Zen & Callsigns

Blake Fisher

My mission at Zen & Callsigns is to find inner peace in a chaotic and often broken world through stories, humor, and interesting antidotes. Think Joe Rogan, Smedley Butler, Alan Watts, and Frank Herbert had a podcast baby. Zen & Callsigns strives to create a data-driven discussion about the true nature of our world and universe. It’s revealed in discussions based on science considered from a philosophical perspective. Sometimes, though, it's just an ex-military a*****e shooting the shit.

  1. 4월 24일

    Ep 41 - Callsign: “SMASHING” Brand Builder, Entrepreneur, Steward, Father

    Will Travis joins Zen & Callsigns for a conversation that moves far beyond branding and business. What starts as a story about creativity, advertising, and global agency success becomes something deeper: grief, reinvention, fatherhood, masculinity, failure, resilience, identity, and the long road back to authenticity. Will reflects on losing his father as an infant, growing up in a house full of strong women, struggling with dyslexia and bullying, building a persona to survive, and then using that persona to rise through the worlds of branding, design, and leadership. From New York and San Francisco to Bali, Saatchi, Sid Lee, and the founding of Elevation Barn, this episode is about what happens when success stops being enough and a man has to rebuild from the inside out. Main Themes Childhood loss and carrying the legacy of an absent fatherGrowing up with strong women and becoming a listenerBoarding school, bullying, ADD, dyslexia, and gritPersona, identity, and “the cloak” we wear to survive and successBuilding a career in branding and creative leadershipRejection, resilience, and using obstacles as fuelMarriage, ego, collapse, and recovery9/11, business collapse, physical injury, and total life disruptionRebuilding through friendship, nature, mountains, and fatherhoodTurning down status and choosing family over egoThe origins and philosophy of Elevation BarnSuperpower versus nemesisPresence, calm, and learning to live from a deeper centerAI, technology, and the hunger for real human connection Notable Story Beats Will recalls being born while his father was dying of cancer and growing up as the vessel for his father’s legacy.He describes a simple but vivid childhood shaped by solitude, imagination, strong women, and not much money.At boarding school, he was bullied, struggled academically, and was told he was “thick,” later learning he was dyslexic and ADD.A pivotal lesson came from his stepfather after academic failure: when you hit a wall, work back from it until you find a way over, under, or around.He entered branding and advertising almost as an extension of learning how to hear “no” and keep moving.America became a major turning point, giving him confidence, momentum, and eventually career breakout.He helped build a powerful design and branding agency culture, including the “Noise” books, and landed major clients like MTV, Columbia TriStar, Ford, PepsiCo, AT&T, Nike, and Sony.At the height of success, ego overtook balance. He lost his marriage, then the dot-com collapse and 9/11 compounded personal and professional breakdown.He rebuilt through physical challenge, mountains, friendship, fatherhood, and eventually a reevaluation of what mattered most.He turned down a major role at Saatchi & Saatchi because he recognized it would cost him the life he actually wanted.Elevation Barn emerged from a simple but powerful insight: people in transition often need a process, a peer group, and honest reflection more than more noise, more status, or more information. The cloak: a persona can protect and propel you, but you have to know how to take it off.The wall: every obstacle has a way over, under, or around it.Superpower as nemesis: the thing people rely on you for is often also the place where you are hardest to help.False summits: growth often requires going back down before you can climb higher.The backpack of expectancy: modern life stacks pressure, identity, and performance until people forget who they are.Branding for a person: just like a company, a human being needs clarity, direction, and a North Star.Belonging matters more than performance theater.Presence and quiet create space for truth to emerge. Elevation Barn website: www.ElevationBarn.com Will’s personal site: www.willtravis.com

