Things I Said Out Loud

Andrew Kooman

A podcast where creativity and faith collide, featuring original content and unique conversations with critically acclaimed writer and producer Andrew Kooman. www.andrewkooman.com

  1. Jan 5

    I'm trying a daily fitness challenge in 2026. The question is, should I film it?

    I want to lean more into fitness this year. Hence the (potentially) embarrassing and ridiculous video, in which I: - Do 40 standard pushups - Do 1.5 minutes of plank - Almost succeed at doing a 2 minute wall squat (watch til the end for the pain!) Why am I doing this? I'm not a fitness bro, and I'm no personal trainer. But I have a body, and guess what, it sits to much at a desk, creating inputs in digital space. No matter what you think about AI, one thing we all know is that it can't do the fitness for you!It's not so much a resolution I'm undertaking, as it as it is a system or habit that I want to put into place. Think James Clear. Scott Adams. Dr. Caroline Leaf. People who talk convincingly about shaping behaviour through setting up systems that are easy to incorporate into the life you're always living.I did that last year with my writing. In 2025, I made a commitment to wake up early everyday (at 5:07 a.m., to be precise). For a quiet time, to walk, and to write.I didn't have to do it but I wanted to. For myself, to see what would emerge, to create. When I look back, I'm so grateful I made this choice. I actually kept to it on most weekdays.It was a year of my highest creative output to date. I created more than 150 pieces of original content. Simply by setting up a system conducive to my life. So, I thought I'd try the same thing, but with fitness. As a dad with a busy life, a busy career, and a busy creative schedule, I find it hard to get to the gym. I walk 10k steps a day (thanks to my early morning routine), but because I can't get to the gym easily based on my family and work schedule, weights and anything other than the walking falls to the wayside. But I, like you, can actually take 10 minutes to get off my butt, move away from the computer, and do a sit up or two. So, that's what I'm doing here. I'm recording it to see if it will help motivate anyone else. I'm toying with the idea of making this a regular livestream so that I force myself to be accountable to do it. Let me know what you think. Want to join me? I'm going to attempt to do this all year. Not sure yet if I'll do it on or off camera... but here's one video for now. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.andrewkooman.com

    9 min
  2. 06/05/2025

    20 weeks in - I can't believe it!

