Can You Change the Music?

Sleepy Dog Creative

The creative's safe space for encouragement and commiseration. Can You Change the Music? is a podcast for self-employed creatives navigating the real highs and lows of creative work. Hosted by videographers Jeremiah Shumaker and Joe Reeves, the show features honest conversations about running a creative business—covering loneliness, burnout, money, freedom, and why we keep choosing this path. It’s a space to commiserate, celebrate wins, and figure it out together.

Episodes

  1. May 12

    VIDEO BREAKDOWN: Green Screens, Dream Scenes and a Mausoleum

    Watch the video here: https://vimeo.com/1010234023?fl=tl&fe=ec In this episode, Jeremiah Shumaker and Joe Reeves break down a video project Jeremiah created that pushed his creative limits. From shooting practical effects with curtains and green screens to building a dreamlike cemetery scene, the conversation dives deep into the filmmaking decisions behind the project. But the discussion quickly expands beyond just one video. Jeremiah and Joe explore the tension between creativity and perfectionism, the value of mastering the gear you already own, and why great storytelling rarely comes down to having the most expensive camera. Along the way, they share stories from their early days in video production, discuss the reality of “gear acquisition syndrome,” and unpack the hard truth that growth as a creative often comes from learning to execute ideas with the tools you already have. If you’re a filmmaker, videographer, or creative entrepreneur wrestling with whether your equipment—or your skills—are holding you back, this conversation offers an honest look at the process behind improving your craft. In this episode: -Breaking down a passion video project step-by-step -The creative process behind practical effects and visual storytelling -Why perfectionism can slow creative growth -The myth that better gear automatically makes better videos -Learning your tools deeply vs. constantly upgrading equipment -Early lessons from the beginning stages of a creative career

    51 min
  2. Apr 28

    The Secret Sauce to Your Creative Business

    In this episode of Can You Change the Music?, Jeremiah Shumaker and Joe Reeves unpack one of the most powerful — and often overlooked — drivers of long-term business success: relationships. From drawing hard lines around personal values to rejecting a scarcity mindset, they explore what it really means to treat clients as partners rather than transactions. Jeremiah shares why owning your value can transform your confidence as a creative, while Joe opens up about the intimidating early days of networking and how stepping into uncomfortable rooms ultimately changed the trajectory of his business. Together, they challenge the idea that you have to gatekeep knowledge or compete with everyone in your industry to win. Instead, they argue that generosity, trust, and strategic partnerships can create opportunities far beyond immediate revenue. If you’ve ever wondered how to build a sustainable creative business without losing your integrity — this conversation is for you. In this episode: -Why setting non-negotiable personal values strengthens your business -Partnership vs. service: reframing how you see client relationships -How scarcity mindset quietly sabotages growth -The surprising ROI of networking (even when it doesn’t pay immediately) -Why teaching people instead of selling them can lead to bigger opportunities -Practical ways to become more relational in your business -How generosity creates momentum you can’t manufacture

    51 min
  3. Apr 14

    From Corporate Safety to Creative Risk - with Gabe Ochoa

    What does success really look like when you step away from a stable career to chase creative freedom? In this episode, Jeremiah and Joe sit down with Gabe Ochoa, founder of MindFlix Films, to unpack the realities of leaving a corporate job, launching a business just before a global shutdown, and redefining what it means to “make it.” Gabe shares how financial uncertainty, pride-shattering moments, and unexpected opportunities helped shape not just his company — but his character. The conversation moves beyond tactics into something deeper: learning to tune out the noise, operate with intention, and stop chasing money as the primary measure of success. Instead, Gabe challenges creatives to pursue meaningful work, trust their inner compass, and build a life aligned with who they truly are. If you’ve ever questioned your path, wrestled with instability, or wondered whether the risk is worth it — this episode is a powerful reminder that growth often comes disguised as hardship. In this episode: -Leaving a 14-year corporate career to pursue creative freedom -Starting a business right before COVID — and adapting to survive -Why income instability forces real personal growth -Diversifying your creative services without losing your identity -Learning to say no to misaligned clients -Shifting your mindset from chasing money to chasing intention -The role of gratitude in avoiding the entrepreneurial “rat race” -Building character through adversity -Loving yourself enough to ignore the noise RESOURCES: Connect with Gabe: Website: https://www.mindflixfilms.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mindflixfilms/ Email: mindflixfilms@gmail.com

    53 min
  4. Mar 31

    Will AI Replace Creative Businesses?

