Fail Better with David Duchovny
En podkast av Lemonada Media - Tirsdager
87 Episoder
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How Megan McArdle Became a Liberal-tarian
Publisert: 11.11.2025 -
Waxing Poetic with Jia Tolentino (Live at Strand)
Publisert: 4.11.2025 -
Failure? Success? Judd Apatow Says Give It 10 Years to Decide
Publisert: 28.10.2025 -
Fail Again: Ben Stiller Confronts His Parents' Legacy
Publisert: 21.10.2025 -
Listen Now: Alive with Steve Burns
Publisert: 14.10.2025 -
No Scars, No Stories with Charlie Sheen (Live at 92NY)
Publisert: 7.10.2025 -
Looking Back: Gretchen Rubin Wants to Make You Happy/ish
Publisert: 30.9.2025 -
How Steve Burns Found His Aliveness Again
Publisert: 23.9.2025 -
Tom Pelphrey Wouldn’t Change a Day
Publisert: 16.9.2025 -
Gene Simmons: The Demon Loves His Mom
Publisert: 9.9.2025 -
Check It Out: Building a Legacy with Tisha Campbell (Legacy Talk)
Publisert: 2.9.2025 -
Amanda Knox’s Story Isn’t Over
Publisert: 26.8.2025 -
The Pitfalls of Manhood with Terry Real
Publisert: 19.8.2025 -
An Hour with Melissa Febos About a Year Without Sex
Publisert: 12.8.2025 -
Jess Walter Can Hoop (and Write)
Publisert: 5.8.2025 -
Tim Minchin’s Infinite Universes
Publisert: 29.7.2025 -
The Family Business with Robert Downey Jr.
Publisert: 22.7.2025 -
What Jake Clark Wants You To Know About Trauma
Publisert: 15.7.2025 -
A Forensic Analysis with Emily Deschanel
Publisert: 8.7.2025 -
Check It Out: The Disappearance of Eric Robinson (Uinta Triangle)
Publisert: 1.7.2025
To be human is to fail – period. And not just to fail once, but to fail a lot. As the author Samuel Beckett said: “Fail again. Fail better.” This saying means a lot to me and my family – so much so that my daughter got a tattoo of it. Why are we, and so many others, so deeply concerned by failure? And if it’s something we all do so often, why are we so afraid of it – especially those of us here in win-at-all-costs America? In this podcast, I sit down with successful, thoughtful people like Ben Stiller, Bette Midler, Sean Penn and more to talk about failure – or what they labeled “failure,” but what was really an unparalleled opportunity for growth and revelation. I even want to delve into my own hardest moments, when I wrestled with setbacks, shame, and fear. We’ll still fail again. And again. But maybe if we fail better, we’ll feel better -- and maybe if we can all laugh together in failure, that's a start.
