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  • Don't Give Bad Feedback
    2025/08/13

    In this episode, Mas Moriya digs into one of the most overlooked skills in the film industry—and pretty much every industry: giving and receiving feedback. From unsolicited screenplay notes to interjecting at the wrong time, Mas shares personal missteps, awkward moments, and the lessons that came from them.


    He explores why feedback is often poorly delivered (or avoided entirely), why bad feedback can be worse than no feedback, and how good feedback—given the right way—can change careers. This is part confession, part industry PSA, and part call for a proper feedback workshop in filmmaking programs everywhere.


    • Why every creative field should teach feedback as a skill

    • The problem with giving notes no one asked for

    • How not to react when you get feedback you don’t like

    • Learning to write feedback down before reacting

    • The danger of “helpful” interjections at the wrong time

    • How bad feedback can break trust in a group or collaboration

    • Recognizing when your notes aren’t actually helpful

    • The importance of tone when delivering critique

    • Why friends who can’t give honest feedback aren’t really helping you

    • Filmclusive updates: new self-promotion tools and token-based boosts


    • Don’t give feedback no one asked for—unless safety or ethics demand it.

    • Don’t take feedback personally—write it down first, react later.

    • Don’t offer vague or unhelpful notes—focus on specifics that can actually be applied.

    • Do present feedback privately when it might embarrass someone.

    • Do be open to feedback yourself—you can’t improve if no one tells you what’s wrong.


    Filmclusive – Entertainment’s first cross-industry marketplace. Free to use. Free to apply. Free to get seen.

    🔑 Topics Covered:💡 Takeaways:🧠 Quote of the Episode:“Non-helpful feedback is also not helpful. If you don’t know, it’s better to say nothing than to derail someone with useless notes.”🔗 Brought to You By:

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    16 分
  • Don't Ignore Your Body, See Your Doctor
    2025/08/07

    I talk about something a little more personal — my health. Specifically, how I handled an ear infection before it got worse.


    We talk about:


    • Why “pushing through” when you’re sick is rarely worth it

    • How to know when it’s time to see a doctor (hint: sooner than you think)

    • Why your RSVP doesn’t matter more than your recovery

    • Embarrassing stories involving poles, kites, and seven-inch lacerations

    • What I learned about acid, tomatoes, and not Googling your symptoms too hard

    • Paul Graham’s colon cancer PSA and why it hit me

    • The importance of taking advantage of your insurance while you have it


    • Don’t ignore the signs your body is sending you.

    • Don’t go to events just to “show face” when you’re not well.

    • Don’t assume no pain means no problem.


    Do:

    Go to the doctor. Tell people when you need to cancel. Take your body seriously.


    Filmclusive – The only cross-industry entertainment marketplace that doesn’t charge you to apply or audition. Claim your username and turn your resume into revenue at filmclusive.com.


    • Web: dontdoitpod.com

    • IG: @masmoriya

    • Platform: filmclusive.com

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    17 分
  • Don't Be Invisible, Be Yourself
    2025/08/05

    In this episode, Mas Moriya unpacks the years he spent hiding in plain sight—behind the camera, behind the work, behind humility—and the long-overdue lesson of stepping into the spotlight. From his early photography days in New York to founding Filmclusive, Mas reflects on how being invisible—culturally, professionally, and personally—impacts our relationships, identity, and growth.


    He explores the emotional cost of always being the one who shows up for others, but never for yourself. Whether you’re an Asian American who’s been taught to prioritize the group, or someone who’s quietly fading into the background out of fear, this is a reminder to stop shrinking. Visibility isn’t vanity—it’s responsibility.


    • Overcorrecting for invisibility as an Asian American

    • Using photography as a form of belonging

    • What it means to be excluded from your own memories

    • The emotional toll of always texting first

    • Cultural humility vs. self-erasure

    • Hiding parts of yourself to be accepted

    • The cost of staying quiet in your own story

    • Being visible so others can see themselves too

    • Shoutout to the Uprisers streetwear brand


    • Don’t stay invisible. If you’re not in the room, your story won’t be told.

    • Don’t be the only one reaching out. Relationships should be reciprocal.

    • Don’t erase your identity. Whether it’s your race, culture, or queerness—own it.

    • Don’t hide behind “helping others.” Self-sacrifice doesn’t equal self-worth.

    • Don’t wait for permission to be seen. You don’t need it.


    Mas gives love to Uprisers—a streetwear brand for and by Asian Americans—for their community-forward designs and consistent support of cultural visibility.


    Filmclusive – Entertainment’s first cross-industry marketplace. Free to use. Free to apply. Free to be seen.

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    16 分
  • Don't Say The First Thing On Your Mind
    2025/07/28

    Ever hit “send” and instantly regret it? Say something and wish you hadn't? In this episode, Mas digs into the hard lesson of learning to pause an action. Whether it’s an email, a group call, or a random DM, reacting without thinking has real consequences. Through a series of personal stories—some awkward, some explosive—Mas shows why taking a beat can save your relationships, your reputation, and your sanity.


    • How speaking too quickly can derail good intentions

    • The danger of assuming your intent is the same as your impact

    • Why clarity of mind (and sometimes sobriety) changes how you respond

    • Why Filmclusive exists—and how it’s trying to fix broken industry systems


    00:00 – 01:04

    Intro: What This Podcast Is About

    Mas introduces the show and sets up the topic of the episode: don’t say the first thing that comes to mind.