    1시간 42분
  2. 4월 18일

    Ep 40 - Callsign: "The Kicker" - Founder, Global Execuative, Seeker, Father

    In this episode of Zen & Callsigns, Blake sits down with Prashant Aggarwal for a wide-ranging conversation on discipline, leadership, risk, entrepreneurship, and the deeper search for meaning behind success. Prashant shares the story of growing up in New Delhi, surviving a serious undiagnosed illness as a teenager, and how that experience taught him the value of time. From there, he walks through his unlikely path from accountancy and Oracle to American Express, Visa, startup life, and eventually becoming CEO of MoneyHero and ringing the bell at Nasdaq. This is not just a business story. It is a conversation about what happens when comfort becomes a trap, why failure is often the clearest teacher, how luck and skill actually work together, and what it means to lead with dignity when people’s livelihoods depend on your decisions. They also get into Bali, parenting, karma, the Ramayana, startup pressure, AI, authenticity, and why real human connection may matter more than ever in a world shaped by machines. Key Takeaways Suffering can sharpen discipline in ways comfort never will.Failure is survivable. Quitting is the real danger.Much of what looks like personal success is built from preparation meeting luck.Corporate success can create comfort, but comfort can slowly kill curiosity.Startups reveal whether your reputation was truly yours or borrowed from a larger brand.Leadership often means carrying pain that no one else sees.Big public milestones do not necessarily answer deeper questions of purpose.AI is powerful, but it becomes dangerous when people outsource original thought.Real human connection may become more valuable, not less, in an AI-shaped world.Timestamps00:00 Introduction and how Blake and Prashant met in Bali00:56 Growing up in New Delhi and humble beginnings01:45 A serious undiagnosed illness in his teens changes everything05:23 Learning discipline, urgency, and the value of time07:25 The dinner that shaped his decision to pursue accountancy11:42 Being treated like an adult and learning through responsibility14:29 Failure, resilience, and why giving up was never the option15:03 Landing the first job at Oracle17:33 Learning on the fly, bluffing through interviews, and figuring it out20:00 Oracle, India opening to the world, and unexpected opportunity23:16 Shared services, almost losing his job, and moving to Sydney at 2428:16 First time on a plane, first time seeing the ocean, and culture shock34:41 From Oracle to American Express and into consulting and sales39:54 Leaving the corporate path and joining MoneyHero44:44 Seeking truth by putting himself back in the arena49:09 Raising capital fast and the chaos of scaling too quickly51:30 Becoming CEO in a moment of crisis54:00 Two months of payroll left and the brutal reality of leadership57:58 Turning the company around and making it to Nasdaq58:25 What it actually felt like to ring the bell01:04:39 Human connection, success, and seeing the bigger arc of life01:06:43 Why Bali mattered after the IPO01:10:00 Romanticizing Bali versus actually living there01:12:11 His philosophical operating system and a deeper view of karma01:19:45 Luck versus skill01:23:07 AI, authenticity, and the danger of outsourced thinking01:34:33 The origin story behind his soccer nickname, “The Kicker”

