LeadHERship - What? Like it's hard?

The Vivian Kensington Plot Twist

32 min · 2. kesä 2026
jakson The Vivian Kensington Plot Twist kansikuva

Kuvaus

When most people think about Legally Blonde, they think about Elle Woods winning the case and proving everyone wrong. But one of our favorite moments in the movie isn't the courtroom scene. It's the Vivian Kensington plot twist. At the beginning, Vivian feels like the competition. She's smart, accomplished, respected at Harvard, and engaged to Warner. From Elle's perspective, she's standing in the way of everything she thought she wanted. And if we're honest, many women have experienced their own "Vivian" at some point in their careers. Another woman sitting at the table we hope to join. Another woman getting an opportunity we wanted. Another woman who, at first glance, feels like the competition. But here's the lesson we love from this story: Elle doesn't spend her energy trying to tear Vivian down. Once she gets to Harvard, she focuses on becoming the best version of herself. She works hard. She stays true to who she is. She shows kindness, even when it isn't returned. And eventually, Vivian realizes something important: Elle was never the enemy. In fact, they're better together. That's the real plot twist. As women leaders, we've all been told at some point that there's only room for one of us. One seat at the table. One leadership role. One voice that gets heard. But our experience has taught us something very different. The best leaders don't protect their seat. They pull up another chair. When we look back on our own careers, none of us got where we are alone. Someone opened a door. Someone made an introduction. Someone took a chance on us. Someone encouraged us to speak up when we weren't sure we belonged in the room. And because of that, we believe we have a responsibility to do the same for others. This episode is about mentoring the next generation, creating opportunities for other women, amplifying voices that haven't yet been heard, and understanding that another woman's success does not diminish our own. Because leadership isn't about being the only woman at the table. It's about making sure you're not the last. Good leaders don't rise alone. And the best women leaders are always looking around the room asking, "Who else deserves a chair?"

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jakson The Vivian Kensington Plot Twist kansikuva

The Vivian Kensington Plot Twist

When most people think about Legally Blonde, they think about Elle Woods winning the case and proving everyone wrong. But one of our favorite moments in the movie isn't the courtroom scene. It's the Vivian Kensington plot twist. At the beginning, Vivian feels like the competition. She's smart, accomplished, respected at Harvard, and engaged to Warner. From Elle's perspective, she's standing in the way of everything she thought she wanted. And if we're honest, many women have experienced their own "Vivian" at some point in their careers. Another woman sitting at the table we hope to join. Another woman getting an opportunity we wanted. Another woman who, at first glance, feels like the competition. But here's the lesson we love from this story: Elle doesn't spend her energy trying to tear Vivian down. Once she gets to Harvard, she focuses on becoming the best version of herself. She works hard. She stays true to who she is. She shows kindness, even when it isn't returned. And eventually, Vivian realizes something important: Elle was never the enemy. In fact, they're better together. That's the real plot twist. As women leaders, we've all been told at some point that there's only room for one of us. One seat at the table. One leadership role. One voice that gets heard. But our experience has taught us something very different. The best leaders don't protect their seat. They pull up another chair. When we look back on our own careers, none of us got where we are alone. Someone opened a door. Someone made an introduction. Someone took a chance on us. Someone encouraged us to speak up when we weren't sure we belonged in the room. And because of that, we believe we have a responsibility to do the same for others. This episode is about mentoring the next generation, creating opportunities for other women, amplifying voices that haven't yet been heard, and understanding that another woman's success does not diminish our own. Because leadership isn't about being the only woman at the table. It's about making sure you're not the last. Good leaders don't rise alone. And the best women leaders are always looking around the room asking, "Who else deserves a chair?"

2. kesä 202632 min
jakson Don’t Stomp Your Little Last Season Prada Shoes at Me kansikuva

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In this episode, we’re talking about what it really means to stand up when everyone else is sitting down. Not because it’s comfortable. Not because it’s popular. But because sometimes the hardest thing in leadership is being the person willing to say, “I don’t think this is right,” in a room full of people who would rather just move on to the next agenda item. We’ve all been there. The meeting where everyone silently agrees something feels off, but nobody wants to be the one to disrupt the momentum. The moment where “we’ve always done it this way” becomes easier than challenging the process, the thinking, or the people leading it. The tension between protecting the peace and protecting what’s right. This conversation is about courage. The kind that doesn’t always look loud or dramatic. Sometimes courage is simply asking the uncomfortable question. Pushing back respectfully. Refusing to nod along when your gut says otherwise. Because leadership isn’t compliance. And progress rarely happens when everyone stays comfortable. We’re also talking about the ripple effect of one brave voice. How one person choosing to speak up can completely shift the direction of a room and give others permission to stop shrinking themselves too. Sometimes the boldest thing you can do is go first. And honestly? Elle Woods would never stay quiet just to make everyone else comfortable.

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jakson Where It Started and Why It Matters kansikuva

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In our very first episode of LeadHERship: What? Like It’s Hard?, hosts Stacey Chapman and Natalie Rutledge pull back the curtain on why this podcast exists and the kind of leadership conversations we believe are missing. This isn’t about titles or checklists. It’s about the women who lead in a way that lifts others up. We share our individual paths to leadership, the moments that shaped us, and the people who poured into us along the way. More importantly, we talk about what makes leadership sustainable… the kind that lasts, grows others, and creates real impact beyond yourself. From servant leadership to building meaningful relationships, we believe the foundation of great leadership isn’t about being the loudest voice in the room. It’s about creating space for others to rise. If you’ve ever wondered what leadership really looks like behind the scenes, or how to grow into it in a way that feels authentic, this is where it starts.

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