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The Journalist Who Got Oprah to Say Something Nobody Had Heard in 30 Years | Ep 335 with David Begnaud Founder & CEO of Do Good Crew
Episode Description
Daniel Robbins interviews David Begnaud about the person who believed in him, the pain he carried growing up, and the moment he finally felt safe enough to be fully seen. David tells the story of his English teacher Josette Surratt, who redirected his life into speech and debate and gave him a nonjudgmental space to be vulnerable. He explains why disaster reporting eventually felt empty, how Puerto Rico pushed him to cross the line from reporting into helping, and why Do Good Crew exists to use modern algorithms for hope instead of rage.
Key Discussion Points
David shares how his high school teacher saw his voice and asked him “what are you running from,” opening the door to healing from shame, Tourette’s, and growing up gay.
He explains he only felt ready to come out publicly after a major career win, believing success gave him “permission” that people would not abandon him once he told the truth.
David reflects on disaster coverage and why compartmentalizing worked until it didn’t, because reporting pain without being able to change the outcome became a growing internal conflict.
He describes how Puerto Rico changed his approach, including using social platforms to both report and mobilize help, and how that led to the creation of Do Good Crew with CBS as an experiment.
David argues trust is the new currency in an AI world, and that the stories that win now are the vulnerable ones that include the hard parts, not just the polished highlight reel.
Takeaways
One honest question from the right person can unlock years of suppressed pain and give someone permission to become who they really are.
Career success can become a bridge to personal freedom, because winning in one arena can create safety to reveal what you have hidden.
In a world flooded with AI content, real human vulnerability is becoming the differentiator that earns attention and respect.
If you want to go viral, tell the story you are tempted to edit, because the struggle is what people actually recognize as truth.
Respect scales further than likability, and building for respect is the long game when the internet is optimizing for cheap approval.
Closing Thoughts
This episode is a reminder that stories do not just entertain, they can change lives when they carry truth and a clear call to action. David Begnaud is proving you can evolve beyond traditional journalism without abandoning integrity, and that the future of media might belong to people who use trust and humanity as the product. If you’ve ever felt like you are running from your own story, this conversation will hit hard.
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