The Flame

Bob Raynor

The Flame is a podcast for creatives who are feeling lost, laid off, or stuck in their career journey. Hosted by Bob Raynor, a seasoned Creative Director, this podcast features real conversations with other creatives navigating uncertainty and trying to rediscover their passion. With candid, heartfelt interviews and personal insights, each episode is a reminder that even in the toughest times, we can find a spark to reignite the flame of creativity. Join us as we light the way forward together, one story at a time.

  1. Just Do The Thing: Embracing Your Creative Truth with Jody Graff

    16H AGO

    Just Do The Thing: Embracing Your Creative Truth with Jody Graff

    What does it feel like to walk away from a 28-year career — and start over? Jody Graff spent nearly three decades as a graphic design professor at Drexel University, one of the top design programs in the country. This June, she's retiring. Not to slow down, but to become a full-time artist. In this episode of The Flame, host Bob Raynor sits down with his former professor to talk about career transitions, creative identity, the fear of starting over, and what design educationgets wrong about AI. Jody shares what she's learned about curiosity, failure, and why embracing discomfort might be the most important creative skill you can develop — at any ageor career stage. What We Talk About Career transitions and creative reinvention after long-term rolesAI in design education — why it may be robbing students of the most important part of learningThe "encyclopedia" theory: how building knowledge through failure creates taste and instinctGenerational differences in creativity and how programmed lives affect creative thinkingWhy the best design studios send their teams to find books about anything except the projectHow to rebuild community and reach out for help when you're the one starting overJody's current art practice — mixed-media narrative quilts on view at Andalusia Historic Houseand GardenWhether you're a designer, educator, creative professional, oranyone facing a major career pivot — this one's for you. Key Takeaways Embrace the discomfort. It's not a warning sign — it's proof you're actually doing something.Curiosity is a skill, and it needs protecting. Build your encyclopedia before you outsource your thinking.The people you mentor will eventually mentor you back. Let them.You don't have to have it figured out to start. You just have to start.About Jody Graff Jody Graff is a graphic designer, educator, and artist who spent 28 years as a professor at Drexel University's nationally recognized graphic design program. Her work spans environmental graphic design, wayfinding, exhibition design, and mixed-media art. She is currently a participating artist in Radical Americana, a 45-artist, 24-location installation projectspearheaded by the Clay Studio in celebration of the US 250th anniversary. Two of her largescale narrative quilt works are on view at Andalusia Historic House and Garden in BucksCounty, PA. Guest Links LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jody-graff-13ba186/Portfolio: https://www.artworkarchive.com/profile/jody-graffInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/whynoti__/Radical Americana at Andalusia: https://andalusiapa.org

    1h 8m
  2. Make Something. Find People. Stay Ready. The Creative's Survival Guide with Bryan Gaffin.

    MAR 23

    Make Something. Find People. Stay Ready. The Creative's Survival Guide with Bryan Gaffin.

    In this episode of The Flame, host Bob Raynor sits down with Bryan Gaffin, known throughout the creative industry as "The Gaf" a veteran creative leader, futurist, and former EVP/Creative Director of Experience Design at FCB Health. Bryan brings decades of perspective to one of the most turbulent moments in the history of creative work. This conversation covers layoffs at the executive level, the limits and potential of AI in creative workflows, why the traditional agency model is failing, and what genuine creative leadership looks like when the titles and hierarchies are stripped away. Bryan shares a candid take on DE&I in the current political climate, offers real advice for senior creatives navigating unemployment, and makes a compelling case that the future of creativity belongs to the makers, not the machines. Topics covered in this episode:• Being laid off at the executive level — three times — and what it actually feels like • Why AI is "memory with no taste" and how to use it with intention • The difference between overreacting to the technology and underreacting to those controlling it • Portfolio mistakes that are quietly killing job searches • Why the holding company and agency model is structurally broken • DE&I: what the backlash is really about and what genuine inclusion looks like • The rise of independent agencies and creative entrepreneurship • Making things with your hands as a creative survival strategy • How to stay ready, stay connected, and keep your flame lit Connect with Bryan Gaffin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thegaf/ Connect with Bob Raynor: talk@theflamepod.com | IG: @theflame.podcast he Flame is a podcast for creatives who are laid off, between jobs, or feeling lost — hosted by Creative Director and Sequence Design founder Bob Raynor.