    01:05 – 03:27

    Noisy Nights and Take Two

    From loud neighbors to tech hiccups, Mas talks about recording in real-life chaos—and why it matters to keep going.


    03:28 – 06:00

    Clarity, Sobriety, and Overactive Thinking

    Mas shares how quitting weed for three weeks has sharpened his thinking—and made this podcast possible.


    06:01 – 08:13

    Tech Breaks, Barrel Exports, and Creative Waiting

    How a slow code export process feels a lot like waiting for a VFX render—and why “productive waiting” matters.


    08:14 – 10:12

    Why You Need to Think Before You Speak

    Emails, meetings, and group chats—how blurting things out has cost Mas, and what he’s learned.


    10:13 – 12:23

    Website Feedback Gone Wrong

    An honest recounting of calling out a broken website in a public Zoom call—and how that backlash led to leaving an entire organization.


    12:24 – 14:03

    The Impact of Words, Even If Intentions Were Good

    Mas unpacks the difference between intent and impact, especially in advocacy spaces and group dynamics.


    14:04 – 16:06

    Reframing Instead of Reacting

    A simple chat becomes a lesson in saying the better version of what’s on your mind. Mas shares how he reframed his gut response into something constructive.


    16:07 – 18:14

    Think Before You Think

    It’s not just about what you say. Mas explains why even your internal monologue matters—and how changing it can change you.


    18:15 – 20:08

    This Podcast Is the Only Format That Works

    Interviews take too much time. Mas leans into solo reflection and shares how he’s finally finding his voice.


    20:09 – 23:00

    Filmclusive Update: What We’re Building

    A breakdown of the platform’s progress and mission: fixing the broken hiring system for creatives—without charging them a cent.


    23:01 – 25:50

    Wrap-Up: Build Your Own Resume Hub

    Why creatives should stop paying to apply for jobs, and how Filmclusive lets you link everything—your work, your identity, your community—on one page.


    25:51 – End

    Closing

    Mas signs off with gratitude and a reminder: think before you speak—online, in-person, everywhere.


    • Filmclusive – Free creative job board and portfolio system

    • California Labor Code §450 – on job application fees

    • SAG-AFTRA vs. Casting Networks (referenced)

    • dontdoitpod.com – Official podcast site

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    26 分
  • Don't Wait To Get Started
    2025/07/25

    In this premiere episode, Mas Moriya—filmmaker, tech founder, and lifelong overthinker—shares why not starting is one of the worst mistakes you can make. From failed podcasts and broken video feeds to decades of film footage gathering dust, Mas unpacks the cost of waiting too long. This is the episode for anyone teetering on the edge of a new idea, project, or creative leap. Just start.


    • Why starting before you’re ready is better than never starting at all

    • The hidden cost of procrastination and perfectionism

    • How past failures (nonprofits, relationships, side projects) still teach you something

    • Why “just try it” might be the most honest creative advice you’ll ever hear


    00:00 – 00:22

    Opening: Who This Podcast is For

    Mas introduces the podcast’s mission: a brutally honest warning label for creatives.


    00:53 – 02:13

    Lesson 1: Don’t Wait to Get Started

    Even with tech issues mid-recording, Mas pushes through. The point? Start anyway.


    02:14 – 03:39

    Podcast Format & Attention Span Reality

    Why short episodes work better—and why this show won’t waste your time.


    03:40 – 05:07

    Digging Through Old Hard Drives

    Reflections on 15 years of filmmaking and why salvaging old work still matters.


    05:08 – 06:46

    What If You Never Start?

    From Lego stop motion to failed love stories—Mas argues experience is earned by doing.


    06:47 – 08:00

    Audiobooks, Motivation, and Patterns of Avoidance

    How Les Brown and late-night routines shaped this podcast’s birth.


    08:01 – 09:11

    Discipline vs. Inertia

    You don’t need perfect conditions. You need to begin.


    09:12 – 10:12

    The Tasters Club Philosophy

    A childhood lesson about food becomes a metaphor for trying anything new.


    10:13 – 11:22

    Parents, Pressure, and Creative Rebellion

    Why being a filmmaker wasn’t the plan—and that’s exactly why it had to happen.


    11:23 – 12:23

    Tech, Coding, and Starting Over

    From no-code to full code, Mas shares how fumbling through tech can still lead to progress.


    12:24 – 13:54

    Dating and Insecurity

    An honest aside about a relationship that fizzled—and the courage to try again.


    13:55 – 15:20

    Nonprofit Burnout & Knowing When to Quit

    Why stopping something can be just as important as starting.


    15:21 – 17:13

    The Midnight Spark: How This Podcast Began

    One spreadsheet. Fifty regrets. A moment of clarity at 2am.


    17:14 – 19:16

    Creativity Is Fleeting—So Act Fast

    Mas shares a story from Big Magic about why ideas don’t wait around.


    19:17 – 21:00

    Filmclusive and the Legal Fight Against Paywalls

    A plug with a mission: creatives deserve job access without a subscription fee.


    21:01 – 22:00

    Wrap-Up: Just Try It

    Mas signs off with a reminder to take the leap—even if it’s messy.


    • Filmclusive – the free entertainment industry platform

    • Big Magic by Elizabeth Gilbert

    • California Labor Code §450

    • NY State labor laws on job application fees

    • dontdoitpod.com – Official podcast website

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    22 分