    I’m not talking about a baby… at least not that kind of baby. My new fiction series, The 49, hit a milestone this week. I’ve published 20 parts since I decided to release it week-over-week as a serial on Substack in January. Have you ever had a story you just had to tell? I almost couldn’t sleep at night or pay attention to people in conversations because this concept was always on my mind, growing, building, forming. In the video above I break down key plot points, share some of the backstory, and basically just geek out over the process of creating the series. The 49 is a supernatural and political thriller that takes place in the not-too-distant future. It’s a story ripped from tomorrow’s headlines. Forty-Nine is the last President inaugurated in the US. It’s the span of terrible days after the global comms black out when the world was reshaped. It’s the number of strange supernatural phenomena that appear around the globe. Let me be honest… It’s a little terrifying to create and release original fictional content in this way. It’s a big story, and while I have much of it mapped out, so much of it is being created as subscribers read it! And, because there’s a deadline every week, I need to find the time and a rhythm to write it. Some Mondays I’m white knuckling it and barely hit the deadline. But I’m proud to say I’ve hit them all so far (but did take Victoria day off). The schedule is, let’s say, invigorating: * On Mondays I release a new chapter of the story (that paid subscribers get first). * I create the cover art for each episode and release it too. * Tuesday’s a new audio version of a recent episode drops. * Friday I make the post available to free subscribers. * Then rinse and repeat each week. As a thank you to all my subscribers, I wanted to give you access the moment each new chapter is released for 30 days. Get premium access to The 49 for 30 days, for FREE! No charge, no strings attached. Where did it come from? The story was unexpectedly birthed out of Contesting, a story I wrote for the stage. If you subscribed to Things I Wrote Down from the very beginning, you may be familiar with it. It’s the story of two people who wake up in a room, with no memory of how they got there or who they are. They slowly piece together the events of a tragic, shared past as strange objects appear. These objects prompt their memory. They realize they are contestants on The Game. And that one of them is guilty of a crime. The audience—watching on devices all through the Corridor where the contestants’ interaction is streamed—will decide who lives and who dies. Only one will survive. The 49 emerged as I started to wonder what the world outside that small and terrible game show set was like. I wanted to explore the context of these two characters I fell in love with while writing their story. Celebrating 20 parts and sharing one of my favourites so far To celebrate hitting this milestone, writing content over the last five months, I wanted to share an exclusive excerpt with you that I enjoyed writing (and to give you a taste of what you’ll get if you subscribe). The following is an excerpt from Part 17, in which we learn how Diez broke the story on pedo priests and came into possession of a famous sculpture. Salvaged Nokias and Banksy's Cardinal Sin - Part 17 There were ways that information was passed between parties, secrets, even in the surveillance state of Corridor West. As the billionaire fiefdoms emerged around the world and the security state reached its peak, a new market of secrets emerged. The priesthood found a way around the invasiveness, became part of a flourishing, hidden network of ideas and communications that flowed around the world, between walled-off corridors, like a quiet, underground river. There had been a resurgence of old tech, nostalgic devices before the blackout, when brains and feeds were flooded with so much messaging and information that people were hungry for a simpler day. And there was an entire black market of information that boomed outside the walls of Corridor Afrique where so many old, discarded devices lived in tech graveyards. They were resurrected like an army of dry bones, brought to life through the rebooting of old Nokias and Motorolas. Flip phones with qwerty boards; pariahs that became desired. An order of African priests introduced the method of communication to Western priests, and an infrastructure of communication was christened. Priests were good at secrets. The confession booth was a lair where they could flourish. While the method of communication was used to protect networks of believers from exposure, to relay messages of encouragement and scripture in areas where speech and ideas freely shared became dangerous to power-hungry despots, there were more nefarious priests who used the same tech. Diez first got wind of these information networks when he first started writing Collars and Crimes. Pedo priests used the secret communication system too, hiding SIMs in crucifixes and rosaries. They salvaged old Nokias that didn’t connect to 7G, saved messages to SIMs. Read them on the off-network devices. It was outdated tradecraft that was a genius subversion. Diez’s most viral article, before the blackout, detailed how the flow of information was passed globally, revealing guilty priests and politicians. Faithful bishops and priests shared scriptures of encouragement to a the remnant: which priests were trustworthy and which priests they should watch out for. He, of course, never revealed names of the faithful priests. And he never disclosed how the SIMs were hidden. But every time he stripped before the guards and the cameras on set of the Games to meet a contestant and enter the confessional, he had himself to thank. The security precaution was meant to ensure information couldn’t be carried in or out of the room. The strange veneration the Gov gave to the the cross—the almost superstitious honour among non-believers for sacred symbols because of the Phos and how the inexplicable power that God displayed on earth—allowed the secret delivery mechanism to continue to hide in plain sight. People in power like the Gov just didn’t want to mess with that power, especially since the Humbling. Diez hung Jonas’ crucifix over the edge of the Banksy statue in the corner of his study. Keep hiding in plain sight, he thought. The owner of the modified 18th century bust–whose stone face was cut off and replaced with bathroom tiles had gifted Diez the piece as a thank you for his reporting on pedo priests. The Cardinal of Sin bust was one of his favourite pieces in his growing collection. It was a constant reminder to Diez of who he was, where he came from, what’s possible when you speak the truth and what’s possible when you abuse the position given to you. Diez hung Jonas’ simple wooden crucifix so that it laid over the stone cross on the sculpture, careful that it wasn’t in view of his webcam when he delivered his homily. It had been years since Diez saw a SIM, back when he was a journalist. He himself had never received or delivered one as a priest. Even if he wanted to he didn’t have a device or a location to safely power up the old tech without detection. Now he had some sleuthing to do. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.andrewkooman.com

