Faith, Fame, And The Cost Of Conviction
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Add to Cart failed.
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
-
Narrado por:
-
De:
A player gets waived and suddenly everybody has a “hot take” about faith, politics, and what’s acceptable at work. We slow it down and ask the harder questions: if someone’s religious convictions cost them millions, do you respect it, criticize it, or both? And if you’re running a team or any business, where do morals actually sit on the priority list next to production, trust, and locker-room chemistry? Along the way, we get into why organized religion can push people away, why moral people aren’t limited to one belief system, and why nuance is the first thing the internet throws out.
Then we pivot into leadership and ego, because power trips aren’t just a meme, they’re a symptom. We talk early-career insecurity, workplace dynamics, and how confidence changes the way you lead and communicate. That naturally turns into sports media and the attention economy, including our ongoing frustration with how debate shows flatten complex topics into quick reactions.
And yes, we bring it back home to Atlanta: Falcons season tickets, PSL money, new jersey hype, and the emotional gamble of buying “hope” every year. We mix in real-life nostalgia and parenting, like full-circle moments with our daughters and the honest fear of how a kid might feel about a future spouse. We close with culture talk, including first reactions to Kanye’s Bully, what sounds good on replay, and why context matters as much as bars. If you rock with these conversations, subscribe, share this with a friend who argues like we do, and leave a review. What part hit you the hardest: faith at work, Falcons loyalty, or the Kanye take?