Dream Job Cafe

PODCAST · business

Dream Job Cafe

Dream Job Café is the podcast for anyone navigating their next career move, achallenge that’s only gotten trickier now that AI has joined the mix. Hosted by Larry Port,each episode goes beyond job titles to explore the realities of different professions —from daily schedules and travel demands to pay, pressure, and whether that career willexist in five years.ㅤYou’ll hear from industry leaders, working professionals, and career experts who sharecandid stories about what it’s really like to do the job. Whether you’re a college studentfacing an uncertain job market, a recent graduate navigating new opportunities, or amid-career professional who needs a change, this show will help you sort throughoptions with clarity and confidence.ㅤDream Job Cafe is here to help you align your skills, values, and lifestyle goals so youcan not just imagine but actually pursue your dream job.

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    From Pre-Med Burnout to Private Practice: Finding Joy in East Asian Medicine | Ep 28

    What happens when the "dream" of becoming an MD turns into a nightmare of intellectual hazing and organic chemistry? In this episode, Dr. Tom Ingegno shares his raw and honest journey from the brink of pre-med burnout to the fulfilling world of East Asian medicine. Dr. Tom explains how he escaped the high-pressure "weed-out" classes—designed more for academic prestige than producing empathetic practitioners—and found his true calling through a serendipitous postcard and a love for Daoist philosophy . Today, he operates a thriving private acupuncture practice where he views health as a systemic balance rather than a series of reactive fixes . This is a must-listen for anyone in the 2026 labor market who feels "stuck" in a traditional path and is ready to discover a career they would happily do for free. Learn more about Dr Tom Ingegno Website PodcastNewest BookKey TakeawaysThe "Weed-Out" Reality: Why Bio 101 and Organic Chemistry are often more about endurance than preparing you to be a good doctor . The Power of Serendipity: How being open to "circular logic" and unexpected opportunities (like a random postcard) can change your life . A Different Kind of "MD": Transitioning into the role of a "half doctor, half shaman" to treat the whole person. Sustainable Joy: Why Dr. Tom says you should "die with your scrubs on" because the work is so rewarding.

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    The High-Demand World of Medical Massage | Ep. 27

    In the 2026 labor market, the human touch is more valuable than ever. While many industries are being disrupted by automation, the field of massage therapy remains fundamentally human-centric. This episode features Ally Middleton, who shares how she transitioned from an aspiring opera singer to a medical massage practitioner and business owner with 16 years of experience.The conversation debunks the myth that massage is just a "vacation luxury" and explores its role in rehabilitating surgery patients, managing chronic conditions like lymphedema, and optimizing professional athletic performance. Ally breaks down the rigorous schooling requirements—including 600 hours of anatomy, kinesiology, and pathology—and explains why the MBLEx is a critical hurdle for any aspiring therapist. Whether you are looking for an entrepreneurial path with high schedule flexibility or a career that provides "instant gratification" through helping others, this episode offers a comprehensive roadmap to the world of therapeutic bodywork.Guest BioAlly Middleton is a Licensed Massage Therapist (LMT), Medical Massage Practitioner, and the founder and co-owner of Lifelong Massage. Originally trained in Texas, she has over 16 years of experience in the field. Throughout her career, Ally has worked in diverse settings, including dental offices, athletic clubs, and alongside chiropractors and surgeons. She is also a former massage therapy instructor and an active member of her community chorus.What We CoverThe Problem-Solving Mindset: Using soft tissue work to muscles, tendons, and the nervous system to achieve specific health goals.A "Windy" Career Path: How a conversation with parents and a daily drive past a massage school led to a 16-year career.The Olympic Effect: How global events like the Olympics bring public awareness to modalities like cupping.Licensing and Schooling: Navigating the 600-hour state requirements and the national MBLEx exam.Medical Specializations: Exploring niche areas like Manual Lymphatic Drainage for edema and scar tissue.Longevity and Ergonomics: The importance of "body mechanics" and table height to prevent therapist burnout.The Economics of Touch: Why seeing 20–22 clients per week is a full-time workload.AI Resistance: Why robots in New York City will never replace the therapeutic relationship built between a human therapist and client.Learn more about Ally and Lifelong Massage:WebsiteFacebookInstagram

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    The Need For More Therapists: High Demand, AI, and Career Flexibility | Ep. 26

    In 2026, the need for mental health support has never been higher. Following the societal shifts of 2020, awareness has boomed, yet the industry faces a significant shortage of clinicians to meet the demand. In this episode, psychotherapist Liza Brackbill breaks down the "hiding in plain sight" reality of the profession: it is a career that blends evidence-based science with the unpredictable art of human connection.Liza explains the critical differences between psychiatrists, psychologists, and social workers, providing a roadmap for those considering a Master's or PhD path . We also discuss the impact of social media and the "dopamine hits" driving anxiety in younger generations, as well as the industry’s cautious embrace of AI as a therapeutic tool . Whether you are a "helper" by nature or an aspiring entrepreneur looking to open your own practice, this conversation offers an honest look at the emotional rewards and lifestyle flexibility of modern psychotherapy.Guest BioLiza Brackbill is a Licensed Independent Clinical Social Worker (LICSW) based in Massachusetts and the founder of Pathways and Possibilities Counseling Services. She holds a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology and a Master’s in Social Work (MSW). Before entering the clinical field, Liza spent three summers as a guide in Yellowstone National Park, an experience she credits with helping her gain perspective before committing to her graduate studies . Her practice specializes in anxiety-related disorders, including panic, social anxiety, OCD, and hoarding.What We CoverThe "Science and Art" of Therapy: Why following a script isn't enough when a real person is in front of you.Anxiety & Social Media: Understanding the "Anxious Generation" and the addictive nature of dopamine feeds.The Credentialing Roadmap: Breaking down the differences between an LICSW, a Psychologist (PhD), and a Psychiatrist (MD).Hoarding as Anxiety: A look into the specialized niche of hoarding disorder.Clinical Internships: The "trial by fire" of sitting across from your first patient.Work-Life Balance: How teletherapy has shifted the profession away from traditional evening/weekend hours.AI in Therapy: Why Liza believes human-to-human connection is "insulated" against the rise of ChatGPT.The "Little League" Test: Can a therapist maintain a consistent schedule for family and community?Resources:https://www.pathwaysandpossibilities.org

  4. 26

    Beyond the Clinical Grind: Discovering Your Niche as a "Psychodietitian" | Ep. 25

    The healthcare sector remains the primary force behind consistent labor growth, offering a vast array of roles beyond traditional surgery or nursing . Dr. Nina Crowley exemplifies this variety, combining her background as a Registered Dietitian and a PhD in Health Psychology to influence the obesity care landscape. By moving away from the limited metrics of weight and BMI, her work focuses on the science of body composition—measuring muscle, fat, and bone to provide a clearer picture of patient health .The path to becoming a credentialed healthcare professional involves rigorous academic training, including the 1,200-hour supervised practice required for dietitians and the deep research involved in a PhD dissertation. This conversation explores the "Big Conference Energy" required to build a professional network, the psychological complexities of behavior change, and the transition from outpatient bariatric clinics to industry thought leadership. For those curious about the financial realities of the field, we also apply the "Disney World" test to evaluate the lifestyle of a modern dietitian and psychologist .Guest BioDr. Nina Crowley is a Registered Dietitian (RD) and a PhD in Health Psychology, currently serving as the Director of Clinical Thought Leadership at Seca. With over 20 years of experience in the field, she has worked in community nutrition through the WIC program and provided clinical counseling for bariatric surgery patients at the Medical University of South Carolina . She is a frequent speaker at healthcare conferences and the host of the podcast In the Know with Nina, where she discusses cutting-edge outcomes in obesity and cardiometabolic health.What We CoverThe "Psychodietitian" Hybrid: Why Dr. Crowley needed a PhD in psychology to be a more effective dietitian .Body Composition vs. BMI: Using bioelectric impedance to talk to patients about outcomes other than just weight .The Credentialing Gap: Why every dietitian is a nutritionist, but not every nutritionist is a dietitian.Specialization Paths: How to advance in niche fields like oncology, sports nutrition, or eating disorders.Research and Dissertations: Understanding the five-year journey of self-determination theory and behavioral research.Clinical to Industry Pivot: How clinical experience leads to corporate roles in medical technology.Networking for Jobs: Why "Big Conference Energy" and professional relationships are the keys to career mobility.Learn more by subscribing to Dr. Nina Crowley's podcast: In the Know with NinaConnect with Dr. Nina CrowleyEmail: [email protected]: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ninacrowleyTwitter/X: https://x.com/psychodietitianInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/ninamcrowley/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ninacrowleyTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@dr.ninacrowley

