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The Ryan Vet Show

Podcast by Ryan Vet

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About The Ryan Vet Show

To lead well today, you have to understand the forces that shaped yesterday and the ones reshaping tomorrow. You were made to Inspire Forward...and every episode helps you do just that.The Ryan Vet Show is where leaders come to understand why the world, and the people in it, work the way they do. Hosted by Ryan Vet, USA Today bestselling author, generational futurist, and contrarian leadership thinker, the show blends research, lived experience, and narrative to help you navigate tomorrow with more insight, perspective, and practical wisdom.Each week, Ryan explores the ideas shaping today’s workplace and culture:Generational dynamics and the behaviors that form each cohortLeadership and organizational psychologyChange management and the forces driving adaptationEntrepreneurship and real-world decision makingCommunication, influence, and human behaviorHow the past explains the present and the present shapes the futureThe show features two core formats:Long-form interviews with leaders, thinkers, entrepreneurs, and creators whose stories reveal the “why” behind their work, decisions, and impact.Weekly readings of the COLLIDE newsletter, where Ryan breaks down cultural shifts, generational insights, and leadership lessons with a story-rich, research-backed lens.Whether you’re an executive, a manager, an entrepreneur, an educator, or simply navigating cross-generational tension, The Ryan Vet Show gives you the insight and tools to lead with clarity, curiosity, and intentionality.If you want a show that’s intellectually grounded, practically useful, and deeply human — welcome.This is your place to understand the world more clearly and lead it more thoughtfully.

All episodes

25 episodes

episode Gen Z Is Ungrounded and Going Back to the Mall - The Generational Pendulum Swings Back to In-Person artwork

Gen Z Is Ungrounded and Going Back to the Mall - The Generational Pendulum Swings Back to In-Person

The most digital generation is going back to the mall. Generational futurist Ryan Vet explains why Gen Z's IRL revival is a leadership signal. Ryan Vet, generational futurist, expert in generations, and AI keynote speaker, unpacks the resurgence of physical retail, the Generational Pendulum, and what Gen Z's return to malls, bookstores, and coffee shops reveals about how this generation was formed. A generation that was tracked, supervised, and over-scheduled is now hunting for the unstructured, in-person moments older generations took for granted. The workplace is next. Key Takeaways * Gen Z's foot traffic at malls is up 57% year-over-year, and 82.2% of Gen Z mall-goers say they are there to socialize, not to shop (Placer.ai, 2026). * The Generational Pendulum is swinging back: 83% of 18-to-24-year-olds say social retail environments improve their sense of connection (Lightspeed, 2026). * Gen X was rarely watched. Gen Z has been over-watched. That difference is formative, not cosmetic. * The mall was practice. It taught budgeting, trade-offs, self-control, and watching peers make bad decisions in real time. A generation that skipped that practice arrives at work without those reps. * Gallup (2025) reports Gen Z is the loneliest generation at work, nearly twice as likely as Gen X to say they experienced loneliness a lot of the previous day. * Leaders cannot replace lived experience with a Slack onboarding checklist. Workplaces need more unstructured time, multi-age interaction, and real apprenticeship. * The recalibration has already started. Gen Alpha (currently 1-13) may be the generation whose parents intentionally design a more analog childhood. Research and Sources Cited * Lightspeed. (2026). Gen Z wants more than products: 83% of 18-24-year-olds say hangout stores boost connection. * Placer.ai. (2026). How malls can win in 2026. * Pew Research Center. (2014). Generation X: America's neglected middle child. * Pew Research Center. (2025). Americans' trust in one another. * Gallup. (2023). Gen Z voices lackluster trust in major U.S. institutions. * Gallup. (2025). State of the global workplace: 2025 report. * Starbucks. (2025). Starbucks coffeehouse designs enter a new era. * City of St. Charles, Illinois. (n.d.). Charlestowne Mall redevelopment. * Business Insider. (2025). Starbucks plans to phase out its mobile-only stores for a future with more warmth and human connection. Connect with Ryan Vet * Read the full essay: Gen Z Is Ungrounded and Going Back to the Mall [https://ryanvet.com/collide/gen-z-is-ungrounded-and-going-back-to-the-mall/] * Subscribe to Collide: www.RyanVet.com/collide [https://www.ryanvet.com/collide] * Website: www.RyanVet.com [https://www.ryanvet.com] * LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/ryanvet [https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryanvet/] * YouTube: @RyanVet [https://www.youtube.com/@RyanVet] * Book Ryan to speak: ryanvet.com/booking [https://www.ryanvet.com/booking] About Ryan Vet Ryan Vet is a generational futurist, USA TODAY bestselling author, international keynote speaker, and host of The Ryan Vet Show. As an expert in generations and an AI keynote speaker, he helps leaders, parents, and organizations make sense of how Boomers, Gen X, Millennials, Gen Z, Gen Alpha, and Gen Beta are reshaping work, family, and culture. Collide is his weekly research-backed newsletter on generational leadership, read by 21,000+ leaders. #GenerationalFuturist #GenZ #GenX #GenAlpha #Loneliness #ThirdPlaces #Mentorship #Leadership #ExpertInGenerations #RyanVet #CollidePodcast #AIKeynoteSpeaker #FutureOfWork Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2557074/fan_mail/new] ABOUT RYAN VET Ryan Vet [https://ryanvet.com/?ref=podcast] is a USA TODAY bestselling author, futurist [https://ryanvet.com/futurist/], and international keynote speaker whose insights on generations, culture, and the future of work have been featured in Forbes, Financial Times, ABC, NBC, and CBS. His research helps leaders understand emerging generational patterns and anticipate societal shifts before they fully unfold. JOIN 20,000+ LEADERS FOR WEEKLY INSIGHTS If you want deeper research and behind-the-scenes insights on generations and the future of culture and society, join Ryan’s weekly newsletter: 👉 https://ryanvet.com/collide