    1시간 54분
  3. 3월 28일

    Ep 39 - Callsign: "LOGOS" - Philosopher, PhD, Author, Podcaster

    In this episode of Zen & Callsigns, Blake sits down with Dr. Matt Segall, professor at the California Institute of Integral Studies, for a wide-ranging conversation on philosophy, spirituality, consciousness, and artificial intelligence. Dr. Segall reflects on his path from journalism and cognitive science into philosophy, the psychedelic experience that radically altered his spiritual trajectory, and the philosophical framework he calls a process-relational view of reality. The conversation moves through Eastern and Western thought, the idea of a Second Axial Age, and the deeper civilizational questions underneath today’s AI acceleration. The result is a dense but grounded discussion on what intelligence is, what consciousness may be becoming, and why the real issue is not just what AI is doing, but what it is doing to us. Dr. Matt Segall is a philosopher and professor at the California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco. His background includes cognitive science, philosophy, neuroscience, and interdisciplinary inquiry into metaphysics, religion, and consciousness. In the episode, he discusses growing up in South Florida, studying cognitive science after starting in journalism, and eventually realizing that teaching philosophy allowed him to keep exploring the deepest questions for life. Matt’s early life, intellectual formation, and the role of hockey in shaping discipline and virtue Why journalism led him toward philosophy and cognitive science A pivotal psilocybin experience at age 19 and its lasting impact Encountering the Christ / Logos through psychedelic experience The relationship between Christianity, Buddhism, Daoism, and Western esoteric traditions Why philosophy should preserve wonder rather than defend dogma Matt’s process-relational philosophical operating system Parmenides, Heraclitus, being, becoming, and reality as ongoing process The difference between Eastern and Western streams of thought, and why they now need integration The First Axial Age and the possibility of a Second Axial Age Animism, monotheism, pantheism, and panentheism explained in plain language AI, machine intelligence, and the danger of mistaking simulation for consciousness Whether we are already living inside an emergent collective intelligence The difference between luck and skill What civilization is refusing to ask about capitalism, technology, and meaning Why AI may represent one of the greatest enclosures of the human knowledge commons in history A formative psilocybin experience brought him face to face with what he describes as the Christ being or Logos, despite having distanced himself from Christianity. That encounter redirected his spiritual life toward Christian mysticism while preserving his engagement with Buddhism, Daoism, and other traditions. Matt argues that philosophy dies when it becomes rigid defense of a single theory. For him, real philosophy keeps open the experience of wonder and remembers that no framework fully captures reality. His “operating system” is process-relational: reality is not fixed substance but ongoing becoming. He frames this through the polarity between Parmenides and Heraclitus, being and becoming, arguing both are partial truths that need one another. One of the strongest parts of the conversation is Matt’s explanation of a possible Second Axial Age: a civilizational shift that would reintegrate transcendence with embodiment, spirit with matter, and divinity with the living world. He points toward panentheism as a key frame for that reintegration. Matt sees AI as part of a long human story of technologically extended intelligence, from fire to language to writing to machine learning. But he stresses that the present moment is qualitatively dangerous because of speed, scale, and the illusion that language simulation equals consciousness. Dr. Matt Segall: Website / blog / Substack / YouTube: footnotes2plato.com

    1시간 16분
  4. 2025. 09. 24.

    Ep 38 - Callsign: "SPECTRE" - Programmer, Founder, Podcaster, Brand Builder

    In this episode, Blake sits down with Anatoly Spektor—business consultant, programmer, podcaster, father, and endurance athlete—whose journey from post-Soviet Latvia to Canada, Ironman competitions, and Bali’s entrepreneurial scene reads like a series of inflection points. Anatoly shares how growing up in Latvia left him aimless, how one cocky comment at a party in Toronto jolted him onto a new path, and how quitting safe jobs led him into software, Amazon brands, consulting billion-dollar firms, and eventually, creating communities and content that changed his life. We cover: Roots in Latvia → Canada: childhood, entrepreneurship in the family, feeling lost, and the pivotal move to Toronto. From dropout to coder: flunking management school, thriving at Seneca College, and landing early work with Red Hat and startups. Ironman mindset: training 30+ hours a week to do the “impossible,” and how it reshaped his beliefs about limits. Consulting & content creation: helping governments and corporations restructure teams, launching a successful Agile/Jira YouTube channel, and discovering leverage in systems. Amazon brands & e-commerce: wins, failures, and why he ultimately sold and walked away from the grind. Podcasting evolution: from “10 Million Journey” to Soul to Soul, building networks of Amazon sellers, and now exploring spirituality, philosophy, and the human side of business. Bootcamps in Bali: creating containers with Sandra to help founders scale from purpose, not just profit. On failure & philosophy: vanity metrics, forgiveness after being burned, the balance of pivot vs. push, and leading with authenticity. AI as sparring partner: how Anatoly builds AI agent teams to automate research, planning, and creative strategy. Masculinity, family, and legacy: raising kids with alternative education, building podcasts as an archive for his children, and redefining leadership as service. Life in Bali: the vibrancy of entrepreneurship on the island, myths founders tell themselves, and the Hindu cultural backdrop that makes the place unique. And of course, the three signature Zen & Callsigns questions: What is your philosophical operating system? What’s the difference between luck and skill? What about AI?

    1시간 40분
  5. 2025. 09. 17.

