• Interview with Josh Latimer Part 2
    May 6 2026

    Ever feel like your faith, your business, and who you’re becoming… don’t quite line up anymore?

    That’s where this conversation goes.

    Curt Kempton and Melody Edwards sit down with Josh Latimer for Part 2—and instead of clean answers, they follow the tension. The result is a conversation that moves through belief, doubt, identity, and what happens when long-held frameworks start to shift.

    This is about answering what feels true and what doesn’t anymore.

    For anyone who’s felt that quiet disconnect between what they were taught and what they’re actually experiencing… this one will feel familiar.

    What They Talk About:

    • Why Curt can't stand "fake it till you make it" and Josh's alternative: holding the pose
    • The moment business trophies start gathering dust, and what it means for identity and growth
    • Melody's fierce struggle with inherited faith, especially when her core values collide with evangelical politics
    • Josh's "God as good dad" framework and why he puts religion itself on the chopping block
    • Parenting through spiritual evolution.. how Josh talks about faith and shame with his kids (very unfiltered)
    • The story of Uncle Roger, the lovable career criminal, and what it reveals about judgment, grace, and cosmic "grading on a curve"
    • Why entrepreneurial paths aren't for everyone and Josh's Home Improvement marathon as parenting philosophy
    • Riffing on economics: business as a garden vs. a pie, why value multiplies, and how real wealth is created collaboratively

    Key Takeaways:

    • You can outgrow your religious programming without tossing out the concept of a loving creator.
    • Business (done well) is about serving people, not extracting value—it’s a messy, generative web, not a zero-sum game.
    • There’s deep power (and pain) in living with uncertainty, wrestling with faith, and giving yourself permission to change your mind.
    • The roles we play in work, faith, and family aren’t interchangeable; your gifts matter exactly as they are.

    Timestamps:

    • 00:00: Why Josh can't stand religion and how Jesus fits in
    • 01:44: The problem with "fake it till you make it" and the cost of certainty
    • 09:23: God as good dad—Josh’s first principles
    • 17:07: Sin, shame, and how Josh handles messy kid conversations
    • 25:05: Are entrepreneurs born or made? The athlete/engineer/artist tribe
    • 31:15: Wrestling with belief systems and finding spiritual freedom
    • 41:57: Serving people, not money, and reframing economic value

    (And yes, they planned to talk more about business and marketing. But they didn’t!)

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    54 mins
  • Interview with Josh Latimer Part 1
    Apr 29 2026

    In this episode, Curt and Melody sit down with longtime friend and mentor Josh Latimer for a conversation that goes far beyond business strategy.

    They dig into the uncomfortable side of growth... why leveling up often feels like loss, how identity quietly sets the ceiling for your success, and why confidence has less to do with what you know and more to do with what you’ve proven to yourself.

    Josh shares openly about failure, reinvention, faith, and the patterns that keep entrepreneurs stuck, even when they “know” what to do.

    If you’ve ever felt like you’re circling the same level despite doing the work, this conversation offers a different lens.. one that might challenge more than it comforts.

    Key Takeaways:
    • You can’t carry your old identity into your next chapter.. real change feels like death, and that’s necessary
    • Integrity pays off over time, even when it feels like you’re falling behind the narcissists in the short run
    • Confidence doesn’t come from knowing more.. it comes from stacking real evidence through messy, relentless action
    • Your “purpose” is less about waiting for a big sign and more about showing up as yourself, right now, imperfectly
    • The people at the top are usually just painfully average, except for their willingness to think bigger, move faster, and do more

    Timestamps:

    0:00 – Josh’s “if it’s worth it, do it” philosophy

    8:34 – Identity deaths, destiny, and $100M generosity

    17:28 – Meeting your heroes: why it matters

    21:27 – Melody’s purpose-versus-profit struggle

    27:26 – The messy truth about religious baggage and family

    39:30 – Confidence, “holding the pose,” and the alter ego effect

    44:45 – Public speaking terror and why more volume changes everything

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    49 mins
  • Petty Justice: Mel Stops Being Nice and Starts Being Real.
    Apr 22 2026

    Melody’s nearly ready to start a fight club or at least dish out a little “petty justice.” This episode is basically what happens when you hit your late 40s and realize you’re done tiptoeing around fragile egos, especially when being “nice” never seems to work out. Curt and Melody share about a messy neighbor drama, the exhausting rules women are still expected to follow, and where standing up for yourself starts to feel like a crime.