    The following description was written with AI: AI is everywhere right now — and if you’re a creative business owner, you’ve probably wondered whether it’s a threat, a tool, or something in between. In this episode, Jeremiah and Joe dive headfirst into the AI conversation, unpacking the fear many creatives feel while challenging the all-or-nothing mindset surrounding new technology. They explore what AI can actually replace (and what it never can), how smart business owners are leveraging it to improve workflows, and why authenticity may become even more valuable in an AI-saturated world. Along the way, they share real-world examples from their own businesses — including moments where AI genuinely saved a project — and wrestle with the emotional tension creatives face when hard-earned skills suddenly feel less rare. If you’ve been unsure whether to resist AI or embrace it, this conversation offers a grounded, honest perspective: learn it, use it wisely, but never forget that human connection is still the foundation of meaningful creative work. In this episode: -The real fear creatives have about AI — and whether it’s justified -Why people who know how to use AI may outpace those who ignore it -The difference between efficiency and impact-How AI can strengthen (not weaken) your creative business -Jobs that may genuinely be threatened — and where opportunity still exists -Why authenticity is becoming more valuable, not less -Leveraging AI to buy back time without sacrificing creativity -The future divide between “cheap content” and meaningful storytelling Send questions or crazy stories to canyouchangethemusic@gmail.com

    55 min
  5. Mar 17

    From Fired to Founder: How Ben DeLaughter Built His Video Business From Scratch

    In this episode, Jeremiah Shumaker and Joe Reeves sit down with videographer and business owner Ben DeLaughter to talk about the roller coaster of creative entrepreneurship. From getting unexpectedly fired during COVID to nearly draining his savings while chasing a dream, Ben shares the honest realities of building a video business from the ground up. Our conversation dives deep into pricing struggles, inconsistent revenue, client relationships, marketing strategy, and the constant tension between creative passion and financial survival. Ben opens up about the moments that made him question everything—and why he still believes the risk is worth it. If you’ve ever wondered whether self-employment is freedom or chaos, this episode is a candid look at what it actually takes to make it work. In this episode: -The reality check that comes when savings run low-Why cheap clients often cost you more -Learning to price your work with confidence -The shift from “video creator” to business strategist-Retainers, ROI, and proving your value -Adapting to trends like vertical video and AI -The mindset required to survive the ups and downs of self-employment -Why betting on yourself is still worth it RESOURCES: Connect with Ben: Website: https://www.blueeyedvisuals.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/blueeyedvisuals/ Email: ben@blueeyedvisuals.com Send questions or crazy stories to canyouchangethemusic@gmail.com

    56 min
  6. Mar 3

    Why Freelance Work Can Feel So Isolating (And What Helps)

    In the last episode, we opened up a raw conversation about loneliness in creative work. This week, we pick that thread back up—and go deeper.Jeremiah and Joe continue unpacking what it actually feels like to run a creative business when the isolation, pressure, and mental weight start to compound. They talk honestly about depression, burnout, unrealistic expectations, and the spiral that can happen when everything feels like it’s falling behind at once.From giving yourself permission to “sit in the suck,” to building rhythms and structures that force you back into community, this episode moves from diagnosis to practical steps. The guys discuss why creatives need structure more than they think, how to create margin without sabotaging your business, and why choosing your “hard” is the real freedom of self-employment.They also balance the heaviness with perspective—talking about wins, financial realities, the upside of creative ownership, and why, despite everything, neither of them would trade this path for a traditional job.If you’re a freelancer, videographer, photographer, or creative entrepreneur who’s ever felt alone, overwhelmed, or stuck in your own head—this conversation is for you.In this episode:-Continuing the conversation on loneliness from the previous episode-Depression, burnout, and the mental spiral of creative work-Why “doing the right things” can feel impossible when you’re exhausted-Giving yourself permission to rest without quitting-The importance of structure, rhythm, and external accountability-Choosing your hard: creative freedom vs. traditional stability-Financial highs, lows, and what success actually looks like-Why the possibility of the future keeps creatives goingLINKS TO RESOURCES:Jeremiah's Movie Podcast "For the Love of Film":https://open.spotify.com/show/4dsI8Lj02ghzAmOfydfMls?si=d1303944002d4fa9

