I’ve always been attuned to movie scores. The way a piece of music can deepen a moment, shift an atmosphere, or quietly break your heart without a single word of dialogue. So I decided to do something a little different. I put together a special radio edition of Curiously, recorded live at the Dale Dorman Radio Studio at Massasoit Community College, dedicated entirely to movies scores. Not the obvious ones. Not Jurassic Park. Not Forrest Gump. I wanted to play the pieces that deserve more air ti...
May 02, 2026•1 hr 26 min
There’s an old idea that explaining a joke is like dissecting a frog: you come away understanding how it works, but the joke dies in the process. Naturally, I decided that was worth spending an hour on. Jim Stallions is a Boston-based comedian you may know from the stage, from his TikTok account Great Face for Radio , or from being the guy in the room you can never quite predict. He joined me in the Dale Dorman Radio Studio at Massasoit Community College to talk about what makes people laugh, an...
Apr 07, 2026•1 hr 24 min•Season 4Ep. 4
Can writing be taught? It’s one of the oldest arguments in literary culture, and every year, thousands of writers bet their time, money, and creative confidence that the answer is yes. They enroll in MFA programs, bring their pages into classrooms, and submit themselves to a process called “workshop,” where their work gets dissected, debated, and handed back to them. Of course, MFA writing programs exist for more than just fiction writers. You can pursue an MFA in poetry, creative nonfiction, li...
Mar 20, 2026•1 hr 48 min•Season 4Ep. 3
When I was a kid, one of my favorite TV shows was The Magic School Bus. In one episode, Ms. Frizzle shrinks the class down and takes them inside the human body to learn about the immune system. I’ve never forgotten it. For years, I knew I wanted to write a story about people miniaturizing themselves with advanced technology and venturing into the body on a mission. Last year, I finally gave it a shot. I imagined technology that reduces the space between subatomic particles, shrinking a person do...
Mar 15, 2026•47 min•Season 4Ep. 2
When we think of imagination, we assume it’s reserved for creatives: painters and poets, actors and musicians. But the truth is, we use our imagination almost constantly: anytime we reminisce, anticipate, plan, or daydream. Research suggests we spend between a quarter and half of our waking hours with our minds wandering elsewhere, away from what’s right in front of us. But why? And what’s actually happening in our brains when we drift? In this episode, I talk with Dr. Adam Zeman, author of The ...
Feb 24, 2026•1 hr 16 min•Season 4Ep. 1
We all know the basics for sleep: put your phone away, create a bedtime routine, avoid caffeine, keep the room cool. We’ve heard it a thousand times. And yet, one in eight Americans has chronic insomnia, and over half report frequent sleep difficulties. So, what’s the disconnect? Why do we know what to do but still lie awake at 3 a.m., mind racing, exhausted but unable to sleep? In this episode, I talk with Morgan Adams , a certified sleep coach who spent years battling insomnia herself. For a l...
Dec 11, 2025•1 hr 29 min•Season 3Ep. 12
Most of us spend our lives pretending we have forever. We push off difficult conversations, delay dreams, and take tomorrow for granted. But the truth is, we don’t have forever. We have about 3,200 weeks, according to average life expectancy. Knowing this can make us work a little harder, love a little deeper, live more intentionally. But how many of us actually sit with the reality that our time is limited? How many of us talk openly about death before it’s too late? In this episode, I talk wit...
Nov 06, 2025•1 hr 26 min•Season 3Ep. 11
Beer has been part of the human story for millennia. It helped fuel debates in revolutionary taverns, followed soldiers to war, brought strangers together in colonial alehouses and modern taprooms. From the Founding Fathers’ home brews to today’s experimental IPAs, beer has been a constant companion to our species. But why? What is it about this fermented beverage that’s kept us coming back for ten thousand years? In this episode, I step inside Boston’s Aeronaut Brewing Co . with head brewer Mar...
Oct 15, 2025•2 hr 14 min•Season 3Ep. 10
I’ve always believed that the questions we ask reveal as much about us as the answers we give. So when I had the chance to set up a booth at the MIT Museum’s 2025 Cambridge Science Carnival , I brought one question with me: “If science could solve one problem for humanity in the next 50 years, what would you choose—and why?” The carnival buzzed with over a hundred booths celebrating curiosity. Families roamed the grounds, kids wide-eyed at hands-on experiments. I was there representing my own sm...
Sep 29, 2025•35 min•Season 3Ep. 9
There’s something both terrifying and oddly comforting about knowing we have four billion years left. The sun will expand, swallow Earth, and explode. We need to leave. The question isn't whether we should go, but how we'll survive once we do. I’ve always been drawn to stories about humanity’s future in space. Not the sanitized Hollywood versions, but the messy, complicated reality of what it would actually take. When I discovered Dr. Christopher Mason’s book, The Next 500 Years: Engineering Lif...
