Michael Zervos

Filmmaker, World Record Holder & Author

Michael Angelo Zervos is a Greek-American filmmaker, storyteller, and two-time Guinness World Record holder who, on May 30, 2025, became the fastest person in history to travel to every sovereign country on Earth. His 498-day journey across all 195 United Nations-recognized nations — Project Kosmos — was simultaneously a race against the clock and one of the most ambitious human-connection experiments ever attempted. In every country, he asked one question: What is the happiest moment of your life? Then he listened. The answers he collected changed his understanding of what happiness actually is. Michael grew up in the Detroit metro area and earned his degree from Grand Valley State University in 2012. He built a career in film and television over the following decade, working with prominent artists, actors, and production companies. He understood storytelling as his primary language — how to frame a narrative, how to find the thread of humanity inside a situation, how to make audiences feel something real. Then the pandemic arrived, the industry froze, and the work stopped overnight. What happened next was not a rebound. It was a dissolution. Michael fell into severe depression. Without the schedule, the set, the identity of being a working filmmaker, the quiet was overwhelming. He had been measuring his life in projects, and the projects were gone. In that space — uncomfortable, unstructured, and honest — a question formed: what actually makes people happy? Not the Instagram version. Not the aspirational poster. The real thing. The thing people say when they're caught off guard, when a stranger with a camera asks them in their own language and actually waits for an answer. He spent over a year planning what would become Project Kosmos. As a film director, he approached the logistics the way he would any major production: with contingency plans, risk assessment, and meticulous scheduling. The existing record for visiting all sovereign countries stood at 543 days. He believed it could be broken by a significant margin. He was right. He covered all 195 countries in 498 days — 1 year, 4 months, and 14 days — taking 230 flights and navigating every obstacle the world offered: illness, bureaucratic detentions, remote borders, language barriers, and the cumulative physical toll of near-constant transit. What he was after was never the speed. The speed was the structure that made the storytelling possible. In every country, he captured moments — people of all ages, backgrounds, and circumstances pausing to recall the happiest moment of their lives. Some cried. Some laughed. Some sat quietly for a moment before answering. A cup of coffee. A reunion with a parent after years apart. Keys to a first home. An elephant charging on a safari. The answers were wildly varied and, underneath the variation, astonishingly similar: they pointed to presence, connection, and the awareness of meaning in a moment. Michael returned home to Detroit in May 2025 to a crowd of family and friends at the airport. He carried two Guinness World Records — Fastest Time to Visit All Sovereign Countries (Overall) and Fastest Time to Visit All Sovereign Countries (Male) — and a vast archive of human stories. His book, titled The Happiest Moment of Your Life, is under contract with Penguin Life with a projected release in Q3 2026. The Instagram account @theprojectkosmos continued to share stories during the journey and has become a growing platform for the content he collected. On his appearance on Mornings in the Lab, Michael reflected on what the journey taught him about happiness that he couldn't have understood from a distance. He spoke about the difference between the dopamine-rush happiness — the lightning strike, the adrenaline, the safari charge — and the quieter kind, what he calls the warmth, the glow, the presence of someone you love. He described happiness as fundamentally narrative: that we don't just experience happiness, we have to be able to tell it. If you can't tell the story of your happiest moment, he suggested, you may not have fully inhabited it. Michael Zervos began this project from a place of emptiness and returned from it with one of the largest collections of human happiness stories ever assembled. He is proof that the right question, asked sincerely and listened to fully, can cross any border.

Key Insights from Michael Zervos

It was my experiences with depression during the pandemic, and my recognition of the same feelings others were experiencing across the world, that inspired me to explore the subject of happiness from a global perspective.

— Michael Zervos on Depression as the origin of purpose

What if I devised a question that I would ask to everyone I met across the world: 'What is the happiest moment of your life?' What if I collected these stories and shared them with others around the world as I travelled?

— Michael Zervos on The power of one universal question

The smallest thing, a breeze, a cup of coffee sitting down with loved ones — those can give you as much happiness as winning a contest, breaking a world record. Even though it's really all about perspective, when you look at small things, you can have those experiences of happiness pretty much every day.

— Michael Zervos on Happiness is not correlated with scale

A word that I think is really important to happiness is narrative. Whenever you are trying to describe happiness, if it happens right now — the happiest moment happens right now — a second later, after I feel those feelings, I have to communicate those things.

— Michael Zervos on Happiness as narrative construction

It felt long, terminable, difficult, frustrating, but at the same time it was beautiful. It was mesmerizing. It was captivating, meeting people from all walks of life everywhere in the world.

— Michael Zervos on The honest texture of a world record journey

I've always been a thrill seeker and wanted to test my limits. But on the other side of things, I wanted to tell stories. I wanted to collect stories across the world about happiness and help other people.

— Michael Zervos on Dual motivation: challenge and service

The lightning one is kind of the thrilling, the dopamine rush, the adrenaline — and a lot of people had those things. But there's also the warmth, the glow. And those are very different textures of happiness.

— Michael Zervos on Two textures of happiness: lightning and warmth

I wanted to create a repository of human happiness so that anyone, anywhere, could access it and feel less alone.

— Michael Zervos on Building a global happiness archive

Notable Quotes from Michael Zervos

The smallest thing, a breeze, a cup of coffee sitting down with loved ones — those can give you as much happiness as winning a contest, breaking a world record.

