Épisodes

  • Ditching the Playbook and Building a Sustainable Creative Career
    Oct 8 2025

    Drew sits down with Blake Pfeil & Jeremiah Wenutu on Cinema Kingston! to explore his winding path from music production to becoming a sought-after director of photography, podcast studio owner, and host of No Set Path. They unpack the reality of being a multidisciplinary creative, building community in the Hudson Valley, and why storytelling matters more than the tech behind it.

    Key Topics & Timestamps

    00:00 – Drew's introduction and impressive client roster (Adobe, Netflix, HBO, Disney+)

    02:00 – How Upstate Podcast Studio evolved from a basement setup to a professional Kingston space

    06:00 – The challenge of being spread thin across multiple creative ventures

    09:00 – Feeling like an outsider in the film industry while pursuing diverse interests

    14:00 – The frustration with editing other people's work vs. creating your own passion projects

    16:00 – The Hudson Valley creative community: talent is everywhere, but connection is key

    19:00 – Two years of HBO production boom post-COVID, then the 2024-2025 slowdown

    22:00 – Plans for No Set Path: building in-person community events and brand expansion

    24:00 – From UMass Lowell recording school to New York City music production

    27:00 – The pivot moment: buying a Canon 7D at B&H and teaching himself cinematography

    30:00 – Starting No Set Path during COVID as a vehicle for meaningful conversations

    33:00 – The unexpected impact: random emails from people inspired by the show

    37:00 – Why Drew asks "how did you get here?" instead of "what camera did you use?"

    40:00 – The realization: storytelling is the thread connecting everything

    44:00 – Storytelling as a buzzword in tech startups and why humans gravitate to narrative

    45:00 – The Goonies, Spielberg, Lucas, and movies that shaped a generation

    50:00 – Easter eggs, film scores, and the magic of eighties adventure films

    Takeaway

    Being multidisciplinary isn't a weakness. It's your unique advantage in a changing creative economy.

    Community over hustle: the Hudson Valley has incredible talent, but genuine connection matters more than networking.

    Storytelling transcends medium. Whether it's cinematography, podcasting, or coaching, story is what connects with people.

    Most successful people don't actually know what they're doing. They're "failing upwards" and figuring it out as they go.

    Name things well: Upstate Podcast Studio succeeds organically because of smart, searchable naming.

    Your creative path will look like a lot of different things. Let it evolve naturally instead of forcing a single direction.

    The tech doesn't matter. People care about the emotion and story, not your gear list.

    Resources & Links

    Cinema Kingston!: https://radiokingston.org/en/broadcast/cinema-kingston

    Drew's Website: www.drewenglish.com

    Lights and Years Media: www.lightsandyears.com

    Upstate Podcast Studio: www.upstatepodcaststudio.com

    No Set Path Podcast: Search "No Set Path: Creative Entrepreneurship Stories" on your podcast app

    No Set Path Newsletter: https://thedrewenglish.substack.com/

    Drew's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drewenglishh/

    Drew's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/drewenglish/

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    57 min
  • When the "Safe" Choice Is Actually the Riskiest Move
    Sep 23 2025

    Drew shares the full story behind walking away from a $100,000 in-house media position and how that decision led to earning 50% more while staying freelance. He breaks down the red flags that made him trust his gut, the corporate culture problems he encountered, and why alignment with your values matters more than security. This solo episode dives deep into the importance of knowing your North Star and making decisions that serve your long-term creative and personal goals.

    Key Topics & Timestamps

    00:00 – Why Drew turned down $100K and made 50% more staying freelance

    01:27 – Red flag #1: Meetings about meetings and corporate culture chaos

    01:50 – No real game plan: throwing everything at the wall to see what sticks

    02:34 – The pressure campaign: formal emails, office meetings, and coffee chats

    03:17 – The deal breaker: written approval required for any outside freelance work

    04:50 – What happened to the colleague who took the job (spoiler: it ended badly)

    05:27 – The importance of trusting your gut and staying aligned with your values

    06:40 – How saying no opened doors to building multiple revenue streams

    07:35 – Drew's current North Star: maximum money, minimum time, maximum family time

