Zane Myers
TrustCast Show
The TrustCast Show features in-depth conversations with successful business leaders who are shaping their industries. Host Zane Myers sits down with top attorneys, physicians, plastic surgeons, and private practice professionals to uncover the real stories behind their success — what worked, what didn't, and the advice they'd give others building a practice. Each episode is 30 to 40 minutes of unfiltered conversation: backgrounds, unique approaches, and hard-won lessons from professionals at the top of their fields. New episodes published regularly across YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Link...
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Episodes
Joseph Scolavino on Why You Should Never Answer the Officer's Question, 25.06.2026 42:58
What happens when a son of an NYPD homicide detective who worked on Capitol Hill and always felt pulled toward public service goes to law school specifically to be a prosecutor, picks up and moves right around the corner from Yankee Stadium to be in the thick of it in the Bronx DA's office, spends five and a half years trying violent felonies — felony assaults, robberies, burglaries, attempted mur...
Ken Himmler on Why Your IRA Has a Tax Lien on It, the Silent Campaign Against Roth Conversions 16.06.2026 34:35
What happens when someone who built one of the country's first home inspection companies in the 1980s, flipped over 70 real estate deals, spent nine years in boot camp under a mentor with a photographic memory who taught him everything from tax planning to financial structuring, sold his first firm to a private equity fund in 2014, and now co-leads a practice with $840 million under advisement dec...
Juli Porto on Why Error Preservation Can Kill an Appeal Before It Starts, 09.06.2026 36:40
What happens when an Army brat who moved every three years, played soccer for the Black Knights at West Point, met her husband while they were both JAG attorneys at Guantanamo Bay, clerked for a Virginia Court of Appeals judge, and then built a practice that sits at the exact intersection of personal injury trial work and appellate law — where being a better trial attorney makes you a better appel...
Angela Ventro on How Supio Turned a $25,000 Soft Tissue Case Into a $250,000 TBI Settlement, 08.06.2026 36:07
What happens when an attorney who failed the bar exam by one point, appealed the result, won, and liked to say her first client was herself — then spent four years managing over a hundred active files at a workers' compensation and motor vehicle accident firm before the pivot that her father still occasionally questions — discovers that she can have more impact on injured people's lives by helping...
Kristen Lojewski on How to Know Something Is Wrong Before It's Too Late 05.06.2026 43:22
What happens when a girl who grew up in poverty in Indiana, watched her grandfather walk into a rehab facility after his second stroke and get wheeled out in a wheelchair with a bag of clothes soaked in urine and feces because they kept passing him by at meals while he dozed in his room, becomes the first person in her family to attend graduate school, spends years as a prosecutor in South Florida...
Dr. Mohammad Chelehmalzadeh on Building an AI Medical Assistant From Scratch, 03.06.2026 53:55
What happens when an ER physician who fled Iran during the revolution as a child, survived Scud missiles and bombings across multiple cities, made it through medical school in Belize, delivered babies as the only doctor in a 25-mile radius in a tiny Minnesota town called Olivia, switched into emergency medicine, and spent years getting lectured by his billing partners about every critical care enc...
Christine Hintze on the $3 Million Hedge Fund Settlement, Why Consent to a Superior Is Never Simple, 20.05.2026 48:48
What happens when a young female attorney who worked as a paralegal before law school, spent time on the defense side, and then crossed to the plaintiff's side realizes that the women calling her from Wall Street banks and hedge funds are not just victims of harassment but are trapped in situations where the very person controlling their promotions, their performance reviews, and their entire care...
Jeremy Dover on Why You Should Never Talk to Any Insurance Company 20.05.2026 40:19
What happens when a young attorney who started his career as a guardian ad litem — the volunteer voice for children placed in the system with no one fighting for them — takes $25,000 of his own money, teams up with his business partner Victor, opens a personal injury firm three months before a global pandemic, outgrows his first office by mid-year, moves into 10,000 square feet by October, and bui...
Joey Comley on Why the Truth Will Not Set You Free, 19.05.2026 50:20
What happens when a seventh grader buries a time capsule in 1993 saying he wants to play football as long as his body allows, join the army, and become an attorney — and then 25 years later his teacher digs it up and sends him a note saying he did exactly that — after commanding troops in combat as a field artillery officer in Iraq, redesigning a cavalry troop from scratch, deploying to Europe, wr...
Derek Lundsten on Why the EAP Is Broken, How LifeGuides Sends Peer Support to Scale, 19.05.2026 38:32
What happens when a serial entrepreneur who wore a suit to elementary school at age eight, built a successful software company, invested his time and network into an early stage idea before anyone else believed in it, and then walked away from his own exit to go all in on a platform built around one simple but radical premise — that the most powerful thing you can do for someone who is struggling...
Mike Guasco on Why HR Is Not Your Friend, What Contingency Really Means 18.05.2026 47:26
What happens when an employment attorney who spent years defending some of the biggest employers in the country at the world's largest employment law firm finally sits in a trial he genuinely doesn't believe in, realizes he can't keep doing it, and crosses to the other side — where he gets to choose his own cases, fight for the workers those companies were trying to defeat, and never charges a cli...
Kurt Nachtman on Why Talking to Police Almost Never Helps 15.05.2026 42:29
What happens when a law student who worked almost full time through law school clerks in the Baltimore City homicide division, gets to know the real people behind the characters in The Wire, learns what it actually takes to build a murder case from the inside, then spends five years on the prosecution side before crossing to the defense table — where 12 years and 30 jury trials later he still gets...