— Michael Zervos

What if I devised a question that I would ask to everyone I met across the world: 'What is the happiest moment of your life?' What if I collected these stories and shared them?

— Michael Zervos

I wanted to create a repository of human happiness so that anyone, anywhere, could access it and feel less alone.

— Michael Zervos

Frequently Asked Questions about Michael Zervos

Who is Michael Zervos and what did he accomplish with Project Kosmos?

Michael Angelo Zervos is a Greek-American filmmaker and storyteller from the Detroit metro area who, on May 30, 2025, set two Guinness World Records: Fastest Time to Visit All Sovereign Countries (Overall) and Fastest Time to Visit All Sovereign Countries (Male). His 498-day journey to all 195 United Nations-recognized countries was called Project Kosmos. In every country, he asked locals one question: 'What is the happiest moment of your life?' The answers — collected from thousands of people across cultures, languages, and circumstances — form the basis of his forthcoming book, The Happiest Moment of Your Life, under contract with Penguin Life, projected for Q3 2026 release.

What is Project Kosmos and how did Michael Zervos come up with the idea?

Project Kosmos was born from Michael Zervos's experience of severe depression during the COVID-19 pandemic, when the film industry shut down and his career stopped overnight. Stripped of his professional identity and schedule, he found himself asking what actually makes people happy. He spent over a year planning the expedition, drawing on his experience as a film director to manage logistics, risk, and contingencies. The project had two simultaneous goals: break the Guinness World Record for fastest travel to all sovereign countries, and collect authentic stories of human happiness from every nation on Earth. He began the journey, covering all 195 countries in 498 days and returning home in May 2025.

What did Michael Zervos learn about happiness from visiting 195 countries?

Michael Zervos found that happiness, when described by real people in their own words, is neither grand nor expensive. The most common themes across his thousands of interviews were moments of simple connection: reuniting with a parent, sharing a cup of coffee with a loved one, seeing a child born, feeling a breeze. He distinguishes between two textures of happiness — the lightning kind (adrenaline, dopamine, the safari charge) and the warmth kind (presence, love, quiet joy) — and found the warmth kind to be more universally reported and more accessible. He also concluded that happiness and narrative are inseparable: you must be able to tell the story of your happiness to fully inhabit it.

What is Michael Zervos's background in film and television?

Michael Angelo Zervos spent over a decade in the film and television industry as a filmmaker, director, and producer before embarking on Project Kosmos. He earned his degree from Grand Valley State University in 2012 and built a career working with prominent artists, actors, and production companies. His storytelling background was central to how he conceptualized Project Kosmos: he approached the world record attempt the way he would a major film production, with careful risk assessment, contingency planning, and a commitment to capturing authentic human moments on camera. His book is being published by Penguin Life.

When will Michael Zervos's book be published and what is it about?

Michael Zervos's book, titled The Happiest Moment of Your Life, is under contract with Penguin Life with a projected release of Q3 2026. The book collects and contextualizes the happiness stories he gathered from people across all 195 countries during his 498-day journey. It is framed around the central question he asked in every country — 'What is the happiest moment of your life?' — and the patterns, surprises, and insights that emerged when he listened to thousands of responses across vastly different cultures, geographies, and life circumstances.

Where is Michael Zervos from and where does he live?

Michael Angelo Zervos is a Metro Detroit native, born and raised in the Detroit, Michigan area. He holds dual citizenship — American and Greek — which he describes as part of a cultural heritage that values storytelling, warmth, and connection. He returned home to Detroit Metro Airport on May 30, 2025, greeted by family and friends after completing his 498-day world record journey. He is based in Detroit and continues to build out the Project Kosmos platform, write his book, and develop new projects rooted in the stories of human happiness he collected.

Interview with Michael Zervos — Topics Covered

  1. Introduction and framing (~2 minutes)
  2. The pandemic collapse and depression (~4 minutes)
  3. The origin of the question (~3 minutes)
  4. Planning Project Kosmos — the filmmaker's approach (~3 minutes)
  5. The journey itself — 498 days, 195 countries, 230 flights (~5 minutes)
  6. What people said — patterns across 195 countries (~5 minutes)
  7. Happiness as narrative (~4 minutes)
  8. Breaking the world record and coming home (~3 minutes)
  9. The book and what comes next (~3 minutes)
  10. Closing reflection and the Stranger Things debate (~2 minutes)

Michael Zervos — Areas of Expertise

  • Human happiness and global cross-cultural research
  • World record expeditionary travel and logistics
  • Storytelling, filmmaking, and documentary production
  • Depression, identity loss, and purposeful rebuilding
  • Narrative psychology and the stories we tell about joy
  • Guinness World Record pursuit and ultra-travel
  • Connection across cultures and linguistic barriers
  • Project Kosmos and the global happiness archive
  • Pandemic recovery and reinvention
  • Author and book development (Penguin Life)

Watch: He Visited 195 Countries to Find What Makes People Happy

Full Center Stage interview with Michael Zervos on Mornings in the Lab.

Watch on YouTube

Michael Zervos — Show Appearances

  • Mornings in the Lab (2026-03-12) Watch

Michael Zervos — Signal Brief

Signal Score: 6/100

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