    Ep 37 - Callsign: "Catch" - Producer, Renegade, Captain Planet, Mythmaker

    I sat down with Thom Beers, legendary producer behind Deadliest Catch, Ice Road Truckers, Storage Wars, Monster Garage, and more, for a sweeping life story that moved from his theater roots and time with icons like Lee Strasberg to his early documentary years under Ted Turner, scripting Captain Planet, and working with Jacques Cousteau. He recounted near-death moments on crab boats, career setbacks like losing his library of shows, and the instinct that led him to hold on to Deadliest Catch, which became his Emmy-winning hit. Thom shared his philosophy of doing any job better than anyone else, of following instinct over conformity, and of building shows around raw character arcs that echo Greek tragedy. He opened up about his heart attack, the wake-up call it gave him, and his current chapter in Bali, where he’s reflecting, writing, and focusing on health. What he hopes to leave behind is compassion, humor, and gratitude—a life remembered for impact, not ego. Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Authentic Conversations 04:37 The Journey to Theater and Education 10:27 The Power of Unexpected Events 15:00 Navigating the New York Theater Scene 19:50 The Turning Point: A Brutal Review 23:02 Breaking into the Film Industry 25:31 A New Chapter in Atlanta 28:35 Documentary Adventures Around the World 30:46 From Dreams to Reality: National Geographic and Captain Planet 32:57 The Voice of Criticism: Tom Cruise's Surprise 34:13 Old School Meets New School: The Evolution of Production 36:14 Captain Planet: A Legacy of Environmental Awareness 38:00 Navigating Controversy: The Challenges of Environmental Messaging 39:41 Legal Battles: The Earth Network Lawsuit 42:39 A Lesson in Humility: The Blind Producer's Triumph 44:05 The State of the Environment: A Call to Action 46:38 Corporate Politics: The Struggles of a Television Producer 48:54 A New Adventure: Transitioning to Hollywood 50:31 Wild Things: The Thrill of Wildlife Filmmaking 50:59 The Wild Things Development Meeting 52:19 Behind the Scenes of Wildlife Filmmaking 54:16 Balancing Work and Family 54:46 The Bitter Truth of Professional Critique 56:15 The Journey to Discovery Channel 59:50 Facing the Deadliest Job in the World 01:01:44 Surviving Chaos at Sea 01:02:39 Turning Adversity into Opportunity 01:05:03 The Birth of a Successful Show 01:06:35 Unexpected Success and New Beginnings 01:08:52 The Journey Begins: From Concept to Creation 01:11:57 Navigating Success and Recognition in Television 01:14:49 The Art of Storytelling: Crafting Engaging Content 01:17:52 Challenges in Production: Lessons Learned 01:20:43 Innovating Reality TV: The Birth of New Shows 01:23:46 The Business of Television: Negotiations and Sales 01:26:57 Health Scares and Life Changes 01:29:53 Transitioning to New Opportunities 01:33:04 Reflections on Wealth and Experience 01:36:05 The Future of Television: Trends and Insights 01:47:41 From Network Success to New Ventures 01:52:06 Navigating Change and New Beginnings 01:55:12 Embracing Life in Bali 01:56:58 Philosophical Foundations and Creative Processes 01:59:58 Lessons from Loss and Identity 02:02:03 Going Against the Grain 02:05:46 The Balance of Luck and Skill 02:09:29 Reflections on Mortality and Meaning 02:11:46 Modern Myths and Storytelling 02:15:32 A New Chapter in Bali

    2시간 19분
  6. 2025. 08. 20.

