Binning the blinkers

Trusting your intuition is something we’re often told to do.

It’s romantic even. The idea that we can ‘just know’.

However, this is ceremoniously debunked by Koen Smets.

“The assumption that the things that are either common or unusual to us are common or unusual in general is, well, not that unusual.”

(Sitting in Amsterdam Airport after 2 packed days at IIeX – processing the above is like trying to mentally chew a gobstopper.)

What is clear is that our intuitions might be hampering our ability to understand something. Potentially leading us to the wrong conclusions. And, somewhat counter-intuitively, seeing data can actually exacerbate the flaws in our intuitively made decisions. For example with Lead Time Bias:

“If someone would die from cancer aged 70 anyway, it looks as if they survive longer if you diagnose them aged 63 than if you diagnose them aged 65.”

The second-person singular

Nick Childs writes about personalisation and ponders why talking directly to one single consumer has become the holy grail.

I particularly enjoyed the argument that us humans are in fact more similar than different. And, as a result, we should be identifying what unites us, finding insightful ideas that speak more broadly to a wider audience.

Drumming up fiction

Earlier this year The Drum quoted millennials as having the most spending power of any generation.

Turns out that claim is complete and utter bobbins.

The Ad Contrarian delves into the dark arts of marketing and how such fiction becomes fact.

He’s brilliant, of course.

Lost in music

A wonderful piece of writing from Ian Leslie on today’s choice paralysis when it comes to television and music. How we’re overwhelmed by the challenges of knowing where to start. How to assign priority. And how, more often than not, this ends in no decision at all.

“Music lovers used to travel for hours to track down a record they might have heard only once, late at night, through the crackle of the airwaves.

When they found what they were looking for, got it home and dropped the needle, they paid attention with every fibre of their being. The music would infuse into their bones. Lifelong love affairs would spark into being; future innovations would be born.

How often do these epiphanies happen now that everything presses itself upon us?”

(?)

Ian optimistically calls the psychology behind all this an ungrasped opportunity – especially for all Brand owners out there perhaps?

…while the Hills are Alive

It’s not just the views. Yellowstone National Park has a rich tapestry of sounds and they’ve decided to release a catalogue of them all. My personal favourite: fountain paint pot. What fun.

Jolene, Jolene, Jolene, Jolene

This was always a great song, but slowed down I think Dolly Parton’s vocals sound even better. I’d wager any number of cakes you’ll agree. Absolute magic.

Playing with Fyre

For anyone who watched the jarring Fyre documentary on Netflix, some smart people at Shutterstock have remade the festival’s multi-million dollar promo video. Only this time just using stock footage. Very clever indeed.




From the archive

If you like The100, maybe even found it vaguely enjoyable (steady now),
you can have a ganders at our previous issues. Fill your boots.

Fran 31 October, 2025 The100

The100: Product failure rates debunked, storytelling frameworks, and elephants vs. pumpkins

Do 80% of new products really fail? The Ehrenberg Bass Institute has a track record of blowing up…

Fran 17 October, 2025 The100

The100: Peak social media, rebuilding attention and the most beautiful libraries in the world

Have we passed peak social media?... …The Financial Times thinks so ($). Their recent article…

Fran 03 October, 2025 The100

The100: American Eagle, perspective triangulation and gnome bones

“You are not the consumer” Remember the Sydney Sweeney and American Eagle kerfluffle? There was the…