    Takeaways

    Trust your gut when red flags appear, even when the money looks good

    Corporate culture problems rarely improve after you're hired full-time

    Alignment with your values and goals matters more than short-term security

    Saying no to the wrong opportunities creates space for the right ones

    Your North Star evolves as your life circumstances change

    Write down your goals and priorities to stay clear on your direction

    Consider practices like morning pages from "The Artist's Way" for clarity

    Resources & Links

    The Artist's Way - Julia Cameron

    Upstate Podcast Studio: www.upstatepodcaststudio.com

    Connect with Drew

    No Set Path Newsletter: https://thedrewenglish.substack.com/

    Drew's IG: https://www.instagram.com/drewenglishh

    Drew's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/drewenglish/

    Drew's Website: www.drewenglish.com

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    9 min
  • Leverage: Turn Your Creative Skills into Scalable Assets
    Jul 30 2025

    In this solo episode, host Drew English unpacks the concept of leverage and why 2025 is the best time for creatives to build independent success. He argues that cheap tech, free global distribution, and direct-to-audience marketing have removed the traditional gatekeepers. Creators who shift from selling services to building assets can own their future in the “Creator 2.0” era.

    Key Takeaways

    Tech is cheap: Your phone can produce market-ready visuals—hardware is no longer the hurdle.

    Distribution is free: Platforms like YouTube give instant access to a worldwide audience; the game now is earning the click.

    Marketing is direct: Email lists and social media let you talk to fans anytime—no middlemen required.

    Assets > services: Follow the athlete model—use your primary skill to build IP, products, or partnerships that earn while you sleep.

    Real-world examples:

    The Umbrella Academy evolved from graphic novel to Netflix hit.

    A24 green-lit “The Backrooms,” a YouTube horror series created by a 19-year-old.

    Producer Alex LeMay urges filmmakers to “think platform first, not format.”

    Action items for listeners:

    Audit your expertise - what unique knowledge or story can become IP?

    Choose one primary platform (e.g., YouTube) and design content natively for it.

    Start an email list to own your relationship with fans.

    Package and test ideas in small formats (web series, mini-docs, digital products).

    Lean into human connection - your perspective and trust can’t be replicated by AI.

    Resources Mentioned

    Jason Murray on “Creator 2.0” (@jason_swet on Instagram)

    Producer Alex LeMay’s Substack article HERE

    The Umbrella Academy (graphic novel → Netflix)

    A24’s upcoming film “The Backrooms” (originated on YouTube)

    Connect with Drew

    Subscribe to Drew’s Substack newsletter Creative Balance for deeper dives.

    Follow No Set Path on YouTube, Instagram, and wherever you get your podcasts.

    Share the episode and tag @drewenglishh to keep the conversation going.

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    9 min
  • Addiction to Ambie Awards: How Abandoned Places Saved My Life w/ Blake Pfeil
    Jul 16 2025

    About the Episode

    What happens when you refuse to “pick a lane” and instead let curiosity steer the wheel? In this conversation, multidisciplinary artist Blake Pfeil (creator of the Ambie-winning immersive podcast Abandoned: The All American Ruins Podcast) sits down with host Drew English to explore how haunting, deserted places became a surprising wellspring of creativity, recovery, and self-acceptance.

    You’ll Learn

    Why Blake traded a traditional musical-theatre path for a globe-trotting artistic life – and how ignored passions came roaring back during lockdown.

    How exploring abandoned spaces (from upstate NY to Finland) helped him process grief, addiction recovery, and burnout.

    The origin story of All American Ruins and the production choices that landed it an Ambie Award for Best Indie Podcast.

    Practical advice for creators who juggle multiple disciplines without losing focus (hint: “master being you,” not a niche).

    The power of slowing down, deep breathing, and letting imagination work as a healing tool.