    57 min
  7. Feb 17

    The Hidden Cost of Running a Creative Business

    Loneliness isn’t something most creatives expect when they start their own business—but it’s often the thing that hits the hardest.In this episode of Can You Change the Music?, Jeremiah Shumaker and Joe Reeves get painfully honest about the isolation that comes with running a creative business. What starts as a conversation about client feedback and the dreaded phrase “Can you change the music?” quickly unravels into something deeper: working alone for long hours, carrying financial pressure by yourself, laying off friends, and sitting with the weight of decisions that no one else can make for you.They talk about the emotional toll of self-employment, the difference between creative freedom and creative burnout, and why owning a business can feel far lonelier than any 9–5 ever did. From dark editing rooms to sleepless nights, this episode explores the quiet parts of creative work that rarely make it onto Instagram.If you’re a videographer, filmmaker, or self-employed creative who’s ever felt isolated, overwhelmed, or unsure how long you can keep carrying it alone—this conversation will feel uncomfortably familiar.In this episode:-The hidden loneliness of running a creative business-Working in isolation and spending long hours alone-Financial pressure and carrying the full weight of responsibility-Laying off friends and the emotional cost of leadership-Creative pride vs. client needs-Burnout, mental health, and creative exhaustion-Why self-employment can feel lonelier than a 9–5-Finding meaning, boundaries, and connection in creative workSend questions, ideas, and stories to read on the show to canyouchangethemusic@gmail.com

    53 min
  8. Feb 3

    The Question Every Creative Has to Answer

    In the first episode of Can You Change the Music?, hosts Jeremiah Shumaker and Joe Reeves kick off the podcast by asking what might be the most important question for any creative: why? Both coming from backgrounds in music, ministry, and video production, Jeremiah and Joe share the winding paths that led them into self-employment — from recording studios that didn’t last, to leaving full-time jobs, to realizing that creative freedom comes with real pressure, risk, and responsibility. This episode digs into the difference between being passionate about creativity and building a sustainable creative business. They talk openly about money, lifestyle design, entrepreneurship, storytelling, burnout, experimentation, and why “being the best” isn’t always the goal — adding real value is. Rather than offering a polished success story, this conversation sets the tone for the podcast: honest, reflective, and grounded in lived experience. If you’re a freelancer, videographer, photographer, or creative considering working for yourself (or already in it and questioning everything), this episode is for you. In this episode: -Why defining your “why” matters more than your skillset -Creative freedom vs. the 9–5 mindset -Passion, practicality, and choosing video as a career -Solving real problems vs. making “pretty” work -Experimentation, niching down, and avoiding aimless growth -Why success doesn’t happen by accident This is the foundation for everything Can You Change the Music? is about — building creative careers that actually support the lives we want to live. Send questions, ideas, and stories to read on the show to canyouchangethemusic@gmail.com LINKS TO CONTENT: Jeremiah's narrative podcast, Over the Edge https://open.spotify.com/episode/7JAP213po3dbk8jkNXl8K1?si=5d7a1b147b7e41bf

    56 min

About

The creative's safe space for encouragement and commiseration. Can You Change the Music? is a podcast for self-employed creatives navigating the real highs and lows of creative work. Hosted by videographers Jeremiah Shumaker and Joe Reeves, the show features honest conversations about running a creative business—covering loneliness, burnout, money, freedom, and why we keep choosing this path. It’s a space to commiserate, celebrate wins, and figure it out together.