Nike Unleashes Its ‘Scary Good’ Soccer Squad Amid Brand Turnaround
Nike’s soccer campaign celebrates terrifyingly talented players.Read More
Nike’s soccer campaign celebrates terrifyingly talented players.Read More
Spend enough time inventing possible futures in your head and you won’t have any time to build the future we will all share.
Time to get to work.
The actress took ADWEEK behind the strategy.Read More

The European Union has 24 official languages and dozens more unofficial ones spoken across the continent. If you add in the European countries outside the union, then that brings at least a dozen more into the mix. Add dialects, endangered languages, and languages brought by migrants to Europe, and you end up with hundreds of languages. One thing many of us in technology could agree on is that the US dominates — and that extends to online languages. There are many reasons for this, mostly due to American institutions, standards bodies, and companies defining how computers, their operating systems, and…
This story continues at The Next WebRead More
No need for CGI when you can book some good puppeteers.Read More
Depending on which aspects of its streaming capabilities WBD is willing to sell off, we could end up with an entirely new streaming landscape.Read More
Horizon Media has made three key executive hires—Krish Kuruppath, Jeremy Flynn, and Allan Johnston —to accelerate its AI-native product and data strategy.Read More
Game theory has a lousy name.
When most people think of games, they think of commercial stuff for kids, like Chutes and Ladders or possibly Monopoly.
But a game is simply a system where humans, facing scarcity, make choices. Scarcity leads to choices and to competition.
It turns out that our culture, our commerce and our lives are simply the result of billions of people making billions of choices. Choices that have costs and rewards, and choices that effect other people.
If you want your idea to spread…
If you want your product to sell…
If you want to change a system…
Then beginning by understanding the game theory involved is essential.
Your job is not to “get the word out.” Nor are you likely to be able to get others to know what you know, see what you see and admit that they were wrong.
Instead, the best we can do is create great work that fits into a system where voluntary choices, made by diverse individuals, leads to the change we seek to make.
What’s the game theory of lobbying the city council? The game theory of launching a new jazz record?
It starts by acknowledging that different people have different lenses, different desires, different stories they tell themselves about what they want and how the world works.
The geeks and the nerds and the early adopters have self selected as the people who like to go first. So if you bring them something new, they might choose to be curious.
Then… what do they tell the others? Why would telling other people about your new thing help them win the game they’re playing? What’s in it for them…
And then, those people, the ones that heard about it from the first group, did they take action? How does the change or opportunity or threat you offer interact with the strategy they have about how they will spend their precious time and resources?
And on and on it goes.
That’s a complete reversal of how it used to be.
Colleges used to be measured by how many books they had in the library. Access to courses was restricted. If knowledge was power, controlling access was essential.
They even call it the ‘admissions office.’
Part of the status that comes from higher education is that they controlled who could find the information and who was left behind.
Today, of course, all of the information is there, a click away. Billions of people have a smartphone with access to everything ever recorded and written, but also to a trillion dollar AI system that can offer informed guidance.
So why hesitate? Why do we get stuck or avoid even acknowledging that it’s possible?
Because learning is hard. It creates tension. It takes time. Most of all, it requires a commitment to becoming someone else, a bet we’re making that might not turn out the way we hope.
The system has called our bluff. If you want to learn, learn.
But we pay for it with effort.
The show, called Her Last Broadcast: The Abduction of Jodi Huisentruit starts streaming on Hulu on Tuesday, July 15.Read More