21 May 2026 - 15 min
episode What the Class of 2026 Is Really Bringing to the Workforce: Loneliness, AI, and the Mentor Gap artwork

What the Class of 2026 Is Really Bringing to the Workforce: Loneliness, AI, and the Mentor Gap

The Class of 2026 is the loneliest generation ever to walk across a graduation stage, and the workforce is not ready for them. Generational futurist Ryan Vet, an expert in generations and AI keynote speaker, unpacks why the college Class of 2026 is unlike any cohort before it. They are the first traditional graduating class whose entire college experience was shaped by generative AI, whose adolescence was marked by political polarity, and whose childhood absorbed the aftershocks of the Great Recession. In this episode, Ryan answers the questions leaders are actually asking. What makes the Class of 2026 different from previous Gen Z graduates? They were born in 2004, the same year Facebook launched. ChatGPT became free to the public the same semester they began college. They are the first cohort whose entire undergraduate experience was rewritten in real time by generative AI. Why is Gen Z the loneliest generation at work? Gallup's 2025 State of the Global Workplace report found Gen Z employees are nearly twice as likely as Gen X and three times as likely as Boomers to report daily loneliness. Only 23 percent of remote-capable Gen Z workers prefer fully remote work, lower than every older generation. What does Gen Z actually want from the workplace? Mentorship. 83 percent of Gen Z workers say a workplace mentor is important, yet only 52 percent have one (Adobe, 2023). Deloitte's 2025 Gen Z and Millennial Survey found most Gen Z employees feel their managers are too busy with tasks to offer real guidance. How should leaders talk to new graduates about AI? The honest conversation is not, "Don't worry, AI won't take your job." It is, "Here is what AI is going to change about this role, here is what I still need a human to do, and here is what I am going to teach you that no model can replicate." The biggest takeaway: this generation does not need more flexibility. They need more meaningful connection. Read the full essay: www.ryanvet.com/collide/what-the-class-of-2026-is-really-bringing-to-the-workforce [https://www.ryanvet.com/collide/what-the-class-of-2026-is-really-bringing-to-the-workforce/] Subscribe to the Collide newsletter: www.ryanvet.com/collide [https://www.ryanvet.com/collide] Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2557074/fan_mail/new] ABOUT RYAN VET Ryan Vet [https://ryanvet.com/?ref=podcast] is a USA TODAY bestselling author, futurist [https://ryanvet.com/futurist/], and international keynote speaker whose insights on generations, culture, and the future of work have been featured in Forbes, Financial Times, ABC, NBC, and CBS. His research helps leaders understand emerging generational patterns and anticipate societal shifts before they fully unfold. JOIN 20,000+ LEADERS FOR WEEKLY INSIGHTS If you want deeper research and behind-the-scenes insights on generations and the future of culture and society, join Ryan’s weekly newsletter: 👉 https://ryanvet.com/collide

14 May 2026 - 11 min
episode Justin Bieber Doesn't Own His Own Songs Anymore - What Coachella Revealed About Millennials and the Internet artwork

Justin Bieber Doesn't Own His Own Songs Anymore - What Coachella Revealed About Millennials and the Internet

