How do you build a creative career before anyone gives you permission?
Before Kathreen Khavari became an accomplished actor, Sundance-winning screenwriter, and new JKS faculty member, she was a frustrated performer going out for increasingly soul-crushing auditions. So instead of waiting for the industry to recognize what she could do, she proved it – by writing and starring in the viral hit Brain of Terror.
In this episode of the podcast, Jake sits down with Kat for a candid conversation about voice, character, and the creative audacity required to chart your own path. Exploring how both writers and actors can sharpen their instincts by becoming more curious observers, Kat shares how she developed the eleven distinct characters she plays in Brain of Terror – by paying attention to the rhythms of real people. Overheard subway conversations, unusual cadences, tiny obsessions, and all the other compelling details that most people ignore.
Along the way, the conversation dives into the relationship between acting and writing: why dialogue needs to feel embodied and speakable, and how a strong point of view creates instant specificity. Kat also opens up about the practical realities of building a creative career – from self-producing on a micro-budget and finding representation, to navigating general meetings, surviving rejection, collaborating with others, and learning to advocate for yourself before anyone else believes in you.
The episode also offers a glimpse into the curiosity-driven, character-focused approach Kat brings to her work as a mentor with the Studio: helping you identify what emotionally drives your work and infusing it with the specificity and voice that makes it most authentically you. Because ultimately, the idiosyncrasies that make you, you can also be the threads you pull to make your work unforgettable.
You’ll discover:
- Why curiosity – not certainty – is the foundation of great writing
- How a strong point of view instantly sharpens a character’s voice
- Why paying attention to rhythm, cadence, and specificity beats “perfect” dialogue
- Why audacity and self-advocacy are essential to surviving the entertainment industry
- How meaningful creative relationships are built through genuine connection rather than forced networking
- How bad drafts can become the foundation for your best work
- Why chasing trends disconnects you from the stories you’re actually meant to tell
- How emotional intention and character specificity bring out your best work genuinely your own.
LISTEN NOW to explore how curiosity and audacity can help you create the work – and career – that feel genuinely your own.