and advertising pro, legal advisor, or just fascinated by the intersection of AI, health, communications, and politics, this episode delivers clarity in a time of confusion—and proves why, whenever in doubt, the industry has for decades grabbed the batphone and shouted "Let's call Dale!"The GuestDale Cooke is the president of PhillyCooke Consulting and FDA Ad Law. He helps companies communicate about FDA-regulated products using 21st century tools, while remaining compliant with regulations written in the 1960s. Dale has worked with more than 50 pharmaceutical and medical device clients and more than 30 advertising agencies around the world. His insights have been featured in Politico, The Pink Sheet, Stat News, Law360, and other publications. Dale is an active member of the Food and Drug Law Institute (FDLI), the Alliance for a Stronger FDA, and the Digital Health Coalition. Dale teaches in the Temple University School of Pharmacy RAQA program.Dale is the author of Effective Review and Approval of Digital Promotional Tactics, which is now in its second edition in FDLI’s Topics in Food and Drug Law series. He is regularly invited to speak at industry conferences on topics including FDA enforcement trends, best practices for review processes, global review practices, and life sciences use of social media.Dale earned his B.A. in Philosophy from Southern Methodist University, an M.A. in Philosophy from the University of Arizona, studied Epidemiology and Biostatistics at Drexel University’s School of Public Health, received a graduate certificate in Healthcare Compliance from Seton Hall University’s School of Law, and his J.D. at Drexel University’s Kline School of Law.The Latest Update on the FDA and Pharma DTCDale's LinkedIn ProfileDale's BlogSend the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  49. 20

    The Customer Doesn't Care About You

    In this punchy, provocative solo episode of Bald Ambition, host Mookie Spitz delivers a masterclass in consultative selling by starting with an uncomfortable truth: customers don’t care about you—your product, your company, or your clever branding. They care about themselves. And that insight, Mookie argues, is the key to cutting through noise in today’s hyper-distracted digital marketplace.Packed with sharp real-world examples, Mookie walks us through why the traditional “peacock” approach to selling—flaunting features, shouting benefits, and listing specs—falls flat. Instead, he urges entrepreneurs, brand strategists, and sales professionals to reframe the entire conversation around the customer’s pain points, motivations, and aspirations.He draws lessons from the Apple playbook—how Steve Jobs fused hardware, software, and content into a lifestyle platform that customers didn’t even know they needed—and contrasts it with Sony’s failure to unify its vast content and tech empire. He dives into why even a simple car sale needs deep customer understanding, not just a shiny vehicle, and explains why websites full of “we do this, we do that” miss the mark.Whether you’re selling a startup vision, a SaaS platform, or your own professional services, this episode reveals why asking the right questions—and resisting the urge to talk about yourself—is the real game-changer. You’ll also get a glimpse into upcoming episodes that tackle trust-building, uncovering customer vulnerability, and truly becoming a strategic partner—not just another vendor.If you’re ready to stop pitching and start partnering, hit play.Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

  50. 19

    Kolming the Future of Health Innovation

    Your bald host Mookie Spitz sits down with fellow follically-challenged digital strategist and innovator Todd Kolm for a scalp-tingling ride through the world of AI, healthcare, and the ever-elusive art of being human in a hyper-digital age.From caffeine withdrawals to robot ethics, quantified selves, and patient empathy, Mookie and Todd dive deep. They explore why AI is more ingredient than recipe, how human connection still trumps automation in medicine, and why reps still matter more than Bots. Plus: a Spanish doctor who buys art instead of furniture, an Italian physician who moonlights as a superhero, and a bold prediction about our privacy future (spoiler: your data's already out there)...The GuestTodd is an accomplished healthcare marketing strategist and innovator with 20+ years experience and impact on the life sciences client and services side, US and global, consumer and HCP. He has a track record as a builder and grower, solving complex challenges at the intersection of critical commercial needs and meaningful customer experiences — employing solutions with the appropriate mix of humanity and technology. Todd has held leadership positions at Pfizer, Sanofi, Aptus Health, Wego Health, Havas, and other companies, including management consulting. Currently, he enjoys life as an independent consultant but is keeping an eye out a career opportunity he cannot resist.Feel free to connect with Todd on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/toddkolm/Send the host a text! Let him know what you think Support the show

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

An expert in consultative selling talks to specialists and shares the latest insights in branding, entrepreneurship, business technology, and sheer grit and motivation.

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Mookie Spitz

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