Cover image of show Creativity Jijiji

Creativity Jijiji

Podcast by Christopher McHale

English

Culture & leisure

Limited Offer

2 months for 19 kr.

Then 99 kr. / monthCancel anytime.

  • 20 hours of audiobooks / month
  • Podcasts only on Podimo
  • All free podcasts
Get Started

About Creativity Jijiji

Produced audio stories about the moment everything changed.Every breakthrough has a hinge point.A constraint that forced a new direction. A mistake that opened a door. A removal that created space. A decision made under pressure that turned out to be the only right one.We call that moment Jijiji.Creativity Jijiji finds those moments — in brands, in art, in music, in story — and shapes them into produced audio narratives. Not interviews. Not panels. Sonic storytelling, built from the ground up, designed to be experienced through sound.Because the most important creative decisions don't happen in the spotlight. They happen in the room just before — when the system breaks, and something new has to enter.That's where we listen.

All episodes

25 episodes

episode Why Human Rhythm Outruns AI Every Time artwork

Why Human Rhythm Outruns AI Every Time

Ever felt a room change when the band locks in and the audience leans forward at the same time? That’s the moment we chase today—where pulse becomes conversation, risk becomes texture, and four people in a room make something no algorithm has learned to feel. We open with the pull of the orchestra’s shared breath, then trace that energy through jazz, theater pits, and the grit of writing a song the slow way. Chris lays out what the trained ear hears in seconds: microtiming, phrasing, and the subtle drift that turns rhythm into story. We point to A Love Supreme as a compass for interplay—how shifting centers and unexpected turns make a recording feel alive decades later. From 942 performances of Jesus Christ Superstar to late‑night lyric notebooks, we unpack how process, not just outcome, shapes meaning. The room always matters; the audience is not a backdrop but a co‑author in the loop. We also zoom out to the tools. AI can predict chords, follow tempo, and trade motifs, and that can be useful for drafts or experiments. But anticipation is not intention. Music is a sacred exchange built on empathy mapped onto time, and that exchange resists being boxed into neat probabilities. We question the rush to monetize human knowledge, ask who benefits when models are trained on our collective past, and argue for the irreplaceable value of collaboration—the invisible trust and timing that make teams, bands, and studios greater than any one contributor. If you care about feel, about why some nights fly and others don’t, and about what we stand to lose when we trade presence for prediction, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves live music, and leave a review with your take: can AI ever have “feel,” or does the beat’s real intelligence only emerge between us? Thanks for listening.

27 Nov 2025 - 20 min
episode The Art of Playing for Twelve People and a Bartender artwork

The Art of Playing for Twelve People and a Bartender

A sticky floor, a half-broken PA, and fifteen people who actually listen—sometimes that’s all it takes to shape a voice you’ll carry for life. We revisit our Boston days with Unction, the band that treated Monday nights at The Rat like a creative laboratory, and we unpack why low-stakes rooms are the secret engine of real growth. From peeling paint to tight harmonies, we explore how small, attentive crowds and imperfect venues gave us permission to be unfinished, to fail loudly, and to discover the groove that still pulses underneath everything we make. We talk about the gap between pretense and practice—how chasing the right look or the right scene couldn’t compete with the discipline of showing up, trying new riffs, and learning in public. There’s a tension we learned to love: hope and hangovers, opera house by day and chaos by night. That friction sharpened our timing, stripped away our masks, and left us with a creative ethic that outlived the venue itself. The Rat is gone, but the pattern remains: real creativity is born in cheap rooms on the wrong nights, where nobody is waiting for you to impress them and failure counts as progress. If you’re building anything—songs, startups, stories, or a new chapter—go find your Monday night. Seek a space with low stakes and high attention, where you can test ideas, watch honest reactions, and refine your voice without the glare of big-stage expectations. Press play to hear the stories behind Unction’s experiments, the lessons that stuck, and a practical blueprint for finding your own unpolished room. If the journey resonates, subscribe, share this with a friend who’s in the messy middle, and leave a quick review to help more creators find their Monday night. Thanks for listening.