    Guest Links

    Website & portfolio: BlakePfeil.com

    Listen to Abandoned: The All American Ruins Podcast → wherever you get podcasts

    Watch the All American Ruins docu-series on Hudsy

    Connect with Drew

    Newsletter Creative Balance – actionable ideas for creative entrepreneurs

    Subscribe to No Set Path on YouTube

    Drew’s IG: @drewenglishh

    Drew’s Website: www.drewenglish.com

    Support the Show

    Share the episode on Instagram & tag @nosetpathpod, @drewenglishh and @blakepfeil.

    Leave a ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ review on Apple Podcasts/Spotify if this episode resonated!

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    1 h et 15 min
  • From Piano Lessons to 100K Subs: Composer Zach Heyde on Building a Modern Music Career
    Jun 3 2025

    Episode Overview

    Drew sits down with LA-based composer and educator Zach Heyde to unpack how he’s blended film scoring, a 100,000-subscriber YouTube channel and a thriving mentorship program into a balanced creative life. They dig into sustaining passion, ditching hustle culture, and why sharing knowledge can be a business model in itself.

    Key Topics & Timestamps

    00:01 – Zach’s early start: piano at 7 and first composing gigs → landing “Kung Fu Panda: The Dragon Knight” (dream job) NSP - Zach Heyde

    08:00 – Reality of writing 10 min of orchestral music per week & protecting creative energy NSP - Zach Heyde

    16:00 – Moving from Tennessee to LA for community, not clout—how genuine relationships create work opportunities NSP - Zach Heyde

    20:50 – 18 years on YouTube: what 100 K subs taught Zach about intention vs. vanity metrics NSP - Zach Heyde

    33:00 – Inside Zach’s Composer Bootcamp & Pro Group: teaching the business of music, not just theory NSP - Zach Heyde

    42:30 – Lowering the “publish” barrier: tactics for beating over-thinking and sharing in real time NSP - Zach Heyde

    50:00 – Upcoming projects: recording live strings in Budapest and turning the process into content NSP - Zach Heyde

    Takeaways

    Your creative “North Star” evolves. Let the fog clear naturally.

    Time-boxed scoring (3 hrs/minute) demands new workflows; balance craft with sustainability.

    Authentic networking = making friends first; work follows.

    Audience trust grows faster when your content serves genuine curiosity, not algorithms.

    Teaching can satisfy creative, financial, and community needs simultaneously.

    Ship fast: capture the impulse before perfectionism kills momentum.

    Resources & Links

    Zach’s YouTube channel – https://youtube.com/zachheyde

    Zach’s IG: @zachheyde

    Zach’s Composer Pro Group & Bootcamp – details on https://zachheyde.com

    The Call of Raven’s Hollow (Album): https://zachheyde.bandcamp.com/album/the-call-of-ravens-hollow

    Connect with Drew

    Creative Balance Newsletter: https://thedrewenglish.substack.com/

    Drew’s IG: @drewenglishh

    Drew’s Website: www.drewenglish.com

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    56 min
  • From Hustle to Purpose: Redefining Success as a Creative
    Apr 29 2025

    Episode Summary:
    In this solo episode, Drew reflects on the real challenges creative professionals face in 2025 like unstable industries, outdated mindsets, and the constant push for "success" at any cost. Sharing his personal journey from music to film to entrepreneurship, Drew explores why reinventing yourself is not only necessary but healthy, and how obstacles often reveal the true path forward.

    If you’re feeling stuck, questioning your career direction, or wondering how to balance ambition with a meaningful life, this episode is for you.

    What You'll Learn:

    Why major life transitions often feel impossible until they're behind you

    How outdated mindsets (like stability = success) can hold you back

    Lessons from "The Obstacle is the Way" by Ryan Holiday

    The hard truths about building a creative career in today's world

    Why redefining success on your own terms is more important than ever

    How to leverage your skills into a new, sustainable direction without starting over

    Resources & Links:

    Sign up for the newsletter: drewenglish.kit.com/newsletter

    Connect on Instagram and Threads: @drewenglishh

    LinkedIn: Drew English

    Book Mentioned: The Obstacle is the Way by Ryan Holiday

    Community Question:
    👉 What obstacle are you currently facing that might actually be pointing you toward your next big move?

