

The James Altucher Show
James Altucher
James Altucher interviews the world's leading peak performers in every area of life. But instead of giving you the typical success story, James digs deeper to find the "Choose Yourself" story - these are the moments we relate to... when someone rises up from personal struggle to reinvent themselves. The James Altucher Show brings you into the lives of peak-performers: billionaires, best-selling authors, rappers, astronauts, athletes, comedians, actors, and the world champions in every field, all who forged their own paths, found financial freedom and harnessed the power to create more meaningful and fulfilling lives.
Episodes
Mentioned books

May 9, 2016 • 51min
Ep. 166 - Brian Grazer: How a Curious Mind Creates An Original Idea
"Imagine... If you had suddenly learned that the people and the places and the moments most important to you were not gone, not dead, but worse- had never been." I was in LA at Imagine Entertainment. It's Brian Grazer's studio. He produced A Beautiful Mind, 8 Mile, a bunch of Jim Carrey movies. He's worked with Eddie Murphy and produced my favorite TV series, Arrested Development. "I bought the book A Beautiful Mind with the thematic intention of trying to make a movie that would help de-stigmatize mental disability," he said. So he created an alternate reality. And he's done this in his own life. "You see, the nightmare of schizophrenia is not knowing what's true," the psychiatrist said in A Beautiful Mind. He was talking to John Nash's wife as she watched her husband get electroshock therapy. She loved a schizophrenic man. A brilliant man. She let me him keep his delusions. They weren't real. But what's the harm? Nothing. Unless you almost drown your baby. He won the Nobel Prize. And I cried. His mind brought him delusions but it also brought him love. Between two realities, he chose himself. I don't try to be everything I am. Because some of me is jealous. Some of me feels sad. Some of me ran out of things to say. So I become the rest of me. The side that practices difficult gratitude and improves just 1% a day. The part of me that listens. And flies to LA to be in an alternate reality. Brian Grazer says, "Curiosity propels storytelling. All stories, incidentally, need propulsion. It not only creates the story, but it gives life to energy, and energy is what stories need." It's what life needs. Or at least, my life. Brian also produced Apollo 13, another one of my favorite movies. He used his curiosity muscle to reframe the story. "People think it's about space. They thought it was about aerodynamics," he says. "To me, it was only about human resourcefulness." "Perspective is everything," Brian said. "It's everything." His perspective comes from curiosity. Which he wrote about in #1 New York Times bestseller, A Curious Mind: The Secret to a Bigger Life. I don't know where my curiosity will lead me. I can only hope it helps you.
------------What do YOU think of the show? Head to JamesAltucherShow.com/listeners and fill out a short survey that will help us better tailor the podcast to our audience!Are you interested in getting direct answers from James about your question on a podcast? Go to JamesAltucherShow.com/AskAltucher and send in your questions to be answered on the air!------------Visit Notepd.com to read our idea lists & sign up to create your own!My new book, Skip the Line, is out! Make sure you get a copy wherever books are sold!Join the You Should Run for President 2.0 Facebook Group, where we discuss why you should run for President.I write about all my podcasts! Check out the full post and learn what I learned at jamesaltuchershow.com------------Thank you so much for listening! If you like this episode, please rate, review, and subscribe to "The James Altucher Show" wherever you get your podcasts: Apple PodcastsiHeart RadioSpotifyFollow me on social media:YouTubeTwitterFacebookLinkedIn
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May 3, 2016 • 35min
Ep. 165 - Dr. Ron Paul: Create Wealth and Freedom by Voting for Yourself
"You're scaring me now," I said.
"Don't scare me."
I was laughing. But I meant it.
The news, the doom and gloom, the fear, it makes fresh air turn
to vomit.
Chunky streams of acid.
I bet Ron Paul has thin stomach lining.
We were talking about freedom. And if there's any left.
I usually ignore all the doom and gloom. That's what works for
me. But we talked about opportunities, hope, trends, the
innovation economy.
And freedom.
"I don't even like politics. I did it only because I could get a
voice out there telling people what was going on, what you need to
do, and what the substitute has to be. Believe me, we're going to
have a chance," Ron Paul says on today's podcast.
Did you hear that?
"We're going to have a chance..."
I like that.
If you pay attention, you'll see the future is already
here.
What does that mean for you?
I don't know. Maybe you'll go to space or make millions
investing in robotics.
You have thousands of new opportunities to create your
own wealth and freedom.
And you can start right now.
I'll tell you how to make money off of rising trends in today's
podcast. This is rare. But you'll hear about my plan to profit
in this innovation economy.
I don't want to choke on my own vomit. I'm choosing myself.
