interview
Interviews to keep you inspired from motivational speakers that will help you conquer fears and achieve goals, now!
Behind the Scenes: Traveling the World to Bring Echoes of Tomorrow to Life
There’s a certain kind of magic that only happens when a film leaves the safety of soundstages and steps fully into the real world. Echoes of Tomorrow is one of those rare projects — a film that didn’t just tell a global story, but truly lived one.
By Andreas Szakacs24 days ago in Motivation
The Architecture of Resilience: Why Your "Internal Weather" Determines Your Destiny. Content Warning. AI-Generated.
Introduction: The Myth of the "Perfect Moment" We are often told that greatness is a lightning strike - a singular moment of clarity where the stars align, the bank account swells, and the path forward becomes a sun-drenched highway. We wait for this "perfect moment" like travelers waiting for a train that isn't on the schedule.
By Chilam Wong27 days ago in Motivation
Building a Career the Slow Way: What Andreas Szakacs Teaches About Craft Over Hype
The film industry moves fast. New faces appear every year, projects trend for a moment, and attention shifts almost overnight. But some careers grow differently — shaped not by sudden visibility, but by consistency, discipline, and long-term creative choices.
By Andreas Szakacs27 days ago in Motivation
The Slow Discipline of Becoming Unbreakable. Content Warning. AI-Generated.
Most people imagine strength as something loud. They picture confidence that fills a room, certainty that never wavers, success that announces itself clearly and publicly. Strength, in this version, is visible. It is validated. It is admired.
By Chilam Wong30 days ago in Motivation
What If Reality Runs Deeper Than What We Can See
Most of us are trained, often without realizing it, to treat what is visible as what is most real. Actions, outcomes, results, behavior. These are the things that can be measured, discussed, praised, or corrected. They are concrete, undeniable, and easy to point to. When something goes wrong, attention naturally moves toward what can be seen. When something goes right, credit is assigned to what just happened. This way of seeing feels practical, even obvious. But what if it quietly reverses how reality actually works.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcastabout a month ago in Motivation
What If Reality Has Layers We Rarely Name
Most of the time, life is navigated as though everything that matters is already visible. We respond to what happens, explain what we can see, and make sense of events based on what appears most immediate. This approach feels grounded and practical. It keeps reality manageable. But it also raises a quiet question that rarely gets explored directly: what if the most influential parts of reality are not the ones we notice first.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcastabout a month ago in Motivation








