justin․searls․co

What's the Hot Fix?

I recently started an interview series on the Breaking Change feed called Hot Fix. Whereas each episode of Breaking Change is a major release full of never-before-seen tech news, life updates, and programming war stories, Hot Fix is a joint effort tackling a specific acute problem that's driving the guest up a wall. It's versioned as a patch release on the feed, because each show serves only to answer the question, "what's the hot fix?"

Because I've had to explain the concept over and over again to every potential guest, I sat down to write a list of what they'd be getting themselves into by agreeing to come on the show. (Can't say I didn't warn them!)

Here's the rider I send prospective guests:

  • Each Hot Fix episode exists to address some problem. Unlike a typical interview show featuring an unstructured open-ended conversation with a guest, we pick a particular problem in advance—ideally one that the guest gets really animated/activated or even angry about—and we jointly rant about it, gradually exploring its root causes and breaking it down together
  • Each episode concludes with us answering the question, "what's the hot fix?" Ultimately, we decide on a pithy, reductive one-line solution to the problem that will serve as the show title (ideally, it's a hot take that not everyone will agree with or feel comfortable about)
  • It's an explicit-language show and I'm pretty clear with the audience that the Breaking Change family of brands is intended for terrible people (or at least, the terrible person inside all of us). You aren't required to swear to be on the show, but if my potty mouth makes you uncomfortable, then let me know and I'll recommend some worse podcasts you can appear on instead
  • I joke at the top that my goal as the host is to, "get my guest to say something that'll get them fired." Since I'm functionally retired and have no reason to hold back from explicit language, irreverence, and dark humor in the mainline Breaking Change podcast, I can't help but poke guests with attempts to drag them down to my level. You can play with this as much as you want or take the high ground, but we'll all have more fun if you let loose a bit more than you otherwise would
  • Why am I doing this? First, because I'm incurious and uninterested in learning about other people, which I'm told is an important part of being a good interviewer. Second, I have a theory that this unusual brand of authenticity will lend credibility to whatever solution the guest is trying to argue for or plug. By keeping listeners on their toes and pushing them out of their comfort zones, each episode stands to effect greater change than a typical milquetoast podcast could

If this has piqued your interest, you can listen to or watch the first episode of Hot Fix with Dave Mosher. It may not seem very hot at first, but please grade on a curve as Dave speaks Canadian English. I've got a couple exciting guests booked over the next few weeks and I'm looking forward to seeing where the show takes us.


Got a taste for hot, fresh takes?

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