    What They Talk About:
    • The saga of Melody vs. her neighbor’s rowdy late-night parties (and why she almost landed in jail over a phone snatch)
    • Why Melody is officially out of patience for dimming herself to coddle male egos and what happens when she doesn’t
    • The story about Matt’s black belt and the absolutely worst time to mention it to drunk party bros
    • Curt’s “Bro Code” theory and how it played out when the cops showed up
    • How Melody’s fight for peace triggered flashbacks to her old, much scarier neighbor (yeah, the one who literally sued everyone)
    • Why “Karen” isn’t quite the insult you think it is.. at least not when you’re just fighting for some sleep
    • Curt’s frank take on male vs. female expectations in parenting and work (featuring Rachel’s frozen dinners)
    • What changes and what doesn’t—frustration with slow progress, politics, and why real change takes generations

    Key Takeaways:
    • Sometimes, standing up for yourself will absolutely make you “the problem” and that’s still better than shrinking.
    • There’s a real energy boost in letting yourself feel anger instead of constantly bottling it up.
    • The rules and expectations placed on women (and especially moms) run much deeper than most guys ever realize.
    • If you’re tired of being a pushover, you don’t suddenly have to become a jerk.. you just get to stop apologizing for being yourself.
    • Real change is slow, messy, and full of setbacks, but the small ways we show up matter.

    Timestamps:

    0:00 — The great neighbor meltdown/night of petty justice

    10:12 — Melody’s realization: done dimming herself

    18:55 — “Bro Code,” cops, and gendered assumptions

    33:30 — Women in business and Melody’s double bind

    43:41 — Curt’s take on mom guilt vs. dad self-permission

    54:55 — Why systemic change is agonizingly slow

    1:04:00 — Petty justice as self-respect (plus closing laughs)

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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • AI Was Supposed to Save Time. Why Are We Working More?
    Apr 15 2026

    Everyone keeps saying AI should make our work lives easier but is anyone actually working less? This week, Melody and Curt talk about burnout, why faster tech just puts more on our plates, and how even “delegating” can feel like another job. It’s one part therapy session, one part practical experiment in finding sanity as a business owner in the AI age.

    What They Talk About:

    • Why Melody felt instant relief when her whole company shut down for a day and what “freedom” really means with a team
    • The women’s conference revelations: burn bright vs. burn out, a keynote on facing 100 fears, and why “comfort” is the real enemy of progress
    • Curt's wild ride with AI—doing a month’s work in a day and somehow always being more exhausted
    • When dashboards become soul-sucking rabbit holes (and the awkward truth about who actually uses them)
    • The invisible job of being everyone’s safety net and why no one feels comfortable stepping away
    • Micro-exhaustion and the “AI brain fry” phenomenon: more automation equals more fragmented days, not fewer headaches
    • That laundry list of burnout symptoms (yes, irritability is there) and how recognizing them still doesn’t make the work less tempting
    • Honest talk about work addiction, recovery, and the ambiguous dream of finally “taking a month off”

    Key Takeaways:
    • AI makes you more productive, but it also ramps up the speed and volume of decisions until your brain feels deep-fried
    • The real relief comes from connection and proactively creating space, not just optimizing workflows or working faster
    • Delegation is its own skill and even in a tech-powered world, it’s hard to let go without a serious mindset shift
    • Sometimes you need to commit, out loud, to shutting the laptop and going outside.. even if you have to guilt yourself into it

    Timestamps:

    0:00 – Why “working less” with AI is not the reality

    11:07 – 10 warning signs of burnout (and both hosts fess up)

    17:32 – Curt's AI workflow and the mounting pressure to keep up

    26:44 – The dashboard dilemma: building for everyone, used by no one

    38:03 – The micro-exhaustion cycle and lost space for thinking

    49:05 – Let’s actually commit: little changes for a saner week

    57:22 – Wrapping up: spring mulching, Easter sunrise, and choosing sanity over speed

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Business The Gen X Way
    Apr 8 2026

    Curt and Melody are wrestling with what “normal” even means anymore.. especially for Gen X business owners living through the AI revolution. If you’ve ever wondered whether tech is actually making life easier or just making you feel like you’re always chasing your tail, this one’s for you. They dig into overwhelm, nostalgia, adaptability, and whether anyone actually knows what’s real online.