    Ep 36 - Callsign: "HexWit" - Hacker, Algorithmic Trader, Contrarian

    Sarid Harper sits down to tell the story of a life driven by curiosity and contradiction. He opens with a vivid teenage UFO sighting outside Billings that shattered familiar narratives and seeded a contrarian mindset. From there we follow his path through London, Montana, Copenhagen, Berkeley, and Bali — learning Visual Basic, assembler, FreeBSD, and offensive security; building exploits and testing the world’s biggest banks; then pivoting into social engineering, hypnotherapy, and Ayurveda when the ethics of the work started to weigh on him. He explains how those disparate skills converged into algorithmic trading (PIPNOTIC), describes a synesthetic way of seeing numbers, and shares why failure and resilience have been his truest teachers. The episode pairs technical war stories with spiritual reflection: an exploration of truth, responsibility, and how to raise a family while living a life that refuses easy answers. Some of the topic we cover: Green School (Bali)https://www.greenschool.org Doctor Who (referenced when describing a UFO sighting)https://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho Knight Rider (referenced when discussing American-style muscle cars)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knight_Rider Bigfoot (referenced alongside monster trucks in Montana)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bigfoot Great Pyramid of Giza (visited in Cairo)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Pyramid_of_Giza LiDAR discovery beneath the pyramidshttps://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05355-8 Joe Rogan (mentioned during the pyramid/LiDAR discussion)https://www.joerogan.com Graham Hancock (cited in the same conversation)https://grahamhancock.com Craigslist (used for finding housing in Berkeley)https://www.craigslist.org YMCA (room rented near Berkeley’s YMCA)https://www.ymca.org Hack This Site (hacking challenges mentioned)https://www.hackthissite.org Pull The Plug (the “pulltheplug.org.com” hacking farm)https://pulltheplug.org.com Visual Basic (learning to write early computer viruses)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_Basic FreeBSD (used for building firewalls on Intel 486 machines)https://www.freebsd.org Python (used to write scripts that hacked IP telephones)https://www.python.org FIX Protocol (the stock-exchange messaging protocol)https://www.fixtrading.org Ayahuasca (the plant brew used in multiple ceremonies)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayahuasca Ayurveda (the 5,000-year-old “science of life” referenced)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayurveda Mescaline (Carl Jung’s entheogen of choice)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mescaline Carl Jung (referenced for psychedelic research)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Jung Friedrich Nietzsche (quoted regarding going against the herd)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Nietzsche The Big Short (film mentioned when discussing standing alone)https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1596363 Stop AI (advocacy group to pause new AI model training)https://stopai.org PIPNOTIC (the speaker’s own algo-trading software)https://pipnotic.org

    1시간 51분
  7. 2025. 02. 27.

    Ep 35 - Callsign: "Hatchet 57" - Navy SEAL, Entrepreneur, CEO, Trailblazer, Mentor

    In this episode, Ty Smith, a retired Navy SEAL, shares his remarkable journey from a challenging childhood in East St. Louis to becoming a Navy SEAL and entrepreneur. He discusses the importance of resilience, mentorship, and leadership, as well as the impact of 9/11 on his military career. Ty reflects on the intersection of luck and skill in combat, the lessons learned from his experiences, and the challenges of transitioning to civilian life. He emphasizes the significance of spirituality and personal growth in navigating life's challenges and the entrepreneurial journey. In this conversation, Ty Smith and Blake Fisher explore themes of spiritual evolution, the philosophical frameworks that guide their lives, and the redefinition of masculinity in contemporary society. They discuss the importance of connection, healing journeys, and the transformative power of experiences like Ibogaine therapy. The conversation also delves into the future of AI, emphasizing the need for adaptability and the potential for technology to enhance human life rather than detract from it. Takeaways: Ty's journey began with a dream to become a Navy SEAL. Overcoming adversity is a common thread in Ty's life. Mentorship played a crucial role in Ty's success. The impact of 9/11 reignited Ty's purpose in the military. Luck and skill intersect in unpredictable ways during combat. Leadership is about never giving up on your team. Transitioning to civilian life requires preparation and support. Entrepreneurship is the hardest challenge Ty has faced. Spirituality has become a significant part of Ty's life. Personal growth is a continuous journey, shaped by experiences. We are all connected through one creator. Spiritual evolution is a personal journey. Philosophical operating systems guide our actions. Masculinity can be redefined to include empathy. Healing journeys can transform lives. AI is a wave that cannot be stopped. Adapting to AI is essential for survival. Men can express vulnerability and still be strong. God's will is always good for us. Connection and compassion are vital in leadership. Chapters: 00:00 From Dreams to Reality: Ty's Journey Begins 02:24 Overcoming Doubts: The Anomaly Mindset 05:17 The Lone Wolf: Embracing Individuality 08:11 The Path to Becoming a Navy SEAL 10:18 9/11: A Turning Point in Purpose 13:09 The SEAL Experience: Trials and Triumphs 16:11 Luck vs. Skill: The Reality of War 19:07 Faith and Survival: A Spiritual Perspective 21:47 Leadership Lessons from the SEAL Teams 34:30 Never Give Up: The Heart of Leadership 36:19 The Power of Not Giving Up 38:53 Success Beyond the Battlefield 41:12 Preparing for Life After Service 46:23 The Challenges of Entrepreneurship 49:18 Spiritual Awakening and Transformation 01:00:26 Redefining Masculinity 01:09:29 Leading with Love and Compassion 01:14:01 Healing Through Community and Support 01:14:52 Transformational Journeys and Personal Growth 01:16:50 Facing Demons: Overcoming PTSD and Trauma 01:18:44 Experiencing Healing: The Power of Ibogaine 01:21:51 Profound Peace: Insights from Spiritual Experiences 01:25:20 Embracing Life: Letting Go of Fear and Doubt 01:34:18 Innovations in AI: The Future of Business Intelligence 01:40:56 Navigating the AI Wave: Opportunities and Challenges 01:45:56 Faith in Humanity: The Role of Technology in Our Lives

