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    Explore " reading" with insightful episodes like "Cosmic Queries – Science Storytelling with LeVar Burton", "Adam Ashton - How to Maximize Your Life and ROI through the Power of Books" and "#151 Frederick Smith (FedEx)" from podcasts like ""StarTalk Radio", "Slo Mo: A Podcast with Mo Gawdat" and "Founders"" and more!

    Episodes (3)

    Cosmic Queries – Science Storytelling with LeVar Burton

    Cosmic Queries – Science Storytelling with LeVar Burton

    What science concepts have we not seen in fiction? On this episode, Neil deGrasse Tyson and comic co-host Chuck Nice sit down with actor and national treasure LeVar Burton to discuss future science, storytelling, and to answer fan questions. 

    NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can watch or listen to this entire episode commercial-free.

    Thanks to our Patrons Gabriel Paavola, Robert Marchal, DarenW, Im The Wiener Dog, vamsee krishna jayanthi, Stan Russell, Balackey, Chris Page, Paul Anderson, and Angy Phillips for supporting us this week.

    Photo Credit: NASA/Don Pettit, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

    Adam Ashton - How to Maximize Your Life and ROI through the Power of Books

    Adam Ashton - How to Maximize Your Life and ROI through the Power of Books

    In this episode, I speak with Adam Ashton, a man whose mind has absorbed an extraordinary amount of knowledge through the power of books.

    Millions of people have listened to Adam and his co-host Adam Jones on the What You Will Learn podcast, where they have spent tens of thousands of hours studying the best ideas from the greatest minds on the planet and putting the best ideas within your reach, for a fraction of the time it would take to read the full book.

    Their latest book is titled The Sh*t They Never Taught You,  a journey through takeaways from over a hundred of the world's greatest thinkers capturing lessons in personal development, career, business, personal finances, human nature, history, and philosophy. Every lesson will be useful, and one might change your life.

    Listen as we discuss:

    • Adam and Adam's podcast, and its goal of relaying the knowledge found in books accessibly.
    • If a book can be summarized in 30 minutes, what's the point of making books so long?
    • How do they choose the books they read for the podcast?
    • Why "How to..." content is so popular.
    • The Sh*t They Never Taught You and why its title is literal.
    • If we have books, is school still useful at all?
    • The enduring power of Robert Greene's The Laws of Human Nature and The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
    • Books provide an unbeatable ROI.
    • Influence by Robert Cialdini
    • Range by David Epstein
    • Why their new book started on a chapter with happiness.
    • Emotions come and go rather quickly, but it is we who allow them to endure.
    • The best relationship books, and the ever controversial Jordan Peterson.


    Instagram: @mo_gawdat
    Facebook: @mo.gawdat.official
    Twitter: @mgawdat
    LinkedIn: /in/mogawdat
    Website: mogawdat.com/podcast

    Connect with Adam Ashton and What You Will Learn on Facebook @whatyouwilllearn, Instagram @whatyouwilllearn, Twitter @wywlpodcast, and their website, whatyouwilllearn.com.

    Don't forget to subscribe to Slo Mo for new episodes every Sunday and Thursday. Only with your help can we reach One Billion Happy #onebillionhappy

    My new book, Scary Smart, is releasing September 30. Pre-order your copy here starting mid-July.

    YouTube: @mogawdatofficial
    Instagram: @mo_gawdat
    Facebook: @mo.gawdat.official
    LinkedIn: /in/mogawdat
    X: @mgawdat
    Website: mogawdat.com

    Don't forget to subscribe to Slo Mo for new episodes every Saturday. Only with your help can we reach One Billion Happy #onebillionhappy

    #151 Frederick Smith (FedEx)

    #151 Frederick Smith (FedEx)

    What I learned from reading Overnight Success: Federal Express and Frederick Smith, Its Renegade Creator by Vance Trimble.

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    Get your tickets here

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    [0:01] At age thirty Frederick Wallace Smith was in deep trouble. His dream of creating Federal Express had become too expensive and was fast fizzling out. He had exhausted his father’s millions. He was in hock for 15 or 20 million more. He appeared in danger of losing his cargo jets and also his wife. His own board of directors had fired him as CEO. Now the FBI accused him of forging papers to get a $2 million bank loan and was trying to send him to prison. He thought of suicide. 

    [1:08] At any risk, at any cost, he refused to let his Federal Express dream die

    [6:23] I believe that a man who expects to win out in business without self-denial and self-improvement stands about as much chance as a prizefighter would stand if he started a hard ring battle without having gone through intensive training. Natural ability, even when accompanied by the spirit to win, is never sufficient. 

    [7:32] It was push and drive he inherited from his father. He had to be doing something all the time

    [9:19] Fred is one of those people who never gives up if he wants something and you say no. He just goes on and on and on

    [10:50] And one of the greatest qualities that he has, that anybody can have, is he’s a voracious reader. You could talk to Fred Smith about government or literature, a whole range of things kids his age didn’t know much about. 

    [11:38] Like Nike, the idea for FEDEX started as a term paper: There is no great mystery to the “hub and spoke” concept. As Smith visualized the plan, the “hub” would be located in a middle America location with “spokes” radiating out to Boston, Los Angeles, Seattle, Miami, and other cities. Fred Smith thought of his system as similar to the telephone network, where all calls are connected through a “central switchboard” routing process. 

    [18:40] He wanted to do something that nobody else had done. That was his main objective

    [20:18] Smith wasn’t traveling in a straight line himself. He tried first one project and then another. All of them were built around his idea of acquiring and operating a fleet of jets. It [FEDEX] didn’t start out as a package outfit. 

    [27:23] Fred Smith was learning not to be disheartened or dismayed by negative reactions

    [35:43] Fred was in such deep thought all the time. Constantly thinking. Sheer determination. You could walk in and he’d be thinking about something and literally wouldn’t know you were in the room. That is one sign of a great mind—the ability to concentrate. When I read that section it made me think of this great quote by Edwin Land: “My whole life has been spent trying to teach people that intense concentration for hour after hour can bring out in people resources they didn't know they had.” 

    [39:00] A great way to think about how hard FEDEX was to start: If you open a Wal-Mart store, and if that formula succeeds and you do well, you open a thousand of them. But you don’t open a thousand of them to take the first order. Which is what you had to do to start FEDEX. 

    [47:10] We were first-grade novices. And I think that really played to our advantage because we were not fully aware of the obstacles we faced or the difficulty in overcoming them. I look back on it now and think, Oh, my God, why in the world would anybody try to do something like this! 

    [53:18] Fred Smith himself said, “No man on earth will ever know what I went through in 1973-1974. When I read that I thought of this quote on Charlie Munger: “Life will have terrible blows in it, horrible blows, unfair blows. It doesn’t matter. And some people recover and others don’t. And there I think the attitude of Epictetus is the best. He thought that every missed chance in life was an opportunity to behave well. Every missed chance in life was an opportunity to learn something and that your duty was not to be submerged in self-pity. But instead to utilize the terrible blow in a constructive fashion. That is a very good idea.” 

    [1:01:30] Fred Smith: You have to be absolutely brutal in the management of your time.

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    I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested so my poor wallet suffers. ” — Gareth

    Be like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast