What makes a person great?
Thatโs the central question of this podcast: What is greatness, and how can we achieve it in our lives?
Thereโs no doubt that there are many ways to be great, but decoding greatness has been a personal passion of mine for a long time now. I want to get to the bottom of greatness and understand how to be greater in my own life and help you do it too. And fortunately, Iโm not alone!
My guest today is a virtual expert on greatness. When I heard he was working on a project called Greatness Code for Apple TV+, I knew I had to have him on the show. His name is Gotham Chopra, and over his career as a filmmaker, heโs gotten to know some of the best athletes of all time.
LeBron James. Tom Brady. Kobe Bryant. Katie Ledecky. Alex Morgan. Usain Bolt. Shawn White. My friend Gotham worked with them at the top of their game to tell their stories and understand what makes them great.
โ… The mechanics of greatness [were] really fascinating to me. Itโs the moment for sure, but itโs the backstory and itโs the context in which greatness happens โ just from a storytelling perspective [I] was really into that.โ – Gotham Chopra
And he doesnโt just work with athletes! When Gotham was only 15, he met Michael Jackson, at 17 toured through Europe with him, and as an adult has continued to reflect on his experiences and what made Michael Jackson the genius he was.
And as if that werenโt enough, Gotham also just happens to be the son of legendary spiritual guru and healer, Deepak Chopra. Gotham has seen the man behind the public persona, and heโs had a unique opportunity to peek behind the curtain of greatness.
And today, heโs here to share his wisdom with you!
Iโm so glad to have a fellow greatness-enthusiast in the house today! Letโs dive in!
Who Is Gotham Chopra?
Gotham Chopra is a legend all by himself. Heโs a world-renowned filmmaker, and heโs worked on several documentary projects with athletes from across the range of sports to uncover what makes them tick.
Back in 2015, Gotham produced and directed Kobe Bryantโs Muse, a feature-length documentary that explores what exactly made Kobe great. As a Boston-native and lifelong Celtics fan, Gotham wanted to hate Kobe, but after getting to know him, he realized that Kobe had something special. In the documentary, he looks at the mentors, trainers, allies, and rivalries that shaped Kobe and pulls back the curtain on the athletic genius we all know and love.
A few years after that, Gotham worked with LeBron James on a series called Shut Up and Dribble. Itโs an awesome look into the NBA and how its athletes grow as a brand and use their fame and platform to advocate for social change.
More recently, Gotham produced the TV documentary series Tom vs. Time, which is an in-depth look at the legendary Tom Brady both on and off the field. Gothamโs truly interested in what makes great athletes great in their sports and in their personal lives, and Tom vs. Time is a fantastic exploration of that. I highly recommend the series, and you can check it out on Facebook Watch here.
And finally, Gothamโs most recent project, Greatness Code, is exactly what it sounds like. Itโs an exploration of greatness through the lens of some of the worldโs top athletes. In this short documentary mini-series, Gotham interviews several elite athletes โ including LeBron James, Tom Brady, and Alex Morgan โ to decode the most pivotal moments in their careers.
Gotham teamed up with Tom Brady once again to co-found Religion of Sports together with Michael Strahan. Religion of Sports is a collection of great filmmakers, writers, podcasters, and creative geniuses who work together to tell great human stories from the court, field, pitch, or any other sports arena. They seek to show how sports give us meaning and how we can find profound truth in the stories we find in sports. In addition to being a co-founder, Gotham is the Chief Creative Officer, and heโs putting some really great work into the world.
I am so excited to have Gotham Chopra on the podcast today. Heโs an insanely talented guy, and his insights into the minds and lives of great athletes, superstars, and geniuses have taught me a lot. We talk about some incredible stuff in this episode, so letโs get into it!
โSurrenderโ: Greatness is a Spiritual Level of Clarity
Oftentimes when we think about our favorite athletes, we think about their greatest moments, like Kobe scoring 81 points in a single game or Katie Ledecky breaking the world record for the 1,500-meter freestyle at just 15 years old. We remember these huge moments of triumph and victory.