    13 min
  3. 05/15/2025

    Take the creative leap - an interview with Daniel Kooman

    Daniel Kooman is busy these days. Having just led one of the most successful faith-film crowdfunds of all time, he’s now gearing up to film a new biblical epic about the prophet Daniel. In this interview Daniel shares about how film festivals were key milestones in his creative journey, the kind of writing that lights his fire, and why you need to take the leap of faith and just create. Daniel is one of the judges of the Things I Wrote Down Poetry Contest this year,lending his expertise to select the three winning poems. About Daniel Kooman Daniel Kooman is an award-winning film producer who has travelled to more than thirty countries to tell stories that challenge and inspire. His work has been featured on platforms such as The Huffington Post, the BBC, Newswire and ABC, amongst many other international, national and local podcasts, journals, magazines and newspapers. Storytelling has become a platform for Daniel and his wife Christy to invest in children, empowering orphans in Tanzania and restoring hope to young women trafficked in Thailand. He produces films for Unveil Studios alongside his brothers Matthew and Andrew, and is the director of the feature film She Has A Name (Amazon Prime) and the documentary series Dream: Find Your Significance (Amazon, Christian Cinema) and Breath of Life, which, along with the other films I just mentioned you can watch at UnveilTV, our niche streaming platform. Daniel and his wife Christy live on Vancouver Island, Canada with their daughter, Rosie and son, Judah. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.andrewkooman.com

    19 min
  4. 04/24/2025

    The era of the biblical film is NOW

    I’m so excited to share with you the most recent trailer for DANIEL, the new film that will soon go into production by Unveil Studios. Helmed by my talented brothers Matthew and Daniel Kooman, the project is a culmination of years of work. It is a key step in our filmmaking journey as brothers, that’s been almost two decades in the making. A few big weeks for Bible stories on screen We’ve been really encouraged by the last few weeks at the box office. In early April, there were four scripture-based films in the Top 15 of the US box office. Audiences desire this content, and it’s not only The Chosen, that sensation of a series, that’s selling tickets and blessing audiences. Films like The Last Supper, released by Pinnacle Peak Pictures in mid-March, hit over 1500 theatres. The small budget film performed really well, making back its budget and then some. You can invest in DANIEL and make history with us It’s been a big week. The Daniel film was featured in some major publications this week (Not The Bee and the Christian Post emailed their followers about it, and the WeFunder site will highlight it in its final days of its crowdfund). The film is approaching the $1 million mark of crowdfunded investment and some major actors and distributors are ready to jump in. With just few days left in our crowdfunding campaign, now is the time to join the movement. If you want to be part of making movie history or know someone who would want in, this is the moment! When you invest, you’re not only helping tell a powerful story—you’re part of the team: * ✅ Owning a Piece of Cinematic History – This is an investment, not a donation! * 🎉 Earning exclusive perks * 🎞️ Getting your name in the movie's credits 👉 Join the movement before time runs out! Follow along this journey You may not be able to invest financially, but we’d love for you to be invested in this film through prayer and engagement. Join us for this adventure! There are so many exciting things happening with this project, I can’t share them all here. But you can follow the journey of Daniel and our other films over at Unveil’s Substack. You can also stream our content and filmmaking at UnveilTV. When you follow along, you’ll get news of the major developments first. When we announced our collaborations with Michael W. Smith or with the international sensation Project of Love, our Unveil audience heard about it first. When we announce key cast in the coming weeks, you can be first to know when you subscribe. Matt and Dan have been putting together some interesting production videos as well. You can get a behind-the-scenes look at how the production is coming together. Recently they were in India to explore a few locations in New Delhi, including an ancient castle that will serve as the backdrop for King Nebuchadnezzar’s empire. Share this opportunity with someone who wants to join in the adventure. Be encouraged, creative If you’re a creative and have been working away to realize your creative dreams for some time, then I hope this note encourages you. We’ve been hustling, dreaming, learning, failing, succeeding, rinsing and repeating for close to two decades. This is a key step in our journey as filmmakers, a journey that will continue into the future. There are so many moments in the creative life. Ups. Downs. Doubts. Glories. We have faith that this will be a success and a win in God’s economy, as people will be invited to stand for truth, have fresh experience of a much-loved story in scripture, be encouraged in their faith, and be highly entertained. So, if you have a moment, say a prayer for Unveil, for Matt and Dan, and for this project that it will be all that it can be. And keep taking the creative risks and putting in the work that move you and your craft forward. People will be blessed as you do. With faith, Andrew This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.andrewkooman.com

    1 min
  5. 03/09/2025

    JFK's vision for the stars; 1001 films to watch before you die; Can you Scroll Happy?

