Épisodes

  • Gretchen Rubin - How Curiosity Becomes a Calling (Ep. 320)
    Jun 25 2026
    Gretchen Rubin joins guest host and Infinite Books CEO Jimmy Soni to discuss her journey from Supreme Court clerk to bestselling author, the creative obsessions that shaped her career, and the daily habits that fuel her work.

    They cover her transition from law to writing Power Money Fame Sex, why she often ends up writing the book before the proposal, the art of editing until the final hour (even during pass pages), her 5:30 AM writing routine, and why "know thyself" remains the foundation of all her books - from 40 Ways to Look at Winston Churchill to Life in Five Senses.

    Important Links:

    Learn more about Gretchen: https://gretchenrubin.com/

    Read more of Gretchen's work: https://gretchenrubin.com/books

    Listen to Gretchen's podcast: https://gretchenrubin.com/happier/

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    1 h et 24 min
  • Ben Cohen - The Hidden Art of Making Things Better (Ep. 319)
    Jun 18 2026

    Wall Street Journal columnist Ben Cohen joins guest host Jimmy Soni, CEO of Infinite Books, to explore the hidden art of making things better. They explore the hot hand phenomenon in basketball, why Moneyball shaped a generation of journalists, the peanut butter and jelly crisis in the Warriors locker room, why ASML is the most important company you've never heard of, the strange story of Driscoll's tastiest berries, and the troubled development of The Princess Bride.

    Important Links:

    Learn more about Ben here: https://www.wsj.com/news/author/ben-cohen

    Read The Science of Success: https://www.wsj.com/news/types/science-of-success

    Read The Hot Hand: https://www.harpercollins.com/pages/hothand

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    1 h et 20 min
  • Revan Lazarus - How AI is Rebuilding the Creator Economy (Ep. 318)
    Jun 11 2026

    AI is no longer just a tool creators use to make content faster. It is beginning to reshape the entire creator economy.

    Revan Lazarus is the founder of Jamie, an AI platform for podcast networks and digital sales teams.

    He joins Infinite Loops, guest-hosted by Nick Tawil, to discuss how AI is changing podcasting, media sales, audience analytics, creator monetization, brand deals, and the future of content itself.

    Important Links:

    Learn more about Jamie AI: https://www.jamie-ai.com/


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    55 min
  • Brian London, Marisa Adler & Eric Stubin - The Hidden Economy of Recycled Clothes (Ep. 317)
    Jun 4 2026
    What actually happens after you donate a bag of clothes? Most people assume it gets sold locally to someone in need, but the reality is much bigger, stranger, and more global.

    In this episode of Infinite Loops, hosted by OSV's Nick Tawil, we sit down for a roundtable on the hidden global economy of secondhand textiles with Brian London, Marisa Adler, and Eric Stubin, all experts in the field. We discuss how the industry works, why fast fashion has made the problem harder, why 70% of the world uses secondhand clothing, what AI can and can't solve, and why turning an old shirt into a new shirt is still much harder than it sounds.

    Substack: https://newsletter.osv.llc/



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    1 h et 7 min
  • Jason Buck - Faith, Failure, and Finance (Ep. 316)
    May 28 2026

    Jason Buck, founder and CIO of Mutiny Funds, joins Infinite Loops to tell the painful and darkly funny story of how the 2007–2008 crash destroyed his real estate business, wiped out his paper wealth, and taught him one of the hardest lessons in markets: being right is not the same thing as making money.

    Jason explains how he went from real estate developer to volatility trader and eventually built his philosophy around survival, resilience, and the "Cockroach Portfolio." He and Jim explore why true diversification always feels uncomfortable, why human behavior is the most persistent source of market mistakes, and why investing beliefs often resemble religion.

    Important Links:

    Learn more about Mutiny Fund here: https://mutinyfund.com/

    Listen to more from Jason here: https://mutinyfund.com/podcasts

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    2 h et 2 min
  • Chelsea Follett - Why Progress Is the Exception, Not the Rule (Ep. 315)
    May 21 2026

    Chelsea Follett joins Infinite Loops to explain why the "good old days" were far darker than most people imagine — and why progress should never be taken for granted.

    Chelsea is the managing editor of Human Progress and author of Centers of Progress and the forthcoming The Grim Old Days. We discuss why humans are so drawn to nostalgia, what life was really like in the preindustrial past, why doomsday predictions keep failing, and how freedom, innovation, and open inquiry helped create the modern world.

    Important Links:

    Learn More about Chelsea's upcoming book here: https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/The-Grim-Old-Days

    Read more of Chelsea's Human Progress work here: https://humanprogress.org/authors/chelsea-follett

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    1 h et 30 min
  • Mykhailo Marynenko - AI Tools That Give Creators More Control (Ep. 314)
    May 15 2026

    Mykhailo Marynenko joins Infinite Loops for for a fascinating conversation about the future of AI, creative tools, privacy, and data ownership.

    From growing up in his father's phone repair shop in Ukraine to building experimental AI systems today, Mykhailo has spent his life taking things apart, figuring out how they work, and rebuilding them in unexpected ways.

    We explore how AI can help creators without replacing them, why privacy and data ownership matter, and what it means to design tools that give people more control over complex information.

    Important Links

    More about Misha: https://linktr.ee/0x77dev?utm_medium=mykhailo.link

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    1 h et 44 min
  • Danielle Crittenden - Dispatches from Grief (Ep. 313)
    May 7 2026
    On a February morning, Danielle Crittenden's world cleaved in two: the life before her daughter Miranda was found dead in her Brooklyn apartment, and the life after.

    Two years and three months later, Danielle joins Infinite Loops to discuss her luminous memoir, Dispatches from Grief, which unflinchingly traces the strange afterlife of grief with precision, restraint, and unexpected humor.

    This conversation explores what grief really feels like. With extraordinary honesty and grace, Danielle shares the physical pain, the loneliness of loss, and the slow work of carrying her daughter's memory forward.

    Dispatches from Grief is out now: Infinite Books | Amazon

    Danielle's Substack: The Femsplainers With Danielle Crittenden
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    1 h et 52 min