Daring Creativity
Daring Creativity is your backstage pass to the minds that shape our creative world. A podcast series inspired by the upcoming book by Radim Malinic, helping people start and grow life-changing careers and businesses.
Over the coming episodes, I will sit down with a broad range of guests: artists, musicians, designers, actors, technologists, and entrepreneurs who've discovered something powerful: that creativity isn't about perfection. It's about showing up with all your doubts, insecurities, and imperfections—and making them count.
Are you ready to discover what happens when you dare to create?
More info https://radimmalinic.co.uk/
Daring Creativity
Dare to feed the right wolf - James Victore
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
James Victore, a "recovering graphic designer" turned creative coach, shares his journey from commercial conformity to artistic rebellion. Starting with a childhood memory of melted crayons on hot cement, James traces his path from failed university attempts to becoming a Museum of Modern Art-featured designer. His breakthrough came at 30 with controversial Columbus Day posters that were scraped off by police—a moment that crystallised his commitment to meaningful work over commercial success.
The conversation explores James's evolution from pleasing clients to finding clients who appreciate his authentic voice. He discusses teaching at the School of Visual Arts for 18 years, where he learned that creativity's job is to disrupt. Now he coaches "frustrated creative adults" to express what's truly in their hearts rather than succumbing to "creative constipation."
Key themes include the difference between being weird versus seeming weird, the importance of self-love in creative expression, and why perfectionism is simply a tool for self-sabotage. James emphasizes that creativity requires business acumen—"a starving artist is just an artist who doesn't know they're in business."
Key Takeaways
- The opposite of depression is expression—creative constipation leads to frustration and unhappiness
- Perfectionism isn't about quality; it's a fear-based tool used to stop ourselves from creating
- Every moment we choose between shrinking from fear or growing from love
- "Normal" life (obesity, job dissatisfaction, early death) is more frightening than being creatively weird
- Children's primal drive to be "seen and heard and loved" is essential for adult creatives to reclaim
- Finding your tribe matters—when weird people connect, magic happens
- Business skills are essential for creative survival—learn invoicing, marketing, and self-promotion
- The future depends on embracing weirdness rather than conforming to destructive normalcy
- True creativity comes from expressing personal truth, not following industry formulas
- Self-love is the trigger that allows creativity to flow; self-hate blocks it
- Marketing is simply having something to say and saying it repeatedly with conviction
- Creative work should entertain, educate, delight, or provoke strong emotions—never be neutral
Daring Creativity. Podcast with Radim Malinic
daringcreativity.com | desk@daringcreativity.com
Books by Radim Malinic Paperback and Kindle > https://amzn.to/4biTwFc
Free audiobook (with Audible trial) > https://geni.us/free-audiobook
Book bundles https://novemberuniverse.co.uk
Lux Coffee Co. https://luxcoffee.co.uk/ (Use: PODCAST for 15% off)
November Universe https://novemberuniverse.co.uk (Use: PODCAST for 10% off)
Podcasts we love
Check out these other fine podcasts recommended by us, not an algorithm.
Daring Creativity
Radim MalinicDesign Matters
Design Matters
The Creative Condition podcast
Ben Tallon
Building your Brand
Liz Mosley
The Selling Show
David Newman
RevThinking™
RevThink™
Life in the Peloton, presented by MAAP
Mitch Docker
Object Subject Form
Simon Clowes
The Right Questions with James Victore
James Victore
60 Songs That Explain the '90s
The Ringer
If Books Could Kill
Michael Hobbes & Peter Shamshiri
The Futur with Chris Do
The Futur
A Bit of Optimism
Simon Sinek