Voting for me.
Because if I don't nobody will.
------------What do YOU think of the show? Head to JamesAltucherShow.com/listeners and fill out a short survey that will help us better tailor the podcast to our audience!Are you interested in getting direct answers from James about your question on a podcast? Go to JamesAltucherShow.com/AskAltucher and send in your questions to be answered on the air!------------Visit Notepd.com to read our idea lists & sign up to create your own!My new book, Skip the Line, is out! Make sure you get a copy wherever books are sold!Join the You Should Run for President 2.0 Facebook Group, where we discuss why you should run for President.I write about all my podcasts! Check out the full post and learn what I learned at jamesaltuchershow.com------------Thank you so much for listening! If you like this episode, please rate, review, and subscribe to "The James Altucher Show" wherever you get your podcasts: Apple PodcastsiHeart RadioSpotifyFollow me on social media:YouTubeTwitterFacebookLinkedIn
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Apr 28, 2016 • 52min
[Bonus] How Minimalism Brought Me Freedom and Joy
I'm homeless. By choice.
I wrote about it. And it turned into a debate. Now I'm
sharing the discussion with you. My podcast listeners and
answering your questions.
"Does minimalism mean having no accomplishments?"
"Does minimalism mean not having a lot of possessions?"
"How do you deal with kids if you are a minimalist?"
"What's the first step I should take? Should I throw things
out?"
This isn't something I usually do. Welcome to my experiment of
the day.
------------What do YOU think of the show? Head to JamesAltucherShow.com/listeners and fill out a short survey that will help us better tailor the podcast to our audience!Are you interested in getting direct answers from James about your question on a podcast? Go to JamesAltucherShow.com/AskAltucher and send in your questions to be answered on the air!------------Visit Notepd.com to read our idea lists & sign up to create your own!My new book, Skip the Line, is out! Make sure you get a copy wherever books are sold!Join the You Should Run for President 2.0 Facebook Group, where we discuss why you should run for President.I write about all my podcasts! Check out the full post and learn what I learned at jamesaltuchershow.com------------Thank you so much for listening! If you like this episode, please rate, review, and subscribe to "The James Altucher Show" wherever you get your podcasts: Apple PodcastsiHeart RadioSpotifyFollow me on social media:YouTubeTwitterFacebookLinkedIn
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Apr 26, 2016 • 1h 2min
Ep. 164 - Steve Case: The Third Wave is coming... An Entrepreneur's Vision of the Future
I would've taken the money. A couple hundred million.
He could've sold the business for a 100, 200 million
dollars.
Bill Gates wanted to buy it.
But he didn't sell.
I wanted to know why Steve Case, co-founder and former CEO of
AOL said no to being a millionaire.
"The simple answer is I really believed in the idea of the
internet and believed in AOL and believed that it could change the
world," he says on today's podcast.
Investors said, "What are you talking about? This internet
thing? Why would normal people ever want to get connected to
this?"
People thought he was crazy crazy. But he could see the
future.
That's the thing about the future. Nobody wants to see it
coming.
Back then, nobody wanted to connect to the internet.
They missed opportunities.
"It was a hard struggle for a decade before we finally broke
through," he said. The future paid off for Steve Case. And now it
can pay off for you.
He believed they could change the world.
He was right. "Six, seven years later, [AOL] had gone from a few
hundred million dollars to tens of billions to then over 150, 160
billion."
But he didn't stop there...
The Third Wave is coming. Steve talks about it in his New York
Times bestselling book, The Third Wave: An Entrepreneur's
Vision of the Future.
These are the opportunities you haven't missed yet.
We're offering you the future.
In my interview with Steve Case, you'll learn about the first
wave (building the internet), the second wave (social media,
community, Facebook, Snapchat... all the billion dollar companies you
wish you thought of or invested in...)
And finally, the third wave. The future.
Listen now to learn how to master your future. Before it's too
late.
And read what I learned from Steve Case at
jamesaltucher.com
------------What do YOU think of the show? Head to JamesAltucherShow.com/listeners and fill out a short survey that will help us better tailor the podcast to our audience!Are you interested in getting direct answers from James about your question on a podcast? Go to JamesAltucherShow.com/AskAltucher and send in your questions to be answered on the air!------------Visit Notepd.com to read our idea lists & sign up to create your own!My new book, Skip the Line, is out! Make sure you get a copy wherever books are sold!Join the You Should Run for President 2.0 Facebook Group, where we discuss why you should run for President.I write about all my podcasts! Check out the full post and learn what I learned at jamesaltuchershow.com------------Thank you so much for listening! If you like this episode, please rate, review, and subscribe to "The James Altucher Show" wherever you get your podcasts: Apple PodcastsiHeart RadioSpotifyFollow me on social media:YouTubeTwitterFacebookLinkedIn
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Apr 18, 2016 • 54min
Ep. 163 - Jesse Itzler: 6 Simple Steps to Becoming Self-made
"Everyday is a new day." ...unless you have a routine.
