Daring Creativity
Daring Creativity is your backstage pass to the minds that shape our creative world. A podcast series inspired by the upcoming book by Radim Malinic, helping people start and grow life-changing careers and businesses.
Over the coming episodes, I will sit down with a broad range of guests: artists, musicians, designers, actors, technologists, and entrepreneurs who've discovered something powerful: that creativity isn't about perfection. It's about showing up with all your doubts, insecurities, and imperfections—and making them count.
Are you ready to discover what happens when you dare to create?
More info https://radimmalinic.co.uk/
Daring Creativity
Dare to bring creative poetry to every problem - Pablo Juncadella
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Pablo Juncadella is co-founder and partner at Mucho, the Barcelona-based branding and identity studio approaching its 25th year. In this conversation, Pablo traces a career built on unlikely advantages — dyslexia, collective thinking, and an editorial background that taught him to treat brands as stories told in headlines. ~
From working on El País at 22 through Pentagram London, to becoming creative director of The Observer at 25, to building a studio with offices across Europe and the US, his path has been one of constant curiosity, deliberate humility, and a refusal to lower the standard of what design can do.
Takeaways:
- Creativity is not visualisation — it's the ability to see from a different perspective and bring others there
- Dyslexia, and conditions like it, place you naturally outside the majority — that position is the seed of creative advantage
- Ideas are preludes, not destinations — falling too in love with one prevents the better version from arriving
- The best early careers involve challenges larger than your current capability — that gap is exactly where you grow
- Collective intelligence outlasts individual ambition; a studio with its own identity can evolve beyond any one person's needs or energy
- Client satisfaction is a baseline, not a ceiling — the real job is to hold higher standards than anyone asked for
- Frustration is not a sign of failure — it's the engine that keeps the standard from quietly dropping
- Visual language is the most universal language; use it to bridge cultures, industries, and disciplines
- Design builds on what came before — your job is to contribute to the wheel, not just spin it
- Longevity comes from curiosity, adaptability, and the willingness to learn from the person sitting across the table
Daring Creativity. Podcast with Radim Malinic
daringcreativity.com | desk@daringcreativity.com
Books by Radim Malinic Paperback and Kindle > https://amzn.to/4biTwFc
Free audiobook (with Audible trial) > https://geni.us/free-audiobook
Book bundles https://novemberuniverse.co.uk
Lux Coffee Co. https://luxcoffee.co.uk/ (Use: PODCAST for 15% off)
November Universe https://novemberuniverse.co.uk (Use: PODCAST for 10% off)
Podcasts we love
Check out these other fine podcasts recommended by us, not an algorithm.
Daring Creativity
Radim MalinicDesign Matters
Design Matters
The Creative Condition podcast
Ben Tallon
Building your Brand
Liz Mosley
The Selling Show
David Newman
RevThinking™
RevThink™
Life in the Peloton, presented by MAAP
Mitch Docker
Object Subject Form
Simon Clowes
The Right Questions with James Victore
James Victore
60 Songs That Explain the '90s
The Ringer
If Books Could Kill
Michael Hobbes & Peter Shamshiri
The Futur with Chris Do
The Futur
A Bit of Optimism
Simon Sinek