Episodios

  • Building Better Rooms: How Leaders Turn Innovation into Reality
    Mar 30 2026

    In this episode of The Real State Podcast, Alex Norman and Jamie Blond welcome back Philipp Willigmann, Founder of u-path, former CSO at Vontier Ventures, and a leader working at the intersection of strategy, venture capital, partnerships, ecosystem design, and real-world deployment.

    Philipp first joined the show in 2021 to discuss the future of mobility. He now returns with a broader perspective on how innovation actually happens—and why it often doesn’t.

    At the center of this conversation is a powerful idea: innovation doesn’t fail because of weak technology. It fails because of the systems around it. Incentives, capital flows, institutions, and leadership alignment determine whether ideas ever make it into the real world.

    That’s where “building better rooms” comes in.

    Alex, Jamie, and Philipp explore how curated, trusted environments bring together the right leaders across corporate venture, innovation, capital, and policy to make better decisions and move faster from strategy to deployment.

    They discuss:

    • Why trust and curation are more valuable than scale
    • The rise of corporate venture capital as a strategic function
    • The difference between performative innovation and real execution
    • How geography (Miami, Berlin, and beyond) shapes leadership interaction
    • What it takes to build credibility and convene global decision-makers
    • Why better conversations lead to better outcomes

    This episode is not about conferences—it’s about infrastructure for better decision-making, and how leadership, capital, and place come together to shape the future of business and society.

    If you’re interested in innovation, leadership, venture capital, AI, corporate strategy, or how real decisions get made at the highest levels, this conversation offers a rare inside perspective.

    For more episodes, visit therealestate.co and follow The Real State Podcast.


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    35 m
  • What Makes a City Great: Americas Power Cities Under the Microscope.
    Feb 26 2026

    What makes a city great?

    In this episode of The Real State Podcast, hosts Alex Norman and Jamie Blond unpack a BBC-driven debate about America’s top cities and the battle for the next spot behind New York and Los Angeles. With Chicago long treated as the default #3, they challenge the assumptions and make the case that Miami’s growth, global pull, and economic momentum may be reshaping the ranking.

    They break down nine criteria often used to judge “greatness,” including economic output, industry concentration, cultural export and tourism, migration, infrastructure, tax policy, and long-term resilience. Along the way, they compare New York’s legacy power, LA’s cultural machine and quality of life advantages, Chicago’s shifting role, and Miami’s rise as a destination for capital, talent, and global attention. They also touch on other contenders like San Francisco, Washington DC, Atlanta, and Boston, plus why outsiders may be most excited about Miami right now.


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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    36 m
  • 2025 Year in Review: Favorite Conversations from The Real State Podcast
    Jan 22 2026

    As 2026 begins, hosts Alex Norman and Jamie Blond slow things down to reflect on the conversations that mattered most in 2025 on The Real State Podcast. Rather than revisiting headlines or trends, this year-end episode focuses on the ideas, stories, and debates that stayed with them long after the microphones were turned off.

    In this special Year in Review, Alex and Jamie revisit four standout episodes that capture the core themes of the show: Trading Suits for Stories, a deeply personal conversation about career pivots, creativity, and second acts; Tourism Revolt, an exploration of overtourism, housing pressure, and the balance between free markets and quality of life; Boundless, a discussion inspired by Alex’s book on accessibility, disability, aging, and inclusive design; and Fair Play, a forward-looking conversation on how schoolyards, parks, and public spaces shape confidence, behavior, and belonging from an early age.

    Across these episodes, recurring questions emerge. How do systems designed for efficiency overlook human experience? What role should government play in protecting livability, inclusion, and access? And how can design, policy, and community engagement work together to create better outcomes for everyone?

    This episode offers longtime listeners a chance to reconnect with the ideas that defined the year, and new listeners a clear entry point into the conversations that sit at the heart of The Real State. It’s a reflective, wide-ranging discussion about cities, culture, accessibility, and how thoughtful design can improve everyday life.

    If you’re looking for a snapshot of where the show has been and where it’s headed next, this episode brings it all together.


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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    28 m
  • Fair Play: Rethinking Schoolyards and Parks for Everyone
    Dec 22 2025

    What do the spaces where we play as children teach us about belonging, confidence, and opportunity?

