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Echoes Across Time

Podcast by Tim Levy

English

Technology & science

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About Echoes Across Time

In a world racing toward artificial intelligence and digital immortality, what does it truly mean to be remembered? Hosted by Tim Levy, serial entrepreneur and founder of Twyn, Echoes Across Time explores how our lives, choices, and creations leave traces that outlast us. Through intimate, story-driven conversations with artists, innovators, philosophers, and pioneers, Tim invites guests to reflect on what legacy means in an age when technology can preserve everything — except the essence of who we are. Echoes Across Time is more than a podcast. It’s an inquiry into memory, meaning, and the art of leaving something that endures.

All episodes

12 episodes

episode Five Years Gone to Addiction — A Power Greater Than Myself artwork

Five Years Gone to Addiction — A Power Greater Than Myself

At 20, Roy Hay had everything — Culture Club's meteoric rise, Madonna-level fame, the cover of every magazine, a country house, stretch limos. For six years, 1981 to 1987, it was the best time. Then he discovered what it cost to ride that wave forever. This episode is Roy's reckoning — how he spent the next 25 years discovering that success doesn't carry you, that the meritocracy he believed in wasn't real, and that the only thing that finally saved him wasn't willpower but surrender. From a single terrifying audition in front of Richard Branson to five lost years he genuinely doesn't remember, Roy traces the arc from the kid who believed music was classless to the man who learned that you can't live on top of a wave. What he found on the other side of that line — the one you cross and can't return from — is the story that matters now. The A&R Guy Who Changed Everything — Visiting his aunt for Christmas, a Virgin A&R man saw Culture Club's first gig and delivered the line that launched them: 'You're absolutely terrible. But the kids loved you.' Roy names this moment as the turning point — proof that meritocracy worked, that the audience was the true gatekeeper.  The Sun Headline That Made History — 'Boy or a Girl' ran across the UK's biggest newspaper the morning after their TV performance, compared to Bowie's Starman moment. Roy still remembers the shock — they'd made cultural history before they understood what was happening.  Madonna Famous: When Success Stops Being Real — Stretch limos, country houses bought from rock stars, parents who had to be relocated because fans and journalists were bothering them. Roy names it plainly: 'Totally lost grip of reality.' The pinnacle moment where he still felt the emptiness underneath the glamour.  The Central Belief That Kept Him Trapped — Roy names the insight that took decades: 'The thing that stopped me getting sober for a long time was I thought there had to be a reason.' He was waiting for the explanation, the justification. Sobriety came when he accepted there wasn't one.  Five Years He Doesn't Remember — Between 2002 and 2007, Roy lived in madness — a second relapse that consumed five years of his existence. The confession without dramatization: 'I really don't know a little about my life' during those years. The full extent of what the addiction cost him.  Dragged Into Rehab by Grace — Not willpower. Not a moment of clarity he orchestrated. 'A power greater than myself interfered and dragged me into rehab.' Roy woke up, walked out, and something shifted. The moment of surrender that finally worked.  Working for the Music, Not the Man — At this stage of life, everything tells him to slow down, cut people out, retire gracefully. Instead: 'You're not working for the man. You're working for the music.' The one-word answer to the question of legacy — and why he's more alive now than he was at the top of the wave.

6 May 2026 - 1 h 1 min
episode Hilary Shor: From Living in Her Car to Universal Release — The Cost of Staying True artwork

Hilary Shor: From Living in Her Car to Universal Release — The Cost of Staying True

Hollywood producer Hilary Shor has built a career on an unusual foundation: moral fiber in an industry that rewards the opposite. In this raw, unflinching conversation with Tim Levy, she reveals how staying true to her values cost her success but saved her soul. From her East Coast intellectual upbringing to surviving decades of rejection in Hollywood, Hilary's story is one of integrity over ambition. She shares the breaking point at 30 that changed everything, the spiritual beliefs that sustained her through the chaos, and the Universal Studios betrayal that buried her best work on six screens Christmas Day. This isn't just another Hollywood war story—it's a meditation on what it means to sleep peacefully when you've chosen principles over profit. For anyone wrestling with compromise versus character, Hilary's fierce declaration 'I have fucking moral fiber' becomes a rallying cry for authentic success. * The Producer's Paradox — Why being a good producer means knowing what you don't know, and how humility becomes your greatest strength in Hollywood politics. * Moral Fiber in a Corrupt System — The episode's emotional climax where Hilary declares her commitment to integrity despite knowing it's cost her career success. * Six Screens on Christmas Day — The devastating story of how Universal Studios buried her best movie, releasing it on only six screens during the worst possible weekend. * Money as Love Language — The family revelation at 30 that explained a lifetime of instability and shaped her approach to relationships and business. * Spiritual Survival in Hollywood — How childlike spirituality and belief in a higher purpose sustained her through decades of rejection and disappointment. * The Journey Perspective — Finding peace with a difficult path by reframing struggle as necessary growth rather than failure. * Do the Work — Her hard-earned wisdom about rejecting entitlement and earning success through relentless effort, especially for younger generations.

