Episodes

  • Steve Rogers, a.k.a. Captain America
    May 19 2026

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    In this episode of Leadership Multiverse, Andrew and Ellen take on Steve Rogers, better known as Captain America, and ask whether he really deserves his reputation as one of popular culture’s clearest examples of values-based leadership under pressure.

    The discussion explores his moral clarity, courage, calm crisis leadership and ability to build followership in moments of danger. It also asks harder questions about his rigidity, his difficulty with compromise, his loyalty to Bucky, the breakdown of the Avengers, and whether principled leadership can become destabilising when it leaves too little room for accountability, ambiguity and other people’s perspectives.

    Along the way, Andrew and Ellen consider the Sokovia Accords, Civil War, sacrifice, emotional intelligence, operational command, and whether Steve Rogers would survive in Starfleet, Star Wars, The Boys, Game of Thrones or DC. Spoiler: Andrew remains deeply unconvinced.

    A lively episode on moral leadership, wartime leadership, personal loyalty, and the difference between being worthy and being easy to work with.

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    51 mins
  • Captain Christopher Pike
    May 12 2026

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    This week, The Leadership Multiverse heads back to Starfleet to explore the leadership of Captain Christopher Pike.

    We look at Pike as a servant leader: calm, values-led, emotionally intelligent and deeply trusted by his crew. We discuss how he creates psychological safety, invites challenge, humanises command and carries the burden of knowing his own tragic future.

    We also ask where his strengths become risks. Does his empathy tip into paternalism? Does he carry too much alone? Can a leader who values consensus still move quickly when the moment demands command?

    Expect comparisons with Kirk, Picard, Burnham, Sisko and Janeway, plus the usual attempt to place him somewhere improbable in the wider leadership multiverse.

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    59 mins
  • Professor X
    May 5 2026

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    This week, we turn to Professor X: calm, principled and often held up as the model of thoughtful leadership.

    We explore how his style shifts over time, from coach and mentor to something more controlling, and question whether his belief in coexistence strengthens or limits those around him. Along the way, we test his moral authority, his reliance on persuasion, and the fine line between protecting a team and holding it back.

    By the end, this is a more complicated portrait of leadership than it first appears, and one that will change how you see him.

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    42 mins
  • Optimus Prime
    Apr 28 2026

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    What can a giant transforming robot teach us about leadership? Quite a lot, it turns out. In this episode, we take on Optimus Prime as a leadership case study, exploring moral conviction, burdened leadership, executive isolation, succession blind spots, and whether principled leaders can become too rigid for the worlds they lead. From 1980s Cold War symbolism to modern questions of adaptability and team culture, Ellen and Andrew ask whether Optimus is the heroic leader we remember, or a more flawed commander than nostalgia admits. As ever, expect serious leadership analysis, geeky detours, and the occasional truck-sized heresy.

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    59 mins
  • The Mandalorian
    Apr 21 2026

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    Season two opens with a return to the Leadership Multiverse after a winter hiatus, and a shift straight into the outer rim. This week we explore the leadership qualities of The Mandalorian, a character who challenges conventional ideas of what leadership looks like.

    At first glance, he's not an obvious leader but Ellen and Andrew examine how his journey from compliant rule-follower to adaptive, values-led decision-maker, reflects a deeper leadership evolution. This is the way.

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    47 mins
  • Wonder Woman
    Dec 3 2025

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    This week we explore why Diana Prince stands out as one of the multiverse’s most emotionally intelligent leaders. From Wonder Woman to Justice League, we look at how she navigates conflict, unites clashing personalities, and leads with empathy without losing authority. We touch on her moral courage, her ability to create psychological safety, and the blind spots that come with her idealism. A warrior, a diplomat, and a calm centre in a room full of egos, Wonder Woman proves that compassion is a leadership superpower.

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    48 mins
  • Darth Vader
    Nov 26 2025

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    In this follow-up to last week’s deep dive on Anakin Skywalker, Andrew and Ellen step into the shadow of the Empire to explore leadership lessons from Darth Vader. Ruthless yet composed, feared yet strangely effective, Vader represents the ultimate case study in control, delegation, and emotional suppression.

    They debate whether Vader was, in fact, a better manager than Anakin, how his place within a structured hierarchy brought out his strengths, and why emotional detachment can look like power, but lead to failure. Along the way, they draw parallels with modern leadership pitfalls: micromanagement, authority without empathy, and the illusion of control.

    Expect some surprising praise for the Empire’s organisational design, and a few crossovers into Star Trek and The Boys. Leadership may not always be a force for good—but it’s certainly strong with this one.

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    54 mins
  • Anakin Skywalker
    Nov 19 2025

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    In this first of a two-part exploration, Andrew and Ellen delve into the rise, and rapid unraveling of Anakin Skywalker. Once the galaxy’s most promising Jedi, Anakin’s story is a masterclass in unfulfilled potential and emotional volatility. From his precocious brilliance and battlefield instincts to his catastrophic lack of emotional regulation, we unpack how the Jedi Order’s rigid system, flawed mentorship, and poor support structure created a perfect storm for his downfall.

    Was Anakin doomed from the start, or simply failed by those around him? And could the right mentor (or executive coach) have saved him from turning to the dark side?

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    54 mins