The Leadership Multiverse

Optimus Prime

59 min · 28 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Optimus Prime

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2529196/fan_mail/new] What can a giant transforming robot teach us about leadership? Quite a lot, it turns out. In this episode, we take on Optimus Prime as a leadership case study, exploring moral conviction, burdened leadership, executive isolation, succession blind spots, and whether principled leaders can become too rigid for the worlds they lead. From 1980s Cold War symbolism to modern questions of adaptability and team culture, Ellen and Andrew ask whether Optimus is the heroic leader we remember, or a more flawed commander than nostalgia admits. As ever, expect serious leadership analysis, geeky detours, and the occasional truck-sized heresy. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2529196/support]

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21 episodios

episode Katniss Everdeen artwork

Katniss Everdeen

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2529196/fan_mail/new] In this episode of The Leadership Multiverse, Ellen is joined by special guest, Elisa Pratt to explore the leadership lessons of Katniss Everdeen from The Hunger Games. Katniss is not a conventional leader. She doesn't seek power, status or a platform. She steps forward to protect her sister and becomes, almost against her will, a symbol of resistance, hope and disruption. That makes her a fascinating study in reluctant leadership, authenticity, personal brand and the uncomfortable politics of being turned into a figurehead. Ellen and Elisa discuss Katniss as an imperfect but powerful leader: reactive, principled, emotionally driven, sometimes strategic, often resistant to being managed, and deeply shaped by the world around her. They consider what her story reveals about symbolic leadership, volunteer leadership, board dynamics, political performance, influence, empathy, rebellion and the limits of charisma. Along the way, they ask whether Katniss belongs more naturally in Star Wars, Star Trek or the Avengers, whether she deserves more credit as a transformational leader, and why the messiest leaders are often the most interesting. A thoughtful, lively conversation about the Mockingjay, leadership under pressure, and what happens when the person everyone follows never really wanted to lead. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2529196/support]

2 de jun de 202643 min
episode Daenerys Targaryen: The Mother of Dragons artwork

Daenerys Targaryen: The Mother of Dragons

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2529196/fan_mail/new] This week Andrew and Ellen enter Westeros to examine Daenerys Targaryen: liberator, revolutionary, symbol-maker, and ultimately a deeply dangerous leader. They explore her journey from vulnerable exile to Mother of Dragons, asking when moral clarity becomes absolutism, when vision turns into destiny, and why charisma without accountability can become catastrophic. Along the way, they discuss trauma, founder syndrome, symbolic leadership, emotional volatility, weak systems, poor succession, and why “breaking the wheel” is not much use if you replace it with fire. A fascinating, conflicted and occasionally scorching leadership case study. Literally. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2529196/support]

26 de may de 202653 min
episode Steve Rogers: Captain America artwork

Steve Rogers: Captain America

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2529196/fan_mail/new] In this episode of Leadership Multiverse, Andrew and Ellen take on Steve Rogers, better known as Captain America, and ask whether he really deserves his reputation as one of popular culture’s clearest examples of values-based leadership under pressure. The discussion explores his moral clarity, courage, calm crisis leadership and ability to build followership in moments of danger. It also asks harder questions about his rigidity, his difficulty with compromise, his loyalty to Bucky, the breakdown of the Avengers, and whether principled leadership can become destabilising when it leaves too little room for accountability, ambiguity and other people’s perspectives. Along the way, Andrew and Ellen consider the Sokovia Accords, Civil War, sacrifice, emotional intelligence, operational command, and whether Steve Rogers would survive in Starfleet, Star Wars, The Boys, Game of Thrones or DC. Spoiler: Andrew remains deeply unconvinced. A lively episode on moral leadership, wartime leadership, personal loyalty, and the difference between being worthy and being easy to work with. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2529196/support]

19 de may de 202650 min
episode Captain Christopher Pike artwork

Captain Christopher Pike

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2529196/fan_mail/new] This week, The Leadership Multiverse heads back to Starfleet to explore the leadership of Captain Christopher Pike. We look at Pike as a servant leader: calm, values-led, emotionally intelligent and deeply trusted by his crew. We discuss how he creates psychological safety, invites challenge, humanises command and carries the burden of knowing his own tragic future. We also ask where his strengths become risks. Does his empathy tip into paternalism? Does he carry too much alone? Can a leader who values consensus still move quickly when the moment demands command? Expect comparisons with Kirk, Picard, Burnham, Sisko and Janeway, plus the usual attempt to place him somewhere improbable in the wider leadership multiverse.  Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2529196/support]

12 de may de 202659 min