Then it's just "eat, sleep, shit, repeat," like they say in Billions.
"Don't you want to create memories? Don't you want to build your life resume and get as much out of life as you can?" Jesse Itzler said on my podcast.
He's the co-founder of Marquis Jets, owner of the NBA's Atlanta Hawks, endurance athlete, former-rapper and now he's an author.
"I didn't have a resume," he says. "I didn't want to have a resume. I didn't want to work for anybody."
Jesse built his life.
"I had no background, no experience and I had no connections."
He's self-made.
I don't know who's in charge of my life. Maybe me. I chose myself.
And I still do. Everyday.
But I also lend my life out. At least once every 24 hours.
"We're constantly dodging arrows," Jesse said. "Each arrow is time."
"Routines are great, but they're also a rut," he said.
"I thought wow, this is amazing. I have great balance. I have a great routine. I'm in my routine. Everything is my routine..."
And he needed to get out of it.
So he did something crazy, which you'll hear on today's episode.
And you'll learn his tricks to becoming self-made.
Then you can enjoy your life. I hope. And forget your resume too.
Listen to my podcast with Jesse Itzler.
Or read my notes here: 6 simple steps to becoming self-made on jamesaltucher.com
------------What do YOU think of the show? Head to JamesAltucherShow.com/listeners and fill out a short survey that will help us better tailor the podcast to our audience!Are you interested in getting direct answers from James about your question on a podcast? Go to JamesAltucherShow.com/AskAltucher and send in your questions to be answered on the air!------------Visit Notepd.com to read our idea lists & sign up to create your own!My new book, Skip the Line, is out! Make sure you get a copy wherever books are sold!Join the You Should Run for President 2.0 Facebook Group, where we discuss why you should run for President.I write about all my podcasts! Check out the full post and learn what I learned at jamesaltuchershow.com------------Thank you so much for listening! If you like this episode, please rate, review, and subscribe to "The James Altucher Show" wherever you get your podcasts: Apple PodcastsiHeart RadioSpotifyFollow me on social media:YouTubeTwitterFacebookLinkedIn
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Apr 12, 2016 • 1h 4min
Ep. 162 - Anders Ericsson: 7 Secrets of Mastery
You have no idea. None of us did. Until now.Everything I've done for the past two years is unfolding before me.I interviewed Dr. K Anders Ericsson. You know his work. He discovered the 10,000 hour rule.The rule that says if you do 10,000 hours of "dedicated practice" you can master a field. But what we've been lead to believe is false. And it's finally being corrected. Today.
Peak: Secrets from the New Science of Expertise uses thirty years of research to reveal what we never knew before, including:What you're truly capable of, how you can achieve it, and where to start. I started this podcast two years ago. And I just realized what it's actually about.
Everyone I interviewed has one thing in common: peak performance. They excelled in their field. They're the smarter person in the room. They mastered their craft.
Go to jamesaltucher.com for 7 things I learned about how to become a PEAK performer
------------What do YOU think of the show? Head to JamesAltucherShow.com/listeners and fill out a short survey that will help us better tailor the podcast to our audience!Are you interested in getting direct answers from James about your question on a podcast? Go to JamesAltucherShow.com/AskAltucher and send in your questions to be answered on the air!------------Visit Notepd.com to read our idea lists & sign up to create your own!My new book, Skip the Line, is out! Make sure you get a copy wherever books are sold!Join the You Should Run for President 2.0 Facebook Group, where we discuss why you should run for President.I write about all my podcasts! Check out the full post and learn what I learned at jamesaltuchershow.com------------Thank you so much for listening! If you like this episode, please rate, review, and subscribe to "The James Altucher Show" wherever you get your podcasts: Apple PodcastsiHeart RadioSpotifyFollow me on social media:YouTubeTwitterFacebookLinkedIn
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11 snips
Apr 5, 2016 • 1h 2min
Ep. 161- Charles Duhigg: Be Smarter, Faster, Better… And Most of All Be Free
Charles Duhigg, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and bestselling author known for 'The Power of Habit,' discusses the relationship between success, productivity, and societal pressures. He emphasizes the importance of experimentation in our daily routines to combat modern distractions. Duhigg shares strategies for effective networking and personal storytelling, revealing how they can enhance self-awareness and connection. He also explores the diversity of motivation and highlights the joy of reading as a tool for personal growth and inspiration.