At Coachella 2026, Justin Bieber walked on stage, sat down at a MacBook, and started playing YouTube videos of his twelve-year-old self. Millennials in the crowd wiped away tears. Generational futurist Ryan Vet unpacks why that Coachella moment is a cultural mirror for an entire generation. Bieber sold his 290-song back catalog to Hipgnosis Songs Capital, a fund backed by Blackstone, for a reported $200 million in 2022. The songs that made him are not his anymore. The Millennials watching him weren't crying for him. They were crying for the version of the internet that discovered him. Ryan applies the Generational Prism, the Velocity Gap, and the Friction Doctrine to explain why Bieber's 15-year arc happened faster than any star before him, and why Millennials, the bridge generation, are auditing the dream the early internet sold them. Topics Covered * What happened at Bieber's 2026 Coachella set and why Millennials wept * How the early internet promised "you can be discovered" and made it feel true * Susan Boyle, Sara Tucholsky, and the artifacts of a kinder internet * Elizabeth Taylor vs. Bieber: 5 decades of fame compressed into 15 years * Why Bieber sold his 290 songs to Blackstone, and what it signals for the rest of us * How Gen Z is swinging the pendulum back toward authenticity Key Takeaways * YouTube received ~6 hours of video per minute in 2007. Today, over 500 hours per minute (Statista, 2022). * Bieber sold his 290-song catalog to Hipgnosis/Blackstone for ~$200M in December 2022 (Billboard, 2023). * In 1963, Elizabeth Taylor became the first actress paid $1M for a single film (Cleopatra). * Taylor's career arced 5+ decades. Bieber's pop arc has taken ~15 years. * The Boomer dream was the American Dream. The Millennial dream was: be remarkable, post it online, you will be found. Who Should Listen Leaders managing Millennial and Gen Z employees, parents raising Gen Alpha and Gen Beta, and anyone who came of age inside the early internet and is now wondering what happened to it. Connect with Ryan Vet * Newsletter (COLLIDE): https://www.RyanVet.com/collide * Website: https://www.ryanvet.com * YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@RyanCVet * LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryanvet/ * Full essay: https://collide.ryanvet.com/p/justin-bieber-doesn-t-own-his-own-songs-anymore Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2557074/fan_mail/new] ABOUT RYAN VET Ryan Vet [https://ryanvet.com/?ref=podcast] is a USA TODAY bestselling author, futurist [https://ryanvet.com/futurist/], and international keynote speaker whose insights on generations, culture, and the future of work have been featured in Forbes, Financial Times, ABC, NBC, and CBS. His research helps leaders understand emerging generational patterns and anticipate societal shifts before they fully unfold. JOIN 20,000+ LEADERS FOR WEEKLY INSIGHTS If you want deeper research and behind-the-scenes insights on generations and the future of culture and society, join Ryan’s weekly newsletter: 👉 https://ryanvet.com/collide

7 May 2026 - 9 min
episode We've Never Been More Alone - Why the Most Connected Generation Is the Loneliest in History artwork

We've Never Been More Alone - Why the Most Connected Generation Is the Loneliest in History

We are the most digitally connected society in human history. We are also, by every measure, the loneliest. The U.S. Surgeon General compared loneliness to smoking 15 cigarettes a day. The loneliest adults are not in nursing homes. They are in their twenties and thirties. Generational futurist Ryan Vet unpacks the research behind Gen Z's loneliness epidemic, why it began in childhood and not in adulthood, and what leaders must understand about the first generation raised inside a connection paradox. From the collapse of the family dinner to the rise of AI companions, Ryan applies the Generational Prism and the Friction Doctrine to explain why a culture that removes the cost of connection quietly removes the relational growth that only comes through it. Topics Covered * Why the U.S. Surgeon General declared loneliness a public health epidemic * How Gen Z became the loneliest generation in American history * The collapse of the family dinner across four generations * How AI companions are deepening, not solving, the loneliness crisis * What every leader managing Gen Z employees needs to understand Key Takeaways * The U.S. Surgeon General compared loneliness to smoking 15 cigarettes a day (2023). * 43.3% of adults ages 18 to 34 report loneliness, vs 23.8% of adults 65 and older (CDC, 2022). * 61% of Gen Z teens felt lonely often during adolescence, twice the Boomer rate (Survey Center on American Life, 2023). * Family dinners fell from 84% (Silent Gen) to 38% (Gen Z), a 46-point collapse (Institute for Family Studies, 2024). * 72% of U.S. teens have tried an AI companion. Heavy users are lonelier and more emotionally dependent (Fang et al., MIT/OpenAI, 2025). * Stress-related absence linked to social disconnection costs U.S. employers $154 billion annually (Cigna, 2025). Who Should Listen Leaders managing multi-generational teams, parents raising Gen Alpha and Gen Beta children, HR executives, and anyone trying to understand why hyperconnected generations report record isolation. Research Cited * U.S. Surgeon General (2023); CDC (2022); Cigna (2025). * Institute for Family Studies (2024); Survey Center on American Life (2023). * Fang et al., MIT/OpenAI (2025); NORC/TechCrunch (2025). Connect with Ryan Vet * Newsletter (COLLIDE): https://www.RyanVet.com/collide * Website: https://www.ryanvet.com * YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@RyanVet * LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryanvet/ * Full essay: https://collide.ryanvet.com/p/we-ve-never-been-more-alone Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2557074/fan_mail/new] ABOUT RYAN VET Ryan Vet [https://ryanvet.com/?ref=podcast] is a USA TODAY bestselling author, futurist [https://ryanvet.com/futurist/], and international keynote speaker whose insights on generations, culture, and the future of work have been featured in Forbes, Financial Times, ABC, NBC, and CBS. His research helps leaders understand emerging generational patterns and anticipate societal shifts before they fully unfold. JOIN 20,000+ LEADERS FOR WEEKLY INSIGHTS If you want deeper research and behind-the-scenes insights on generations and the future of culture and society, join Ryan’s weekly newsletter: 👉 https://ryanvet.com/collide