  5. 25

    Is Nursing the New Path to Prosperity? A Mid-Career Shift from Business to RN | Ep. 24

    The modern labor market frequently experiences volatility, but one profession remains in consistently high demand: nursing. As healthcare needs grow due to an aging population, the role of the Registered Nurse has expanded far beyond the hospital floor. This conversation features Lauren, an RN who left a career in specialty pharmacy analytics to enter the nursing field in her 30s. She shares the "hiding in plain sight" reality of nursing as a stable career where opportunities are often brought directly to you through strong professional networks.The discussion provides a deep dive into the educational requirements for a career pivot, specifically the benefits of an accelerated nursing course for those who already hold a bachelor's degree. We also tackle the "Family Dinner Test," evaluating how home healthcare offers a level of schedule flexibility that traditional hospital shifts cannot match . From overcoming the "gross factor" of the job to understanding the different scopes of practice between medical assistants and licensed RNs, this episode serves as a comprehensive guide for anyone considering a future in healthcare.Guest BioLauren is a Registered Nurse currently practicing in home healthcare in South Florida. She holds a business degree and spent the early part of her career working in reporting and analytics for specialty pharmacies before pursuing an accelerated nursing program. With experience in both hospital "med-surg" units and independent home health visits, she offers a unique perspective on the lifestyle and financial stability available in the nursing profession today .What We CoverThe Decision to Pivot: Moving from Microsoft Access spreadsheets to hands-on patient care in your 30s.Accelerated Schooling: How prior degree holders can become a nurse in approximately two years.The Nursing "Club": Why nurses look out for one another and how networking drives the job market.Hospital Reality: Navigating 12-hour shifts and the intense physical demands of the "med-surg" floor .The "Gross Factor": Dealing with squeamishness and why a genuine desire to help people is the ultimate requirement.Home Healthcare Flexibility: How a "point system" for patient visits allows nurses to control their own schedules.Advanced Career Paths: The differences between RNs, Nurse Practitioners, and Nurse Anesthetists .The Prosperity Test: Evaluating nursing against lifestyle goals like coaching Little League or being home for family dinner.Connect With UsFind Larry Port on LinkedInSubscribe to our Channel on YouTube

  6. 24

    Is Your Job a Dead End? The "Where You Work Matters" Ranking Revealed | Ep. 23

    Finding a career path that leads to long-term financial success often feels like a guessing game, but big data is finally bringing clarity to the labor market. This deep dive features Shrin Rao, Director of Workforce Innovation at the Burning Glass Institute, as he unveils the "Where You Work Matters" study—a revolutionary ranking profiled by The Wall Street Journal. Unlike traditional "Best Places to Work" lists that often rely on internal surveys or "pay-for-play" models, this research analyzes the actual career histories of over 12 million workers to identify which companies truly drive economic mobility.The conversation explores why certain employers offer 68% higher promotion rates and 50% better pay for the exact same roles compared to their competitors. We also navigate the "Credential Value Index" (CVI), a tool designed to act as a "nutrition label" for non-degree certifications. Whether you are considering a transition into UX design, welding, or IT, understanding the ROI of your training is essential in the 2026 economy. We also explore the unique career path of working in the nonprofit sector and how business acumen from the corporate world is being used to fuel social impact and workforce innovation.Guest BioShrin Rao is the Director of Workforce Innovation at the Burning Glass Institute, a nonprofit data laboratory that researches the future of work and learning. Shrin began his career at the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) after earning a degree in finance from the University of Texas. After obtaining his MBA, he transitioned into the nonprofit sector to apply big-data analytics and strategic business acumen to the challenge of advancing economic mobility for all workers.What We CoverThe "Where Your Work Matters" Study: Analyzing how employer choice is a primary driver of career success.Debunking "Best Place to Work" Lists: Why real-world career data is more reliable than internal corporate surveys.The Power of Occupation Controls: How the study compares "like-for-like" roles (e.g., comparing software engineers only to other software engineers).Staggering Differences in Mobility: Why top-ranked "Platinum" employers see significantly higher retention and promotion rates.The Credential Value Index (CVI): A public resource for assessing the wage gains and job placement rates of non-degree certifications.ROI on Specific Certs: Comparing the financial outcomes for roles like UX Designers and Welders.Nonprofit Careers: Shrin’s personal journey from BCG to mission-driven data science.Resources:Where You Work Matters IndexBurning Glass InstituteConnect With UsFind Larry Port on LinkedInSubscribe to our Channel on YouTube

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    Is AI Actually Stealing Your Job? The Truth About the Current Labor Market | Ep. 22

    Today’s labor market feels more volatile than ever, leaving many to wonder if artificial intelligence is the primary culprit behind recent layoffs and hiring freezes. While headlines often point toward a looming "AI apocalypse," the underlying data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the New York Fed tells a much more nuanced story.Larry Port introduces the #WTFISUP Report and provides a deep dive exploring why we are currently in a "low hire, low fire" dynamic and why historical tech disruptions—from the printing press to the ATM—suggest that human-centric roles are more resilient than we think.We explore the structural realities of the modern workforce, including how "talent hoarding" by big tech and the rising age of the workforce are impacting entry-level opportunities. We visit the academic study of diffusion, which sheds light on how new technologies often take decades to fully materialize. Consequently, societal and organizational constraints may put brakes on job disruption during the AI transition.Whether you are a software engineer, a recent college graduate, or a professional concerned about automation, understanding these market forces is essential for long-term career planning.What We CoverThe "Low Hire, Low Fire" Dynamic: Understanding the stagnation in the current labor market.AI vs. Reality: Why data suggests AI likely isn’t the main culprit for youth unemployment—at least not yet.Historical Context: How past innovations like the telephone and the automobile faced similar skepticism before becoming essential.Talent Hoarding: Why major tech companies over-hired and how those "bench" roles led to recent layoffs.The Diffusion of Innovation: Why it takes decades for organizations to actually adapt to and benefit from new technology like AI.The Human Element: Why radiologists, translators, and bank tellers have seen job growth despite technological threats.Connect With UsFind Larry Port on LinkedInSubscribe to our Channel on YouTube

  8. 22

    The Financial Advisor Career: Acting As A GPS For Clients (with Mike Giordano, CFP®) | Ep. 21

    What does a Financial Advisor actually do all day? Host Larry Port sits down with Mike Giordano, CFP®, to find out. This career is much more than crunching numbers on a computer screen. Mike explains how financial advising is essentially a human endeavor. Advisors act like a GPS for their clients. They help people navigate major life transitions, from funding college educations to planning for retirement.ㅤMike shares his very unique career path. He started as a sports broadcaster before realizing his television industry peers desperately needed basic financial guidance. He explains the daily reality of the wealth management job. You will learn what skills are necessary to succeed and why a level head is far more important than complex math abilities. The role also offers incredible work-life balance and family time for those willing to put in the effort early in their careers.ㅤGuest BioMike Giordano, CFP® is a Private Wealth Advisor at Williams Wealth Management in Greenville, South Carolina. He holds a degree in Broadcast Journalism from Syracuse University and earned his CFP certification from Northwestern University. Before entering wealth management, Mike worked as a television broadcaster and sports anchor.ㅤHe now uses his background in communication to simplify complex financial information for his clients. Mike operates on the core belief that wealth without direction is just a number on a page. He works closely with professionals to align their financial resources with their actual life goals.ㅤWhat We CoverHow Mike transitioned from tracking sports scores in the newspaper to managing stock portfolios.Why financial advising relies heavily on human psychology and caring about client stories.The daily routine involves engaging in meaningful client conversations and using financial planning software.Why the wealth management field is a great fit for highly organized and level-headed people.How artificial intelligence serves as a tool for quick research, but cannot replace the comfort of human advice.The practical steps to enter the profession include shadowing professionals and networking.The reality of the early career grind versus the excellent family balance you can achieve later on.ㅤResources MentionedWilliams Wealth ManagementSyracuse UniversityFidelityCostcoWendy's