    What They Talked About:

    • Why Melody feels scared (not just overwhelmed) about AI’s rise and what keeps her up at night
    • Curt’s hacks for speeding up everything with AI voice tools (and a rant about Siri being useless)
    • The story about Rachel’s dinner, “people better start caring,” and how family dinners are an endangered species
    • Melody’s struggle to process her month-and-a-half of travel and why “catching up” never happens
    • What happened when Curt tried to run events for real-life connection and why folks stopped showing up
    • The “forced to adapt” feeling for entrepreneurs: gun-to-the-head vibes
    • Disposable information and the risk of losing actual wisdom (plus how Gen Z kids just see all this as normal)
    • Old-school learning vs. AI-assisted thinking—and whether school will ever catch up

    Key Takeaways:

    • Overwhelm isn’t just about pace; it’s about losing the freedom to choose your own priorities
    • Even with all our tech, quality of life sometimes feels less “real” and more fragmented
    • Human connection remains essential—but people aren’t voting for it with their dollars (yet)
    • Adaptation is inevitable, but forced adaptation is what breeds anxiety for business owners
    • Wisdom comes from wrestling with uncertainty, not just having instant answers

    Timestamps:
    • [00:00] - Are we optimistic or pessimistic for the future? Kicking off with big, existential questions
    • [07:10] - Melody’s CleanCon trip and the AI coding class struggle
    • [12:34] - Is AI actually making work easier, or just shifting the burden?
    • [22:10] - The “forced to adapt” dilemma and ADHD entrepreneurial brains
    • [30:04] - The Gen Z perspective: kids who see fast change as normal
    • [44:23] - Can schools keep up with AI, or are they doomed to lag?
    • [47:34] - Social trust, scams, and the scary side of instant information
    • [51:08] - Happiness and contentment: why chasing it never works

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    59 mins
  • Michael Hinderliter: The Cost of Success
    Apr 1 2026

    Ever wonder what really happens when workaholism, family expectations, and a purpose-driven heart collide? In this episode, Melody and Curt dig into the reality of entrepreneurship with Michael Hinderliter—aka the “power wash guy”—who’s lived through business reinvention, divorce, and the very human challenge of not losing yourself (or your mind) along the way.

    What We Talk About:

    • The story of how Melody and Michael managed to become genuine friends despite wildly different backgrounds, politics, and very different flights to Italy
    • Why Michael’s dad trained him in power washing... after his failed union organizing left him blackballed from the industry
    • What it’s like growing up “power washing royalty” and why Michael never bought into the hype (or used his last name as a business card)
    • The chaos (and crumbling) of running a business with your spouse and what happens when your identities (and failures) get all tangled up
    • Curt and Melody trading notes on marriage dynamics: ride-or-die loyalty, chaos muppets vs. moored partners, and why most of us are building our businesses for our families (and sometimes forgetting to check if it’s actually working)
    • The truth about depression for entrepreneurs, and Michael’s way of climbing out of the pit.. plus why time isn’t your most valuable asset, but your mind is
    • Purpose, faith, and why Michael prays for people who’ve hurt him (including his exes—yes, really)
    • What changes when you become a grandparent (hint: more joy, less exhaustion), and why the “happiness chase” is a game you only win by stepping out of it

    Key Takeaways:

    • Chasing “success” for your family while burning yourself out rarely ends with connection or peace—it might undermine both
    • Admitting you don’t have all the answers (or that you’ve been wrong) is where real growth starts, not where it ends
    • Relationships—business, personal, or even with yourself.. don’t get better by default; they get better with honesty and uncomfortable work
    • Everyone’s fighting battles you can’t see, and almost nobody fits the mold you thought was universal when you were 25

    Timestamps:

    • [00:00] Raw opening – showing emotion vs. losing respect
    • [00:41] Introductions & the Italy “diplomacy” story
    • [11:47] Michael’s family, union busting, and the birth of a power washing legacy
    • [22:09] Marriage, working 24/7 with your spouse, and when things fall apart
    • [35:56] Post-divorce, depression, and the struggle to find meaning again
    • [46:10] Faith, business, and praying for people who’ve hurt you
    • [57:56] Becoming a grandparent and shifting family roles
    • [1:03:29] Stereotypes, gender roles, and learning to rethink old beliefs
    • [1:24:16] Showing emotion as a leader—where’s the line?
    • [1:26:12] The difference between happiness, purpose, and surviving the rollercoaster

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    1 hr and 30 mins
  • Is Entrepreneurship Bad for Your Mental Health?
    Mar 25 2026

    Mental health is one of those things entrepreneurs love to ignore, but it sneaks up on all of us (usually in the form of workaholism, anxiety, or quarter-life crises... that somehow become annual). In this part 3 episode with Bobby Walker, Curt & Melody share about their own struggles, childhood trauma, religious dogma, and the ways business ownership can both help and hurt your brain. If you've ever felt like you're rolling a boulder uphill or hiding your symptoms behind “just working really hard,” this conversation is for you.