When we talk about those moments, weโre in awe of how well these athletes perform. They seem to be on a whole different level, right? Their mental toughness and physical strength work together perfectly, and they perform at the absolute highest level.
And this is common to a lot of athletes. According to Gotham, that kind of mental clarity is consistent across the board.
โYouโre very familiar with the expressions โin the zone,โ โflow state,โ โpeak performance,โ all of that. โฆ You start to hear consistency across when these athletes describe it โ this level of surrender. โฆ I hear all this stuff, โbut in that moment I let it all go,โ you know, โin the presentโ and all that stuff.โ – Gotham Chopra
For athletes, greatness happens when they surrender. In those awesome moments we all remember, they reach a spiritual level of clarity. They donโt think โ they just move. They tune out all other thoughts and distractions and just get โin the zone.โ
But no one gets to that level without preparation. The greatest athletes are obsessed with improving their game and becoming the best they can be.
โ… When we started Tom vs. Time, it was literally three or four weeks โฆ after the incredible 28-3 comeback. And I was on a practice field with him in Boston. … So I was like, โDude, are you series? Like, you just won a Superbowl a month ago.โ And he was like, โYeah, a month ago. โฆ Training in March and April pays off in January and February.โ โฆ Itโs the sort of mad scientists in the laboratory tweaking so that in the moment you can just be instinctive. โฆ Youโre not thinking about, you know, your hip or your arm movement or whatever. Itโs like at that moment youโre just reacting.โ – Gotham Chopra
Great players like Tom Brady donโt put in the hard work training so that they can think about their skills out on the field. They train hard so they donโt have to think. They put in long hours practicing so that they can surrender to that spiritual level of clarity and just move naturally in those insane career-defining moments.
The Dark Side of Greatness: Genius Can Be Isolating
Thereโs a dark side to greatness, though. And since Gothamโs been exploring greatness for so long, heโs definitely seen it. Nowhere has it been more obvious than in Michael Jackson.
โMy experience with him was: heโs a genius. He was one of the most gifted artists in the history of human civilizations. And actually now when we all read about, you know, Vincent van Gogh or Picasso or Mozart, like they were crazy geniuses. They were disturbed in many ways. And I think Michael was that โฆโ – Gotham Chopra
To be greater than everyone else, you have to be able to stand alone. But that loneliness can have a major cost. Whether these great artists and performers are living with past trauma or not, it can be insanely difficult to live a life in the spotlight and elevated above everybody else.
For Michael Jackson, that struggle often resulted in him spending his downtime alone in hotel rooms. But more than that, Michael Jackson stayed trapped in a young mindset for too long. He never truly grew up because he felt so much pain, and that led to a lot of struggle.
โI mean, so there was like this childlike quality to him. โฆ He was like a 15-year-old boy that was trapped, you know, like, he had never really matured from that time, you know? And I knew Michael across a long period of time.โ – Gotham Chopra
Itโs so important to stay grounded and keep your relationships healthy. You canโt be a healthy individual without people around you supporting you.
Thatโs why sometimes athletes have an advantage over artists or other performers. When you play on a team, youโre part of a unit thatโs greater than yourself. You have to take care of your relationships with your teammates and work together to succeed.
โI think sports are unique because a lot of them are team sports, right? So no matter what kind of trauma or isolation you have in your past … part of being successful, at least in a team, is like connecting with other people. And thatโs โ in its own way โ restorative and healing. So, you know, LeBron James comes from a difficult background โฆ But like gradually over time โ and really starting in high school โ the guy was already having success. And to this day heโs surrounded by those same guys โ Maverick Carter and โฆ some of the guys in his inner circle โ and so I think thereโs something healing about that.โ – Gotham Chopra
Whether youโre an athlete or not, focus on your relationships with the people around you. After all, your team is made up of those people. They could be your family, friends, co-workers, or literal teammates. Whoever those people are in your life, make sure you invest in those relationships. When you do, you make the whole team greater.