Sep 19, 2025•57 min•Season 3Ep. 8
Since starting the podcast in 2023, I’ve made a conscious effort to stay out of the way. I ask questions, I guide guests through their stories, I stay detached. I never wanted to be one of those hosts who dominates their show with their own opinions. But staying detached comes at a cost: listeners don’t really get to know me. And in podcasting, that connection matters. People want to feel like they know the person behind the mic. One morning over breakfast, I had the TV on and caught an episode ...
Sep 09, 2025•1 hr 48 min•Season 3Ep. 7
Ever since I can remember, I’ve been fascinated by space. As a kid, I had a poster of the Eagle Nebula on my bedroom wall and a telescope I used to study the moon. My favorite movie is Contact , based on Carl Sagan’s novel about searching for extraterrestrial life. Thinking about the cosmos gives us perspective. Not just on our own lives and problems, but on our entire species. Sagan reminded us of this in his iconic Pale Blue Dot speech. When you see how small and fragile our planet is in the v...
May 26, 2025•2 hr 27 min•Season 3Ep. 6
You’ve seen it while scrolling social media, sitting in a virtual meeting, or watching a political debate. Some people command attention right away, drawing viewers in and holding them there. Others, despite having meaningful ideas, fail to engage. Not for lack of substance, but for lack of visual presence. In an age of constant on-camera interaction, this skill is no longer optional; it’s essential. In this episode, I talk with my friend Anthony Thomas —actor, model, video podcast host, and You...
Apr 03, 2025•2 hr 4 min•Season 3Ep. 5
In 2022, I joined The Anthony Thomas Podcast to discuss my sci-fi thriller, The Empathy Academy , a novel that explores this exact question. The story follows Montgomery Hughes, a teenager who infiltrates a controversial academy designed to genetically “correct” unethical behavior in young people. What he discovers inside reveals the dark side of using science to engineer morality. The conversation with Anthony was supposed to be a typical author interview—talk about the book, share some behind-...
Mar 18, 2025•1 hr 31 min•Season 3Ep. 4
What if the reason your health problems keep coming back is because you’ve only been treating symptoms, never the underlying cause? When Katie Concannon was a teenager, she started experiencing health issues related to her menstrual cycle. She did what most people do: went to doctors, followed their advice, took medications. The treatments addressed her symptoms temporarily, but they never explored why the problems existed in the first place. Worse, the interventions created new complications: m...
Feb 26, 2025•1 hr 4 min•Season 3Ep. 3
What if you could work from anywhere in the world—a beach in Bali, a café in Barcelona, a mountain village in Colombia—and never need permission from a boss to buy a plane ticket? The digital nomad lifestyle has become the fantasy of millions stuck in fluorescent-lit offices, scrolling through Instagram feeds of tanned freelancers typing on laptops with ocean views. But behind the perfectly curated photos lies a more complicated reality: How do you actually build a sustainable, location-independ...
Feb 09, 2025•1 hr 8 min•Season 3Ep. 2
Can an AI truly understand us? Does it have thoughts, creativity, or self-awareness? The movie Her was set in 2025—the year we’re living in now. So I decided to interview artificial intelligence itself. In this fascinating 45-minute conversation, I put OpenAI's ChatGPT on the hot seat to explore what AI is actually capable of today, what it fundamentally lacks, and what the future might hold. For over two years, ChatGPT has been my daily research assistant, copyeditor, and conversational partner...
Jan 18, 2025•40 min•Season 3Ep. 1
When I was a kid, I questioned rules that didn’t make sense. I resisted illegitimate authority. I could be difficult, inquisitive, sometimes arrogant. My dad used to joke that I had oppositional defiant disorder, or ODD, a behavioral diagnosis for kids who are uncooperative and defiant toward authority. But I never saw that part of myself as disordered. I saw someone concerned about the world, unwilling to bow to coercion or incompetent control. Dr. Bruce Levine , my guest today, might’ve had a ...
Dec 15, 2024•1 hr 24 min•Season 2Ep. 8
When Elon Musk publicly revealed he uses ketamine to manage his depression, the revelation sent shockwaves through both tech and mental health communities. Here was one of the world’s most high-profile figures openly discussing his struggle with depression and choosing a treatment that most people associate with anesthesia or illicit raves. But Musk isn’t an outlier. He’s part of a growing movement of people turning to ketamine when traditional antidepressants have failed them. Ketamine has had ...
Dec 05, 2024•1 hr 11 min•Season 2Ep. 7
What if the future of mental health treatment involves substances we’ve spent decades criminalizing? For years, psychedelics like psilocybin and MDMA were dismissed as dangerous drugs with no medical value. But a growing body of research suggests these substances, when combined with guided therapy, might help people struggling with depression, PTSD, anxiety, and addiction in ways traditional treatments cannot. The question is no longer whether psychedelics work, but how to integrate them safely ...
