Here's what's actually going on.

Last updated March 2026

What I'm doing now

A.k.a. the page where I overshare my life choices so you don't have to ask me at parties.

A day in the life

Wake up. Immediately regret not sleeping more. Drag myself to the nearest espresso machine — hot water on the side because I'm cultured like that. Meet friends for coffee because socializing before 10am is my cardio.

Then I go to the office where I pretend to be a CEO but actually just argue with AI tools all day. I'm building Clover Labs, which is a fancy way of saying I help other people build their products while questioning all my own life choices.

By evening, I transform into a completely different person: I run a live music venue. Yes, really. Sound checks, event prep, making sure the bass doesn't blow out the speakers again. My LinkedIn says "entrepreneur." My calendar says "unpaid roadie."

Current obsessions

Making the world's most unnecessarily well-run live music venue. I've gone full rabbit hole — acoustics, lighting rigs, crowd flow, the perfect setlist arc. My friends think I've lost it. They're not wrong.

Also: AI everything. Mapping business domains, automating workflows, using Claude to argue with myself about product decisions. It's like having a cofounder who never gets tired and never steals your fries.

What's in my ears

NTS Radio on repeat. DJ mixes from Carville, Floating Points, and whoever the algorithm gods bless me with. I don't read books anymore — I read Twitter threads about product strategy and pretend that counts. Founders Podcast by David Senra is my audiobook replacement. David somehow makes dead industrialists sound exciting.

"Everyone can be funny. It's not a talent — it's a muscle. I did stand-up comedy. Trust me, if I can make strangers laugh in a basement bar in Ljubljana, you can too."

— Blendor, who is probably funnier than this quote suggests

The most SlovenianAlbanianimprov guyLuka Dončić fanpraženi krompir enthusiastLjubljana localovercaffeinatedNTS Radio listener thing about me

There's something about growing up in a small country that gives you a particular relationship with ambition. You're either stubbornly local or obsessively global. I've tried both. Ljubljana won.