• The Case For Moneyball as the Most Professionally Helpful Movie Ever Made
    Feb 23 2026

    What if the most professionally useful film ever made isn't a documentary, a TED talk, or a business book—it's a Brad Pitt baseball movie? In this episode, host Matt Campobasso puts Moneyball on trial as the most professionally helpful movie ever made. Through six exhibits, he argues that what Aaron Sorkin and Steve Zaillian wrote and Bennett Miller directed isn't really about the 2002 Oakland Athletics at all—it's a two-hour masterclass in how value is created, how it's overlooked, how innovation is resisted, and how the person who sees the future before everyone else doesn't get a parade, they get a war. Matt walks through the film's most transferable career lessons, tackles the toughest objection head-on ("Billy Beane never won a World Series"), and lands on the question the movie asks that no leadership seminar ever dares to: Which character are you right now—and are you sure you'd like your own answer?

    • Exhibit A – The Market Is Inefficient: Why every industry has its own version of "he's got the face of a ballplayer," and how the gap between what people measure and what actually matters is where enormous opportunity lives
    • Exhibit B – Build the Machine, Not the Highlight Reel: How Billy Beane replaced a star by reconstructing his production from parts nobody wanted—and why the best team is almost never the one with the most impressive individual résumés
    • Exhibit C – Do More with Less or Go Home: Why resource constraints aren't a death sentence but an invitation to play a completely different game—and how the refusal to accept the premise became the source of the entire innovation
    • Exhibit D – The First One Through the Wall Always Gets Bloody: How resistance to change comes hardest from inside your own house, and why Moneyball shows this isn't a bug in the system—it is the system
    • Exhibit E – Trust the Process When the Scoreboard Says You're Wrong: The valley between decision and results, why the scoreboard is a lagging indicator, and the 20-game win streak that proved the approach was always working
    • Exhibit F – Adapt or Become the Scouts: Why the most uncomfortable scene in the film isn't about incompetence—it's about expertise becoming a prison, and the question that should keep every professional up at night
    • Objection Overruled: Why the fact that Billy Beane never won a World Series actually makes the movie more helpful, not less—and the professional lesson hidden in someone else finishing what you started
    • Your Action Items: Watch Moneyball this week through a professional lens, ask yourself which character you honestly are right now, and find your industry's version of on-base percentage—the thing that actually predicts success but nobody's paying attention to

    Build your case with us: Share this episode with a colleague who's ever sat in a room that looked exactly like that scouts meeting, and join the conversation using #TheCaseFor.

    Remember—whatever your case is, don't be afraid to build it and carry it out into the real world.

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    19 Min.
  • The Case For Employers As The Answer to America's Health Crisis (with Cara Lenz)
    Feb 19 2026

    What if the most powerful healthcare provider in America isn't a hospital—it's your employer? In this episode, host Matt Campobasso puts a radical idea on trial: that employers are uniquely positioned to solve America's health crisis. His guest, Cara Lenz—leadership transformation coach, former Apple talent and development manager, and author of Health Wanted, Enquire Within—argues that companies are the only major stakeholder whose bottom line actually improves when employees are genuinely well. Together, they follow the money through a healthcare system that profits from illness, unpack the science of burnout as a workplace-created syndrome, and explore why wellbeing isn't a perk or a personality trait—it's a teachable skill that belongs in the same training catalog as project management and giving feedback. Cara shares her own story of quitting her dream job, fleeing to a Caribbean island, and discovering that the stress followed her there—a lesson that reshaped her entire framework. They walk through the five inquiries from her book, tackle the toughest objections ("aren't we just turning managers into therapists?"), and land on something disarmingly simple: people shouldn't have to choose between their health and their career.

    • Exhibit A – Follow the Money: Why employers are the only entity that loses when you're sick—and the trillion-dollar productivity cost they're already paying
    • Exhibit B – The Water We Swim In: How work reshapes your emotional state every single day, and the question no leader thinks to ask
    • Exhibit C – Wellbeing Is Not a Vacation: Cara's island experiment and why changing your scenery without changing your skills is just pattern interruption
    • Exhibit D – The Five Inquiries: A practical, inside-out framework for functioning well under pressure—starting with "What do I believe?"
    • Objection Overruled: Why this isn't about replacing healthcare or turning bosses into therapists—it's about teaching a skill set employers are already built to deliver
    • Micro Tools for Monday Morning: Two things any leader can do this week—look to yourself first, and ask your team one question you've probably never asked

    Build your case with us: Pick up Cara's book Health Wanted, Enquire Within and find her on LinkedIn and Instagram. Share this episode with a leader who's ready to move wellbeing from slogan to infrastructure, and join the conversation using #TheCaseFor.