Jenet Pequeno on Why You Should Never Leave the House Before Getting a Parenting Schedule 15.05.2026 48:04
What happens when a girl who grew up watching her single mom choose between $2 of gas and a loaf of bread in the Chicago suburbs goes to law school in Miami without knowing a single person to network with, takes the first job she can get at a small boutique in Woodstock, Illinois, discovers a passion for fighting for parents and children in the moments that matter most, and 22 years later leads a...
Abogado Ray Maldonado on Following Armed Vigilantes Through the Sonoran Desert, 13.05.2026 33:04
What happens when a kid from the Arizona-Mexico border who grew up throwing rocks from his grandmother's backyard into Mexico, drops out of Stanford Law to follow armed Minutemen through the Sonoran Desert with a video camera, comes back, finishes his degree, and builds one of Phoenix's most feared immigration and criminal defense firms — one with 1,200 Google reviews, 50 people on staff, a worksi...
Dan Hayes on 13 Years Inside the SEC, What the Volkswagen Case Actually Took to Build 13.05.2026 40:57
What happens when a trial attorney spends 13 years inside the SEC building the exact kinds of cases that keep executives and general counsels up at night — including the securities fraud case against Volkswagen and its CEO for deceiving US bond investors during the emissions scandal, a case that earned him a framed picture of a carrion hawk from his colleagues after Judge Charles Breyer's opening...
Adam Wasserman: From Brain Injury to Attorney - How Meta-Consciousness Conquered ADHD & Dyslexia 13.05.2026 39:48
In this episode of the Trustcast Show, host Zane Myers sits down with Adam Wasserman, Managing Partner of Education Justice Law Group and co founder of ExamSoft, the bar exam software used in almost every state. Adam’s story is remarkable. After being told he would never ride a bicycle, play a musical instrument, or graduate high school due to ADHD, dyslexia, and major learning challenges, he spen...
Angela Barker on What Attorneys Miss in Medical Records, 13.05.2026 40:08
What happens when a pediatric ICU nurse who spent years in high-stakes home health settings — training nurses on ventilator troubleshooting, running competency assessments for tracheostomy patients, and then investigating unexpected deaths and abuse allegations as a healthcare administrator — decides that the place she can do the most good is not inside a healthcare company but inside a courtroom,...
Ash Reynolds on Compassion Fatigue, Teaching Third Graders to Stop and Breathe, 13.05.2026 24:47
What happens when a licensed marriage and family therapist who grew up in Los Angeles watching pastors, doctors, nurses, and high achievers give everything they had to the people around them while quietly neglecting themselves decides that the most important thing she can do is teach people how to refill before they run completely dry — and then extends that same mission to third graders who are s...
John McKenna and Lou Mincarelli on Will Contests, Criminal Defense 12.05.2026 49:06
What happens when a psychiatric social worker who spent 12 years inside the mental health system before going to law school teams up with a former Philadelphia DA prosecutor who took 60 jury trials to verdict, got nominated to the Chester County bench by two separate governors, and sat in every division of the Court of Common Pleas — and they both end up at one of the oldest law firms in Pennsylva...
Mark Astor on the Marchman Act, Why the Baker Act Has No Due Process, 12.05.2026 54:02
What happens when a British kid who grew up watching his father build businesses from nothing comes to America for college, stumbles into a trial courtroom as a law school intern and knows within five minutes that's where he belongs, spends five years trying 200 jury trials including capital murder cases for Palm Beach County, walks away burned out, loses himself for a decade trying desperately no...
JoDee Neal on Prosecuting Crimes Against Children, Why the System Can't Be the Basis of Your Healing 12.05.2026 38:43
What happens when a five-year-old who watched her father help people in his Dallas law office decides she wants that same response from the world, becomes the youngest prosecutor ever assigned to crimes against children in Collin County at 27, spends two decades in courtrooms trying to protect kids, helps recover nearly $3 billion for Texas counties in the opioid epidemic, goes to Singapore to fig...
Drew Sewell on State Shifting, Why High Performers Break Down at Home 10.05.2026 32:26
What happens when a trauma therapist trained in EMDR, interpersonal neurobiology, and dialectical behavior therapy decides that the most important work he can do is not in a clinical setting but in a coaching practice built around a single observation — that the most capable, dependable, highest-functioning people around us are quietly carrying more strain than anyone can see, and that the mainten...
Sonia Rodriguez on Betrayal Trauma, Why Women Override Their Own Intuition 09.05.2026 32:02
What happens when a psychotherapist and women's life transition coach who has lived through her own relational trauma decides that the most powerful thing she can do with that pain is build a platform, write in thirteen anthologies, launch a nonprofit to help women leave toxic relationships, and spend her career helping other women recognize the difference between a partner who lost interest and a...
Mike Kennedy on Switching Sides After 15 Years Defending Builders, 09.05.2026 38:12
What happens when a lawyer who spent 15 years defending builders against construction defect claims — learning exactly how insurance companies calculate risk, what motivates adjusters to settle, and what plaintiff firms do that make cases harder to resolve — wakes up one morning after pulling an all-nighter to write ten motions, taking a deposition, and driving straight to the courthouse without s...
Jennifer Higgins and Melissa Goldberg on the Perry Mason Moment That Sank the Plaintiff's Expert, 08.05.2026 38:53
What happens when a Queens DA prosecutor who spent six years putting felony offenders away in domestic violence and special victims cases discovers that everything she learned about expert witnesses, burden of proof, and preparing witnesses for hostile questioning translates perfectly into defending physicians — and then teams up with a partner who grew up inside a medical family, watched her phys...
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