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    UX Designer: The Glue Between Outcomes And Experience (with Edward Case) | Ep. 20

    The career of a User Experience (UX) Designer involves acting as the glue between technical software outcomes and human interaction. Host Larry Port sits down with Edward Case to explore the reality of product design. Edward shares what it takes to translate complex requirements into intuitive digital experiences. The conversation covers the daily life of a UX designer, including user research, wireframing, and collaborating closely with product managers.ㅤEdward explains how the role is evolving from static design handoffs to working directly in the codebase using modern tools. Listeners will learn about the essential skills required for this path, such as inherent curiosity, empathy, and the ability to accept harsh critiques. We also discuss the work-life balance of a design leader. Edward reveals how he manages to coach a soccer team and hit family dinners while maintaining high engagement with his projects.ㅤGuest BioEdward Case is the Director of Product Design and UX at Vantaca, an artificial intelligence software company based in Wilmington, North Carolina. Operating within Vantaca's Product Development organization, Edward shapes the user experience for complex community association management software. His team translates technical accounting and property management requirements into intuitive features.ㅤBefore joining Vantaca, Edward worked in architectural sculpture, designed golf courses, and ran his own web design business. He draws on his unique background in fine arts to craft elegant, pleasurable software experiences for thousands of daily users.ㅤWhat We CoverHow a background in sculpture and fine arts translates directly to building digital applications.The critical differences and overlaps between user interface design and user experience design.Why empathy and an understanding of human behavior are more important than a traditional technical background.The daily reality of testing, validating ideas, and facing brutal design critiques without ego.How the UX designer role is rapidly evolving to include active coding and pull requests instead of just static mockups.The flexibility and trade-offs required to balance a demanding tech career with family life and coaching a youth soccer team.Why people who need strict, black-and-white answers might struggle in the unpredictable field of product design.ㅤResources MentionedVantacaRocket MatterFigmaClaude CodeLovableReact

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    Career Strategy in an Uncertain World (with Scott Stirrett) | Ep. 19

    Scott Stirrett, author of The Uncertainty Advantage and Senior Advisor at Shorefast, joins Larry Port to discuss why uncertainty is not a threat to be feared but a tool to be leveraged. Scott shares his personal transition from a prestigious role at Goldman Sachs to launching Venture for Canada, a national charity he led for over a decade.ㅤListeners will learn why the days of predictable, linear career paths are over and why this shift is actually good news. Scott explains why "following your passion" is often dangerous advice that leads to burnout and why developing useful skills is a safer bet. He also breaks down the concept of antifragility: the ability to get stronger, not just survive, when things go wrong.ㅤThe episode covers practical strategies for building "uncertainty muscles," including how to take calculated risks and why generalist skills—being a "Fox" rather than a "Hedgehog"—are crucial in the age of AI. Scott also provides actionable advice on networking as a way to add value rather than extract favors.ㅤAbout Scott StirrettScott Stirrett is the Senior Advisor at the Shorefast Institute for Place-Based Economies and the Founder of Venture for Canada. He is the author of The Uncertainty Advantage. Scott previously worked at Goldman Sachs in New York and has been recognized as a Globe and Mail Changemaker and an Ashoka Fellow. He focuses on helping people and communities thrive in a volatile world.ㅤWhat We CoverThe death of the linear career: Why careers are no longer simple progressions but a series of pivots, detours, and unexpected opportunities.The passion trap: Why "follow your passion" is flawed advice that ignores how interests evolve and how skills create real value.Antifragility vs. Resilience: How to design a career that benefits from chaos and disorder rather than just bouncing back from it.Fox vs. Hedgehog: The importance of being a generalist who knows many things and can adapt across different domains.The Goldilocks zone of risk: How to identify smart, calculated risks without being reckless, and why playing it safe is often the riskiest move of all.Action over analysis: The value of launching a "minimum viable product" in your career rather than waiting for a perfect plan.Networking with purpose: How to build a wide and deep network by focusing on giving and shared humanity rather than transaction.The role of self-compassion: Why being kind to yourself is a critical skill for navigating failure and maintaining ambition.ㅤResources MentionedBook: The Uncertainty Advantage by Scott StirrettBook: So Good They Can't Ignore You by Cal NewportBook: The Lean Startup by Eric RiesBook: Give and Take by Adam GrantBook: Crucial ConversationsOrganization: Shorefast InstituteOrganization: Venture for Canada

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    Urban Planning and Civil Service Careers (with Marc Wigder, JD MBA) | Ep. 18

    Marc Wigder, JD MBA, joins Larry Port to discuss his evolution from a real estate attorney to a business owner and Boca Raton City Councilman. Marc explains how a legal background provides a foundation for understanding business mechanics, yet why he chose to return to school for an MBA to master finance and marketing. He details the day-to-day reality of city management, which involves complex tasks ranging from seawall reconstruction to railroad logistics. Listeners will learn about the "organic" nature of career pivots and discover high-demand, overlooked roles in the public sector, such as surveying and civil engineering.ㅤ👤 Guest BioMarc Wigder, JD MBA, is a City Councilman for the City of Boca Raton and Chair of the Community Redevelopment Agency (CRA). He is the founder of Greenhouse Property Company, which focuses on sustainable commercial real estate, and co-founder of GreenSmith Builders. Additionally, Marc serves as an Adjunct Professor of Business Law at Florida Atlantic University (FAU). He holds a JD from New York Law School and an MBA from the Yale School of Management.ㅤ📌 What We CoverMoving from a straight-line legal career to a series of pivots in business and government.Comparing the checklist-based logic of law school with the creative and financial scope of an MBA.How representing clients requires deep knowledge of their specific business operations, such as dental office construction.The transition from managing private property to overseeing city-wide infrastructure and budgeting.Using data-driven analysis and field research to address constituent issues like road safety and zoning.Identifying critical labor shortages in technical fields like surveying and urban planning.Applying a "total customer experience" philosophy to both business and public service interactions.ㅤ🔗 Resources MentionedYale School of ManagementFlorida Atlantic University (FAU)Greenhouse Property CompanyRitz-CarltonJack WelchLeon CoopermanBernie MarcusGumbo Limbo Nature CenterLoggerhead Marinelife CenterTri-Rail

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    Inside Look At A Data Science Career (with Ben Berkman) | Ep. 17

    Ben Berkman joins the show to explain the actual work of a Data Scientist. He specifically works on identity graphs at The Trade Desk. Host Larry Port asks Ben to break down how online advertising auctions happen in a fraction of a second. Ben describes his daily routine, which involves about six hours of coding in Scala and two hours of meetings. He clarifies the distinction between data scientists who build models and the software engineers who build the infrastructure to support them.ㅤBen also shares how his background in economics and liberal arts helps him ask better questions. He offers an honest look at work-life balance and how AI tools like Claude are changing the way he codes.ㅤGuest BioBen Berkman is a Graphs and Identity Data Scientist at The Trade Desk. He specializes in building data structures for cross-device identity resolution. Before this role, he worked as a Cost Analyst and Data Scientist at Technomics, Inc., where he focused on defense acquisition data. He holds a Master's in Data Science from NYU and an undergraduate degree from Pennsylvania State University.ㅤWhat We CoverHow The Trade Desk facilitates real-time ad auctions for the open internet.The specific breakdown of a data scientist's day: mostly solitary coding with some team collaboration.Differences between data science (creative modeling) and software engineering (plumbing and infrastructure).Why curiosity and communication skills from a liberal arts background are valuable in technical roles.How AI tools are shifting coding workflows from manual typing to agentic oversight.The personality types that thrive in data science: curious problem solvers who enjoy steady work.Realities of work-life balance in a global company with teams in Singapore.ㅤResources MentionedThe Trade DeskScala (Programming Language)Apache SparkAndre KarpathyClaude (Anthropic)Spotify

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    Life as a Firefighter Paramedic (with Marc Juliano) | Ep. 16