    In this episode of The Real State, Alex Norman and Jamie Blond sit down with Honorata Gręczykowska, an urban designer living and working in Barcelona whose research focuses on how the design of everyday spaces influences behavior, mobility, and social dynamics. Drawing from years of work across Europe and deep, year-long studies inside Catalonian primary schools, Honorata explains why schoolyards are often the first true public spaces children navigate independently—and why they matter far more than we realize.

    The conversation explores how culture, especially in a football-centric city like Barcelona, shapes public space design, and how participatory, intersectional research with children, parents, teachers, and municipalities can challenge long-standing norms. We dig into how small design decisions can dramatically change who feels welcome, who participates, and who is pushed to the margins, and why inclusive design doesn’t require big budgets—just better understanding.

    We close by looking ahead. What could the future of schoolyards, parks, and public spaces look like if cities truly designed for how people live and play? And how might these early experiences shape healthier, more confident communities for generations to come?


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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    33 m
  • From Success to Significance: The Second Mountain Mindset
    Oct 30 2025

    In From Success to Significance: The Second Mountain Mindset, Alex Norman and Jamie Blond unpack why the goals that drive us early in life often stop feeling satisfying and how that shift can open the door to purpose, community, and contribution.

    Inspired by David Brooks’ The Second Mountain, they share personal stories of career peaks, loss, reinvention, and the moment when achievement gives way to meaning. From Miami to Mexico City, more people are rebuilding their lives in midlife and rethinking what fulfillment looks like.

    This episode offers a candid, often funny take on second acts, the role of place in starting over, and why giving back can feel better than getting ahead.

    Follow The Real State for more honest conversations about life, change, and the spaces we build.


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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    31 m
  • Club Collapse: Why Mega Nightclubs Are Closing and the Future of Nightlife
    Sep 10 2025

    Is the club era over or just evolving? In “Club Collapse,” Alex and Jamie trace the arc from Studio 54 to bottle service and today’s experience-driven mega clubs, then dig into why many are shuttering and what’s rising in their place. They cover cost inflation, $150–$200 entry fees, festival trade-offs, and the growing pull of destination party spots.

    You’ll hear why restaurants with “show” vibes are siphoning demand, how private members clubs changed the lounge game, and why smaller rooms, vinyl bars, and mixed-use spaces are delivering the connection people actually want. Alex also shares a DJ’s view on what makes intimate sets work and how venues can nurture emerging talent.

    If you enjoyed our restaurant episode, this one pairs perfectly. Rate and review, then tell us where you think nightlife goes next.


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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    32 m
  • Prix Fixe Fatigue: Why Restaurant Week is No Longer a Deal
    Aug 31 2025

    Restaurant Week started as a short, clever fix in 1992 and grew into month-long “deals,” yet the math has changed. Hosts Alex Norman and Jamie Blond unpack how food costs, rent, and wages climbed while drinking declined, why $60 prix fixe dinners still land at $300 with drinks and fees, and how seasonality and loud, rushed dining rooms erode the experience. With anecdotes from Miami and New York plus cultural shifts like Ozempic and Gen Z drinking habits, they explore what this says about the real state of city dining today.


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    33 m
  • Tourism Revolt: The Fight to Reclaim Cities from Mass Travel
    Jul 22 2025

    In Tourism Revolt: The Fight to Reclaim Cities from Mass Travel, Alex Norman and Jamie Blond explore how the explosive growth of global tourism is fueling backlash in cities like Barcelona, New York, Mexico City, Tokyo, and Miami. From Airbnb bans and disappearing neighborhoods to squirt-gun protests and soaring housing costs, they unpack how mass travel is reshaping local life—for better and worse.

    With tourism now a $10 trillion global force, this episode dives into the tension between economic growth and cultural survival, asking: who are cities really for—the locals who live there or the tourists passing through? Packed with real-world stories, stats, and banter, this episode challenges listeners to rethink how we travel—and how we build the cities we love.

    Have you witnessed tourism changing your city—or one you’ve visited? Share your story and join the conversation @realstatepodcast.


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    33 m