Craft and Chaos

A Weird Show for Weirdos Who Make Things How do you make art when the world feels like it’s on fire? Welcome to Craft and Chaos, the podcast for creative minds trying to thrive in the madness. Whether you write, paint, build, perform, or daydream ideas that keep you up at night, this show is your companion through the wild ride of making something out of nothing. Join Misty, Pete, Kyle, and Ryan — a ragtag team of creative types — as they dive into the joy, frustration, and beautiful mess of the artistic process. From the spark of inspiration to the reality of “I actually made this,” they’ll share honest stories, epic wins, total flops, and the weird, wonderful chaos that comes with being possessed by a new idea. This isn’t just about craft. It’s about surviving the noise, embracing your weird, and making cool stuff anyway. Wherever the strangest podcasts are found.

Episodios

  1. The Lorem Ipsum of Our Future

    HACE 1 DÍA

    The Lorem Ipsum of Our Future

    This week on Craft and Chaos, Pete, Misty, Kyle, and Ryan take a running jump into the boiling cauldron of AI, authorship, and the existential dread of wondering if your book draft is secretly moonlighting as training data for Skynet’s moody younger cousin. Pete opens the show mourning the discovery that Google Docs is essentially that roommate who “borrows” your clothes without asking—except instead of your hoodie, it’s your creative soul. Kyle yanks all his writing off the internet faster than you can say “Blue Harvest.” Ryan insists on contractual AI abstinence clauses like he’s starring in the world’s least sexy prenup. And Misty? She just admits she’s given up—then immediately delivers a sermon on theft, cognitive diminishment, and the performative weirdness of social media that makes you wonder if Instagram is actually just a giant gaslighting experiment. But this isn’t all doom and gloom! The crew pivots from paranoia to possibility, arguing that the one thing AI can’t replicate is weirdness. Distinct human mess. The sentences with too many M-dashes. The sketch about sperm redistribution. The Shakespearean play about late-night TV hosts fighting for the throne. The legendary giant squid of Lancashire. This is the content the robots can’t touch, and it’s glorious. Then, as if that weren’t enough chaos, they unleash The Working Titles Game—where Hollywood’s real, baffling project code names are guessed, mocked, and improved. “Starbeast” becomes Alien. “Rory’s First Kiss” turns out to be The Dark Knight. And everyone learns that “Group Hug” is somehow The Avengers. If you’ve ever wondered whether you’re a “face” or a “hands,” if you’ve contemplated anonymity as artistic freedom, or if you just want to hear Pete suddenly turn a sketch character Jewish halfway through, this episode has everything. It’s part therapy session, part roast, part TED Talk on weirdness, and part game show fever dream. By the end, you’ll either feel inspired to go make something beautifully strange… or just jealous that you’re not the one writing a half-hour comedy called Sperm Robin Hood. Links and Notes People & Creators: John ScalziAustin KleonJohn AugustUrsula K. Le Guin Daily Writing RoutineMiranda July - Author of All FoursWhite Hot Heist (2022) - the one where Bowen Yang does that thing with that stuff.Articles & Resources: "So Your Kid Wants to be a Twitch Streamer" - Wired article discussing "faces vs. hands""Downton Arby's"“Night of the Squid”Creative Works & Projects: Welcome to Night ValeSwashbuckling Ladies Debate SocietyGo Help YourselfHeadstoneMarvel Movie MinuteArcher Thorne superhero seriesTools & Platforms Mentioned: Wattpad - Early writing platform, later acquired and data concerns raisedAutoPod/AutoCut - AI-powered podcast editing tools for multi-camera switchingConcepts Discussed: The Dark Side of Cognitive DiminishmentThe Dunbar number (00:00) - Welcome to Craft and Chaos (02:40) - How have you changed because of AI? (12:07) - "Sponsor:" Headstone with Pete Wright (14:04) - MAJOR SEGMENT ALERT (01:09:26) - "Sponsor:" The Audio Fiction Convention (01:10:57) - Working Title Game!