    Remember—whatever your case is, don't be afraid to build it and carry it out into the real world.

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    1 Std. und 1 Min.
  • The Case For Avoiding the Ten-Second Trap (or Why Our Snap Judgments Are Making Us Lonely)
    Feb 16 2026

    In a career spanning more than 100 formal depositions, host Matt Campobasso has watched the full spectrum of human behavior under pressure—the liars, the saints, the corporate warriors, and the whistleblowers. And every single time, a witness says something in the first five minutes that tempts him to deliver a final verdict on the spot. But if he snapped that folder shut and walked out of every deposition after five minutes, he wouldn't just be wrong—he'd be committing professional malpractice.

    In this solo episode, Matt makes the case that we've imported that same malpractice into our everyday lives. We live in a high-velocity judgment culture where a single political take, a bumper sticker, or an offhanded comment is enough to make us label someone, lock the door, and throw away the key. Drawing on neuroscience, litigation strategy, and a decade of courtroom experience, Matt introduces "The Deposition Discipline"—a framework for trading snap verdicts for patient discovery in the courtroom of life—and argues that the shortcut to being right is the longest road to being lonely.

    Whether you're leading a team, navigating a divided family dinner, or just trying to build deeper relationships in a world designed to keep things shallow, this episode makes the case for staying in the room long after your ego has started looking for the exit.

    • The Biological Shortcut: Why your brain is a prediction machine built for the savanna—and how its ancient survival templates are catastrophically misfiring in polarized workplaces, fractured communities, and divided families.
    • The Deposition Discipline: The litigation-tested tool for replacing snap verdicts with curiosity—why the best lawyers don't walk out when a witness says something ridiculous, they lean in and ask "tell me more."
    • The Connection Tax: How misunderstanding creates a compounding debt on your professional output and personal relationships—and why "trench warfare" in the workplace buries speed, creativity, and innovation.
    • The Loneliness Verdict: Why judging people quickly curates your life down to a hall of mirrors that feels safe but is hollow—and how we've replaced the messy work of understanding with the sterile work of grouping.
    • The Cross-Examination: Matt takes on the two toughest objections head-on—"some people are just bad" and "I don't have the time"—and explains why refusing to understand an opposing idea is like a doctor refusing to study a virus.
    • The Origin Inquiry: The exact phrase—"Help me understand how you got there"—that drops someone's identity shield and gives you access to the inputs you're missing.
    • The Snapshot Audit: How to identify one person you've filed away as "just one of those people" and find the common ground that has nothing to do with what you disagree on.
    • The Discovery Delay: The practice of staying a judgment until discovery is complete—because real growth happens in the minute after you want to leave.
    • The Mirror Mercy Test: Before you write someone off for a bad 10 seconds, ask yourself: what's the worst 10-second snapshot of my life—and would I want to be judged by it forever?

    Build your case with us: Share this episode with someone who needs to hear the why behind the what and join the conversation on social media using #TheCaseFor. We want to hear about a time a single question broke a stalemate and built something real.

    Remember—whatever your case is, don't be afraid to build it and carry it out into the real world.

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    18 Min.
  • The Case For The Legal Builder (with Sal Carranza)
    Feb 12 2026

    The Case For the Legal Builder Model

    In the fall of 2008, a new technology quietly appeared that most people dismissed as a curiosity. But as a professional and legal operator,Salvador Carranza saw something different—not a toy, but a "front door" being rebuilt from the ground up.

    In this episode, host Matt Campobasso sits down with Sal, the founder of PossibLaw, to explore the "Legal Builder Model." This framework is the result of a decade-long friendship and ongoing dialogue about the future of the profession. We dive deep into the specific, often counter-intuitive strategies Sal has developed for transforming legal professionals from reactive problem-solvers into proactive architects of systems—and why the window to make that shift is closing faster than most lawyers realize.

    Whether you're a solo practitioner, a BigLaw associate, or a chief legal officer running a lean team, this episode makes the case for choosing systems over instinct and builders over bystanders.

    • The Front Door Thesis: Why the way people access legal services is changing forever—and what it means for every lawyer still waiting by the old entrance.

    • Tastemakers vs. Pattern-Matchers: How lawyer incentives are built around judgment and opinion, and why AI is now competing for the role of the ultimate "Pattern-Matcher."

    • Software Eats Legal: The four foundational forces—Marc Andreessen, Charlie Munger, Damien Riehl, and the "Front Door"—that explain why this moment is a seismic shift, not just a trend.

    • Raising the Ceiling: Why the real opportunity in legal AI isn't making the basics cheaper—it's enabling lawyers to do things that were previously impossible.

