A Rule Breaker Bonus: Gatherings Guru Priya Parker

Earlier this month, Motley Fool co-founder David Gardner interviewed Priya Parker, founder of Thrive Labs and author of the book, The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why It Matters. Her speciality is in teaching people how to transform the way we gather together and build purpose-driven communities. And that topic was just too much to cover in a single Rule Breaker Investing podcast episode.

So you, the listeners, get an extra treat -- a "lightning-round format" interview where Parker gives her best relatively short answers to a series of queries from Gardner. The topics range from what's missing from Martha Stewart's ideas about gatherings to how to turn the panel format into something less blah to how to make your family reunions more meaningful.

A full transcript follows the video.

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This video was recorded on Aug. 11, 2018.

David Gardner: Welcome back to Rule Breaker Investing! Earlier this week I had the pleasure of interviewing Priya Parker -- her book The Art of Gathering. Priya graciously agreed to do an extra, so here we are with a little bit of weekend fun. What you're about to hear is me ask [eight or nine] fairly rapid-fire questions of Priya that I thought would be fun.

She's going to give some provocative answers to provoke your thinking toward how to improve your next gathering and maybe in some senses how to improve our own characters and our lives. I think when we get better at gathering, we get better as people and it leads to really good things.

I'm really pleased that Priya's back. Let's get started.

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Gardner: Welcome back! It's the weekend. Thank you so much for joining me! I'm here with Priya Parker, the author of The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why It Matters and I sure hope you enjoy it. I know you enjoyed Priya earlier this week.

As I mentioned earlier this week, she was gracious enough to accept this invitation to an extra and Priya, our ground rules, here, are going to be simple. I'm just going to fire a few fun questions that occur to me based on reading your work and enjoying your work and just hear what you have to say. Let's go with a lightning-round format. I can imagine like one minute -- 30-to-60-second answers -- whatever you've got to say. Are you ready?