    Thanks for spending part of your weekend with Things I Wrote Down. I’m suffering from a bout of whiplash. All these tariffs being added then removed has been like attending a tennis match (without the trophy or the athleticism). Last week I brought did a video version of my 3 Things for the first time, and it got a bunch of views, so I thought I’d give it another try. Thanks for reading and watching. Here are some interesting places I landed on the web this week and a poem called “love”. Subscribe to Things I Wrote Down (andrewkooman.com) . It’ll spark some hope in your week. 1. JFK's vision for the stars Do you think humanity will ever occupy the planets? Ten years ago I wouldn’t have believed it. But I’m getting more and more convinced. This week over at The 49 (the new fiction series I’m releasing week-over-week) I asked that question. Here's a clip of JFK's visionary speech. 2. 1001 films to watch before you die When I recommend a book, if I really love it, I tend to say, “I don’t want you to die anytime soon, but this is definitely a book you should read before you die.” So, when I was at our local library, this title jumped right out at me. Can you actually Scroll Happy? This new tech start up called UP thinks you can. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.andrewkooman.com

    11 min
  6. 03/02/2025 ·  Bonus

    New day for Bible films; Those Carney memes; Tweaking like Megyn Kelly

    Long live the weekend! I hope you’re enjoying some quiet moments and rest. This week I added a video to my 3 Things, so please let me know if you like it. Here are some interesting place I landed on the web this week and a poem about. Subscribe to Things I Wrote Down. It’ll spark some hope in your week. 1. New era for Bible films It’s here. The much anticipated House of David series dropped its first 3 episodes on Prime. I haven’t had a chance to watch it yet, because I was on the road this week. I happened to be at NRB in Dallas, where the series was featured heavily. The trailer and poster and branding was everywhere. But I have heard from friends and family, and on the internet how excited people are. This is a big moment for films and series based on beloved bible stories and bible characters. Amazon-MGM’s multi-year, multi-million dollar commitment to be the home of the new series was a landmark moment in 2024. A signal that faith and film fit and that audiences are hungry for it. People want scripture-based content. It’s an exciting time for value-driven, faith-focused audiences and content makers. As a filmmaker I’m encouraged. Over at Unveil we’re bringing the story of Daniel to life this year and we’re in pre-production. It’s a big effort to bring a story like this to life, and seeing stories like House of David land on platforms and have buzz is really energizing. 2. Those Mark Carney memes Have you been catching all the memes about Mark Carney this week all over the internet? I’m definitely here for it. Mark Carney, former Governor of the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England, has become the unlikely star of a meme surge on social media as he campaigns for the Liberal Party of Canada leadership. A trend on X is to call him out for his dishonesty and poke a little fun at how he puffed up or flat out fibbed about his own bio. I jumped in on the fun. Looking for a new read? I’ve got you covered. I’ve started to release a new fictional series called The 49. It reads like an action story ripped from tomorrow’s headlines. It’s a high-tech, high stakes thriller set in the not-too-distant future. And the cool thing about it is that it’s being written in real time. Subscribe today and you’ll get part of the story emailed to your inbox every week. Tweaking like Megyn Kelly If you create content, have you thought about ways you can re-use existing content or even your notes to serve your audience? If not, take a page out of Megyn Kelly's recent playbook. She expanded her popular podcast to include her new AM minute. What’s cool about it is that this new feature came out of a desire to serve her audience and it also is content that her team realized they could repurpose. Since it’s launch, has already had millions of downloads and views, in less than 2 weeks since its launch. Each night she gets a packet of all the news of the day to best prepare her for the interviews she does on the following day’s show. And The team realized they had a daily segment of content that could serve an audience hungry for information in a media environment that’s heavy on punditry and opinion, but short on straight up news. I thought this was a really interesting addition and it’s great lesson for content creators. What’s in your hand? What can you reuse, repurpose or recycle to bring value to your audience? A poem I was reminded of this poem this week. I wrote it when I lived in Malaysia for a few years and studied then served in the School of Biblical studies, YWAM’s famous 9-month verse-by-verse scriptural intensive. There was a road near the campus that I walked morning and night after long days of intense study. I called it my runway. my runway The inlaid flecks of glass sparkle a few steps ahead as I walk beside the painted lines of the pavement towards the hills and their silhouette in the velvet blueblack sky with their stars who also speak to me that wink at a distance I reach for them but they remain untouched The street lamp casts me two shadows with its faint din one small the other stretches out ahead always bigger unable to match its size symbolic of all I have to grow into The air is fresh and touches my skin I am to slow to breath it in and it is gone to linger elsewhere for a time I turn back along the strip only one shadow now first beside me now in front always getting longer as I walk between lampposts until it disappears waiting for the light to fade so it can walk with me again. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.andrewkooman.com