    48 min
  3. FEB 6 ·  BONUS

    The Friday 5 | Show Up. Make Things. Stay Human.

    Show Up. Make Things. Stay Human. | The Friday 5 In this episode of The Friday 5, Bob Raynor takes a quieter, more reflective approach to creativity and career life during uncertain times. Amid ongoing layoffs, job instability, and burnout across the creative industry, Bob reflects on a recent New York Times Well article, “An Overlooked Prescription for Happiness,” which explores how engaging in the arts, even casually, has proven mental and physical health benefits. Drawing on research from Dr. Daisy Fancourt of University College London, the episode explores creativity as a “forgotten fifth pillar of health,” alongside sleep, diet, exercise, and nature. Bob connects this research to the lived experience of creative professionals, emphasizing the importance of making things for their own sake and seeking out community, not for networking, but for connection. This episode is a reminder that creativity doesn’t always need to be productive or monetized to matter and that showing up, making something, and being around other creative humans can be enough to carry you forward. Topics covered: Creativity and mental health The impact of layoffs and industry uncertainty Art as a form of care and stability Community as a source of resilience Why making things still matters Keywords: creative mental health, creativity and wellbeing, Friday 5 podcast, Bob Raynor, creative burnout, art and happiness, creative community, future of creative work

    5 min
  4. EP. 16 — Start With a Blank Page: Carl Napolitano on Creativity, Collaboration and Resilience

    FEB 6

    EP. 16 — Start With a Blank Page: Carl Napolitano on Creativity, Collaboration and Resilience

    In this episode of The Flame, I’m joined by Carl Napolitano, a Creative Director with nearly two decades of experience in pharmaceutical advertising. Carl shares his journey into pharma, why creativity actually thrives within constraints, and how starting with a blank page still fuels his passion for the work. We also dig into the realities of today’s job market for senior creatives — navigating layoffs, recruiter ghosting, LinkedIn’s evolution, and the emotional toll of being on the other side of hiring after years in leadership. Throughout the conversation, Carl offers a steady, hard-earned perspective on resilience, collaboration, and creative confidence, reminding listeners that rejection is part of the craft, not a reflection of their value. Topics we cover: Why pharma advertising is “working inside a box” and why that can spark better ideas The joy of starting with a blank page and building meaning from complexity How layoffs and rejection impact creative identity The loss of human connection in recruiting and hiring Why collaboration, not ego, makes great creative work Advice for creatives navigating uncertainty and long job searches Carl leaves listeners with a simple but powerful reminder: “Don’t take it personally. It’s part of the industry.” CHAPTERS00:00 Introduction and Background 01:48 Carl's Journey into Pharma Advertising 05:23 The Creative Process in Pharma 09:51 The Impact of Pharma Work 12:16 Working with Teams and Collaboration 13:30 The Shift to Remote Work 17:08 Navigating the Job Market and Layoffs 20:03 The Role of LinkedIn in Job Searching 24:22 The Changing Dynamics of Recruitment 26:25 The Impact of Layoffs on Creative Confidence 27:42 Building Resilience in the Creative Industry 31:30 Shifts in the Advertising Landscape 34:49 Client Perspectives and Budget Constraints 39:45 Navigating the Pharma Creative Space 41:39 The Future of Freelancing and Small Agencies 44:35 Advice for Creatives Facing Challenges RESOURCES & LINKS• Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/carlnapolitano/• The Flame website: https://www.theflamepod.com/• Subscribe on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheFlamePodcast• Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-flame/id1774068657FIND YOUR FLAMEIf this helped you, please subscribe and share it with a friend who’s navigating a creative career change.

    45 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

The Flame is a podcast for creatives who are feeling lost, laid off, or stuck in their career journey. Hosted by Bob Raynor, a seasoned Creative Director, this podcast features real conversations with other creatives navigating uncertainty and trying to rediscover their passion. With candid, heartfelt interviews and personal insights, each episode is a reminder that even in the toughest times, we can find a spark to reignite the flame of creativity. Join us as we light the way forward together, one story at a time.