Mar 27, 2016 • 58min
Ep. 160 - Ashlee Vance: Elon Musk and the Quest to Save Mankind
He didn't have permission.
But he did it anyway. And one day Elon Musk called him.
"He was either going to make life really horrible on me or he was going to cooperate with the book" said Ashlee Vance, author of the New York Times bestseller and Wall Street Journal's "best books of the year," Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future.
Ashlee did 200 interviews before Elon agreed, proving permission is not a starting place.
I wish I wrote the book. But I didn't.
My "quest" is different.
Instead, I mastered curiosity.
I called people and recorded. I did a ton of research. I read every book, article, interview and watched every talk. I've spent 10,000 hours interviewing and more than 10,000 hours preparing.
I didn't need permission. And neither do you.
Here are 5 ways to bypass the gatekeepers:
A) Master something
Like anybody, Elon is smart in some things and probably stupid in others. But he mastered his interests.
Mastery is learning 90% of everything you could learn about a subject. You can't reach 100%. I hope that's comforting.
Explore your interests. Combine them and you'll find what works for you. Then improve 1% each day.
Along the way, you'll master it.
B) Make your own decisions
Elon doesn't let people make decisions for him. They'll choose wrong. And he knows it.
If you choose for yourself you will choose yourself.
C) Play for pay
I remember my childhood. Some of it. I read comic books and Dear Abby.
Now, at 47? 48? I search for "superhero" stories.
And I get to be Dear Abby.
"Ask Altucher."
Every Thursday at 3:30 PM EST, I have a Twitter Q&A.
I answer texts and emails from strangers. 203-512-2161
I answer Quora questions and co-host a podcast with my friend, Stephen Dubner. He wrote the New York Times bestseller, Freakonomics.
I wonder if he read Dear Abby growing up, too. We answer questions with questions.
But before all of this, I worked in finance. I did what "they" wanted me to do. I got lost.
Elon did, too.
"He just got swept up in the internet for a little while," Ashlee says, "and then once he made a ton of money (from PayPal), the light went on and he just said, 'Now I can go chase everything I've ever wanted to go do.'"
"Elon appears to have some kind of calling to go save humankind," Ashlee says. "When he was 12, he designed a video game that was exactly that concept."
But at one point, he changed course. We all do. We forget play.
Now he's saving humanity.
D) There are always problems
When I interviewed Derek Sivers last week, I said "You can always disappear from your problems."
And you can.
He did. But then what?
Derek spends a lot time answering emails and giving advice. And Elon is exploring electric vehicles and life in space.
Everyday, I have a choice: find new problems or help others with theirs. Create problems or solve them.
When I help people with their problems, I forget about mine. Sometimes.
Elon sees extreme problems and extreme solutions. All his basics are covered. He's doesn't worry about his boss or the mortgage.
"The weird thing to me," Ashlee says, "was that [when] you started talking [to Elon] about mankind being wiped out, he wells up with emotion."
Suffering graces all life. There are always problems.
"What I saw with Elon is that he's very clear-eyed. He meditates on what he thinks is important and has a absolute devotion to pursuing these goals"
"He gives you a sense of urgency in your life. Maybe I'm just getting older," Ashlee says, "When I finished doing the book, I sat back and I said, 'I need to be much clearer about exactly what I want to do with my life.'"
I don't have the same problem as Ashlee or see the same problems as Elon Musk. And I'm grateful.
E) Be on the right side of history
You only have a certain amount of energy each day. Don't waste it fighting the inevitable.
"Going against Elon is the equivalent of going against Steve Jobs these days and you...
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Mar 22, 2016 • 1h 22min
Ep. 159 - Derek Sivers: The Zen Master of Entrepreneurship
The most powerful currency in the world is not what you think.
Not anymore.
We're turning to a new economy with two powerful currencies.
And you have an opportunity, right now, to build a more fulfilling and rewarding life.
I'm going to tell you what these two currencies are and how to leverage them successfully. I'll tell you what works for me.
But before I do, I want to introduce you to Derek Sivers. He's an influential thinker, speaker, entrepreneur and the zen master of entrepreneurship writing.
If you're starting a business, you have to read his book, Anything You Want: 40 Lessons for a New Kind of Entrepreneur. It's in my top three.
Derek built his business, CD Baby, around doing people favors. It became the largest seller of independent music online, with $100M in sales for 150,000 musicians.
Derek later sold CD Baby for $22M and gave the proceeds to charity. "If you focus entirely on others the world seems to reward you the most," he says.
