Episodes

  • Eric Wang: Cooking on Wall Street – From Private Equity to Culinary Craft
    Dec 27 2025

    For the final episode of 2025, we are joined by a guest who embodies the spirit of exploration: Eric Wang.

    By day, Eric works in private equity in New York City, managing commercial real estate deals on Wall Street. On weekends, he trades his spreadsheets for a chef's knife, running 81 Eats – a supper club and pop-up series featuring "Chinese-inspired comfort food."

    From growing up in Shanghai and attending boarding school in the US at age 12, to training at Wharton and a top-tier French culinary school, Eric is turning the journey inward.

    We discuss how he balances a high-pressure finance career with the grounding nature of cooking, his solitude during the pandemic in Tokyo, and his personal philosophy rooted in nature ("touch grass" to feel alive) and gathering people together.

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    35 mins
  • Shaka Mitchell: Civil Discourse Through Music, School Choice & the Rise of AI in Learning
    Nov 26 2025

    Today on Floating Questions, we sat down with Shaka Mitchell - Aspen Institute Civil Society Fellow, Senior Fellow at the American Federation for Children, constitutional law lecturer, long-distance runner, creator of the Come Together Music Project, and father of three.

    Shaka has spent decades building bipartisan coalitions in education and civil discourse, guided by humility, principled thinking, and a deep commitment to humanizing others. In this conversation, we explore:

    • Music as a bridge: why “every memory has a soundtrack” and how sharing a song helps people humanize each other before hard political conversations
    • Values, faith & principled living: “to give anything less than your best is to sacrifice the gift,” and why humility matters when advocating for what you believe
    • School choice & civic engagement: how diverse motivations still build coalitions, and the tension between plural school options and the demands placed on parents
    • AI in the classroom: how AI can support learning and where it can’t replace teachers, plus emerging policy questions as AI enters education

    Shaka shares stories from his coalition-building work, his family, and his faith - offering a grounded look at how people with very different backgrounds and beliefs can still learn from one another.

    You can also follow his work and thoughts here https://shakamitchell.substack.com/

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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • Timothy Chen: From “Not Good Enough for Microsoft” to Building Trust in Code and Capital
    Oct 29 2025

    Timothy Chen’s story isn’t your typical Silicon Valley success arc.

    He didn’t start as a hotshot coder - Microsoft once slotted him into the IT track, nothing more. Yet he went on to become a member of the Apache Software Foundation, contribute to open-source projects like Kafka and Mesos (the one-time rival to Kubernetes), and now runs Essence VC, where he backs infrastructure founders with a hands-on approach.

    In this episode, we talk about:

    • The underdog mindset that turned rejection into reinvention.
    • How working in dysfunctional and even toxic environments taught him what builds a great startup.
    • The messy reality of politics and consensus-building in open source - and why, contrary to myth, it’s the trust circle, not the crowd, that makes progress happen.
    • How he’s building the fund he wished existed when he was a founder.
    • A thrilling story of Mesos vs. Kubernetes - and how arrogance, not tech, killed the former.

    This conversation blends the human and the technical - a reflection on what it means to build trust, whether in code or in capital.



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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • Julia Morton: What AI Changes (and Doesn’t) About Art
    Sep 24 2025

    In this episode, we sit down with Julia Morton - a writer, art curator, fashion designer, early YouTuber, and author of a Substack chronicling how artists are experimenting with AI (https://aiplusart.substack.com).

    We chatted how Julia views art as a time capsule for a species going from analog to cyber, why AI-aided films can feel more personal (smaller crews, fewer gatekeepers), and how new tools surface new voices the way photography once did.

    We also wade into the thorny stuff: ownership and consent, documenting “transformative” use, and why we keep calling AI “them.” Julia shares a story about her husband’s implanted device - and how merging with machines can literally change how we feel.

    If you’re tired of doomscroll takes, this conversation sits in the nuance: fear and possibility, creativity and execution, and the old question beneath every new medium - what, exactly, makes art human?

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    49 mins
  • Joshua Pulsifer: Encountering Life, Death, and Art Through Video Games
    Aug 6 2025

    In this episode, we are joined by Joshua Pulsifer - narrative designer and co-director at Zipit! Games, an indie studio in New York. Joshua and his partner Ben are building The Wide Open Sky is Running Out of Catfish, a story-driven photography game set on the back of a giant flying catfish. Beneath its playful exterior lies a meditation on memory, friendship, and the impermanence of life.

    We dive into a super fun journey exploring: whether video games are a good storytelling medium, what creates powerful emotional arcs, and why we need to take video games seriously as art. Along the way, we also confront death - both as a universal fear and as a source of connection and meaning.

    It’s an episode about creativity, mortality, and the stories we play that shape who we are.

    Socials: @zipit_games


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    43 mins
  • Chad Sanderson: Fixing Broken Data Culture, One Contract at a Time
    Jul 30 2025

    Data breaks. AI models go crazy. Downstream teams scramble to put out the fire.

    In this episode, I talk with Chad Sanderson, CEO and co-founder of Gable - a startup rebuilding data quality and governance from the ground up. We dive into the “shift left” philosophy: why upstream engineers must own their data outputs, how data contracts create accountability in AI systems, and what it takes to drive real cultural change across an organization.

    We also zoom out into Chad’s journey - from martial arts and journalism to leading data teams at Microsoft and Convoy. Along the way, we unpack why upstream ownership unlocks downstream speed, why the future of AI depends on mapping data flows end to end, and how a mission rooted in truth and transparency ties it all together!

    A must-listen for anyone navigating the messy intersection of product velocity, data integrity, and organizational scale - the foundation needed to truly unlock AI’s potential.

    https://www.gable.ai/

    https://dataproducts.substack.com/

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    1 hr and 19 mins
  • Stephanie Franklin: The Role of Data in Making Education Policy Count - and the Challenges Behind It
    Jun 24 2025

    How do you measure whether an education policy is actually working?

    In this episode, I talk with Stephanie Franklin, Deputy Associate Commissioner of Strategy and Analytics at one of the largest education agencies in the U.S.

    We dive into the grounding yet complex role data plays in education - how student outcomes are tracked, how metrics are built to drive accountability, and the delicate balance between actionable insight and student privacy, in a world of emerging tech.

    From evaluating classroom initiatives to exploring why education is inherently data-driven, this conversation unpacks the challenge of measuring what matters - and why great policy still hinges on effective execution.

    If you’ve ever wondered how governments gauge success in education - or why it’s so difficult - this episode is for you!

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    48 mins
  • Sean Chen: From Google to the Streets - Startup Hustler & Content Creator
    May 29 2025

    In this episode, we sit down with Sean Chen - a former data scientist at Google and one of the first AI product managers at Walmart/Sam’s Club - to unpack his whirlwind journey through tech and startups.

    Sean reveals how VC pressure can steer or stall your vision, and how he and his co-founder built “Shelfer,” a voice-driven inventory app for SMB retailers, in just two days on London’s shop floors. We also break down the most realistic agent-AI use cases (of course, how could we miss the buzzword), dive into authentic content creation (and handle criticism like a game), and explore why scrappiness often trumps perfectionism.

    Tune in for a candid conversation about hustling, pivoting, and staying true to yourself in the fast-moving world of entrepreneurship.

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    45 mins