    What They Talk About:

    • Why Melody thinks workaholism is basically a generational sickness (and also the only way to survive entrepreneurship)
    • The story about Bobby Walker realizing he was “depressed”.. months into not being able to get out of bed
    • Curt's framework for how religion shaped his view of mental health (and how the paradigm crumbled)
    • Why “Rub some dirt on it!” was the emotional regulation lesson of the '80s/'90s
    • The false idea that business success equals happiness (and how the next big win is always… less satisfying than you hoped)
    • How trauma, dissociation, and ADHD show up as secret weapons (and sometimes landmines) in business
    • Melody's perspective on why female entrepreneurs carry extra guilt, even when they're supporting their families
    • The importance of moving from sympathy (thinking “that must be hard”) to real empathy (“this is what it feels like, and it changes how I lead”)

    Key Takeaways:

    • Self-awareness is the first step, but you have to actually want to look inward otherwise you’ll just keep distracting yourself with work or goals
    • “Doing it for my family” can become an excuse for avoiding real healing and perpetuating unhealthy cycles
    • Empathy (not just sympathy) changes how you show up for your team, your customers, and yourself.. even if it takes a few decades and a lot of therapy to get there
    • Powerful stuff (business, habits, trauma) can build roadways or blow things up—it’s about how you wield it
    • Entrepreneurship doesn’t automatically make you “better”—it just reveals what you haven’t dealt with yet

    Here's the link about the addiction bird Curt mentioned about: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUngLgGRJpo

    Timestamps:

    0:00 – Childhood lessons on ignoring pain

    7:00 – Emotional regulation and “rub some dirt on it”

    18:00 – Religion vs. mental health

    28:00 – When the paradigm breaks down

    41:00 – Workaholism, cycles, and entrepreneur guilt

    54:00 – Self-awareness, acceptance, and juggling family vs. business

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    1 hr and 2 mins
  • Addicted to Uncertainty: The Entrepreneur’s Paradox
    Mar 18 2026

    Entrepreneurs love the thrill of chasing the unknown or do they actually crave certainty and stability more than they'd admit? In this episode, Melody and Curt spiral through the chaos, uncertainty, and optimism that seem baked into business ownership. It's a closer look at why we white-knuckle through unpredictability, and whether being “addicted to uncertainty” is actually a badge of honor or just a survival strategy.

    What Curt & Melody Talk About:

    1. Why Melody left her pearls (literally!) and car keys at a hotel, and what losing stuff teaches her about letting go
    2. Curt’s ongoing battle with white-knuckling decisions and the existential “rug pull” he expects daily as an entrepreneur
    3. The story about Melody’s Filipino team facing economic instability, and what “I pay living wages” really feels like during a crisis
    4. Religions as systems for creating certainty and whether God cares about car keys (spoiler: this gets deep and funny)
    5. How meditation, mountain biking, and rocky business times help Curt find peace at rock bottom, but only temporarily
    6. Melody’s comfort with chaos: why calm situations sometimes stress her out more than the messy ones
    7. The carrot metaphor: chasing goals we’ll never truly catch, and why achieving big things leaves us weirdly unsatisfied
    8. Micro-certainties vs. macro-unknowing—Melody’s recent aha’s about social media, and why they’re fleeting but helpful

    Key Takeaways:

    1. Being addicted to uncertainty may just be a survival skill for entrepreneurs: if you don’t adapt, the chaos eats you alive
    2. Certainty is almost always an illusion systems break, relationships change, and the world is rarely predictable
    3. Holding happiness hostage to certainty leads to cynicism; learning to find comfort in unknowing is essential for sanity
    4. Practical wins (micro-certainties) help, but everything shifts again.. so keep curiosity alive and don’t cling too hard
    5. Ethical business means wrestling with pain, firing people, and accepting that every lesson usually needs repeating

    Timestamps:

    8:07 - Entrepreneurs and the daily “rug pull”

    12:15 - Spirituality as a system for certainty (and God + car keys)

    20:16 - Addicted to chaos: Melody's money mindset and life at the edge

    32:07 - The uniqueness of every hard business decision

    45:02 - Curt on finding peace in uncertainty (and the carrot you never catch)

    48:18 - Micro-certainties and why they never last

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    57 mins