    Leave a comment, DM Drew, or reply to the newsletter — we’d love to hear from you!

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    13 min
  • Scrappy, Smart, and Successful: Creative Wins with Less
    Apr 8 2025

    Episode Summary:
    In this solo mini-episode, Drew strips down the myth that success requires a massive audience, fancy gear, or deep pockets. Through a real-world example from his recent short film The Ride of Your Life, he shows how creativity and scrappiness can trump big budgets and large teams. If you’ve ever felt paralyzed by not having “enough,” this episode is your wake-up call.

    What You’ll Learn:

    Why creatives often overestimate what they need to succeed

    How The Ride of Your Life was made with minimal resources—and still turned heads

    Three mindset traps that keep people stuck:

    Lack of real effort

    The distorted influence of social media

    Fear of failure and judgment

    A powerful quote from 10x Is Easier Than 2x to reframe your creative risk-taking

    Mentioned in the Episode:
    🎥 The Ride of Your Life – Short doc film about Serotta Cycles
    👉 Watch it HERE

    📖 Book: 10x Is Easier Than 2x by Dan Sullivan

    Stay Connected:
    Join Drew’s newsletter for more insights on creativity, filmmaking, and mindset: drewenglish.kit.com

    Support the Show:
    If you enjoyed this episode, please take a moment to rate and review the show—it helps more than you know!
    ⭐️ On Apple Podcasts & Spotify
    📺 On YouTube – Like & Subscribe

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    6 min
  • Finding Your Zone of Genius in Film Production | Lisamarie Shires
    Mar 26 2025

    Episode Summary

    In this episode, Lisamarie Shires shares her journey from government contracting to photography, then to producing, and finally to coaching creative professionals. She discusses how her experience across various roles in the production industry has informed her coaching philosophy, focusing on helping creatives build sustainable businesses that prioritize life and family while achieving professional success.

    Chapter Markers

    [00:00-04:00] Lisa's Journey from Government Work to Creative Fields

    [04:00-09:00] The Appeal of Producing and Its Challenges

    [09:00-15:00] Transition from Production to Coaching

    [15:00-24:00] Balancing Family Life and Career in Production

    [24:00-31:00] Post-COVID Industry Changes and Client Expectations

    [31:00-37:00] Personal Branding and Finding Your Unique Value

    [37:00-45:00] Overcoming Multi-Passionate Creative Identity Crisis

    [45:00-49:00] Values-Based Decision Making and Future Programs

    Key Takeaways

    Lisa left a stable government job to pursue her creative passions, starting with photography before moving into producing

    Her coaching practice developed naturally from her tendency to mentor younger professionals and her own experience with coaching

    The production industry has shifted from transactional to relationship-focused, requiring creatives to position themselves as experts who deliver results

    For creatives with families, finding work-life balance is crucial and often requires external support and intentional decision-making

    Post-COVID market uncertainty has changed buyer behavior, resulting in clients being more cautious with budgets and requiring more certainty from creatives

    When building a personal brand, focus on being visible and leveraging your existing network rather than waiting for perfection

    For multi-passionate creatives, identify your "zone of genius" to determine where to focus your energy and how to package your various skills

    Values-based decision-making helps creative professionals avoid burnout and make choices that align with their priorities

    Quote

    "I'm catering to the people that have been playing in commercial production for at least 5 to 10 plus years... if you want to stand out, you need to start acting like it... decide that you're that person already, and then that personal development is going to play into your professional development."

    Links & Resources

    Lisa on Instagram: @LisaMarieShires
    Website: lisamarieshires.com

    Upcoming program: "The Unforgettable Filmmaker" - focusing on confidence and leadership

    Recommended Book: "The Big Leap" by Gay Hendricks

    MORE ABOUT “NO SET PATH”
    |Website: nosetpath.com
    Instagram: instagram.com/nosetpath
    YouTube: youtube.com/@drew_english

    FOLLOW DREW ENGLISH
    Instagram: instagram.com/drewenglishh
    LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/drewenglish
    Twitter: twitter.com/thedrewenglish
    Website: drewenglish.com

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    51 min