There's a moment in every room, every strategy session, every family dinner where someone finally says the thing everyone has been circling. Not a new idea, necessarily, but the buried one. The one that was always there, underneath the decks and the dashboards and the nervous small talk. CJ Casciotta has built a career around finding that moment, and in this episode, we sit down to talk about what happens when you stop treating storytelling as decoration and start treating it as the essential work of making sense of a world that refuses to slow down. CJ and I go back years, and what has always struck me about him is the way he walks into a situation without a predetermined frame. He doesn't arrive with a deliverable in hand. He arrives with questions, and then he digs. He calls it meaning archaeology, this practice of excavating the thing under the thing until a team, a brand, a community can look at what surfaces and say, "Yes, that is what we have been trying to say." It sounds simple. It is not. And it matters now more than it ever has, because we are not living in an era starved for information or attention. We are living in an era starving for formation, for someone who can take the noise and the fragments and turn them into a narrative people can actually hold onto, repeat, and act on. We talk about Reculture, the message studio CJ runs, and what it means to call it a message studio rather than a branding agency or a content shop. The distinction is deliberate. For CJ, messaging strategy looks less like traditional brand guidelines and more like sense-making. Content looks less like posts optimized for clicks and more like what he calls artifacts, pieces that make a story legible in public. That framing alone is worth sitting with: not content as filler, not content as performance, but content as evidence of a story that actually exists beneath the surface. The conversation opens up wide when we get into the tension CJ describes as myth morphing. Every organization, every community, every family carries myths, stories that have held things together for years, sometimes generations. Right now, those myths are being stretched and pulled by cultural volatility, political upheaval, technological disruption, and the sheer speed of change. The question CJ keeps returning to is not whether these myths should change. They will. The question is how you hold onto the center of gravity, the essential truth inside the myth, while letting the rest morph so it stays relevant. And he is honest about the fact that nobody has a playbook for this. Not the smartest executive, not the most decorated strategist. We are all improvising in real time, and that admission itself feels like a kind of clarity. We spend a good stretch of the episode on AI, and what I appreciate about CJ's take is its groundedness. He is not breathless about it and he is not despairing. He is paying attention. He notices that AI has a remarkably identifiable writing voice, and that this actually creates an opening for humans who are willing to do the harder, slower work of cultivating their own voice. In a feed full of outputs that all sound the same, the thing that jumps out is the thing that feels unmistakably human. He makes a point that stopped me: these are large language models, not large meaning models. Language and meaning are not the same thing. We can automate language at scale. We cannot automate the excavation of what that language should actually mean. That work still belongs to us, and it is more valuable now precisely because it is harder to replicate. We also talk about Reculture Live, an event CJ recently produced that brought together immigrants, educators, journalists, activists, and people of faith to sit in close proximity with each other's stories. He opened the event by asking, essentially, why would a message studio put on something like this? His answer is that if you claim to help organizations make sense of this cultural moment, you have to be doing your own research. You have to get close to the people living inside the narratives that everyone else is debating from a distance. What surprised him most was the hope. Not naive optimism, but a grounded, lived-in conviction from people on the ground that there are ways through this time to something on the other side. We close with a conversation about fatherhood, because CJ and I are both dads navigating the same questions every parent faces in a world flooded with screens and shrinking attention spans. His advice is disarmingly simple and entirely earned: curiosity. Not as a buzzword, but as a daily practice. Teaching your kids to use the tools in front of them to discover rather than to numb. And he is quick to say that this starts with us. If we are not staying curious ourselves, researching what our kids are consuming, making hard calls about which platforms stay and which ones go, then we cannot expect them to develop the muscle on their own. It is the oxygen mask principle applied to meaning-making: you have to breathe it in before you can offer it to anyone else. This episode is for anyone who feels the gap between the messages swirling around them and the reality they are actually living. It is for leaders trying to align their teams around something true, for creators wondering what their voice is worth in an age of automation, and for parents who want to raise humans who stay human. CJ Casciotta is doing the work, and this conversation is a window into how and why it matters. You can learn more about CJ and Reculture at reculture.tv, find his TEDx talk, or pick up his books, Get Weird and The Forgotten Art of Being Ordinary. You can get your copy of The Narrative Edge wherever books are sold. And remember, if you are not in control of your story, well, who is? Dr. Rod Berger is a keynote speaker, moderator, producer, author, and expert in strategic storytelling. Berger’s book, The Narrative Edge: Authentic Storytelling That Meets The Moment (Wiley), hits bookstores in late 2025. He draws on more than 4,000 interviews conducted worldwide for Forbes, Entrepreneur Magazine, and Fair Observer, including a cover story about former Virgin Entertainment co-founder Jason Felts, for Los Angeles Magazine, as well as various podcasts. He has captured the narratives of investors, CEOs, renowned entrepreneurs, bestselling authors, scholars, and cultural icons such as NBA legends Magic Johnson and Charles Barkley, as well as United Nations officials and Van Halen’s Sammy Hagar, while also exploring the behind-the-scenes world of Formula 1. Berger has met with the Crown Princess of Sweden, Pope Francis, United Nations officials, and NGO leaders, covering stories of water insecurity with WaterAid, the intergenerational refugee crisis faced by displaced Sudanese in Uganda, and the impacts of child marriage in Western Africa with the Le Korsa Foundation. Berger served as a guest lecturer at Vanderbilt University’s Owen Graduate School of Management for nearly two decades, focusing on the power of storytelling in business. He has partnered with The Jim Henson Company to create a television show, The Ultimate GOAT, that combines his passion for distant lands and storytelling with culture, sports, and puppetry for family programming. Berger conducts moderated keynote events that blend storytelling with live, on-stage narratives featuring cultural icons such as Opal Lee, the recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee, and recognized as the “Grandmother” of Juneteenth. In 2023, Berger received the inaugural Pangea International Literacy Prize and delivered his TEDx Talk, “Story is Our Currency.” He lives in Franklin, Tennessee, with his wife and two children. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.