30 Apr 2026 - 11 min
episode Disagreement Used to Cost You Something artwork

Disagreement Used to Cost You Something

Disagreement used to cost you something. Today, it costs nothing — and that's the problem. The Berlin Wall is remembered for what it built. But what it really destroyed was the middle: the shared space where people could disagree, stay in the room, and finish the conversation. Today, an invisible wall made of algorithms, labels, and distrust has done the same thing. In this episode, generational futurist Ryan Vet explores what happened to the middle ground in American culture, why the "Invisible Gorilla" experiment reveals how we're all missing what's right in front of us, and what leaders must do to reclaim the space where real dialogue lives. From Gallup's data on the collapse of political moderates to the inattentional blindness research of Simons and Chabris, Ryan connects the dots between generational information arcs, algorithmic fracture, and the leadership mandate to stay in the room. * The middle didn't vanish overnight. Gallup found moderates fell from 43% of Americans in 1992 to 34% in 2024 — a slow erosion with compounding consequences. * The "Invisible Gorilla" problem: when you're preconditioned to count passes from your own side, you miss the gorilla walking through the room. Millions of people are doing this simultaneously. * Disagreement used to require physical presence and accountability. Algorithms eliminated that friction — and we lost something irreplaceable when it went. * Millennials got information at scale. Gen Z inherited a version of that promise already corrupted by filtered feeds, "fake news," and earned institutional distrust. * The middle isn't a spineless, uncommitted position. It's having convictions strong enough that you don't need to destroy someone else's to feel secure in your own. * For leaders: the goal isn't agreement. It's staying in the room long enough to finish the conversation. Research and Sources Cited * Gallup (2025). U.S. Political Parties Historically Polarized Ideologically. https://news.gallup.com/poll/655190/u-s-political-parties-historically-polarized-ideologically.aspx * Pew Research Center (2014). Political Polarization in the American Public. https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2014/06/12/political-polarization-in-the-american-public/ * DiMaggio, P., Evans, J., & Bryson, B. (1996). Have Americans' social attitudes become more polarized? American Journal of Sociology, 102(3), 690–755. * Simons, D. J., & Chabris, C. F. (1999). Gorillas in our midst: Sustained inattentional blindness for dynamic events. Perception, 28(9), 1059–1074. * Berlin.de / Chronik der Mauer. Victims of the Wall. https://www.berlin.de/mauer/en/history/victims-of-the-wall/ Connect with Ryan Vet * Newsletter (COLLIDE): https://www.RyanVet.com/collide * Website: https://www.ryanvet.com * YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@RyanVet * LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryanvet/ * Read the full essay: https://collide.ryanvet.com/p/disagreement-used-to-cost-you-something About Ryan Vet Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2557074/fan_mail/new] ABOUT RYAN VET Ryan Vet [https://ryanvet.com/?ref=podcast] is a USA TODAY bestselling author, futurist [https://ryanvet.com/futurist/], and international keynote speaker whose insights on generations, culture, and the future of work have been featured in Forbes, Financial Times, ABC, NBC, and CBS. His research helps leaders understand emerging generational patterns and anticipate societal shifts before they fully unfold. JOIN 20,000+ LEADERS FOR WEEKLY INSIGHTS If you want deeper research and behind-the-scenes insights on generations and the future of culture and society, join Ryan’s weekly newsletter: 👉 https://ryanvet.com/collide

16 Apr 2026 - 10 min
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