『Superficial Spirit』のカバーアート

Superficial Spirit

Superficial Spirit

著者: Where the divine meets the delusional
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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Superficial Spirit is a podcast where pop culture, queerness, and spirituality collide. Hosted by Canada’s OG gay pop star Peter Breeze, each episode explores the wild, weird, and wonderful ways we chase meaning through fame, music, identity, and everything in between.


Once a club kid turned underground pop star, Peter built a name in queer nightlife scenes across North America. Now, as he relaunches his music career, he’s inviting other queer pop stars, Canadian celebrities, and spiritual misfits to join him in raw, unfiltered conversations about life, love, ambition, and the forces that shape us.


From drag queens and reality stars to psychics, witches, and wellness rebels, The Superficial Spirit dives deep into modern spirituality with a wink—and a dance break.


Past themes include:


  • The culty side of new-age spirituality 🌙
  • Ayahuasca, manifestation, and plant medicine 🌿
  • Fame, money, and the divine ✨
  • Queer identity and spiritual rebellion 🏳️‍🌈
  • Why Britney, Paris & The Housewives are low-key spiritual icons 👑


It’s part interview, part self-discovery, and all heart. Because sometimes, the most superficial things are where the spirit shines brightest.

© 2026 Superficial Spirit
スピリチュアリティ 社会科学 音楽
エピソード
  • Going Viral with Courtney Love — Nick Cisnero’s 5M+ View Breakthrough
    2026/04/03

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    What happens when you go from posting content online… to getting millions of views — and Courtney Love herself is watching?

    In this episode, I sit down with Nick Cisnero, whose Courtney Love–inspired content has exploded across TikTok and Instagram, racking up over 5 million views and catching the attention of the icon herself.

    We talk about the creative process behind his videos, what it actually feels like to go viral overnight, and the surreal moment when the person who inspired your work starts engaging with it. We also get into the pressure, the momentum, and how quickly everything can change when the internet decides you’re the moment.

    If you’ve ever wondered what viral fame really looks like behind the scenes — this one’s for you.

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    38 分
  • Watching Your Friend Fall in Love on TV — with Kirkland Douglas
    2026/03/27

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    What does it actually feel like to watch your friend go from acting school to reality TV… to falling in love on screen?

    In this episode, I sit down with Kirkland Douglas — entrepreneur, farmer, and reality TV personality from Farming for Love and The Traitors Canada — to talk about the full-circle moment of seeing someone you know step into the spotlight.

    We get into how much the entertainment industry has changed (especially for queer and Indigenous representation), what it’s really like behind the scenes of reality TV, and why fame isn’t quite what it seems. But more than anything, this is a conversation about identity, growth, and what it means to see someone live out a version of life you once dreamed about together.

    It’s honest, a little nostalgic, and a reminder of how far things have come — both on screen and off.

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    1 時間 11 分
  • The Party Is Within You: Social Fitness in an Anxious World
    2026/03/20

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    For most of my twenties, partying wasn’t just something I did — it was who I was.

    Clubs four nights a week. Music. Drugs. Dancing until the lights came on. I found inspiration there. I found community there. I also found confusion there.

    So when I got an email from someone calling himself The Party Coach, I was intrigued — and skeptical.

    In this episode, I sit down with Evan Cudworth, who has built his work around one central question: Why do we struggle to connect — and what role does partying actually play in that?

    This conversation goes deeper than I expected.

    We talk about:

    • What partying really means beyond drugs and alcohol
    • The idea of “social fitness” — and why we’ve lost the reps
    • Dopamine, social media, and our addiction to digital validation
    • Cocaine, nostalgia, and the thin line between transcendence and numbness
    • Whether Gen Z is missing something essential — or just evolving differently
    • And the uncomfortable idea that maybe we’ve overcorrected into safety

    Evan doesn’t preach sobriety. He doesn’t glamorize chaos. And I don’t agree with everything he says.

    But I do believe this: something has shifted in how we gather, how we connect, and how we let ourselves feel alive in a room full of strangers.

    This episode is about unpacking that shift — honestly.

    If you’ve ever wondered whether your wild years were reckless or sacred… this one might resonate.

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    52 分
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