Overview
Quantitative profile computed across the full archive. Topic, fear, and joy framings come from a close read of a stratified sample.
Most-tagged topics
Editorial tags applied to interviews (top 24).
How questions begin
First three words of the operative question (top 18). It is overwhelmingly a craft interview.
Who gets interviewed
Primary vocation across the archive.
The emotional vocabulary
Word mentions across ~4.4M words of answers. Joy words outweigh fear words by an order of magnitude.
Source: The Creative Independent (thecreativeindependent.com). Each interview links out to the original. Theme tags on questions are assigned by keyword and are meant for browsing, not as exact classification.
Ask the archive
Ask a question in plain language. A Haiku-powered assistant reads the most relevant interview answers, writes a short synthesis, and shows you the answers it drew from.
What people ask about
The recurring question clusters. Click any to browse the real questions behind it.
Common fears
What creatives express fear, doubt, or struggle about — ranked by how often it surfaced. Bars indicate prevalence.
Common joys
Sources of pleasure, meaning, and purpose. The archive is far warmer than it is anxious — and its most-named joy isn't the art at all.
The shared gospel
Advice repeated almost verbatim across vocations and across the decade.
Live tensions
The cross-cutting questions the archive argues with itself about — where there is no consensus.
Rare & singular
The opposite of the common themes — the idiosyncratic, one-of-a-kind fears, joys, beliefs, and rituals that turned up in only a single interview. Surfaced from a separate close read of 148 interviews, ranked by sheer surprise.
Rarest fears
Anxieties you'd expect from essentially no one else.
Rarest joys
Unusual sources of delight and meaning.
Contrarian beliefs
Stances taken against the consensus of everyone else in the archive.
Strange rituals & methods
Peculiar working habits and fixations.
Most singular lines
The sentences that stop you cold.
Browse the questions
Every genuine question asked across the archive. Search the text, filter by theme or vocation, and click any question to read its answer and find similar questions and answers from across the corpus.