18 Nov 2025 - 11 min
episode Get Wild artwork

Get Wild

What if the map is the problem? We trade tidy outlines for living curiosity and show how “getting wild” can rescue a flat draft, reroute a stuck project, and even clarify the self that’s been hiding behind a careful plan. Wildness here isn’t chaos. It’s the deeper order you notice when you pause the algorithm, walk into unfamiliar streets, and let the work speak first. We start with light and shadow—the inner contradiction that powers real art—and a coffee shop moment that reframed preparation as playful wandering. From there, we unpack Song in Space as a jigsaw without a box image, exploring how to avoid predictable escapes by spinning the dial, shifting rhythm, and throwing new spices into the creative stew. You’ll hear practical moves: switch mediums when you stall, change environments to rewire attention, follow a string of “what ifs” until a dead end turns into a hidden door. Travel stories—riding subways you can’t read, surfacing in neighborhoods you didn’t plan to visit—become a metaphor for building work that breathes. We also tackle the pressure to fit inside digital conformity while sounding original. The answer isn’t louder rebellion; it’s permission to dismantle old temples and rebuild them in strange, honest forms. Wildness lets you see your shadow without flinching, and that meeting often reveals the voice your audience has been waiting for: not the expected perspective, but the unexpected one only you can offer. If you’re craving a path back to freshness, come wander with us. Subscribe, share this with a friend who’s stuck in a box canyon, and leave a review telling us the rule you’re breaking this week. Then put away the compass and see what the work wants from you. Thanks for listening.

25 Oct 2025 - 15 min
episode The Art of the Call artwork

The Art of the Call

Ever stared down a project while your brain begged for one more option, one more draft, one more “thinking walk”? We’ve been there—on an opera stage with eighty Vikings, in ad studios racing against dawn, and inside a passion project that ballooned into overwhelm. Today we pull those threads together to show how decisive action turns chaos into creative momentum. We start with the high-stakes story: a dress rehearsal, an expectant cast, and a conductor waiting. That pressure cooker reveals a quiet truth about the creative process—every piece advances one choice at a time. From the writer’s room in New York to production pits and pitch decks, we unpack why “writer’s block” is often decision block, and how simplifying low-stakes calls preserves energy for the art. Wardrobe shortcuts, default tools, and tight constraints aren’t boring; they’re safeguards for your best ideas. When a month of fundraising, casting, and platform choices for Song in Space tipped into noise, we chose an intentional pause: a road trip across Appalachia, history-soaked detours, and fresh air that reset the compass. Distance wasn’t avoidance; it was a decision to restore flow. Back at the desk, a cleaner pitch and a realistic plan snapped into place. We lay out the three-step framework that made it possible: recognize the decision point, define the choices—including the “impossible” one—and make the call. Along the way, we challenge the perfection myth and share a Miles Davis insight on turning a “wrong note” into the right one through commitment. If you’re stuck cycling options or fearing the imperfect, this conversation offers practical tools, sharp language, and a friendly push to move. The universe doesn’t respond to maybe—it responds to motion. Hit play, then tell us the choice you’re making today. And if this resonated, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review to help more creatives make the call. Thanks for listening.

24 Oct 2025 - 16 min
En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
Rigtig god tjeneste med gode eksklusive podcasts og derudover et kæmpe udvalg af podcasts og lydbøger. Kan varmt anbefales, om ikke andet så udelukkende pga Dårligdommerne, Klovn podcast, Hakkedrengene og Han duo 😁 👍
Podimo er blevet uundværlig! Til lange bilture, hverdagen, rengøringen og i det hele taget, når man trænger til lidt adspredelse.

Choose your subscription

Most popular

Limited Offer

Premium

20 hours of audiobooks

  • Podcasts only on Podimo

  • No ads in Podimo shows

  • Cancel anytime

2 months for 19 kr.
Then 99 kr. / month

Get Started

Premium Plus

Unlimited audiobooks

  • Podcasts only on Podimo

  • No ads in Podimo shows

  • Cancel anytime

Start 7 days free trial
Then 129 kr. / month

Start for free

Only on Podimo

Popular audiobooks

Get Started

2 months for 19 kr. Then 99 kr. / month. Cancel anytime.