    1 h y 23 min
  2. Dying to Cobble

    18 SEP

    Dying to Cobble

    This week on Craft and Chaos, Misty wrangles the chaos as the team dives into the comfort of cozy mysteries, the horror of genre snobbery, and the existential unraveling that occurs when you go viral and absolutely nothing happens. We kick off with a round of “what are you enjoying,” which—shockingly—turns into a love letter to Murderbot, Idris Elba, and Helen Mirren solving crimes while wearing cozy cardigans. Pete accidentally reboots his Apple TV algorithm. Ryan makes new famous friends. Kyle shares a Netflix recommendation so charming it may cause spontaneous Britishness. And Misty just got back from Edinburgh Fringe with a play that involved one tire and possibly a direct hotline to the gods of storytelling. Then we take on a deceptively gentle listener question: “How do you find a supportive creative community when yours has turned toxic?” Cue the most emotionally validating roundtable since that time you cried in your car after improv class. The crew gets real about vibe checks, class-based writing groups, running far away from bad energy, and possibly forming a new community by declaring “you’re in my group now” to strangers in a bookstore café. We have a rousing round of Craft Confessions this week and we unpack a brutally honest essay from Amy McNee, whose appearance on a massive podcast should have led to skyrocketing book sales. It didn’t. At all. And that leads us into a real conversation about what success actually looks like when the “big break” doesn’t break anything. Finally, we ruin classic movies. Bet you’ll have Little Women: Too Little, Too Women. living rent free you-know-where when it’s over. Links & Notes Shows, Movies, and Books HijackOnly Murders in the BuildingHigh PotentialKnives Out / Glass Onion / Wake Up Dead ManThursday Murder Club (based on the books by Richard Osman)Murderbot Diaries by Martha WellsMurderbot Audiobooks via GraphicAudioSandstorm by James RollinsA Letter to Lyndon B. Johnson or God, Whoever Reads This First by Xhloe and NatashaWriters & Creators Mentioned Amie McNee (Author of We Need Your Art)"I went on one of the biggest podcast in the world" by Amie McNeeBonus D&D Reference Deborah Ann Woll explains D&D to Jon Bernthal (00:00) - Welcome to Craft and Chaos (01:04) - What are you enjoying right now? (09:57) - Listener Questions! (23:22) - "Sponsor" The Other Orange (24:54) - Craft Confessions (37:15) - What's the Bump? Tell me what's a-happenin' ... How do you define success? (57:48) - "Sponsor:" Your Favorite Comfort Show (58:59) - The Terrible Sequel Generator

    1 h y 7 min
  3. Build Your Own Weather

    3 SEP

    Build Your Own Weather

    Ryan opens with a philosophical gauntlet: if a podcast intro is just a throat-clearing, why does it somehow set the weather for everything that follows? Consider this episode a field test in micro-moods and momentum—the kind where vibes double as both a bit and a manifesto. From there, the conversation becomes a collage of modern creative survival: the strange dignity of being the “control group” in a gym commercial; the emotional origami of querying gatekeepers who want both your voice and your compliance; and the quietly radioactive question of whether the world owes artists anything besides indifference and, occasionally, a polite clap. Creativity here is a set of rituals that smuggle you back to yourself: five-minute sprints, a piano you only half-remember how to love, a kitchen dance that resets your nervous system, a mantra that lets your brain slip past security. Regret shows up, as it always does, wearing the cologne of “what if,” and gets gently escorted to the door by the older, kinder realization that showing up late is still showing up. We even run a cultural Turing test—romance novel or death metal band?—and discover that genre is just marketing in a studded leather jacket. There’s also a quiet benediction tucked inside the jokes: creativity keeps working in the back room even when you can’t get to the front. Life surges, rooms empty, kids drive themselves, and the noise floor drops. So you learn to build your own weather. Print your own book if you must. Bless your past self, absolve the cringe, and keep making weird things for the weirdos who will find them. That’s the show: not a lesson plan... a permission slip. (00:00) - This is a Craft and Chaos Intro (01:10) - Pete his hired as "Before" (03:11) - Listener Questions (03:22) - What is a Query? (12:36) - Does the world owe you an audience? (19:42) - "Sponsor:" The Other Orange (20:40) - How do you create when life is full... and possibly a little boring (39:34) - "Sponsor:" It's All Good. (40:38) - The Games Portion: Romance V Death Metal Band (53:00) - Marker 10 (54:20) - A Writer's Rec

