
Free Daily Podcast Summary
by Mike Conroy
The podcast that takes you on the long and dangerous journey from the siloed foothills of inventing things to the yawning abyss of reinventing society. Each week we take a subject related to innovation and set off on a verbal stroll to see what wonders unfold.
The most recent episodes — sign up to get AI-powered summaries of each one.
John Bicheno has dedicated his career to the subtle Art of Lean, nurturing a complex and nuanced philosophy that is habitually eroded when passed through the reductionist, monetizing filters that drive Western consultancy. Under his care that seed grew from a car centric creed to encompass wider horizons. In this episode he looks back on his legacy with a wry smile. His legacy lives on in the 5th edition of The Lean Toolbox: A Handbook for Lean Transformation. Bio Prof John Bicheno, Emeritus Professor
In this episode of Danger Mouth, Darrell Mann, Mike Conroy, and Shana Finnegan dive into the polarizing spectrum of AI—from the hype-fueled "snake oil" promises to the potential for total human economic redundancy. The trio explores why AI currently excels at simple sorting but stumbles over the "Three C’s": Complexity, Counterintuition, and Causality. Using a botched train itinerary as a starting point, they discuss why the "human in the loop" remains vital for navigating systems that AI cannot yet model. The conversation takes a deep turn into "Toxic Capitalism," examining how companies at the top of their S-curves often externalize harm to vulnerable customers to maintain growth. They argue that the future isn't about AI replacing us, but about a "bifurcation" of society: those who use AI to avoid thinking, and those who collaborate with it to solve deep systemic contradictions and usher in a new "Age of Meaning".
In this episode of Danger Mouth, hosts Darrell Mann, Mike Conroy, and Shana Finnegan sit down with Dr. Gopichand (Gopi) Katragadda, a man who might just be one of the last true polymaths on the planet. From his high-octane career as the CTO of the Tata Group and Managing Director at GE’s Jack Welch Research Center to his current ventures in AI and theater, Gopi shares a masterclass on balancing the rigor of engineering with the fluidity of the arts.
A delicious appentiser not to be missed! This episode of Danger Mouth centres on a conversation with Olly Hawes, a portfolio artist, actor and writer whose work probes the limits of human connection and the points where society strains. It moves easily between the physical and the reflective, from Ollie’s account of being accidentally stabbed on stage during a production of Julius Caesar to a broader examination of craft, activism and the place of AI in artistic practice. At the core is a simple rule he lives by and teaches his children: look after yourself and look after other people. From that starting point the discussion opens out. Ollie describes the turning point that followed a near fatal incident in Edinburgh, an event that reshaped his life, led to marriage and fixed his commitment to storytelling. The group explores his instinct for working across opposites, arguing that tension rather than coherence often produces the most interesting art and the most effective solutions in business. They also examine the encroachment of AI into creative work. Ollie reflects on using a large language model to help secure Arts Council funding, while questioning what may be lost if technology begins to erode the presence and immediacy that give live performance its force. Running through it all is the practical reality of making a life in the arts. Money is uncertain, purpose is not. Ollie speaks plainly about the pressure to remain creatively alive, not just for himself but for the people who come after. It is a conversation that holds together injury and humour, principle and improvisation. At its centre is a working artist who has come close to the edge and decided to keep going, with intent.
This is an episode of the Danger Mouth podcast, hosted by Darrell Mann, Mike Conroy, and Shauna, featuring Swedish guest Per Lindstedt, co-author of The Value Model. The Value Model defines value as a ratio — satisfaction of customer needs divided by use of customer resources. Per breaks this into 6 strategic levers: three to increase satisfaction (solve an undiscovered problem, improve performance, enhance feelings/experience) and three to reduce resource consumption (time, money, effort). The iPhone is used throughout as the prime example of a product with a sky-high ratio — and the App Store as an accidental masterstroke that Jobs initially resisted. The conversation broadens into organisational innovation and S-curves: why companies near the peak of one S-curve become complacent, why very few (perhaps 10% in Europe) survive the jump to the next, and whether it's sometimes healthier to simply let companies die. Nokia's inability to abandon its Symbian OS is the cautionary tale; a Chinese manufacturer pivoting from bread-makers to LEDs in eight weeks is the counter-example. The final third focuses on Per's AI tool (built using Lovable), which takes messy requirement specifications and sorts them into five information domains — customers, needs, functions, solutions, and processes — flagging what's actually a customer need versus a disguised technical solution. This is positioned as a scalable version of the consultancy work Per spent decades doing manually.
Free AI-powered daily recaps. Key takeaways, quotes, and mentions — in a 5-minute read.
Get Free Summaries →Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.
Listeners also like.

The Restless Ones
Executives at the intersection of technology and business discuss innovation, leadership, and driving change in fast-evolving industries.

The Knowledge Project
Explore timeless principles and deep insights from experts across disciplines to improve decision-making and master essential life skills.

Inquiring Minds
Explores the intersection of science and society through critical thinking and in-depth analysis.

TED Tech
Experts examine how technology reshapes society, science, design, and business through ethical, cultural, and human lenses.

Invention
Explores how human inventions from agriculture to the X-ray shaped society and transformed the way we live.

The Great Simplification with Nate Hagens
Discussions with experts on energy, ecology, economics, and human behavior to understand the systemic challenges facing civilization.

The Jordan Harbinger Show
Conversations with top performers across fields, distilling actionable insights on success, relationships, and personal growth.

This Machine Kills
Critiques the intersection of technology, capitalism, and power through a leftist political lens.

The Honest Designers Show
A candid look at building a successful creative career, covering client work, personal style, branding, and fulfillment in design.

The Curiosity Shop with Brené Brown and Adam Grant
Brené Brown and Adam Grant explore boldness amid uncertainty through research, debate, and dialogue in a six-episode series.

Reply All
A podcast that explores the internet and its impact on modern life through investigative stories and personal narratives.

DGTL Voices with Ed Marx
Ed Marx and Digital Voices host industry leaders to discuss healthcare technology's future.
The podcast that takes you on the long and dangerous journey from the siloed foothills of inventing things to the yawning abyss of reinventing society. Each week we take a subject related to innovation and set off on a verbal stroll to see what wonders unfold.
AI-powered recaps with compact key takeaways, quotes, and insights.
Get key takeaways from DangerMouth: The Innovation Station in a 5-minute read.
Stay current on your favorite podcasts without falling behind.
It's a free AI-powered email that summarizes new episodes of DangerMouth: The Innovation Station as soon as they're published. You get the key takeaways, notable quotes, and links & mentions — all in a quick read.
When a new episode drops, our AI transcribes and analyzes it, then generates a personalized summary tailored to your interests and profession. It's delivered to your inbox every morning.
No. Podzilla is an independent service that summarizes publicly available podcast content. We're not affiliated with or endorsed by Mike Conroy.
Absolutely! The free plan covers up to 3 podcasts. Upgrade to Pro for 15, or Premium for 50. Browse our full catalog at /podcasts.
DangerMouth: The Innovation Station publishes biweekly. Our AI generates a summary within hours of each new episode.
DangerMouth: The Innovation Station covers topics including Science, Education, Business, Entrepreneurship, Natural Sciences, Self-Improvement. Our AI identifies the specific themes in each episode and highlights what matters most to you.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.