98 episodes

What do you do when the national dialogue sucks? You start listening. And figure out better ways to communicate.I hear a lot of ‘I don’t get them.’ They’re stupid/crazy/too fragile/woke. You get the drift. We don’t seem to get each other. Self-involvement, lack of information or experience, blind adherence to a belief prevents us from seeing things from a different viewpoint. And there are many points of view, many sides to a story.If we don’t listen and don’t engage, we can't really know what another person thinks? And as good as we are, we're not clairvoyant. So get curious. Start with some questions. Let’s listen to understand, if not agree.This season’s Embark goes where few conversations go – to the other side. Or to many sides. Hop on for a little more conversation and a lot more ‘getting’ each other. All aboard? Let’s go.With Liz Solar, Voice Actor/ Writer/Communications Coach

Embark Liz Solar

    • Society & Culture
    • 5.0 • 9 Ratings

What do you do when the national dialogue sucks? You start listening. And figure out better ways to communicate.I hear a lot of ‘I don’t get them.’ They’re stupid/crazy/too fragile/woke. You get the drift. We don’t seem to get each other. Self-involvement, lack of information or experience, blind adherence to a belief prevents us from seeing things from a different viewpoint. And there are many points of view, many sides to a story.If we don’t listen and don’t engage, we can't really know what another person thinks? And as good as we are, we're not clairvoyant. So get curious. Start with some questions. Let’s listen to understand, if not agree.This season’s Embark goes where few conversations go – to the other side. Or to many sides. Hop on for a little more conversation and a lot more ‘getting’ each other. All aboard? Let’s go.With Liz Solar, Voice Actor/ Writer/Communications Coach

    Lisa DeAngelis: Embracing the Unknown and Exploring the Pathways to Change

    Lisa DeAngelis: Embracing the Unknown and Exploring the Pathways to Change

    Humans are complicated. We often crave change... as long as we don't have to work to make it happen. How great would it be if we could have that dream job, or perfect mate, or lose that pesky 10 pounds, with a wave of a wand or a sprinkle of pixie dust?
    Life would be perfect.

    So much for magical thinking.

    Change, unless it happens from external sources, is an inside job. Yes, it is so hard, we may whine, but so well worth it if it brings us closer to what we want and honors our values.  Desire plus self-knowledge plus action equals change.

    Lisa DeAngelis knows a thing or two about change and describes the obstacles we encounter (or put in our own way), the reasons behind our resistance and the rewards we receive when we explore new possibilities.  She shares through research, personal experience and case studies what's involved in change and how it's not as difficult or as easy as it looks.

    She also tells me when change isn't such a good idea, if the justification is 'all the other kids are doing it'.

    Join us, then  share your own experience with change.  Thanks for listening.

    About Lisa

    Lisa DeAngelis is a holistic change practitioner, author, teacher, and speaker. She is passionate about building meaningful relationships and helping others live authentically.

    Her debut book, Embracing the Unknown: Exploring the Pathways to Change offers research, wisdom, and aspirational stories which will empower and support others in learning to navigate change in their own lives. Lisa’s own unfolding journey has established her commitment to living with intention and purpose and helping others walk through the meaningful intersections of their lives. An avid traveler, singer and lover of the arts, Lisa lives and works in New York City

    • 33 min
    Anne Janzer on the Writer's Voice

    Anne Janzer on the Writer's Voice

    Our voiceprint is as unique as our fingerprint, and we understand a little about how we use our physical voice. But how do we use a writer's voice, and what is it anyway?

    As readers,  we fall in love with certain writers, their word choice,  their attitude,  the memorable characters that populate a work of fiction, or the distinct style of an essayist or non-fiction writer.

    Whether you want to make your emails more engaging/impactful/entertaining  or if you're attempting to author a distint book of your own, it's essential to develop a voice that connects to the reader or listener.

    Anne Janzer, brings knowledge, wisdom and humor to this episode.  She has also written The Writer's Voice: Techniques for Tuning your Tone and Style, the fifth book in her Writer's Process Series.

    We discuss how many writer's feel about their writing and writer's voice, how you can improve and vary the style  in which you communicate,  the musicality of language and the importance of serving the reader.

    With a little practice and and a sense of play, you can master the art and science of writing voice.

    Anne Janzer is an award-winning author, armchair cognitive science geek, nonfiction author coach, marketing practitioner, and blogger. She’s on a mission to help people spread important ideas through writing.
    As a professional writer, she has worked with more than one hundred technology companies, writing in the voice of countless brands and corporate executives. She is author of the books Get the Word Out,  Writing to Be Understood,  The Writer’s Process, The Workplace Writer’s Process, and Subscription Marketing.

    • 34 min
    Collin Lieberg on Striking Creatives, Streaming and the British Invasion

    Collin Lieberg on Striking Creatives, Streaming and the British Invasion

    With two creative guilds (Writers Guild of America & SAG-AFTRA)  on strike, can we look forward to a repeat of this summer's Barbenhiemer double-bill phenom next summer? How much longer can striking actors and writers face off with big studios?  This strike affects many thousands more: Directors, script supervisors, hair and make-up, location scouts, gaffers, craft services, dialect coaches are just some of the essential members of a film crew.