    Many people picture firefighters rushing into burning buildings every day. In reality, modern first responders in South Florida handle mostly medical calls and complex prevention work. Host Larry Port sits down with Marc Juliano, a veteran Firefighter/Paramedic and current Fire Safety Inspector with Broward Sheriff Fire Rescue.ㅤMarc breaks down the truth about the job: from the 24-hours-on, 48-hours-off schedule to the "second family" dynamic at the station. He explains why 88% of calls are medical, the operational toll of the opioid epidemic, and how fire codes prevent tragedies before they start. You will learn exactly how to enter this field, the specific schooling required, and why being late is the ultimate cardinal sin in this line of work.ㅤAbout Marc JulianoMarc Juliano is a Firefighter/Paramedic and Fire Safety Inspector for Deerfield Beach Fire-Rescue, contracted through the Broward Sheriff’s Office (BSO). With over 20 years in the service, he spent 16 years "on the trucks" responding to emergency calls before moving into fire prevention and code compliance.ㅤWhat We CoverThe operational reality of the 24-hours-on, 48-hours-off shift schedule.Why 88% of modern fire rescue calls medically related rather than structural fires?The "Risk a lot to save a lot" philosophy regarding property versus life safety.How a "Kelly Day" works and how firefighters stack vacation time for long breaks.Transitioning from riding the trucks to the preventative side of Fire Safety Inspection.The station dynamic: Grocery shopping, cooking, and training as a "second family."Educational requirements: EMT school, Fire Academy, and Paramedic certification.The impact of the opioid epidemic and Fentanyl on first responder resources.ㅤResources MentionedNFPA (National Fire Protection Association)Chicago Fire (TV Show)Backdraft (Movie)

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    Marketing Careers from Agency to In-House (with Scott Redick) | Ep. 15

    Marketing careers offer a unique path for creative professionals seeking stability. This field attracts liberal arts majors, musicians, and writers who want to leverage their right-brain skills while securing a 401 (k). Host Larry Port speaks with Scott Redick, the Managing Director of Retail Acquisition Strategy and Integration at Charles Schwab. Scott breaks down the two main worlds in this industry: agency work versus in-house roles at a brand.ㅤScott shares the reality of agency life, which can involve long hours, constant pitching, and fire drills. He contrasts this with the client side, where the pace is often smoother and more focused on long-term strategy. They discuss the "whole brain" thinking required to succeed, blending emotional creativity with analytical logic. Scott also explains why this career requires a thick skin: you might pour your soul into a project only to have a manager request a different color at the last minute.ㅤGuest BioScott Redick is a marketing executive and strategist currently serving as the Managing Director of Retail Acquisition Strategy and Integration at Charles Schwab. Before joining the client side, he spent years in the agency world, including a role as President and Head of Strategy at Heat (acquired by Deloitte Digital). He has also held leadership roles at Isobar and DDB. Scott holds a Bachelor of Science in Journalism from Northwestern University.ㅤWhat We CoverThe difference between agency culture (younger, spiky hours, frequent fire drills) and in-house corporate roles (smoother pace, more stability).Why marketing is often a home for "working creatives" like drummers or writers who need a steady paycheck.The "whole brain" approach: combining right-brain emotion with left-brain analytics and math.The reality of pitching in advertising: doing huge amounts of work for free just to win a client.This career is not for people who need a rigid structure or cannot handle ambiguity.The emotional toll of having creative work rejected or changed by upper management.How AI is currently serving as an editor and thought partner rather than a total replacement for human creativity.The influence of 20-somethings on culture and why brands look to them for trends like TikTok.ㅤResources MentionedCharles SchwabNorthwestern University

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    Estate Planning Law and Financial Planning: Crushing Professional Services (with Victor Medina) | Ep. 14

    Victor Medina joins Larry Port to share his journey from a "baby 22-year-old" with a psychology degree to a dual-certified attorney and financial advisor. Victor explains how a direct conversation with his wife pushed him toward law school and why he eventually walked away from a high-paying job at a large firm to start his own practice. He discusses the reality of working in professional services: it is not just about spreadsheets or legal briefs.ㅤVictor and Larry discuss the future of the industry, specifically how artificial intelligence and technology will impact legal and financial careers. Victor argues that technology is an augmentation tool rather than a replacement. He also breaks down his specific hiring philosophy for young professionals. Victor prioritizes character and culture over competence because he believes technical skills can always be trained.ㅤGuest BioVictor Medina is the Managing Partner of Medina Law Group and the Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Palante Wealth Advisors. Based in Pennington, New Jersey, he holds designations as a Certified Elder Law Attorney (CELA®) and a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ (CFP®). Victor focuses on helping people lead a great life in retirement by coordinating income, investments, taxes, and estate planning. He is also the host of Retirease Radio.ㅤWhat We CoverVictor describes his role as a "founder" and "Chief Excitement Officer" across his companies.The story of how Victor's wife convinced him to go to law school so people would take him seriously.Why Victor left a prestigious "big law" job after missing Thanksgiving with his family.The transition from practicing school law to estate planning and eventually adding financial services.How technology and AI will force professionals to deliver higher value and move away from the billable hour.The two types of people who succeed in this field are those who love numbers and those with high human empathy.Why Victor believes you should never join the legal or financial profession solely for the money.Victor's "Three Cs" of hiring: Character, Culture, and Competence.ㅤResources MentionedMedina Law GroupPalante Wealth AdvisorsRetirease Radio

  16. 14

    How To Successfully Trade as an Independent Stock Broker (with Elliot Edelman) | Ep. 13

    Larry Port sits down with his old Little League coaching friend, Elliot Edelman, to discuss the reality of making a living in the stock market. After 30 years as a professional trader working for hedge funds and proprietary firms, Elliot recently made a major pivot: he left the corporate office to trade his own money from home.ㅤElliot explains the trade-offs of this lifestyle change. He no longer has access to firm leverage or a back office, but he also avoids compliance headaches and the commute. He shares honest insights on what it actually takes to survive as a trader. It requires a grasp of probability akin to that in poker, the discipline to handle losses, and the ability to compete against high-frequency algorithms. Larry and Elliot also discuss the "efficient market," why retail traders sometimes outsmart the pros, and how AI might change the finance industry forever.ㅤGuest BioElliot Edelman is a seasoned financial professional with 30 years of experience in the securities industry. He spent over a decade as a proprietary trader at T3 Trading Group, LLC, before transitioning to self-employment in January 2023. Holding an MBA and a background in programming, Elliot now operates as an independent trader and financial content writer, focusing on quantitative market analysis and educational material.ㅤWhat We CoverThe transition to independent trading: Elliot describes leaving the proprietary firm environment to trade his own account, noting the freedom to finally "walk around at noon" on a Wednesday.Breaking into the industry: The story of how headhunters called Elliot "washed up" at 27 and how he eventually used his programming skills and MBA to get his foot in the door at a hedge fund.The trader mindset: Why successful traders need to understand risk and probability rather than just loving stocks. Elliot compares trading logic to sports betting and poker.Market efficiency: How the move from fractional pricing (1/8th of a dollar) to pennies created an environment dominated by high-frequency trading firms.Retail vs. Professional traders: A look at how amateur traders often win by "buying the dip" on popular stocks, while professionals sometimes over-analyze valuations.The future of finance jobs: Elliot discusses how AI is already automating tasks like writing 10-K reports and what this means for young people entering the field.The barrier to entry: Trading is unique because anyone can open an account and start immediately, unlike becoming a doctor or lawyer.ㅤResources MentionedElliot Edelman on LinkedInVirtu Financial (High-frequency trading firm mentioned)Pets.com (Historical reference)Robinhood / Fidelity / Schwab (Trading platforms mentioned)

  17. 13

    Consulting As A Career: One of the Biggest Names in the Field! (with Frank Milano from Deloitte) | Ep. 12

