After 15 hours on a plane, I took a one hour bus ride followed by a short walk to my Tokyo hotel. The plan: shower, sleep, and leave early to catch the bullet train to Osaka.
Copywriter and Content Writer Inspiration
A blog with useable information to support, educate & amuse marketing writers of all experience levels
Thursday, June 4, 2026
I woke up in Tokyo wearing someone else’s pants
After 15 hours on a plane, I took a one hour bus ride followed by a short walk to my Tokyo hotel. The plan: shower, sleep, and leave early to catch the bullet train to Osaka.
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
Content Creation and Productivity in the Age of AI
People keep blaming AI for killing content creativity, but it
was already headed toward the food court version of itself long before the
robots showed up.
For years, the industry has rewarded speed over thought.
More posts. More campaigns. More platforms. Less time to sit with an idea long
enough to make it weird or honest or memorable.
Then AI walked into the room like an overqualified intern
and said, “You want 400 pieces of acceptable content by This afternoon?
No problem.”
The speed and volume were impressive, but the actual content?
Technically competent and perfectly acceptable because a lot of modern content
already sounded machine-made before machines started making it. AI just
perfected the dialect: upbeat, frictionless, emotionally beige. Every sentence
polished to the texture of dentist office waiting room furniture.
It’s ubiquitous now: every platform is drowning in words,
and somehow almost none of them feel written by anybody.
Because good writing usually comes from tension. Hesitation.
Somebody wrestling with a thought long enough to surprise themselves a little.
Meaning takes time. Taste takes time. Original thought takes an uncomfortable
amount of sitting around staring at nothing, which modern workflows treat like
a fire-able offense.
Everything now is optimized to remove the pause. But the pause is usually where the interesting stuff lives. The culture has become deeply impatient with the actual process of creativity: the slow, inefficient part where someone has to think hard enough to say something real.
Thursday, May 14, 2026
The Financialization of the Economy
I was in line for coffee at Peets. Six bucks for something that used to cost pocket change.
The guy in front of me was working
an investment app like he was playing a slot machine. And,
on the surface, it almost seemed normal. Not just the price of the coffee, but
the vibe: Everything’s an asset now. Your house, your retirement, your side
hustle, your attention span.
Finance stopped being a support system for the economy and
quietly became the main character. Instead of helping businesses make things,
it increasingly makes money from money. And it’s very good at it.
Corporations used to talk about building products, expanding
operations, hiring people. Now they talk about “maximizing shareholder value”
like it’s a sacred chant. Which often translates into stock buybacks,
cost-cutting, and a kind of corporate calorie restriction: trim the workforce,
boost the share price, repeat. It’s like running a restaurant where you slowly
replace the food with accounting tricks but still expect five-star reviews.
To be fair, the system rewards this behavior. Executives are
paid in stock. Investors want quick returns. Markets react to quarterly
earnings like toddlers on sugar. So companies optimize for that. You don’t need
a conspiracy when incentives are this loud.
Meanwhile, regular people are pulled into the same orbit.
Retirement used to mean pensions. Predictable, boring, almost comforting. Now
it’s 401(k)s, index funds, and a vague sense that you should probably know what
the S&P 500 did today. We’ve all been conscripted into being part-time
financiers, whether we signed up or not. It’s like being told you’re now
responsible for flying the plane mid-flight, but don’t worry, there’s a YouTube
tutorial.
There’s also this strange side effect where everything
starts to look like a trade. Housing isn’t just shelter; it’s an investment
vehicle. Education isn’t just learning; it’s ROI. Even companies that clearly
make physical things behave like hedge funds with a side gig in manufacturing.
The real economy, the one with stuff you can touch, starts to feel like a
supporting actor in its own story.
And then there’s inequality, which shows up like an
uninvited guest who refuses to leave. When profits flow more toward financial
channels than wages, the gains tend to concentrate. If you own assets, great.
If you don’t, you’re mostly watching the scoreboard from the sidelines. It’s
not exactly subtle.
It isn’t just the imbalance, it’s the way it reshapes how we
think. There’s a quiet cultural shift where everything becomes a calculation.
Is this worth my time? My energy? My “personal brand”? We start to sound like
spreadsheets with opinions. Even creativity gets nudged into metrics -- views,
clicks, monetization -- as if its main job is to justify its own existence in
dollars.
I get the appeal. Finance is efficient. It’s scalable. It
promises control in a world that feels increasingly chaotic. But it’s also a
bit like using a chainsaw to butter toast. Impressive, sure, but maybe not the
right tool for everything.
I don’t think the answer is to romanticize some pre-finance
golden age, that ship sailed a while ago (probably leveraged and sold in
tranches). But it does seem worth asking whether we’ve let the logic of finance
seep too far into places it doesn’t belong. Not everything needs to be
optimized, traded, or turned into a yield.
Sometimes a house should just be a house. A job should just
be a job. And coffee, expensive or not, shouldn’t feel like a symptom of a
system that’s constantly trying to turn your morning into a market opportunity.
Or maybe that’s just me, standing in line, watching someone
refresh a stock app while the barista mispronounces my name.
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
Mocking Bird
I woke up in Tokyo wearing someone else’s pants
After 15 hours on a plane, I took a one hour bus ride followed by a short walk to my Tokyo hotel. The plan: shower, sleep, and leave early t...
-
When conducting an interview, to get below the surface follow up answers to your questions with more questions. Here are 8 follow-up questi...
-
Clients are comparing you to AI on your perceived value vs. AI’s near-zero cost. That’s why every copywriter and content writer should c...
-
There's a particular breed of social media prophet I've been noticing lately. They lurk in the comments sections of articles about A...

