Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Interview.
Meet Enzo Zelocchi: The Actor Who Quietly Built a $1.5 Billion Empire
In an era where celebrity wealth is often loud, flashy, and endlessly documented, Enzo Zelocchi’s rise tells a very different story. While audiences recognize him for his commanding screen presence and creative versatility, far fewer people realize that Zelocchi has been building something much bigger behind the scenes—a business empire reportedly valued at $1.5 billion.
By Brian Smith29 days ago in Interview
Center Stage with Gina C.. Top Story - February 2023.
*** I'm keen to republish the interviews I did for my series with Vocal creators. It's been a few years and I thought it might be nice to revisit these wonderful conversations. I'll be releasing them one at a time for a few weeks/months.
By Heather Hubler29 days ago in Interview
The Rest Is Science Podcast
Science podcasts essentially have two sets of DNA. One version of a Science podcast is academic, sometimes pedantic, yet brilliantly informative. Big Brains and Why This Universe are just two examples. Then, there are the Science podcasts that offer hard science with the soft shell of humor, irony, or outright mockery. Examples include Science VS, Taboo Science, and even Unexplainable.
By Frank Racioppiabout a month ago in Interview
Igor Finkelshtein: What Long-Term Builders Know That Fast-Growth Founders Often Miss
In today’s entrepreneurial culture, speed is often treated as the ultimate indicator of success. Founders are encouraged to move fast, launch quickly, and scale before competitors catch up. But after years of building businesses in industries where reliability and trust matter more than headlines, I’ve learned a different lesson.
By Igor Finkelshteinabout a month ago in Interview
Fumfer Physics 35: Cognitive Limits, Big Data, and AI’s Role in Human Reasoning
In this exchange, Scott Douglas Jacobsen asks what human consciousness cannot process adequately. Rick Rosner argues that people hit hard limits with big data, large parameter spaces, and even simple mental representations like number grids. Computers can find correlations, but humans struggle to hold enough information at once to test whether patterns are causal. Rosner suggests AI could surface correlations and generate wide-ranging analogies across culture at superhuman scale, while humans remain responsible for interpretation and meaning. He extends the point to scientific imagination—alternative cosmologies and modified-gravity ideas—and notes AI may help break cognitive ruts, even if it is not yet a top-tier theoretical mathematician.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsenabout a month ago in Interview
Trump to give update after US strikes Venezuela and captures President Maduro. AI-Generated.
In a dramatic turn of events, the United States has conducted strikes in Venezuela leading to the capture of President Nicolás Maduro, a move that marks a significant escalation in American involvement in the region. Former President Donald Trump is set to provide a public update on the operation, promising clarification on the motivations, execution, and potential implications of the intervention.
By Aarif Lashariabout a month ago in Interview
A Chat with Andrew Chancellor, CEO at Wellbeing International Foundation
Tell us about Wellbeing International The Wellbeing International Foundation was created to close the gap between scientific discovery and everyday medicine. The aim has always been to turn strong biologic research into treatments that genuinely help people, rather than leaving good science stuck inside laboratories. Our focus is on regenerative medicine and cell-free biologic therapies. These are treatments built from the body’s own healing signals rather than whole cells or surgery.
By Wellbeing International Foundationabout a month ago in Interview
T. Michael W. Halcomb on Disillusionment, Community, and Accountability in the Modern Church
T. Michael W. Halcomb is an American professor, author, podcaster, and stand-up comedian. He is the author of around 30 books, an educator with five degrees (including a PhD), and a frequent academic presenter with nearly 100 conference presentations. He co-founded GlossaHouse in 2012, a publishing house focused on language-learning resources, especially biblical languages. He gave a TEDx talk, "Silent no more: Resurrecting dead languages," in Evansville, IN in October of 2015. His comedy work has been featured in outlets such as Yahoo! Entertainment, TheWrap, and The Mirror US.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsenabout a month ago in Interview
Hope For A Better World
It's amazing what the prospect of a new year may bring. Suddenly, a night with a large Doritos bag and your favorite streaming channel gives way to a return to the fitness center, where your money has gone unrequited for the last year.
By Frank Racioppiabout a month ago in Interview










