Career Podcast Resource at Time We Discuss
Season Highlights
The debut season, season 1 of Time We Discuss, included 86 episodes in 2024 and featured over a dozen each of authors, coaches, creatives, and business professionals. It included some great obscure jobs including: an oyster farmer, a vegan interior designer, a publicist, and an elementary school principal. We got to learn about some nonprofit organizations including Steven's Wings and Colby's Army. Similarly, we learned about what it takes to be a funder.
Season 1 ended and we jumped right into season 2, which included 65 episodes. I always appreciate the different views and stories of all of the guests on the show. That being said, I made a strong effort to limit the number of authors and coaches that appeared as part of season two. Season two had an unintentional large focus on professionals that work in a creative field (voice over artist, mosaic artist, audio engineer) or small businesses (professional exorcist, real estate wholesaler, an event planner). Finishing out season two, it became very clear that there is a market for pretty much anything if you put your mind to it and work in a methodical manner.
Similar to season 2, season 3 of Time We Discuss started strong in January (of 2026). At the time of this writing, we are only about 8% into the season. I'm continuing to focus on both traditional career paths (inpatient mental health counselor, security guard, family attorney) as well as some that are a little more untraditional (scary clown
, dog trainer, home stager). One thing that I can guarantee is that by the time this season is over, you'll have access to some amazing conversations and career paths that you may have overlooked.
Most Popular Career Videos
Finding time to do anything extra is especially challenging as everyone tries to capture and hold your attention for as long as possible. Without searching through the channel, you might want to consider these episodes that others found especially helpful. From registered patent agents to the related patent attorneys, this career offers great work-life balance. If you are looking for something a little more obscure, being a clown or a dream therapist proves to be popular choice. Working as a corrections or parole officer has it's own challenges.
Careers People Aren't (but should be) Exploring
Every once in awhile I get to interview a person that has a job and there are amazing perks. It might be completely remotely, amazing work-life balance, incredible salary, etc. For whatever reason, people don't seem interested in those careers. Astrology reader, talent manager, and social media marketer are some of those career choices.
