
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


What’s a sentence that invites the universe to call your bluff?
“I could do that!”
Meet three people who said it, and then had to live it.
Christopher Lamar runs Lunar Embassy, a company that sells deeds to plots on the Moon and other celestial bodies. Logan Goodspeed learns what happens when you casually claim you could run a marathon “with 24 hours’ notice,” and your spouse takes that seriously. And Mandle Cheung, a tech CEO and devoted music lover, writes a huge check to fund a Mahler concert, so he can conduct the Toronto Symphony Orchestra himself.
Suggested episodes:
What Happens When You Act Like You Belong
GOOD GOURD! A show about pumpkins!
TOPS: A woman summits Everest, a man considers a body transplant, and world-record hat-wearing
GUESTS:
Christopher Lamar: CEO of Lunar Embassy, a company that sells deeds to plots on the Moon and other celestial bodies. The business was founded by his father, Dennis Hope, in 1980
Logan Goodspeed: A 32-year-old software engineer from California who ran the Rock ’n’ Roll San Diego Marathon with about 24 hours’ notice and no formal training
Mandle Cheung: A 78-year-old technology CEO and amateur conductor who founded Mandle Philharmonic in 2018. In June 2025, he personally funded a one-night performance of Mahler’s Symphony No. 2 (“Resurrection”) and conducted the Toronto Symphony Orchestra
Jessica Severin de Martinez, Meg Fitzgerald, and Robyn Doyon-Aitken contributed to this show, with help from Coco Cooley.
Support the show: https://www.wnpr.org/donate
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By Connecticut Public Radio4.7
7676 ratings
What’s a sentence that invites the universe to call your bluff?
“I could do that!”
Meet three people who said it, and then had to live it.
Christopher Lamar runs Lunar Embassy, a company that sells deeds to plots on the Moon and other celestial bodies. Logan Goodspeed learns what happens when you casually claim you could run a marathon “with 24 hours’ notice,” and your spouse takes that seriously. And Mandle Cheung, a tech CEO and devoted music lover, writes a huge check to fund a Mahler concert, so he can conduct the Toronto Symphony Orchestra himself.
Suggested episodes:
What Happens When You Act Like You Belong
GOOD GOURD! A show about pumpkins!
TOPS: A woman summits Everest, a man considers a body transplant, and world-record hat-wearing
GUESTS:
Christopher Lamar: CEO of Lunar Embassy, a company that sells deeds to plots on the Moon and other celestial bodies. The business was founded by his father, Dennis Hope, in 1980
Logan Goodspeed: A 32-year-old software engineer from California who ran the Rock ’n’ Roll San Diego Marathon with about 24 hours’ notice and no formal training
Mandle Cheung: A 78-year-old technology CEO and amateur conductor who founded Mandle Philharmonic in 2018. In June 2025, he personally funded a one-night performance of Mahler’s Symphony No. 2 (“Resurrection”) and conducted the Toronto Symphony Orchestra
Jessica Severin de Martinez, Meg Fitzgerald, and Robyn Doyon-Aitken contributed to this show, with help from Coco Cooley.
Support the show: https://www.wnpr.org/donate
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

91,008 Listeners

43,990 Listeners

38,222 Listeners

6,782 Listeners

43,614 Listeners

38,907 Listeners

21,592 Listeners

1,572 Listeners

8,468 Listeners

57 Listeners

1,178 Listeners

56 Listeners

211 Listeners

112,217 Listeners

13 Listeners

3 Listeners

16,387 Listeners

47 Listeners

18 Listeners

2 Listeners

0 Listeners

29 Listeners

24 Listeners

16,290 Listeners

824 Listeners

0 Listeners

11 Listeners

21 Listeners

0 Listeners

0 Listeners

0 Listeners

0 Listeners

0 Listeners

44 Listeners