    Businesses have to be compliant with any number of different things, and it can feel like a hidden area of business until somebody explains what it is and what it looks like day to day. ㅤLarry Port talks with Frank Milano about Assurance, Deloitte, and what it means to help clients with complex accounting and internal control issues, including cybersecurity and all manner of things that require compliance to run a good business.ㅤFrank describes consulting relationships that can be four-week or four-year projects, and explains why being a client’s trusted advisor depends on trust, communication, and showing up as your best self all the time.ㅤThe conversation covers travel, remote work, and opportunities across the global network, plus what types of people thrive in professional services, especially people who thrive on ambiguity, are curious, and are ferocious learners. Frank also shares how he started in audit, became a CPA, moved into consulting, and how technology and AI may change the work without changing the mission.ㅤ👤 Guest BioFrank Milano is a partner at Deloitte and the managing partner for the Assurance business. He describes Deloitte as a massive professional services firm with consulting, tax, accounting, and advisory work, and says the job is to help clients with complex accounting and internal control issues. Frank started out auditing a very specific client in New York City, went to SUNY-Albany, passed the CPA exam, and later got more into the finance systems side of things in a consulting capacity. He also talks about traveling to India and working with clients and organizations of all sizes and shapes, all over the world.ㅤ📌 What We CoverWhat “Assurance” is, and why companies come to Deloitte for help with complicated accounting and internal control type issuesCompliance, cybersecurity, and “all manner of things” businesses need to run a good business“Trusted advisor” relationships, and how projects can be four-week projects or four-year projectsCampus hiring signals: accounting and finance and economic majors, plus IT experience or aptitude, like MIS or data scienceWhy soft skills matter: leading a team, communicating with a client verbally and in writing, and “reading the room.”Travel, flexibility, remote work, and opportunities to live elsewhere for a little while“Choose your own adventure” career paths: starting in audit, moving into consulting, and ending somewhere different than where you startedWho thrives, and who should run for the exits: thriving on ambiguity, not needing a ton of structure, and being willing to learnㅤ🔗 Resources MentionedLarry PortFrank MilanoDeloitteDeloitte University (Dallas)ChatGPTMorgan StanleyArthur Anderson (now Accenture)Pricewaterhouse (PwC)Chick-fil-AOhio State UniversitySUN- Albany, SUNY-BinghamtonFlorida State, University of FloridaFAU (Florida Atlantic University)

  18. 12

    Control of your destiny and “less risky” than a 9-5 job (with David Schnurman) | Ep. 11

    People think it’s less risky to be in a nine-to-five job, but sometimes it’s the most risky thing because you don’t control what can happen to you. Larry Port talks with David Schnurman about entrepreneurship, mindset, leadership, culture, and the long game of building something over 20 years.ㅤDavid shares two stories: from a public-access TV show named Lawline to taking CLE online, dissolving the company, and relaunching in 2006 with a high school intern and essentially zero revenue. They discuss sales, rejection, creativity, asking good questions, and how AI has changed the inbox with spam emails that are “too good.” David explains The Fast Forward Mindset, getting out of the comfort zone and staying out longer, moving a family to Barcelona, getting stuck in the strictest lockdown in Europe, and rebuilding the family operating system through travel.ㅤ👤 Guest BioDavid Schnurman is the CEO of Lawline. He shares two stories with Lawline: a 1999 idea to take CLE online, a brutal early period with dial-up, and a 2006 relaunch and rebuild of accreditation. David talks about sales, law school, leadership challenges, building the right team, and a structured hiring process. He is the author of The Fast Forward Mindset and shares why he moved his family to Barcelona and how that experience changed how they travel and explore.ㅤ📌 What We CoverThe two stories to Lawline, a public access TV show, taking CLE online, “too early,” and a 2006 relaunchSales is the best experience, rejection, creativity, consistency, organization, and asking a lot of good questions“Wolf of Wall Street” vs process, calling and doing the right things over and overAI and inbox spam, “too good” emails, and why shorter and more personal is betterLaw school, the Socratic method, case law, the cost, and “more experiential” apprenticeship experienceEntrepreneurship as a school project, making mistakes, leadership and mindset, and “stuck” phases at different levelsThe Fast Forward Mindset, “fearless enough” and “focused enough,” and staying out of the comfort zone longerBarcelona, strict lockdown, kids not allowed to leave for 52 days, eight o’clock pots and pans, and “a beautiful song”ㅤ🔗 Resources MentionedLawlineThe Fast Forward MindsetCLE (continuing legal ed)Mark Cuban, broadcast.com, YahooPBSStaplesEntrepreneur MagazineDale Carnegie sales trainersOrbitslens.comThe Wolf of Wall StreetGary Vaynerchuk (Gary V)stoicismMyers-Briggs testType CoachlovableNetflixYouTubeBarcelonaJapan, Israel, Patagonia, New Zealand, Australiathe UK, Canadathe Socratic method

  19. 11

    What does an INFORMATION ARCHITECT do? (with Emily Claflin) | 10

    “We live in a world today where we spend a lot of time in these places that are made of information instead of being a physical place.” Larry Port talks with Emily Claflin, an information architect at The Understanding Group, about structuring and organizing information in ways that are useful to people. The conversation moves from websites, intranets, and apps to enterprise environments where you cannot make the complexity go away, but you can bring clarity. Emily shares a career story that starts with history and sociology, a year of service with AmeriCorps, public libraries, a master’s in library and information science, and then an internship that became full-time work. Along the way: talk to your professors, because all sorts of opportunities open up. The conversation also touches on AI, search, browsing, and chat, as well as “garbage in, garbage out,” ethics, and navigating organizational complexity.ㅤGuest BioEmily Claflin is an information architect with The Understanding Group. She came from library science, worked in a local public library system, and did her master’s program fully online while working full-time. She took a class in information architecture, got an internship, and then went from hourly, part-time work while finishing school to full-time work. She also talks about serving as a conference chair and selecting a theme such as “navigating complexity.”ㅤWhat We CoverWhat an information architect does: give structure to information, organize it, and make the most important information the easiest to find and the easiest to useComplex information environments: clarity, relevance, and “one kind of person with one particular goal”Information architecture and user experience design: a blurry line, “behind the scenes,” and “hopefully you never notice it”A career that was not a clear end goal: history and sociology, Spanish minor, study abroad, AmeriCorps, public libraries, and a master’s degreeTalking to the deputy director, getting a mentor-like conversation, and planning “three or five years from now”Research as a prerequisite: recruiting, interviews, trade shows, and synthesizing insights into shared artifacts and modelsWho does well in the role: naturally curious, okay with ambiguity, and sees the forest and the trees at the same timeAI, ethics, and information retrieval: search, browse, and now chat, plus “garbage in, garbage out”ㅤResources MentionedEmily ClaflinLarry PortThe Understanding GroupIA ConferenceAmeriCorpsFacebookLinkedInZoomSharePointGED classes

  20. 10

    Communication, Empathy, and Ambiguity in Product Management (with Alejandro Dao) | Ep. 9

