
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Danil Nevsky entered 23 competitions before he placed in a single one. He dropped shakers. Broke glass. Forgot his lines on stage. Then his appendix burst on a plane and nearly killed him after eleven countries on a solo trip around the world. None of it was the cool, detached version of bartending the industry sells you. Instead, it was caring out loud, in public, where everyone could watch him fail.
The thing quietly capping your career is an attitude you probably picked up as armor: the studied indifference, the "I don't give a shit" that reads as cool and costs you every opportunity that actually compounds. Danil Nevsky, World's 50 Best opening teams, eighteen months and eleven countries on the road, founder of a free global training platform, makes the case that earnestness, not talent, is the real unfair advantage, and that the people who give opportunities away are the only ones who last a whole career. This episode is the reframe your detachment has been hiding from you: how to taste like a pro, why your Instagram is the resume you're not editing, and where the real leverage lives inside a tipping system most bartenders never think to question.
Expect to Learn:
LINKS
Service starts now.
Follow the show: Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube
I talk to people in and around the service industry space. I'm looking to hear from the people I wish I could have talked to when I was coming up in bars. Said another way: I am trying to make sense of this wild, beautiful mess that can be a life working in bars, and help others that are feeling similarly confused and/or lost. Check out the Podcast Website Here and get in touch with me!
Classic Episodes You May Like:
As always, I’m just here taking notes, trying to figure out what it all means.
Cheers
By Andrew RoyDanil Nevsky entered 23 competitions before he placed in a single one. He dropped shakers. Broke glass. Forgot his lines on stage. Then his appendix burst on a plane and nearly killed him after eleven countries on a solo trip around the world. None of it was the cool, detached version of bartending the industry sells you. Instead, it was caring out loud, in public, where everyone could watch him fail.
The thing quietly capping your career is an attitude you probably picked up as armor: the studied indifference, the "I don't give a shit" that reads as cool and costs you every opportunity that actually compounds. Danil Nevsky, World's 50 Best opening teams, eighteen months and eleven countries on the road, founder of a free global training platform, makes the case that earnestness, not talent, is the real unfair advantage, and that the people who give opportunities away are the only ones who last a whole career. This episode is the reframe your detachment has been hiding from you: how to taste like a pro, why your Instagram is the resume you're not editing, and where the real leverage lives inside a tipping system most bartenders never think to question.
Expect to Learn:
LINKS
Service starts now.
Follow the show: Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube
I talk to people in and around the service industry space. I'm looking to hear from the people I wish I could have talked to when I was coming up in bars. Said another way: I am trying to make sense of this wild, beautiful mess that can be a life working in bars, and help others that are feeling similarly confused and/or lost. Check out the Podcast Website Here and get in touch with me!
Classic Episodes You May Like:
As always, I’m just here taking notes, trying to figure out what it all means.
Cheers