The Dangerous Creative - How Solving Problems Makes You Dangerous (Even If You're a Barista)
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Sometimes creativity has fuck-all to do with your job title.
In this episode, Patrick explores why the most dangerous creative minds often don't call themselves artists—they're teachers buying classroom supplies with grocery money, middle managers translating executive gibberish into human language, and baristas solving problems that million-dollar consultants couldn't crack with PowerPoint.
Through the story of surgeon Atul Gawande's surgical checklist revolution, we examine how creative problem-solving becomes subversive when it works too well, threatening systems that profit from keeping things broken.
What You'll Learn:
- Why pattern recognition plus intervention courage makes you dangerous to institutions
- The three stages every dangerous creative goes through (and why most people stop at stage one)
- How "strategically lazy" problem-solving threatens people who've built careers on complexity
- Why your creative solutions face resistance even when they obviously work
- The economic forces that fight back when you prove alternatives are possible
Featured Story: The tale of how a Harvard-trained surgeon nearly got blacklisted for suggesting doctors use a checklist—and how his "radical" idea of making sure surgical teams knew each other's names reduced complications by 35%.
This episode speaks directly to photographers, CEOs, therapists, teachers, stay-at-home moms, baristas, and anyone else solving problems that others ignore.
Atul Gawande TED Talk excerpt: "How do we heal medicine?"
Links:
- Leave a voicemail: terriblephotographer.com/voicemail
- Subscribe to Field Notes newsletter: the-terrible-photographer.kit.com/223fe471fb
Music: Licensed through Blue Dot Sessions
"Creative work that actually changes things doesn't feel like art. It feels like resistance."
Episode Photo by Alexander Krivitskiy - Follow his work on Instagram
26 episodes