    59 min
  4. Brooksie Skittles and the Great Granite Glow-up

    20 AGO

    Brooksie Skittles and the Great Granite Glow-up

    If you’ve ever thought “My life would be so much easier if I just changed my name to Wanda Milkshake,” then you already understand the energy of this episode. Kyle has an existential crisis about his last name, which, as it turns out, is basically a bureaucratic cover-up from Ellis Island. Misty makes an airtight case for Lucille Ball not just as a comedy legend, but as the secret godmother of Star Trek. Pete reveals that Steve Jobs personally ruined his ability to touch a Windows machine without crying, and Ryan teaches us why Spider-Man should never give a TED Talk while being punched in the face. Along the way, we invent an entire pulp noir character—Brooksie Skittles—because apparently none of us can be trusted with free time. We also discover that your true adult-entertainment name is your grandmother’s first name plus the last dessert you ate, which is both hilarious and a devastating reminder that you’ve been eating Pop-Tarts for dinner. But beneath the jokes, there’s a point here: inspiration is weird, inconsistent, and often arrives from places that make no sense at all. Whether it’s bittersweet sitcoms, Brené Brown’s radical vulnerability, or Prince literally existing as a one-man thunderstorm, these are the figures chiseling away at our creative DNA. And if that means our Mount Rushmore ends up looking less like granite and more like a fever dream carved out of pudding, well, at least it’s honest. Mentioned in the Episode Scrubs (TV series)Mission Impossible 3 (film)The Gone Away World by Nick HarkawaySpider-Man comics (assorted runs)John & Hank Green (Vlogbrothers, authors)Douglas Adams (The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy)Prince (musician, icon)Steve Jobs (Apple)Frances Marion (screenwriter)Lucille Ball (I Love Lucy)Phoebe Waller-Bridge (Fleabag, Killing Eve)Brené Brown (Daring Greatly, shame research)Aaron Sorkin (The West Wing)Dirk Maggs (audio drama producer)Peter David (comic/Star Trek novelist)Jane Espenson (Buffy, Battlestar Galactica)Dying for Sex (Hulu series & podcast)Onyx Storm by Rebecca YarrosAdults (Hulu/Disney+)The Residence (Netflix) (00:00) - Welcome to Craft and Chaos! (00:54) - What's In a Name? (18:38) - "Sponsor:" Sitting in the Dark — A Horror Podcast (20:04) - Your Rushmore (55:36) - "Sponsor:" Problem Attic!

    1 h y 3 min
  5. You Are A Most Important Tool

    6 AGO

    You Are A Most Important Tool

    Let’s be honest: most creative podcasts want to sell you the idea that if you just buy the right thing, you’ll magically become a creative genius. Which, to be clear, is absolute nonsense—because if that were true, this entire episode would have been recorded by a $700 Remarkable tablet and a foam ball named Chaotica, not four humans with questionable impulse control and deeply specific opinions about keyboards. But instead, it’s us: Misty, Kyle, Ryan, and Pete—offering an unfiltered digital show-and-tell of the actual tools we use to write novels and plays, make podcasts, and summon demons via cursed potatoes. Some of us love long walks, others rely on mechanical keyboards, and one of us edits audio like a gremlin in the night using software that no longer legally exists. We kick things off with Kyle’s philosophical rant about the tyranny of software subscriptions and his never-ending quest for open-source purity. Misty shares her evolution from USB mic amateur to Rodecaster Pro sorceress, while Ryan maps out how a good chair, a great playlist, and noise-canceling headphones can turn a coffee shop into a cathedral of inspiration (as long as there’s no beer involved). Pete, naturally, has turned his studio into a voice-activated spaceship, powered by Hue lights, Obsidian, and a potato that literally shocks people. Also, somewhere in here, someone gets electrocuted and someone else quotes Clarissa Pinkola Estés, which pretty much sums us up. We wrap with our “Worst Then Best Advice” roundtable, where each of us confesses the terrible guidance we’ve received (hello, “rewrite your script from memory”) and the wisdom we’ve clung to when the work gets hard. The truth is, no matter what tools you use—expensive or scrappy, analog or pixelated—the most powerful tool is you. Which, yes, sounds like a motivational poster from a dentist’s office, but in this context, it’s also deeply true. Some of the Tools, Services & Shiny Things Mentioned: Hardware: Rodecaster Pro IIShure SM7B MicrophoneKeychron Q1 Pro Mechanical KeyboardInsta360 Link CameraHue Smart LightsCommand StripsDJI Osmo Mobile GimbalSoftware & Services: ObsidianPlottrPagesReaper Audio EditorAuphonicAudacityDaVinci ResolveCodaTrelby Screenwriting SoftwareFade InScrivener (not recommended by most of us)Honorable Mentions: Kaotica Eyeball (no, seriously)Remarkable TabletKindle ScribeHighland 2 (formerly loved, now subscription)Celtx (ditto) (00:00) - Welcome to Craft and Chaos (01:14) - A Heartwarming Story of Disappointment (12:36) - "Sponsor:" That Song (14:13) - The Craft of Craft (55:30) - "Sponsor:" Wall (56:52) - Worst... then best advice