That's one of the two most powerful currencies today: favors.
But there are limits.
"You have to serve others within the limits of what you're able to sustainably do. You can't do something that makes you absolutely miserable," he says.
That's choosing yourself.
I got a lot of ideas from interviewing Derek, which is the other currency: ideas. But you already knew that.
Derek moved to New Zealand. He takes 3-day hikes, spends 30 hours a week with his family, and answers thousands of personal emails asking for his advice.
He wrote a list of his priorities and said "I don't want to do anything else right now. (No more interviews or speaking at conferences until further notice.)" This is his last interview for awhile.
I'm grateful he chose me. Chose us.
And chose himself.
I encourage you to write him.
And listen to this interview. Share what you learned. I wrote a list -- 7 ways to a "make a killing" and master the new economy.
Because Derek quoted Kevin Kelly, futurist and founder of Wired. He said, "We should focus on making a living, not on making something huge."
Derek changed it to "It's about making a living, not making a killing."
To me, that's success in the new economy.
7 ways to a "make a killing" and master the new economy:
A) Leave in the cracks
Derek was listening to Sheryl Crow. But he didn't know it was her. Her voice cracked. And she got his attention. "That little fault is what made me like her," Derek said.
B) Admit your faults
I know I'm bad at a lot of things. Derek gave an example. When I interviewed Ramit Sethi, I admitted I forgot to read something. And I wasn't totally prepared.
"To me it kind of seems like a brilliant way of asking the world to love you," Derek said.
And maybe it is.
Everyone wants love. How sad is it that we, as humans, contemplate hiding ourselves?
We have two choices: be yourself or fear being yourself.
C) You can always disappear from your problems
But do you want to? Did Kurt Cobain kill himself because he was too famous? Or because he got everything he wanted? And didn't know what to do with it.
We always want things. Happiness, love, appreciation.
But then do we ask for the right things? Raises, promotions, more responsibility, less freedom?
You can choose f-ck you money and f-ck you problems. Or you can focus on happiness. That's what Derek did.
He had a company, CD Baby. It's basically the original iTunes. People said he'd get a lot of money with an IPO. But he didn't do it.
"What's the point of making money?" Derek said, "It's to be happy."
"And if it would make me unhappy to have so much responsibility then I'd rather not make more money. I'd rather just focus on the happiness."
D) Do more favors
Anyone can do this.
Derek started by selling old CDs online.
He made money right away. So people asked for favors. Can you sell my old CDs?
He said yes. And it spread. Friends of friends asked. Then strangers and soon he had a profitable business.
But...
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Mar 15, 2016 • 50min
Ep. 158 - Terry George: Hotel Rwanda and the Art of Suffering
If I didn't listen to my pain, I'd be dead.
I've interviewed hundreds of "successful" people. When they look back, they see two things: struggle and a story.
These are hero stories -- choose yourself stories.
Directed by pain, they found passion. Because they listened.
I was alone, on the floor, broke, desperate, hopeless.
I ignored the pain. I wanted to die. And then something shifted.
But you don't need to hit rock bottom to be successful.
You just need something that ignites you.
"There's a moment, a chemistry, where people find a spark... something inside you triggers greatness," said Terry George. He wrote and directed the award winning film, Hotel Rwanda, and the upcoming film, The Promise, about a love story during WWII's genocide.
"I'm not interested in suffering," he says. But he is. "I'm interesting in alleviating it."
He grew up Catholic during Ireland's struggle for civil rights across a divided nation. "I got beaten up in playgrounds and shit like that. There was definitely a sense that you were not welcome to put it mildly."
"That was was my education," he says.
He never thought about turning something horrific into a movie.
But that's exactly what he did. Through film, he connects us to human frailty, vulnerability and fear. He calls it "a universal language."
That's the art of suffering.
------------What do YOU think of the show? Head to JamesAltucherShow.com/listeners and fill out a short survey that will help us better tailor the podcast to our audience!Are you interested in getting direct answers from James about your question on a podcast? Go to JamesAltucherShow.com/AskAltucher and send in your questions to be answered on the air!------------Visit Notepd.com to read our idea lists & sign up to create your own!My new book, Skip the Line, is out! Make sure you get a copy wherever books are sold!Join the You Should Run for President 2.0 Facebook Group, where we discuss why you should run for President.I write about all my podcasts! Check out the full post and learn what I learned at jamesaltuchershow.com------------Thank you so much for listening! If you like this episode, please rate, review, and subscribe to "The James Altucher Show" wherever you get your podcasts: Apple PodcastsiHeart RadioSpotifyFollow me on social media:YouTubeTwitterFacebookLinkedIn
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.