    People trying to figure out what they wanna do for a living hear Larry Port talk with his good friend Alejandro Dao, lead product manager at Pendo.io, a very cool and innovative software company in North Carolina. Alejandro describes product management as leading the product's vision and strategy, deciding what to build next and why, and working with engineering, design, and customers.ㅤHe compares the role to a quarterback and an orchestra director, keeping the tempo and pace of software development and making sure everybody knows what they are building and why. Alejandro shares a mix of tactical and strategic work, from sprints and steel threads to roadmap meetings, user empathy, and many conversations with customers.ㅤThe conversation walks through his trajectory from a shy kid and Model UN to a support engineer, software developer, sales engineer, sales operations manager, MBA at Duke, an internship at Amazon, and landing at Pendo in Raleigh, North Carolina.ㅤ👤 Guest BioAlejandro Dao is a lead product manager at Pendo.io in North Carolina. Originally from Venezuela, he has a background in computer science and engineering. Alejandro started as a support engineer and software developer at Rocket Matter, then moved into sales engineering, solutions engineer, and sales operations manager, owning Salesforce and sales processes.ㅤHe completed a two-year MBA program at Duke’s Fuqua School of Business and used that to pivot into product management. After a technical product management internship at Amazon, he chose to stay in North Carolina. He joined Pendo, where he owns the guides product and spends a lot of time with engineering, design, and customers.ㅤ📌 What We CoverWhat a product manager is, leading the vision and the strategy of the product, deciding what should be built next and why, and working with engineering, design, and customersQuarterback and orchestra director analogies for product management, keeping the tempo and pace of software development, so everybody knows what they are building and whyConcrete examples from Pendo, with two big pillars, analytics and guides, and Alejandro owning the guides product and crafting what the vision of the product is going to beDay-to-day work that mixes tactical and strategic, from sprints, steel threads, and compromises to roadmap meetings, senior leadership, and a lot of meetings with customers about frictions, frustrations, and use casesCommunication and empathy as critical soft skills, including stories from Rocket Matter, working with attorneys under a lot of pressure, and flexing that empathy muscleWhat it is like to work with engineers and UX designers, speaking the same language, rowing in the same direction, building prototypes together with tools like Bolt, Lovable, and V zero, and using AI as a superpower, not a replacementAlejandro’s path froma shy kid and Model UN, into computer science and engineering, video games, Florida Atlantic, a career fair conversation about Atlas Shrugged, and eight years at Rocket Matter in multiple rolesMoving into sales engineering, solutions engineer, and sales operations manager, owning Salesforce integrations, automating syncs, and modernizing sales processesWhy Alejandro wanted an MBA at Duke, filling knowledge gaps in accounting, finance, and business administration, and how the hardest part was getting in, not the academicsUsing the MBA to pivot into product, recruiting for Google, Apple, Amazon, Wayfair, VMware, and landing a technical product management internship at Amazon during the first year of COVIDFalling in love with North Carolina, choosing not to move to Seattle, and building a relationship with the recruiter at Pendo, North Carolina’s first unicorn, to join a company that does software for product managersHow work hours, travel, and lifestyle in product management depend on company size, industry, and person, from nine to five with Slack after hours, to talks at Duke, onsite visits, and international trips to places like Mexico City, the UK, and South AmericaHow AI and LLMs fit into product and engineering work today, helping with unit testing, triaging bugs, document feedback, and quicker prototyping, while creativity, junior talent, and core coding remain essentialWho might be a good fit for product management, including people who like public speaking, talking to customers and C level leaders, dealing with ambiguity, and talking to a gamut of personalities across engineering, design, sales, and leadershipㅤ🔗 Resources MentionedPendo.ioRocket MatterFacebookThe Tipping Point by Malcolm GladwellAtlas ShruggedSalesforceFlorida AtlanticDuke University and Fuqua School of BusinessAmazonGoogleAppleWayfairVMwareBoltLovableV zero

  21. 9

    Bond Trading, Sales and Trading, and Risk in the Bond Market (with Guest Patrick Leary) | Ep. 8

    Larry Port talks with Patrick Leary about his career in finance, bond trading and sales, work-life balance, and what this job is like on a day-to-day basis at Loop Capital on the Dream Job Cafe podcast. Patrick talks about the bond market, how bonds do not trade on an exchange like stocks, why it takes actual people to make these transactions happen, and how an old-school market still has an electronic component. They walk through market hours, inventory, and the firm's risk position, travel with clients, and take advantage of the extra credit hours that come with being successful in this industry. Patrick shares how he moved from medicine and pre-law to the business school, an internally managed stock fund, and a junior trading intern role at a bank trust company. He describes how a professor who said he would teach how the world really works changed his financial literacy, why bond trading clicked, and how AI, algorithms, bespoke products, and large language models may shape the future for young people who are curious about this path.ㅤ👤 Guest BioPatrick Leary is the managing director and head of trading at Loop Capital, leading the firm's fixed income division. His work sits in the bond market, trading government bonds, corporate bonds, muni bonds, and mortgage-backed securities with institutional clients. Patrick manages the firm's inventory and risk position, blending sales and trading with risk management and client service. He started as a junior trading intern at a local bank trust company in St Paul, trading equities and many different types of fixed income instruments on the buy side before moving to the broker-dealer world.ㅤ📌 What We CoverWhat this job is like for a head of trading in the bond market, from market hours and being tied to the bell to lunch breaks on the desk and work-life balance across time zones.How sales, trading, and risk management fit together, including inventory, client warehousing risk, and the differences between institutional clients, banks, hedge funds, money managers, and public entities.Patrick’s path from thinking about medicine and law to pre-law, the business school, an internally managed stock fund, and a professor who said he would teach how the world really works.Early experience as a junior trading intern at a bank trust company in St Paul, trading equities and many different types of fixed income instruments on the buy side before moving to a broker-dealer.The role of salespeople has changed, from entertaining clients with ball games and great dinners to using technology tools, electronic trading, and a more sophisticated, knowledgeable sales staff.The future of bond trading and sales, including commoditization and electronification, algorithms and trading programs, cryptocurrencies and stable coins, and bespoke products that are not easy to commoditise.The temperament and skills that help in this industry, like comfort with risk, thick skin, next trade mentality, networking, internships, and using AI and large language models as a calling card for young people.ㅤ🔗 Resources MentionedLarry PortPatrick LearyLoop CapitalMorgan StanleyIBMRobinhoodTed Lasso

  22. 8

    Applicant Tracking Systems, Keyword Matching, and The Secret To Landing Jobs Right Now (with Peri Ginsberg) | Ep. 7

    Strategic career skills and the job market today are the focus as Larry Port sits down with his old friend Peri Ginsberg, founder and head coach of Workforce Ready Now. Peri works heavily with college graduates, new graduates, and really early stage professionals who are navigating the workforce and feeling the pressure that the first job is going to make or break their entire career.ㅤPeri shares how careers are rarely linear, how any job is going to teach you something, and how her own pivots from civil and environmental engineer to management consulting, Office Depot, and entrepreneurship built the wherewithal to do what she is doing today. Larry and Peri walk through what applicant tracking systems actually are, why they are not AI or a robot, and why keyword matching and formatting can stop you from getting an interview. They talk about the seven second test for resumes, students getting ghosted after hundreds or thousands of applications, and why networking, LinkedIn outreach, and relationship building are still the secret to landing jobs right now.ㅤ👤 Guest BioPeri Ginsberg is the founder and head coach of Workforce Ready Now and works heavily with college graduates, new graduates, and really early stage professionals in navigating the workforce. Educated as a civil and environmental engineer, she did that for a couple years, then transitioned into management consulting, which she really loved. After relocating to South Florida for family reasons and no longer being able to travel, Peri became a director in the project management office at Office Depot. Eventually she departed from the corporate lifestyle because she had that entrepreneurial bug, ran a hair salon for children, and pivoted through multiple roles that set her up for success as a coach on resumes, networking, and interviewing.ㅤ📌 What We CoverWhy careers are rarely linear, why that first job is not going to make or break your entire career, and how any job is going to teach you something, even what you do not like.Peri’s own pivots from civil and environmental engineer, to management consulting, to director in the project management office at Office Depot, to entrepreneurship and Workforce Ready Now.What applicant tracking systems are, why the ATS is not AI, not a robot, not an evil thing that is out to get you, and how must haves, nice to haves, and keyword matching score your resume.How pictures, a fancy logo, text boxes, and untraditional formatting can throw off the ATS, stop the system from parsing text correctly, and stop you from getting an interview, plus why ATS compliant templates matter.The difference between what the ATS cares about and what a human hiring manager cares about, including headings, dates, Times New Roman, tight spacing, one page resumes for college kids, and Peri’s seven second test with strategic bold and a touch of color.The Wall Street Journal picture of students sending out hundreds or thousands of resumes, getting crickets and being ghosted, blaming an evil applicant tracking system, and why networking is still essential.Networking that scares this generation, growing up behind a phone screen, the fear of picking up a phone and saying hello, and Peri’s coaching on LinkedIn messages that simply ask for a chat and information, not “Hey, will you hire me?”The Florida State and MLB story of Peri’s son, customized 300 character LinkedIn messages to three people at every MLB team, a call with someone at the Tampa Bay Rays, and an advocate who made sure three hiring managers had his resume in hand.Peri’s strategy of using AI and chat with ten job descriptions, creating three buckets, building three resumes around responsibilities, skills, and tools, and using those versions to match 95 percent of roles without customizing hundreds of times.The LinkedIn rule of three after every application: an alum, someone one or two years ahead who loves being asked for advice, and a manager or director or talent acquisition contact who can share what they look for in candidates.The UT Austin junior econ example, a student who applied to over a thousand jobs with no interviews, how a reworked, applicant tracking system friendly resume that shows what you can do opened three interviews in one week, and why the student did not change, only the way he communicated and represented himself.How Peri helps students with resume building, optimizing LinkedIn, networking, follow up beyond “I sent an email,” STAR methodology, behavioral, technical, and case interviews, marketing them into 500 or thousand strategic inboxes, and building confidence to articulate their value throughout their professional life.ㅤ🔗 Resources MentionedWorkforce Ready NowLinkedInIndeedWall Street JournalOffice DepotCommon AppOhio State and the Fisher School of BusinessFlorida StateMLBTampa Bay RaysUT Austin

