Thursday, July 9, 2026

When Things Were Allowed to Just Be Things

 

Evolution of the Phone


The other day I tried to read an article online and got interrupted by a pop-up asking me to accept cookies, subscribe to a newsletter, disable my ad blocker, create an account, and verify that I’m not a robot.

I wasn't surprised. It feels about right for the era. Everything now requires a password, an app, a subscription, or a small surrender of dignity. We were promised technology would simplify life. Instead it turned ordinary activities into airport security … and makes me long for simpler times.

I don’t think I’m nostalgic in the way people usually mean it. I’m not sitting around polishing a jukebox or wishing we still used telegrams. Half the old stuff was inconvenient, ugly, or smelled faintly of lead paint. But I do miss a time when the world had less insulation between you and ordinary life.

You bought a thing and you owned the thing. End of relationship.

Somewhere along the line we stopped letting things simply exist. Your television wants software updates. Your smart watch is disappointed in you. And everything comes with an app or login screen, like we’re all trying to enter a mediocre nightclub managed by a password prompt. Simplicity has left the building and now every purchase is an experience, a platform, a brand, a pipeline, or a personal journey.

Maybe that’s why the world feels exhausting. Nothing is allowed to be quiet anymore.

I miss when things were allowed to just be things.





Wednesday, July 8, 2026

6 Tips for Marketing Writing That Doesn’t Suck


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We’ve all seen it. That Frankenstein monster of corporate “content” stitched together from jargon, buzzwords, and the tears of unpaid interns. It lumbers across the internet, moaning things like “synergize your ROI streams” and “facilitating growth opportunities.”

And … we close the tab.

Don’t be that writer. Nobody wants to read a white paper that feels like homework. If your marketing copy doesn’t make people yawn, scroll, or punch their monitor, you’re already ahead of the pack. Here’s how to keep your words alive, awake, effective, and maybe even fun.

1. Write Like You’re Talking to a Human (Preferably One You Like)

Pretend you’re explaining your thing to a buddy over beers. Not a boardroom. Not a hostage negotiation. A buddy. If it feels like you’re writing a eulogy for software, stop. Start over.

Shortcut: Literally write, “Hey [friend’s name], did you know…” and then just let it rip. You can delete the “Hey Steve” later, but that tone? That’s the good stuff.  

2. If You Wouldn’t Say It In a Conversation, Torch It

Do you actually say words like “utilize” in real life? No, you say “use.” The second you start sprinkling in “facilitate,” “robust,” or “synergy,” you sound like a malfunctioning TED Talk robot.

Bad: “We facilitate growth through innovative strategies.”

Good: “We help you grow with smart strategies.”

One sounds human. The other sounds like a ransom note.

3. Read It Out Loud (And Cringe Accordingly)

Your brain lies to you. It tells you that your 34-word sentence is smooth jazz when really it’s a Yoko Ono interpretive interlude. Read it out loud. If you trip over it, your reader will too. Rewrite until it feels like something you’d actually say.

Before: “Our team leverages cross-platform synergy to maximize ROI.”

After: “We make sure your brand shows up wherever your customers are, so you get the most bang for your buck.”

See? Less “leverage.” More life.

4. Stop Marathoning Your Sentences

A sentence should not feel like a triathlon. If you’re gasping for air halfway through, your reader’s already gone. Break it up. Short. Punchy. Done.

Before: “Our new app offers a range of features designed to streamline workflows, enhance productivity, and ensure optimal user satisfaction by delivering seamless integration across multiple platforms.”

After: “Our new app helps you work smarter. It streamlines workflows. It boosts productivity. It plays nice with your other tools.”

See how much easier that is to swallow?

5. Bring Yourself to the Party

People don’t want to talk to a brand. They want to talk to you. Opinions, stories, jokes … whatever makes you sound less like a voicemail from Comcast, use it.

Boring: “Our customer service team is always available to help you.”

Better: “Got a question at 2 a.m.? We’ve got your back. Our support team basically runs on caffeine and panic.”

Your personality is the difference between “eh” and “hell yes.”

6. Kill Corporate Buzzwords

Buzzwords are marketing’s cigarette butts. They’re everywhere. They stink. And they make you look lazy.

Trash: “Let’s circle back on that low-hanging fruit and leverage cutting-edge solutions.”

Treasure: “Let’s talk later. We use the latest tools to get the job done.”

Simple. Clear. And you won’t make your readers throw up in their mouths.

 

Good marketing writing isn’t about sounding smart. It’s about being clear, being human, and, dare I say, not sucking. Write like a person, cut the crap, and remember: nobody’s ever said, “Wow, I loved that brand’s synergy.”

Now get out there and make words people actually want to read.



Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Curbing Creativity

 

Curbing Creativity

Most people don’t have a creativity problem. They have an approval problem.

You can watch it happen in real time. Someone starts to say an idea out loud, then suddenly edits themselves mid-sentence like they’ve got a tiny corporate lawyer living behind their eyeballs. “Well, maybe that’s stupid.” “This probably wouldn’t work.” “Forget it.”

The idea barely made it out of the driveway before getting pulled over for inspection.

Which makes sense. Modern culture trains people to become aggressively reasonable. Schools reward the right answer. Offices reward the safe answer. Social media rewards the fast answer delivered with the confidence.

Meanwhile, actual creativity is messy as hell.

Good ideas often arrive looking slightly stupid. They wander in incomplete ... making weird connections, asking inconvenient questions. And people kill them early because nobody wants to sound foolish in a culture obsessed with optimization.

So we edit too soon -- filtering while generating and judging while exploring. Because everything now has to sound optimized, validated, scalable, monetizable, and preferably summarized into a carousel suitable for posting on LinkedIn.

The irony is that originality rarely comes from people who are always certain. It comes from people willing to sit in ambiguity a little longer. People who can follow a strange thought without demanding a business case after thirty seconds. 

This looks suspiciously unproductive to people addicted to metrics, but the smartest people I know are rarely the quickest to declare certainty. They poke at ideas instead of immediately trying to win with them. And I believe that this is more of an advantage now than ever before. Because the world is filling up with polished sameness. Perfectly optimized content that is clean, efficient, frictionless, and dead on arrival.

The people who still matter creatively will be the ones willing to look a little foolish before they look correct. The ones who can resist editing every thought into compliance before it has a chance to breathe. The ones who may initially appear inefficient, but, when the dust has cleared, will be celebrated for their effectiveness.



Monday, July 6, 2026

Fortunately, Dav was not a very good listener.


About the Author: Dav Pilkey

Dav Pilkey’s “Captain Underpants” books have been translated into more than 37 languages with more than 90 million books sold worldwide.


Captain Underpants


When Things Were Allowed to Just Be Things

  The other day I tried to read an article online and got interrupted by a pop-up asking me to accept cookies, subscribe to a newsletter, di...