    11 min
  7. 12/25/2024

    Radio made this song a Christmas star

    Subscribe to Andrew's newsletter Things I Wrote Down (andrewkooman.com) It is well, (it is well)With my soul (with my soul)It is well, it is well with my soul These words have rung through the hearts of believers for more than 150 years. They are the deep cry from the heart to God. It is a song about peace. Peace in a world with unexplainable tragedy. Peace in a world where darkness often looks like it will win. Peace in the hearts of women and men who experience unspeakable challenges. Peace because the God who made us and loves us gives a peace that surpasses all understanding. Perhaps you know the story of this song. It was written by a man named Horatio Spafford in 1873. The lyrics came to him when he was at sea. Why was he in a boat on his way to England?  Just days before, Horatio was in Chicago, preparing to travel to Europe to help the evangelist D.L. Moody with his revival services. His wife and four daughters traveled ahead of him, sailing across the Atlantic.  He stayed behind for a few days to deal with a zoning issue with their house. Like so many in the city, Horatio and his family lost their home in the great fire of Chicago a few years before. They lost everything and were rebuilding their lives. In the midst of this busy week, planning to join his sweet family and dealing with the hassles of bureaucracy, he received a telegram that forever changed his life. It was a short note. Six words from his wife Anna: “Saved alone. What shall I do?” The tragedy of losing his home to a fire was suddenly a small thing. Because with those six words, sent across the ocean by wire, Horatio learned that he’d lost his most precious gift: his four beautiful daughters drowned. The boat they were on was shipwrecked. Only his wife survived. There are no words to describe the grief, the pain, the sorrow like sea billows that rolled against that man as he came to terms with his loss. And famously, as he sailed to England to meet his wife and mourn with her, the ship's captain stopped the boat at the spot where the tragedy occurred so that Horatio could mourn and remember his daughters. And that’s when the words to this song dropped into his soul. Words became flesh.Peace came into life’s storm.Jesus entered his experience and brought comfort and hope. As we prepare for the joy of Christmas, so many of us are also reminded of deep pain and grief. Friends and family who are no longer here. Unresolved hurts or sorrows that billow or roll against us.  When we light the candle of peace, we remember that Jesus came to bring peace into our world and into our lives. Only Jesus can teach our troubled hearts to say, no matter what we face, that “It is well, it is well with my soul.” Let the peace of God fill your heart this Advent season.  Response: Take a moment to listen to the song below or to read the lyrics out loud and meditate on the words. When peace like a river, attendeth my wayWhen sorrows like sea billows rollWhatever my lot, thou hast taught me to sayIt is well, it is well, with my soul It is wellWith my soulIt is well, it is well with my soul Though Satan should buffet, though trials should comeLet this blest assurance controlThat Christ has regarded my helpless estateAnd hath shed His own blood for my soul It is well (it is well)With my soul (with my soul)It is well, it is well with my soul My sin, oh, the bliss of this glorious thought!My sin, not in part but the wholeIs nailed to the cross, and I bear it no morePraise the Lord, praise the Lord, o my soul! It is well (it is well)With my soul (with my soul) About Songs of Advent The music we sing at Christmas helps us to remember the story of Jesus and fills our hearts with hope, peace, love and joy. This series of readings–one for each week of the four Sundays of Advent, as well as a fifth reading for Christmas Day–looks at the inspiring stories behind some of our most beloved songs, including O Holy Night, Joy to the World, and Silent Night. Enjoying the series? * Find it and more of Andrew’s Christmas content on YouVersion. * Use the series in church! You can purchase at Skit Guys. * Bring Songs and other resources to your classroom. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.andrewkooman.com

    4 min

About

A podcast where creativity and faith collide, featuring original content and unique conversations with critically acclaimed writer and producer Andrew Kooman. www.andrewkooman.com