    1 h y 14 min
  6. Dressage for the Creative Soul

    23 JUL

    Dressage for the Creative Soul

    This week on Craft and Chaos, we asked a simple question: how do you keep making things when the world feels like it’s melting into a fine mist of hopelessness, bad headlines, and that one guy in your group chat who just did that one thing with that one person and now won’t shut up about it? Misty takes the hosting reins and invites Pete, Kyle, and Ryan to explore what it means to create during a time when existential dread has gone from a background hum to a full-blown dubstep remix. We begin with a trip to Phoenix Fan Fusion, where Ryan’s book sold out, Kyle got to unleash his inner Marvel nerd, and apparently Hayden Christensen is still drawing a crowd. Then we dive straight into the emotional lava pit: Pete confesses to skipping the premiere of the short film that got him his first job (because self-doubt is a sneaky bastard), Misty reads poetry that is wonderful surely didn’t come from the pen of someone who claims not to be a poet, and Kyle shares a fan fiction stage script that accidentally found a moment of grace in the middle of a ridiculous showdown involving electric pencil sharpeners. Yes, that sentence was real. Finally, Ryan brings a punk rock script for public reading and it goes about as punk rock as you can imagine it would with... you know... us. Also: haunted British girls endorse self-help podcasts. There’s a tangent about dressage that spirals out of control. And we all admit that five-star reviews are less about algorithmic reach and more about soothing our delicate, trembling egos. So if you’re out there wondering whether any of this creative nonsense actually matters—whether your fanfic, your sketchbook, your unfinished novel or weird little voice memo has value—the answer is yes. Because it matters to you. And maybe, just maybe, it will matter to someone else too. Even if it takes them ten years and a random internet stumble to find it. Go ahead. Make something weird. And for the love of God, review the podcast. (00:00) - Welcome to Craft and Chaos (03:52) - The Phoenix Fan Fusion Report (15:15) - "Sponsor" The Other Orange (16:50) - How DO You Make Art When The World is On Fire? (39:42) - "Sponsor" Go Help Yourself Podcast! (41:49) - The Proudnesses

    1 h y 23 min
  7. Touching the Wily Breadbasket

    9 JUL

    Touching the Wily Breadbasket

    Rejection. It’s what’s for dinner. And breakfast. And sometimes, if you’re lucky, brunch. In this episode, Ryan, Misty, Kyle, and Pete dive headfirst into the creative gauntlet of being told, in increasingly poetic ways, that their babies are ugly. Kyle kicks things off with a rejection letter so well-crafted it deserves its own rejection from the Pushcart Prize. Misty breaks down the unglamorous labor of being a gatekeeper at Lionsgate, Ryan shares a deeply relatable five-minute sadness rule, and Pete reveals he processes pain through footwear and paper products. As one does. From there, we launch into the writer’s block TED Talk no one asked for but everyone needs. Ryan makes a compelling case that writer’s block isn’t a real thing—it’s just fear in a trench coat—and the gang explores the odd rituals, inner critics, and coffee shop migrations that accompany the daily quest to get words on a page. There’s talk of NaNoWriMo (RIP), vomit drafts, and why sometimes you just need to write the worst possible version so Future You can come in with a cape and fix it. Then, like any respectable artistic salon, the episode devolves gloriously into chaotic Mad Libs. First, Misty guides the group through a make-your-own creative process confession. Then Pete unleashes a faux-pretentious artist statement so disturbingly accurate it may have been plagiarized from a Brooklyn gallery wall. It includes polyester, Marco Polo, Aunt Pat’s canning club, and the philosophical meaning of “baby squirrel and rollerblades.” Plus, you’ll hear two new “Sponsors”—one from the return of The Other Orange and another featuring Gandalf’s Discount Used Automobiles, because of course. If you leave this episode feeling totally normal, congratulations: you’re doing it wrong. (00:00) - Welcome to Craft and Chaos (02:20) - The Sweet Sound of Rejection (20:52) - "Sponsor:" The Other Orange (22:41) - My Wily Breadbasket (28:28) - Writer's Block (45:41) - "Sponsor:" Gandalf's Fine Somewhat Used Discount Vehicles (48:30) - ANOTHER Mad Lib

