Messy & Magnificent with Karlee Fain
For leaders building organizations that don’t run on adrenaline.
Messy & Magnificent with Karlee Fain is for the people responsible for what they lead — and tired enough to know the way it’s running isn’t sustainable.
If your calendar is full, your team is smart, and endless challenges still seem to land on your desk, this show is for you.
Each episode shares candid stories and practical, proven tools to help you build clearer systems, steadier leadership, and a grounded approach to success that doesn’t cost you yourself.
Messy & Magnificent with Karlee Fain
Why Bad Leaders End Up in Charge | How to Interrupt Adrenaline Leadership
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
🌟 Click to Send Karlee a Text - We Want To Hear Your Thoughts About This Episode 🌟
Have you ever watched someone speak with such speed and conviction that the entire room just followed? No pause, no pushback, no second glance…and later wondered how things went so sideways?
The most quietly damaging pattern inside many organizations isn't strategy. It's this: we confuse how someone sounds with how well they've actually thought something through.
Intensity isn't competency. Conviction isn't accuracy. And once you see the difference, you cannot unsee it.
This week, Karlee dives into part two of a multi-part series on the patterns that shape how we lead — often without us realizing it. She takes the conversation one layer deeper than urgency into what actually fuels it: adrenaline as a leadership style.
In this episode, you’ll learn why certainty can feel like the most convincing thing in a room without being the most grounded. You’ll discover what research tells us about how confidence gets mistaken for capability, and you’ll take away practical questions you can use right now to shift any conversation from default speed to real productive thinking.
If you’re ready to move from running on adrenaline to leading from something steadier and more true, this episode is for you.
What You’ll Learn in This Episode:
- (7:22) What happens in the body and the room when adrenaline increases certainty
- (9:05) The research on why fast, confident speakers are perceived as more competent
- (11:17)Overconfidence bias: what the science says about people who are the most certain and the least accurate
- (15:44) A clear breakdown of intensity-led versus competency-led leadership and what each one actually produces over time
- (19:38) Questions that shift a room from untested certainty to inquiry
Resources Mentioned in this Episode:
Dunning–Kruger Effect (Confidence ≠ Competence): Dunning, D., & Kruger, J. (1999).
Unskilled and unaware of it: How difficulties in recognizing one’s own incompetence lead to inflated self-assessments.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
Speaking First & Confidence Influence Group Perception: Anderson, C., & Kilduff, G. J. (2009).
Why do dominant personalities attain influence in face-to-face groups? The competence-signaling effects of trait dominance.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
Time Pressure & Decision-Making (Urgency Signal): Cisek, P., et al. (2021).
Urgency disrupts cognitive control of decision-making.
The Journal of Neuroscience
Overconfidence Bias: Moore, D. A., & Healy, P. J. (2008).
The trouble with overconfidence.
Psychological Review
Use the “Text Karlee” option above to send your Audio Comments and Questions to us.
Connect With Karlee:
Messy and Magnificent is produced by the folx at Ginni Media.