8 Apr 2026 - 0
episode Wayne Jobson: How A Law Student Faked It Into A Record Deal With Reggae Legends artwork

Wayne Jobson: How A Law Student Faked It Into A Record Deal With Reggae Legends

There's a moment when a teenage law student in England, armed with nothing but a demo and the whispered endorsement of Johnny Rotten, walks into record company offices and lies with such confidence that they hand him money. He doesn't have a band yet. He barely has a story. But he has the audacity to become one anyway—and the world shifts. This is not a story about getting lucky. It's a story about what happens when luck finds someone already moving. Native Wayne Jobson spent his childhood in Jamaica's hills watching greatness work: his father building industries, his cousin launching legends through Island Records, Bob Marley refusing anything but total commitment. When the world opened, he didn't hesitate. He walked through. In this episode of Echoes Across Time, listeners will discover how a Jamaican storyteller became the architect of global soundtracks—from Grammy-winning reggae reimaginings to Disney films to radio stations—not by chasing fame but by staying rooted in what matters: craft, humility, and the relentless practice of one's gift. Tim Levy, himself eighth-generation Jamaican, meets Wayne as a mirror—two men from an island that produces confidence the way other places produce anxiety. Their conversation explores what it means to build a life when you've been surrounded by the world's greatest minds, carrying the weight of real inheritance: what you keep, what you pass on, what it costs to stay humble when you're standing next to genius. About the Guest: Native Wayne Jobson is a music producer, entrepreneur, and creative strategist whose work spans Grammy-winning albums, film soundtracks, and broadcast media. Based between Jamaica and the United States, he bridges Caribbean heritage with global creative vision.

1 Apr 2026 - 0
episode Esther Anaya: From Refugee Loss to World Tours—The Cost of Survival artwork

Esther Anaya: From Refugee Loss to World Tours—The Cost of Survival

A woman sits across from her interviewer and admits something she's never said aloud before. The eating disorder. The crying in her bed while the world watched her shine on stage. The moment she stopped performing the version everyone expected and started asking for help instead. This is not the story of a flawless rise. This is what happens when someone with everything still feels empty, when touring the world feels like performing loneliness, when the hardest part of success is showing up human on the other side of it. Esther Anaya is a Colombian-born DJ, classical violinist, singer-songwriter, and producer who has performed at Super Bowls, collaborated with Rihanna, Kanye West, and Maluma, and built a global career spanning stadiums and festivals. In this episode of Echoes Across Time, she reveals what shaped her beneath the stages: a childhood marked by family loss in violence, a father who risked everything in politics, a mother who taught her resilience through music, and a faith that has anchored her through depression, eating disorders, and the relentless pressure of a male-dominated industry. You'll discover how someone at the height of external success learned to recognize and honor what was breaking inside. Tim Levy hosts this conversation with the presence of someone who understands that the most powerful stories emerge when we stop interviewing and start listening. What unfolds is a portrait of someone learning, in real time, that strength and vulnerability are not opposites—they are the same thing. This is about legacy, survival, purpose, and the courage it takes to let others see you becoming whole. About the Guest: Esther Anaya is a Grammy-nominated artist, producer, and founder of music programs dedicated to serving underserved youth globally. Her work spans classical training, electronic production, and collaborative artistry across multiple genres and continents.

25 Mar 2026 - 0
episode What Shapes Resilience When Life Begins With Loss? | Peter Drewett artwork

What Shapes Resilience When Life Begins With Loss? | Peter Drewett

In this conversation, Tim Levy sits with Peter Drewett, international rugby coach and high-performance leadership expert, to explore resilience, identity, and the experiences that shape how people perform under pressure. Across more than three decades in elite sport, Peter has helped prepare teams for over 350 internationals and 18 Rugby World Cups. From leading England U21s to their first ever Six Nations Grand Slam to helping build the high-performance culture that later powered Exeter Chiefs’ Premiership success, his career has focused on understanding what allows individuals and teams to thrive when the stakes are highest. But Peter’s story begins long before professional sport. After spending his earliest years in Ghana, his childhood was shaped by loss. His mother died when he was seven, his father remained in Africa, and Peter grew up moving between families — learning early how to adapt, persevere, and move forward without seeing himself as a victim. Together, Tim and Peter reflect on childhood resilience, emotional armor, faith, and the mentors who shape our path. They explore how great teams are built through culture, trust, honest feedback, and shared values — and why the strongest performers are often those who remain humble enough to keep learning. This episode is not only about sport or leadership. It is about resilience, the quiet strength forged through uncertainty, and how early adversity can shape a life dedicated to helping others achieve the extraordinary. To learn more about Peter’s work in leadership development and high-performance teams through PERFORM2XL, visit www.perform2xl.com. If this conversation stayed with you, follow Echoes Across Time wherever you listen to podcasts, and join us as we continue exploring what truly lasts.

18 Mar 2026 - 1 h 0 min
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