  23. 7

    Middle Skilled or New Collar Jobs, Veterans, and the Skilled Workforce (with Emily Bose) | Ep. 6

    Middle skilled or new collar jobs, veterans, and the skilled workforce sit at the heart of this Dream Job Cafe conversation as host Larry Port talks with Emily Bose, managing director at Transition Overwatch. Emily works with companies and veterans through structured employment programs, retention support, and wraparound support that connect strong go getter people with employers who want to hire more veterans.ㅤShe shares how recruiting can be really meaningful work, from placing a mechanic who totally changed the course of his life to helping veterans navigate military transition, tricky workplace communication, and promotions into the next level. Emily breaks down middle skilled and new collar jobs that do not always require a college degree, often pay well, and offer room to grow, especially in healthcare, manufacturing, aviation, and the skilled trades. She also highlights shift based work, flexibility, and how these jobs can help people build actual careers and even start their own businesses.ㅤ👤 Guest BioEmily Bose is a managing director at Transition Overwatch, a startup that works with companies and veterans through structured employment programs and a retention program for the first one to two years of employment. She has been with the same company and the same CEO for about seven or eight years, starting in recruiting for manufacturing, where she placed around 90 people, including plant managers and roles from top to bottom in the organization.ㅤEmily talks every day with veterans about what they are trying to do next in their careers, their motivations, goals, and how programs can support that. She also hosts a podcast live on LinkedIn called the Emily Bow Show, talking about workforce things for the skilled trades and the next generation of skilled technicians.ㅤ📌 What We CoverHow Transition Overwatch serves two real customers, companies and veterans, through structured employment programs, wraparound support, clear growth paths, and optimized benefits, with program lengths of one to two years and average retention pushing three years.Emily’s path from radiology and working as a student tech to recruiting in manufacturing, placing about 90 people, touring plants, and getting excited about this skilled workforce and middle skilled or new collar jobs.Why recruiting can be really meaningful work, including the story of a mechanic found on LinkedIn who was stuck in a dead end job and moved into a higher level of responsibility, traveling and representing his company.Skills for recruiting and sales, like quickly building rapport, getting people to open up about what they are really looking for, asking clarifying questions, taking lots and lots of notes, doing follow up, communication, and thinking creatively about search terms, titles, and adjacent industries.A grounded explanation of applicant tracking systems as a glorified CRM and filtering system, how answers in applications can be disqualifying, and why recruiters want to help people get hired rather than act as an evil A T S gatekeeper.A clear picture of middle skilled or new collar jobs that do not necessarily need a college degree, may come with on the job training or technical and trade schools, help people earn while they learn, and lead to growth in areas like radiology, healthcare, manufacturing, and other skilled arenas.The reality of shift based work, overtime and shift differentials, weekend and night work, and how schedules can support flexibility for young moms, students, and people who do not enjoy sitting at a desk all day.Why these jobs are not dead end jobs, with pathways into more advanced modalities, management, instruction, operations, quality, supply chain, safety, cybersecurity, and other roles that support plants, factories, and data centers.The difficulty of military transition, including many moving parts, unclear fits in the civilian marketplace, different communication styles, and how structured support for one or two years helps veterans handle vague emails, tricky conversations, and promotions into the next level.High demand across aviation, air traffic control, automotive, heavy equipment, construction, transportation, and data centers for trades like boiler makers, HVAC, plumbers, welders, and technicians, especially as experienced workers retire.How many industries are intentionally trying to bring in more non traditional talent, creating more inclusivity, belonging, and welcoming cultures for women, people of color, veterans, and other groups in the skilled workforce.The strong connection between skilled trades and entrepreneurship, including Emily’s note that 28 percent of people who go into the skilled trades start their own businesses compared to around 8 percent of the general workforce, and how entrepreneurship can help people control their own destiny.ㅤ🔗 Resources MentionedTransition OverwatchWall Street Journal article: “They are hot. Upwardly mobile jobs. Here’s why they are so hard to fill.”Emily Bose on LinkedInThe Emily Bow Show, live on LinkedIn, talking about workforce things for the skilled trades and workforce development across aviation, automotive, heavy equipment, construction, and more.

  24. 6

    Turning a Love of Theme Parks and Performing into Big-Stage Live Events (with Sammy Port) | Ep. 5

    A kid from Tampa rides coasters at Busch Gardens, prints “theme park enthusiast” on a business card, and aims his entire college path at Disney. Then, at what feels like the culmination of that dream at Epcot, something inside says it is time to switch gears. In this conversation, Larry Port sits down with his cousin Sammy Port to trace a non-linear path that runs through Cornell’s hospitality school, long days in ride operations, the surreal training grounds of Disney University, singing on Vegas stages, cruise ship shows, producing an off-Broadway musical, and finding a home as Senior Creative Director at Proscenium. Listeners hear how support networks, authentic connections, accountability, and a willingness to say yes shape a sustainable creative life across entertainment, production, and DJing, without losing sight of real-world needs and human-centered work.ㅤ👤 Guest BioSammy Port is Senior Creative Director at Proscenium and a lifelong fan of large scale entertainment. He grew up in Tampa near Busch Gardens, studied at Cornell’s hospitality school with theme parks in mind, and worked in operations at parks including Busch Gardens, Cedar Point, Six Flags, and Epcot at Disney. Sammy performed in Las Vegas, on cruise ships, and in New York, helped produce the musical “Spandex,” and moved into event production with Proscenium. He curates music and creative experiences for major live events and also DJs high profile events such as Time 100.ㅤ📌 What We CoverEarly obsession with theme parks, trade shows, and calling himself a “theme park enthusiast” at thirteen.How Cornell’s hospitality program, summer roles at Busch Gardens, Cedar Point, and Six Flags, and an Epcot internship created a focused path into theme park operations.The reality of “making it” at Disney, imposter syndrome, Disney University training, and why that milestone still did not feel complete.The courage and support network behind leaving a coveted Disney role to pursue performing, auditions, and learning through imperfect first steps.Moving to Las Vegas for “Jubilee,” performing on cruise ships, and the eventual shift to New York with an honest look at whether performing was truly in his heart.Producing the musical “Spandex” and how one coffee conversation led directly to an internship opportunity at Proscenium.Why a varied background across operations, performance, and production made Sammy the “missing piece” for a corporate events agency focused on theatrical, branded experiences.What a Senior Creative Director actually does: aligning designers, staging, lighting, visuals, music, and talent so everything feels cohesive for the brand.How curating event music evolved into DJing events like Time 100, and why that creative outlet fits naturally with his work at Proscenium.A candid reflection on career identity, not being defined only by a title, balancing financial stability with creative fulfillment, and finding energy in both work and side projects.Practical guidance for early career professionals: saying yes, doing unglamorous work, building real connections, following through, using accountability, and understanding the unseen effort behind “beautiful” events.Thoughts on AI in live events, how virtual experiences compare to being in the room, and why the human element in shared spaces still matters.ㅤ🔗 Resources MentionedProsceniumCornell University School of Hotel AdministrationBusch Gardens (Tampa)Cedar PointSix Flags New EnglandEpcot / Disney University / Disney attractionsSoarin’ (referenced as a newly opened attraction)“Jubilee” (Las Vegas show)Cruise ship productions“Spandex” (jukebox style musical about the eighties aerobics movement)Time 100T-MobileWalmartLast Call (Cornell a cappella group)Tau Kappa Epsilon (TKE)

  25. 5

    Why I Should Not Have Gone To Law School And How To Avoid A Terrible Mistake (with Jared Correia) | Ep. 4

