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I got an F in Spanish class for breaking the rules. That F ended up teaching me one of the most important lessons of my life.
In this episode, I tell the real story. Senior year. Jesuit High School. A Spanish project everyone else played safe with. Posters. PowerPoints. Famous Spaniards. I went the opposite direction. I made a full-blown music video. Cinematic. Ridiculous. Over-the-top. And yeah, it was in English.
The teacher failed me on the spot.
But what came next mattered more. A friend hid that video inside the senior DVD as a secret Easter egg. Years later, it resurfaced. And I've been remaking that same video every decade since, louder, bolder, worse decisions included.
That moment taught me something about creativity, leadership, and building anything meaningful in the real world. Creativity makes rule followers nervous. Innovation looks reckless while it's happening. And the thing you get punished for early often becomes the very thing that defines you later.
We talk about why rule breakers are almost always misunderstood in real time. Why obedience is easier to grade than engagement. And why some of the most influential creators and founders in history weren't wrong, they were just early.
If you've ever been told your idea was dumb, reckless, immature, or didn't fit the template, this episode is for you.
Because sometimes the only difference between a failure and a legend is time, persistence, and one person willing to hide your masterpiece in plain sight.
Break the rule. Make it excellent. And if they give you an F for being different, smile. Your Easter egg is still in there.
By Alex Spinoso5
1111 ratings
I got an F in Spanish class for breaking the rules. That F ended up teaching me one of the most important lessons of my life.
In this episode, I tell the real story. Senior year. Jesuit High School. A Spanish project everyone else played safe with. Posters. PowerPoints. Famous Spaniards. I went the opposite direction. I made a full-blown music video. Cinematic. Ridiculous. Over-the-top. And yeah, it was in English.
The teacher failed me on the spot.
But what came next mattered more. A friend hid that video inside the senior DVD as a secret Easter egg. Years later, it resurfaced. And I've been remaking that same video every decade since, louder, bolder, worse decisions included.
That moment taught me something about creativity, leadership, and building anything meaningful in the real world. Creativity makes rule followers nervous. Innovation looks reckless while it's happening. And the thing you get punished for early often becomes the very thing that defines you later.
We talk about why rule breakers are almost always misunderstood in real time. Why obedience is easier to grade than engagement. And why some of the most influential creators and founders in history weren't wrong, they were just early.
If you've ever been told your idea was dumb, reckless, immature, or didn't fit the template, this episode is for you.
Because sometimes the only difference between a failure and a legend is time, persistence, and one person willing to hide your masterpiece in plain sight.
Break the rule. Make it excellent. And if they give you an F for being different, smile. Your Easter egg is still in there.

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