A Peek Behind the Curtain: Itโs About Human Struggle
Growing up as the son of Deepak Chopra, Gotham had a special opportunity. He got to watch his dad grow into the world-renowned spiritual leader he is today. Those years of observing and learning gave him a unique perspective on greatness that you canโt get without peeking behind the curtain.
For many years, Deepak Chopra was not the spiritual guru so many people look to for guidance today. In fact, for a long time, he led the total opposite lifestyle. He struggled, and he depended on alcohol and drugs to get through the days.
But eventually, that changed. Deepak transformed his life, and Gotham captured the shift on film.
โ… He kind of has a deep dissatisfaction in his life, and I lived through that. I watched it. I remember as a kid โฆ he would work all weekend. He would work to the bone. He would come back, have two whiskeysโฆ probably more than two whiskeys, and pass out. โฆ So I remember I did a documentary a couple of years ago called Decoding Deepak [that] was basically, โOkay, hereโs who he is to the world. โฆ Hereโs who he is to me. And hereโs the story that sort of underlies this.โโ – Gotham Chopra
In some ways, Deepak Chopra has two sides to him. He has the public side, which now teaches people to meditate and shows people how to connect with their spiritual sides. But he also has the private side, which is just like you and me.
At the end of the day, Deepak Chopra โ along with all the other great people weโve talked about today โ is just a person. Heโs a human who struggles with things. He achieves greatness when he continues to struggle and prevail over his personal challenges.
โ… Actually, everything that he is โ you know, this idea of spirituality or perfection or whatever โ to me is a lot more admirable when, you know, โฆ thereโs a real human being thatโs โฆ struggled with things. And again, same thing with athletes. Itโs โฆ like this person who youโve seen as this moment of greatness โ itโs actually like theyโre [a] human being [who] is struggling with all these things. โฆ that makes it that much more admirable.โ – Gotham Chopra
Thatโs so powerful. Gotham doesnโt see his dad as a great man because heโs a world-renowned spiritual leader. He sees Deepak Chopra as great because heโs a real human being who struggles and prevails.
Why You Should Listen to this Gotham Chopra Podcast Episode Right Nowโฆ
Greatness isnโt about being the best. Itโs not about scoring the most points, making the most money, or having the most followers on Instagram.
Gothamโs definition of greatness is pretty simple: โsometimes itโs just about being in the moment.โ
That is so true. Greatness is all about what you do in each individual moment. Itโs about surrendering to the moment and making the most of your time.
If you prepare as hard as you can and invest in your relationships, youโll be ready when your moment of greatness comes. And it will come. We all have the potential for greatness because weโre all human. We all struggle, and we all experience defeat and success.
This episode was powerful, guys. Iโm so glad I got to have my friend Gotham Chopra in the studio to help me decode greatness today.
If you want to connect with Gotham, you can find him on Twitter and Instagram. You can also check out the website for Religion of Sports to see more of his work.
And donโt forget to check out Gothamโs documentary series Tom vs. Time on Facebook Watch and Greatness Code on Apple TV+!
You guys, this is a fantastic episode you do not want to miss! If youโre ready to learn the secrets to greatness from someone whoโs worked with some of the greatest athletes, artists, and thinkers of all time, look no further than Episode 980 with Gotham Chopra.
Iโll catch you guys next time!
To Greatness,

Some Questions I Ask:
- Why did you start to want to work with world-class athletes only?
- How important is it for all great minds to watch game film?
- Did you ever see insecurities or self-doubt in these athletes?
- Does trauma cause geniuses to try harder to succeed or is it something else?
- What did you see in your dad being both a father and a spiritual leader and how that affected him at home?
- Do you feel pressure to live up to the bar set by your father and those he associates with?
In this episode, you will learn:
- What the anatomy of greatness is
- How experiences that are more meaningful give more clarity
- How Steph and Kobe and Tomโs dedication after success help to define their greatness
- How the ability to deal with failure in crunch time helps define success
- How working with trauma can help to heal through support in oneโs community
- How providing the gifted with resources they need helps them to succeed
- Plus much more…
Connect with:
Gotham Chopra