    1시간 47분
  8. 2025. 01. 23.

    Ep 34 - Callsign: "Breath" - A discussion on breath work

    In this conversation, Miles Bolden and Blake Fisher discusses the profound impact of breath on mental health, performance, and overall well-being. They emphasizes the importance of breathwork as a tool for managing stress, anxiety, and emotional regulation, particularly for veterans facing mental health challenges. Miles shares various breathing techniques and their applications in athletic performance, highlighting the science behind breathwork and its accessibility as a natural alternative to pharmaceuticals. The discussion also covers the significance of understanding the autonomic nervous system and tracking progress through metrics like heart rate variability. They discusses the transformative power of breathwork, emphasizing its role in enhancing performance, mental clarity, and emotional well-being. Miles shares practical techniques for harnessing breath to prepare for high-stakes situations, the science behind breathwork, and its historical roots. Miles also highlights the importance of teaching breathing techniques to children and adolescents, advocating for a mindful approach to breathing that can be integrated into daily life for improved mental health and focus. Takeaways Breath is a constant companion that can help in dark moments. Intentional breathing can shift energy from negativity to positivity. Breathwork can be as effective as SSRIs for mental health. Nasal breathing enhances oxygen absorption and performance. Breathwork techniques can be tailored to specific situations. Understanding the autonomic nervous system is crucial for breathwork. Breath can help manage stress and emotional responses. Breathwork is accessible and free, making it a valuable tool. Tracking metrics like heart rate variability can enhance breathwork practice. Breath can change the atmosphere and improve mental clarity. Breath is the only autonomic function you can consciously control. Breathwork can reduce stress instantly and activate the parasympathetic system. Deep, slow breaths boost energy and focus. Breathwork is accessible anytime, anywhere. Breathwork has been practiced for thousands of years across cultures. Visualization enhances the effectiveness of breathwork. Teaching breathing techniques to children can empower them. Consistency in breathwork practice leads to significant benefits. Intentional breathing can bring peace and clarity. Breath is a bridge to emotional and spiritual health. Chapters 00:00 The Importance of Breath in Mental Health 03:03 Breath as a Tool for Performance 05:55 Breathwork Techniques and Their Benefits 09:13 The Science Behind Breathwork 11:52 Practical Applications of Breathwork 15:02 Breathwork in Athletic Performance 17:53 Understanding the Autonomic Nervous System 21:13 Tracking Progress with Breathwork 23:56 Breathwork Techniques for Different Situations 39:05 Harnessing Energy for Performance 44:03 Pregame Routines and Mental Preparation 49:11 The Science and History of Breathwork 57:35 Visualization and Concentration Techniques 01:01:54 Breathwork for Adolescents and Children 01:07:21 The Power of Breath in Daily Life

    1시간 6분

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My mission at Zen & Callsigns is to find inner peace in a chaotic and often broken world through stories, humor, and interesting antidotes. Think Joe Rogan, Smedley Butler, Alan Watts, and Frank Herbert had a podcast baby. Zen & Callsigns strives to create a data-driven discussion about the true nature of our world and universe. It’s revealed in discussions based on science considered from a philosophical perspective. Sometimes, though, it's just an ex-military a*****e shooting the shit.