    Collin Lieberg is Creative Executive at  Cobalt Knight, a genre production company focused on telling feature, series, and comic book stories about the human condition with touches of social commentary. He develops much of the content that you might view. Yet, these days, in solidarity with WGA and SAG-AFTRA, he's working on personal projects until the strikes are resolved.

    We talk about the striking creatives, the complications of negotiating with streaming companies and ponder what changes may happen and how that affects the film and TV industry whenever the strikes are settled.  Oh yeah. We also discuss Collin's musical background, and his fascination with the British Invasion of the 1960's.

    Collin Lieberg is a screenwriter, creative executive, and world traveler. He has spent many years living abroad and feeling out of place, so he writes about outsiders struggling to fit in. He has a background in academia, management, marketing, and retail that all inform his characters and stories.  For the past two years he has run a monthly #VirtualHappyHour (#VHH) Zoom mixer to connect with friends and make new connections.
     He's working on two TV pilots and is gearing up to write his first novel.

    Read more here:

    https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/terra-mystica-board-game-adaptation-cobalt-knight-1235363278/

    • 34 min
    Liz and Jack on AI, Strikes and Barbenheimer

    Liz and Jack on AI, Strikes and Barbenheimer

    You've probably heard the ubiquitous discussion  about AI.  How the bots are coming after your job, and are capable of  even greater nefarious actions.

    We put the nefarious aside today to address how AI voices are eliminating the need/desire to use human voice actors for many narration projects. So yes, Jack and my conversation is born out of self-interest, some trepidation and curiosity as to where all of this leads.  The development and now widespread  use of AI - for everything from ordering dinner to writing a book to litigating a legal case -  has significant consequences, which we will continue to explore throughout our season.

    Speaking of significant consequences, Jack and I talk about the SAG-AFTRA theatrical strike,  as well as blockbuster movie openings despite it.  Barbie and Oppenheimer, also known as Barbenheimer, or Oppenbarbie, have moviegoers filling theatre seats in record numbers.  In just three weeks, Barbie, directed by Greta Gerwig, has broken box office records, taking in over one billion dollars globally. Not bad for a girl : )

    At the same time, Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer's has taken in  500 million dollars. Not too shabby for a three-hour film about the development of the nuclear bomb, another consequential event. See a theme here?

    We have some fun, and Jack indulges in some shameless (albeit well-deserved)  self-promotion. 

    Thanks for listening.

    • 33 min
    Mental Health Counselor Jon Mattleman on Work, Loneliness and Emergency Joys

    Mental Health Counselor Jon Mattleman on Work, Loneliness and Emergency Joys

    Feeling overwhelmed? Lonely? Burnt-out and unfulfilled? You're not alone.

    When the Surgeon General declares a mental health crisis, you know your feelings of anxiety and depression are not outliers.

    Mental Health Counselor Jon Mattleman provides some calm, as well as some strategies you can use to help you get over some of life's most challenging times and perhaps lift your spirits.

    We talk about the changing phenomenon of how we choose  - if at all, to show up at work, where to find fulfillment in several overlooked and abandoned professions and how Jon discovered his 'emergency joy' in a quarter of Brigham's chocolate chip ice cream.

    About Jon Mattleman

    Across all of his work, Jon brings warmth, understanding, and patience…plus a healthy dose of humor! In his more than 30 years of experience as a therapist and presenter, clients have felt comforted by his ability to acknowledge that the challenges they face are complex – and often downright exhausting! In acknowledgment of this, his work is grounded in delivering tools that can be implemented immediately. Who has time to wait?

    More about Jon's work here

    • 36 min
    Liz & Jack on Passions Versus Practicality: Which Route Leads to Success?

    Liz & Jack on Passions Versus Practicality: Which Route Leads to Success?

    Passions. Some people say follow your passions and you'll never work a day in your life. Do what you love and the money will follow. Is that true?  If we don't take the road less traveled, will we regret it, or be ever grateful to the parents who urged us to attend business school or find 'a real job'?

    Is it possible to follow a more traditional, pragmatic career path and either find passion there?  How important is having a career for an interest we have passion for, especially if we lack talent of said passion? Passions. What are they good for?

    Which route leads to success - and  happiness - following your passions or being pragmatic? Can those two things coexist?

    Jack and I will let you know as we discuss our own career paths, the advice we would give our younger selves and wax poetic about a little, old TV show called 'WKRP in Cincinnati'. 

    Welcome to our world. Please share this episode with a friend, mention it on the socials and please subscribe.

    • 36 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
9 Ratings

9 Ratings

Jessica Wilson, Filmmaker ,

Welcome home, globetrotters! 💜

Oh, what a wonderful journey to join - authentic and rewarding. Liz created a safe space for open hearted and open minded individuals, embarking together. If you wish to inspire or be inspired, you have reached your dynamic destination. You won’t regret a second!

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