Why 3.5 million Japanese families eat fried chicken for Christmas, and how to watch a 365-day NYE ball drop
A case for slowing down, making it messy, and trusting the room.
Speaking internet: tech satire that sells for $100K, data dashboards that became culture & tourism ads that lean into conspiracy
Three stories about things that weren't supposed to work: rejected scripts, divisive stickers & accidental design
When doing too much is exactly enough: corporate satire perfected, absurd ideas crafted beautifully, and obsolete arts preserved
I may have found a loophole for guilt-free meat. Maybe.
Three approaches to showing up: perform joy loudly, signal depth quietly, hide completely
Intimacy.exe: when AI, screens, and photography all want your attention
When brands ask for trust: Nike's brain shoes, Ramp's stunt, and Jolene's 6-year-old designer
Architecture as obsession: desert isolation, Hollywood illusion, and sky meditation
When giving up control is the smartest move a brand can make
Three stories about what happens when brands actually listen to their communities (and go way overboard)