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The Nick Oliveri Show

The Nick Oliveri Show

Auteur(s): Nick Oliveri
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Nick Oliveri is a Ukrainian-born #1 bestselling author and fashion designer. He is often dubbed as a controversial creator of transgressive fiction and genre-bending literature.

Nick plumbs the depths of the human psyche in his fiction, sharing his potent tales of tragedy and triumph with the world. Skilled at crafting sentences that bring his characters and their narratives to life, he is passionate about the beauty the written word has to offer.

Oliveri draws from a unique set of creators that have inspired him throughout the years. These include Jean-Michel Basquiat, Vladimir Nabokov, Stephen King, Lil Wayne, and Hunter S. Thompson.

Nick is a startup co-founder dedicated to the onset of the circular economy. Born in Ukraine but having grown up in the United States, today you can find Nick next to nowhere, and sometimes somewhere, enjoying whatever it is that he does.

Read my bestselling work, Monsters in My Mind: https://bit.ly/431rY3U

Follow me on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Nick-Oliveri/author/B09NLBSHV5?ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1&qid=1737603747&sr=8-1&isDramIntegrated=true&shoppingPortalEnabled=true

X: @faultyharb

Instagram: @nick0liveri

Nick Oliveri 2025
Art Philosophie Sciences sociales
Épisodes
  • Ep. #37 What have we done to ourselves?
    Aug 19 2025

    As always, sit back, relax, and enjoy.

    Read my bestselling novel, Monsters in My Mind: https://bit.ly/431rY3U

    Follow me on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Nick-Oliveri/author/B09NLBSHV5?ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1&qid=1737603747&sr=8-1&isDramIntegrated=true&shoppingPortalEnabled=true

    X: @faultyharb

    Instagram: @nick0liveri

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    40 min
  • On Genius: Why the Word Is Overused and the Real Thing Is Rare
    Jan 8 2026

    In this episode, I examine the modern notion of genius and argue that the word has been so overused it has nearly lost its meaning. Genius is often mistaken for high intelligence, professional success, or the ability to function smoothly within systems. Just as often, it is treated as a distant historical curiosity, safely removed from the present and stripped of its disruptive force.

    I propose a more grounded definition of genius as something genuinely rare. Genius is the externalization of a capacity most people do not possess, either the ability to see what others cannot see or to do what others are unable to do. It is not an affect, a refusal, or a posture, and it is not synonymous with talent, intelligence, or skill, though it may involve aspects of all three.

    Drawing from philosophy, art, science, literature, and music, this episode explores real examples of genius throughout history and examines why people so often dislike the genuine article. Genius threatens the ego, violates norms effortlessly, and exposes uncomfortable truths. The episode ends with a quiet warning about what happens when we label competence as genius and mistake safety for brilliance.

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    37 min
  • There Is No Writer’s Block, Part 2: Discipline, Privilege, and the Command to Write
    Jan 5 2026

    In Part 2, I define what a real writer is without apology. A writer writes. Period. This episode moves past diagnosis and into responsibility, examining writing not as self expression or inspiration, but as obligation, discipline, and privilege.

    I address common counterarguments, including family obligations, trauma, illness, and addiction, with intellectual fairness, then dismantle them by looking at the historical record. Writers and artists have produced enduring work while facing conditions far harsher than inconvenience or self doubt. Writing has never required ideal circumstances. It has always required seriousness.

    This episode reframes writing as an act of sovereignty over one’s own mind, rejects the outsourcing of struggle to abstract excuses, and ends with the only command that matters. Write anyway.

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    24 min
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