Aug 05, 2024•1 hr 16 min•Season 2Ep. 6
Exercise is practically a religion in modern culture. We’re told it helps us sleep better, lose weight, reduce anxiety, and lower our risk of countless diseases. So like millions of others, I’ve stayed active—triathlons, marathons, spin classes, yoga, and for the past three years, high-intensity workouts at Orange Theory. But somewhere in my early 30s, I started noticing something disturbing: exercise seemed to come at a cost. It didn’t matter when I worked out or what kind of exercise I did. Af...
Jul 26, 2024•1 hr 10 min•Season 2Ep. 5
When you listen to an audiobook, especially fiction, you want to be transported, swept into another world where characters feel real and scenes play like movies in your mind. A great narrator doesn’t just read words; they breathe life into them, transforming text into an immersive experience. Take Andy Serkis’ narration of The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers . One listener described his performance this way: “He’s not just giving characters unique voices and emotions; he’s acting the scenes ou...
Jun 15, 2024•1 hr 10 min•Season 2Ep. 4
Cancer doesn’t discriminate. It strikes scientists and artists, children and the elderly, the famous and the unknown. We’ve all felt its cruel grip, whether through our own diagnosis or watching someone we love fight a battle they might not win. Despite decades of research and billions of dollars invested, cancer continues to outsmart us, evolving faster than our treatments, defying our understanding. Why is this so hard? Dr. Zuzana Kečkéšová thinks the answer might be found not in tumors themse...
May 06, 2024•1 hr 11 min•Season 2Ep. 3
Would you believe me if I told you that the flowers in your window and the trees in your yard are actually sophisticated chemical laboratories, producing compounds that could cure disease? Plants can’t run from predators or hide from harsh weather. So over 450 million years of evolution, they developed something better: chemistry. To survive, plants engineered intricate metabolic systems that produce thousands of specialized chemicals that attract pollinators, poison herbivores, and fight off pa...
Apr 07, 2024•1 hr 11 min•Season 2Ep. 2
In early 2024, Kaitlyn Gilbert, a designer I’ve worked with for several years, reached out after hearing me discuss my book The Healing Book on a podcast. “I see parallels in our stories that are too striking to pass up,” she wrote. She wanted to share her own healing story, one that involved her parents’ unexpected divorce, leaving corporate life during the pandemic, and finding solace in the most unlikely place for a millennial designer: daily readings of The Bible. I’m not religious myself, b...
Mar 11, 2024•44 min•Season 2Ep. 1
What if love isn’t just a feeling, but a form of data from a higher dimension? In this season finale, I invite Jeanne Mayell back to the podcast to pick up where we left off in Episode #4 . Jeanne is an intuitive counselor and author who gives private life readings and helps people develop their intuitive abilities. In our first conversation, we explored how intuition works. But Jeanne felt we hadn’t fully addressed the most important question: What is the mechanism behind intuition? Her answer:...
Jan 22, 2024•1 hr 16 min•Season 1Ep. 12
In this episode, I sit down with Samantha Cooke, author of Love Always, Bailey , a young adult novel that hit #1 in New Releases for YA Mental Health within hours of its November 2023 launch. The book climbed into the top 10 YA bestsellers—just below John Green, author of The Fault in Our Stars—and dominated the top three spots across paperback, eBook, and hardcover formats simultaneously. Love Always, Bailey follows Morgan, who hasn’t heard from her best friend Bailey in seven months, not since...
Dec 08, 2023•1 hr 23 min•Season 1Ep. 11
What do you do when you realize life has no inherent meaning? You invent your own. In this episode, I’m doing something different: I’m reading a short story from my book, The Healing Book , which published in 2023. The story is called “ Searching for Meaning in the Stars, ” and it follows a theoretical physicist who writes a memoir about overcoming an existential crisis in his cabin on Lake Winnipesaukee in New Hampshire. During the pandemic, I found myself in my late thirties, trapped at home, ...
Nov 06, 2023•30 min•Season 1Ep. 10
Can a conversation with an “ordinary” person be as compelling as one with an expert or a well-known figure? I decided to find out. In this episode, I abandon my usual format—no research, no preparation, no predetermined topic—and sit down with Bob Smith (not his real name), a 73-year-old man from Massachusetts who has never been on TV, written a book, or held any position of power. He’s not an expert on anything in particular. He’s just... Bob. But here’s the thing: Bob is hilarious, kind, quick...
Oct 24, 2023•1 hr 9 min•Season 1Ep. 9
Can you really make a living as an artist in 2025? After publishing six books, I’ve learned the hard way: the answer is more complicated, and bleaker, than most people realize. In this episode, I sit down with William Deresiewicz, award-winning essayist, cultural critic, and author of The Death of the Artist: How Creators Are Struggling to Survive in the Age of Billionaires and Big Tech. After interviewing 140 artists—novelists, filmmakers, visual artists, musicians—Deresiewicz uncovered a troub...
Oct 14, 2023•1 hr•Season 1Ep. 8