    1 h y 5 min
  8. TV’s Patrick Duffy Has Entered the Chat

    25 JUN

    TV’s Patrick Duffy Has Entered the Chat

    In this episode of Craft and Chaos, the team barrels past the sophomore slump and directly into a full-on identity crisis, complete with pseudonyms, fake sponsors, and a trivia contest where the prize is fractional horse ownership. Kyle Olson hosts Misty Stinnett, Ryan Dalton, and Pete Wright in a wildly meandering conversation about creative resilience, the dangers of scorpions, and why “bookmark” might be the most emotionally accurate verb of 2025. They debate the ethics of banana bread espionage, perform a cold read of a sewage-plant noir mystery written under the influence of neurotoxins, and invent a sponsor who promises not just goods and services, but also existential dread. Somewhere in there, Misty becomes a certified coach, Pete learns about Jeff Bridges’ jazz career, and Ryan achieves his dream of invoking TV’s Patrick Duffy for absolutely no reason at all. It’s absurd. It’s sincere. It’s exactly what happens when creative people try to talk about their work and end up inventing a shadow organization called The Other Orange. Pancakes are eternal. Footnotes are emotional. And yes, creative survival is still possible—even if your leg is on fire. Subscribe wherever chaos is allowed. Support the show at https://trustory.fm/join, and we’ll send you the rest of the horse.* *We will not. (00:00) - Welcome to Craft and Chaos (00:54) - Introductions... again. (05:07) - New Rules: Footnotes and Bookmarks (10:52) - SPONSOR: Pancakes (13:27) - Misty's Trivia Corner (23:24) - *Footnote: What can we learn about TV's Patrick Duffy? (26:50) - Storytime with Kyle

    49 min
  9. Practice In Public

    11 JUN

    Practice In Public

    Welcome to Craft and Chaos, the podcast that dares to ask: what if a bunch of creative overachievers decided to work through their deep-seated psychological baggage… into a microphone? In this first episode, Misty, Kyle, Pete, and Ryan gather around the digital campfire and do the unthinkable—start something new, on purpose. What follows is a freewheeling, earnest, and often hilarious journey into imposter syndrome, perfectionism, and the strangely comforting fact that Julia Child didn’t publish her first cookbook until she was 49. You know. For the rest of us. Pete confesses his creative process is fueled by dread and French teachers long dead. Kyle relives his artistic awakening via a Shakespearean pep talk from Lawrence Fishburne. Ryan, the most emotionally stable of the bunch (suspicious), calmly denies imposter syndrome exists while quietly dominating the author game under two names. And Misty—a princess by day, TV writer by night—drops the mic on late bloomers, Cinderella in a parking garage, and what it means to create when there’s no safety net, just drive, deadlines, and cheap wigs. Along the way, you’ll hear ads from mysterious sponsors (we think?), deeply human moments wrapped in neurotic punchlines, and a shared promise: this show might not make us rich, but it will be real. And occasionally, it’ll be about ducks à l’orange. So pull up a chair, bring your weirdest ideas, and enjoy the slightly lumpy, gloriously flavorful start to a podcast that honors the chaos of creation—and the creators still figuring it out in public. (00:00) - Welcome to Craft and Chaos (00:54) - Kyle Olson is Dramatic (01:20) - Ryan Dalton is Acclaimed (02:07) - Misty Stinnet Produces (03:04) - Pete Write has Podcast and Book (05:44) - "Sponsor" The Other Orange (07:23) - Pete's Thing: The Aire of the Imposter (29:38) - Late Bloomers! (36:32) - Buy "This Last Adventure" by Ryan Dalton (38:07) - Perfectionism (01:00:25) - The Visit (01:03:06) - Reach Out! https://CraftAndChaos.fun

    1 h y 5 min

Acerca de

A Weird Show for Weirdos Who Make Things How do you make art when the world feels like it’s on fire? Welcome to Craft and Chaos, the podcast for creative minds trying to thrive in the madness. Whether you write, paint, build, perform, or daydream ideas that keep you up at night, this show is your companion through the wild ride of making something out of nothing. Join Misty, Pete, Kyle, and Ryan — a ragtag team of creative types — as they dive into the joy, frustration, and beautiful mess of the artistic process. From the spark of inspiration to the reality of “I actually made this,” they’ll share honest stories, epic wins, total flops, and the weird, wonderful chaos that comes with being possessed by a new idea. This isn’t just about craft. It’s about surviving the noise, embracing your weird, and making cool stuff anyway. Wherever the strangest podcasts are found.

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