    • The Cross-Examination: Matt and Sal go head-to-head on whether veteran lawyers can ever truly compete with AI-native colleagues—proving that compounding knowledge, not native fluency, is the real edge.

    • The Force Multiplier Audit: How to map your current workload and identify which 60% is costing you the other 40%—the proactive work that actually moves the needle.

    • The Reverse-Prompt Technique: After a great AI output, ask:"What prompt would have gotten me here instantly?" Save it. Build your personal playbook one conversation at a time.

    • The Front Door Moment: How to reframe your team's next technology discussion—from "how do we protect what we do?" to "how do we shape what comes next?"

    PossibLaw helps legal pros become Architect Lawyers. Builders who design what's next, not just practice what's now. We're ReCoding the Vibe in legal. Join us!

    • Website & Substack: www.possiblaw.com

    • AI Learning Platform: www.lexpair.AI (Launching soon!)

    • Instagram: @possiblaw

    • LinkedIn: PossibLaw

    • Reddit: r/PossibLaw

    • YouTube: @PossibLaw

    Build your case with us: Share this episode with your team and join the conversation on social media using #TheCaseFor. We want to hear your feedback and your ideas for future "cases."

    Remember—whatever your case is, don't be afraid to build it and carry it out into the real world.

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    1 Std. und 3 Min.
  • The Case For The "Right" Fit: Why Resumes Don't Win Gold Medals
    Feb 9 2026

    In February of 1980, the world witnessed what we now call a "Miracle." But as an attorney and executive, Matt Campobasso has learned that miracles aren't about luck—they are about engineering.

    This episode explores the "Brooks Model" of leadership, inspired by a weekly 1:1 conversation between Matt and his CEO. We dive deep into the specific, often counter-intuitive strategies Herb Brooks used to turn a group of college kids into an unstoppable system that took down the greatest hockey machine ever assembled.

    Whether you’re building a startup, a legal team, or a global enterprise, this episode makes the case for choosing compatibility over stardom and system over pedigree.

    In this episode, we break down:

    • The "Right" Player vs. The "Best" Player: Why cutting a superstar is sometimes the only way to win.

    • The Hybrid System: How to integrate diverse methodologies to become impossible to scout.

    • "The Legs Feed the Wolf": Why operational discipline is a mental weapon in high-stakes environments.

    • The Front of the Jersey: How to sacrifice individual ego for a shared mission.

    Matt also goes through a rigorous Cross-Examination on the relevance of Brooks’s "hard" coaching style in a modern world that values empathy and high EQ, proving that accountability is, in fact, the highest form of respect.

    Tactical Micro-Tools for Monday Morning:

    1. The "Right Fit" Audit: A new framework for your next hire.

    2. The "Legs" Check: How to fix the "fatigue" in your team's processes.

    3. The Front of the Jersey Moment: How to reset your team’s focus in your next meeting.

    Build your case with us: Share this episode with your team and join the conversation on social media using #TheCaseFor. We want to hear your feedback and your ideas for future "cases."

    Remember—whatever your case is, don’t be afraid to build it and carry it out into the real world.

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    13 Min.
  • The Case for Pearl Jam as The Best Band of All Time (with Pat Noonan)
    Feb 5 2026

    "I know someday you'll have a beautiful life, I know you’ll be a star in somebody else's sky, but why... Why, why can't it be mine?"

    Most trials are built on cold, hard facts—contracts, forensics, and fingerprints. But in this episode of The Case For…, host Matt Campobasso argues that the most compelling evidence isn't found on a spreadsheet; it’s found in the frequency forty thousand strangers find in the dark during a three-hour set.

    Matt is joined by his close friend and "expert witness," Pat Noonan, to make a bold claim: Pearl Jam is the best band of all time. Celebrating the band’s 35th anniversary in 2026, Pat brings decades of fandom—including 20+ concerts and a daughter named in the band's honor—to prove that their greatness is a matter of objective record, not just personal preference.

    • Exhibit A: Pure Talent & Songwriting: Beyond the "grunge" label, the band’s chemistry and Eddie Vedder’s "face-melting" vocal delivery create a fluid, emotional experience that evolves without losing its identity.

    • Exhibit B: The Deep-Cut Catalog: With 12 studio albums, 185+ live bootlegs, and rarities like Lost Dogs, the band’s consistency over three decades is unmatched.

    • Exhibit C: The Live Marathon: From 3-hour sets to "taking the fine" to play until 2:00 AM at Wrigley Field, the communal energy of a Pearl Jam show is a feeling that "the world stops" for.

    • Exhibit D: The Integrity of Eddie Vedder: As the last mainstream grunge performer still performing at this level, Vedder’s authenticity and leadership push the band into "best of all time" territory.