    Law school, big law, lifestyle, AI, legal technology, small firm reality, student loan pressure and legal adjacent careers all collide in this conversation. Host Larry Port sits down with Jared Correia, who walks through his path from small liberal arts college English major and classics minor to Suffolk Law School, small firm practice, bar association work and founder of Red Cave Law Firm Consulting.ㅤJared shares that he went to law school with no idea what he wanted to do, discovered he did not like practicing law, and pivoted into consulting after seeing how many firms lacked basic business management. Larry and Jared break down different practice areas, lifestyle practices like estate planning, the grind of personal injury and big law, why so many lawyers are depressed, and how AI and cloud software reshape research, document drafting and staffing. Listeners hear honest advice on knowing why you want to go to law school, understanding debt, exploring legal adjacent work and building skills in communication, sales, customer service and AI.ㅤ👤 Guest BioJared Correia is the Founder and CEO of Red Cave Law Firm Consulting, providing business management consulting services for lawyers and law firms, as well as technology and marketing consulting for legal institutions and legal-facing businesses. A former practicing attorney and bar association administrator, he has worked with thousands of law firms and hosts legal industry podcasts and events. Jared brings honest insight on law school decisions, small firm life, big law, legal technology, AI and alternative paths in the legal world.ㅤ📌 What We CoverGoing to a small liberal arts college, choosing English and classics without a plan, joining the debate team and deciding to apply to law school late with a middling LSAT.How Jared chose Suffolk Law School over Santa Clara, went straight through without a break and then discovered through electives that he did not like any of the traditional profitable paths.Why he says he probably should not have gone to law school, and why students should understand what lawyers do, talk to lawyers, shadow, and avoid going in just for money.Clear examples of how different practice areas shape real life: personal injury as scratching lottery tickets and eating ramen, estate planning as a lifestyle practice with flexible hours, and the strain of litigation work.Honest talk on big law, billable culture, giving away your twenties, and why many lawyers feel trapped with significant student loan payments, old cars, no house and repetitive, stressful work.The emotional and mental load of lawyering: worst case scenario thinking, constant client crises, pessimism, and how that bleeds into personal life and fuels depression and burnout.Jared’s pivot story: leaving small firm practice, joining a bar association, moving into a consulting role for thousands of lawyers, using cloud software, social media and podcasting to build a profile in legal consulting.How AI and legal tech intersect with law firm work, why many lawyers are still not really using AI, what can be automated in document review and drafting, and why future lawyers should build strengths in sales, customer service and prompting AI.ㅤ🔗 Resources MentionedRed Cave Law Firm ConsultingSt. Anselm CollegeSanta Clara UniversitySuffolk University Law SchoolMassachusetts Bar Association consulting program (business management support for lawyers)Rocket MatterAI tools and ChatGPT style assistantsEstate planning software and forms based practicesMichigan State law programs (referenced in connection with Dan Linna)University of South Carolina School of Law (referenced with Dave Maxfield)Jeff BezosBilly Joel, The StrangerTom Petty, Full Moon FeverJeff LynneTo Kill a Mockingbird

  26. 4

    How to Stand Out When Everyone’s Applying | Ep. 3

    Anxiety is running high for new graduates and career changers as industries shift and the job market feels locked. Joseph Lewin joins Larry Port to talk about what’s behind the frustration so many students face as they send out hundreds of resumes without a response. They explore why traditional job applications fail, how to think about career direction, and what to do when your degree doesn’t lead to immediate opportunities.ㅤLarry shares his direct experiences mentoring college students and guiding his own kids through the career search process. The conversation moves from self-awareness and lifestyle choices to practical strategies for networking, exploring internships, and finding new ways to stand out in a crowded field.ㅤ📌 What We CoverWhy so many recent graduates feel anxious about their job prospectsHow to figure out what kind of career actually fits your strengths and lifestyleThe importance of honest self-assessment and knowing what you’re good at (and not)Real-world examples, like a real estate agent balancing flexibility with constant availabilityHow the flood of computer science graduates changed the hiring landscapeWhere to look for opportunity in tech: DevOps, AI infrastructure, cybersecurity, and data analyticsThe value of networking and talking to people over mass resume submissionsWhy applicant tracking systems (ATS) have broken the job application procesHow to reach out effectively on LinkedIn and what not to say when networkingHow internships act as extended interviews and lead to long-term rolesThe recurring theme: relationships drive career success at every stageㅤ🔗 Resources MentionedLinkedIn (for networking and outreach)DevOps and cloud infrastructureCybersecurity and data analytics fieldsApplicant Tracking Systems (ATS)

  27. 3

    AI Transition, Risk, and Real Career Paths | Ep. 2

    Figuring out what career path to take is intimidating. Larry Port talks through the massive chasm after graduation, the luxury of choices, and the work of connecting who you are to the life you want. Joseph surfaces real tensions around hard skills versus the lifestyle you actually want, parental pressure, and the risk of walking a predetermined path. Larry shares personal shifts from photojournalism to software and entrepreneurship, why family dinner and coaching Little League mattered, and how looking at who you will become in a field can guide decisions.ㅤThe conversation gets practical on the current AI transition, conflicting studies, what the tools can do right now, and why using them increases throughput. They compare startups and large companies, risk, culture, and wearing different hats, then map rising and retracting industries by paying attention to the news, demographics, energy, and the kinds of work that will be automated.ㅤ📌 What We CoverThe massive chasm after college and why choices feel dauntingHard skills, aptitude, and whether the job translates to the life you wantParental pressure, predetermined paths, and the cost of avoiding uncertaintyLooking at who you will be in a field by watching people ahead of youAI transition in October 2025, conflicting studies, and real use cases that increase throughputStartups versus large companies, culture, risk, and wearing different hatsEntrepreneurship temperament, roller coaster moments, and time freedomIndustries to watch: healthcare ecosystems, robotics, sales, energy, and roles supplying AIㅤ🔗 Resources MentionedChatGPTOpenAI and Sam AltmanYale study; Stanford studyMorgan StanleyErnst and YoungGoldman SachsRobotics; humanoid robotsDevOps

  28. 2

    Facing the Chasm of Graduation and Career Change | Ep. 1

    What should I do with my life? It is a question almost everyone has asked. Larry Port opens the conversation by exploring the difficult transition from school to the workforce and the overwhelming chasm that graduates face when trying to figure out what comes next. He reflects on the challenges of standing out with a degree that looks like everyone else’s while automation and AI reshape white collar jobs.ㅤLarry shares his own experience of discovering that photojournalism, though exciting on paper, conflicted with the family life he wanted. He highlights how overlooked careers, from user experience engineering to sales and finance, can be rewarding yet rarely appear on a college counselor’s radar. Alongside producer Joseph Lewin, the discussion focuses on listening to your inner voice, aligning career choices with personal goals, and paying attention to labor market trends. This episode sets the stage for a show dedicated to helping students, career changers, and professionals navigate the uncertainty of work and life.ㅤ📌 What We CoverThe overwhelming transition from college to career and how to stand outWhy a career on paper can look very different from real lifeLarry’s story of pursuing photojournalism and realizing its lifestyle trade-offsCareers that few people know exist, from user experience engineering to event planningHow overlooked roles in sales and finance can align with personality and goalsThe importance of listening to your inner voice when making career decisionsPaying attention to labor market news and societal trends to anticipate opportunitiesWhy Dream Job Cafe exists and who will benefit from tuning inㅤ🔗 Resources MentionedLarry Port (Host)Joseph Lewin (Producer)Wall Street Journal (labor market trends mentioned)

  29. 1

    Dream Job or Nightmare? Welcome to Dream Job Cafe!

    Larry Port introduces Dream Job Cafe — a show about uncovering what careers are really like, beyond the glossy titles and résumés. Hear why this podcast exists, who it’s for, and how real conversations with professionals can help you figure out if a career path fits the life you want to live.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Dream Job Café is the podcast for anyone navigating their next career move, achallenge that’s only gotten trickier now that AI has joined the mix. Hosted by Larry Port,each episode goes beyond job titles to explore the realities of different professions —from daily schedules and travel demands to pay, pressure, and whether that career willexist in five years.ㅤYou’ll hear from industry leaders, working professionals, and career experts who sharecandid stories about what it’s really like to do the job. Whether you’re a college studentfacing an uncertain job market, a recent graduate navigating new opportunities, or amid-career professional who needs a change, this show will help you sort throughoptions with clarity and confidence.ㅤDream Job Cafe is here to help you align your skills, values, and lifestyle goals so youcan not just imagine but actually pursue your dream job.

HOSTED BY

Larry Port

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