    Matt puts Pat on the stand to address the "Obvious Giants"—The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, U2, Led Zeppelin, and Pink Floyd. Pat’s rebuttal? While others wrote the blueprint, Pearl Jam built a lifestyle through longevity, integrity, and a refusal to become a "cookie-cutter" legacy act.

    If you're Pearl Jam-curious, Pat recommends these five tracks to understand their soul:

    1. "Footsteps": A haunting vocal trance from Lost Dogs.

    2. "Smile": A raw, emotional track featuring the famous "three crooked hearts".

    3. "Porch": The ultimate live experience, known for Mike McCready’s blistering 20-minute solos.

    4. "Low Light": A nuanced deep cut that captures the strategic emotion of the late 90s.

    5. "Blood": A hard-hitting, raspy masterpiece that doubles as the perfect walk-up song.

    The Verdict: Specialists win arguments, but bands with range win outcomes. Don't build your career (or your playlist) to be impressive in one lane; build it to be effective in the whole system.

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    51 Min.
  • The Case For Being a Swiss Army Knife
    Feb 2 2026

    In this episode of The Case For…, host Matt Campobasso—an attorney managing the legal function for a billion-dollar company and a father of three—sits down to challenge the most pervasive myth in professional development: the cult of the specialist.

    We are taught to be scalpels: precise, narrow, and specialized. But as Matt argues, a scalpel is only useful if you’re in an operating room. The moment you step into the "wicked" environments of modern business, shifting markets, or the chaos of parenting, that narrow edge becomes a liability.

    Pulling from David Epstein’s landmark book, Range, and psychologist Robin Hogarth’s research on learning environments, this episode builds the case for why being a Swiss Army Knife is the only real hedge we have against an unpredictable world.

    • Kind vs. Wicked Environments: Why specialization works in golf and chess, but fails in the boardroom and real life.

    • The Integrator Advantage: Why the roles you actually want (Director, VP, C-Suite) are about connecting dots, not drilling holes.

    • The Comfort Strategy Trap: Why we hide in specialization to feel "safe," and how to get comfortable being the "master of none."

    • The Portfolio Rule: How to build intentional breadth without turning your career into chaos.

    1. The Executive Answer: A single sentence to project judgment over desperate speed.

    2. The Three Lenses Question: A framework to instantly force breadth on any project.

    3. The Portfolio Rule: A strategy for compounding range one quarter at a time.

    The Verdict: Specialists win arguments, but people with range win outcomes. Don’t build your career to be impressive in one lane; build it to be effective in the whole system.

    Subscribe to The Case For… and never miss a hearing.

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    18 Min.
  • The Case For Starting Over (Even When It's Terrifying) (with Brooke Marsalla)
    Jan 29 2026

    "If you don’t authorize the match, the forest will eventually choke itself out."

    In this episode of The Case For…, host Matt Campobasso sits down with Brooke Marsalla to examine the architecture of professional and personal reinvention. After 15 years as a high-end corporate trainer and sales leader for luxury brands like Nordstrom and Sephora, Brooke faced a "dual-engine failure"—the simultaneous arrival of a global pandemic and a shifting retail landscape that made her role obsolete.

    Her subsequent pivot from the skincare industry to a successful career in real estate serves as a masterclass in why the "burn" is often the only way to save the career.

    Inside the Courtroom:

    • The Controlled Burn Metaphor: Why "starting over" is often the only way to clear away the dead brush of an obsolete career to make room for new growth.

    • The Invisible Tax of Inertia: The heavy cost we pay for staying in a predictable life because we are too scared of the alternative.

    • The Portability of Methodology: Why your title is temporary, but your core methodology—like "The Nordstrom Way"—is industry-agnostic and can be replanted in new soil.

    • The 70% Certainty Rule: Why waiting for 100% certainty is a recipe for paralysis, and why 70% is the threshold for taking action.

    • The Parent's Perspective: Matt and Brooke discuss the heavy responsibility of modeling resilience for their children even when their own lives feel like they are in ashes.

    The Verdict: Reinvention isn’t about discarding your past; it’s about auditing your skill set to see which "trees" are worth replanting. Starting over isn't a sign of failure—it's a sign of active management. The smoke is temporary, but the new growth is where the future lives.

    Micro-Tools for the Restart:

    • Visualization as Survival: How to mentally map a version of yourself that is happy again before you take the leap.

    • Routine Over Confidence: How to build the structure first so that your confidence has a place to catch up.

    Subscribe to The Case For… (with Matthew Campobasso) to learn how to build your case and carry it out into the real world.

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    42 Min.