🙃✨The Nexialist #0210raging against various elements | hyper-optimization | releasing > posting | hypernormalization | self-esteem crisis | toolkit for utopian thinking | eco-development | willy chavarria
welcome to your weekly brain-jolt in shape of a newsletter, the nexialist hey, you! I hope this message finds you in the best of spirits possible (even if that is a legion of ghouls, welcome all of you.) this friday, i’ll be speaking at the Futures Friends here in amsterdam and i’m so excited (thank you, Els Dragt, for the invitation). wish me luck as i’ll be sharing 3 signals, in 3 slides, in 3 minutes. also, i’ve been wondering this week how is it possible that in this planetary alignment/parade, it seems that things are so unaligned… that is not what we were promised. or was it? i’ll not go into that, neither in the deepseek launch that shook the ai world (for that, go to Artificial Insights, as Michell Zappa explained it all.) but i promise some other fresh things to read and stimulate your brain and heart. enjoy! 🫀✨ 1 year ago » 🎎✨The Nexialist #0158 : margiela’s artisanal collection | levels of tension | meta trending trends '24 | polyfuturism | the tyranny of the algorithm | hiss | preparada | here and now 2 years ago » 🥭✨The Nexialist #0106 : META trending trends: 2023 | tech trends | centaur mindset | enshittification lifecycle | mangoes as a propaganda tool | LLYLM | interlingua | santas almas benditas 3 years ago » 🧠✨The Nexialist #0056 : Liveware & Malleability | Tupperware | Jessie Ware | Miro Academy | Question Burst | Learning a Language | Shinigami Eyes 4 years ago » 🧠✨The Nexialist #0005 : Queer the Future | Curation and Synthesis | Meta Trending Trends | Future of Fashion | Sevdaliza | RIP SOPHIE and Brega Funk 🤬raging against various elementslast week, i got to see connor schumacher’s raging agains various elements (thank you, juan, for the invitation!) and it made me dance in my seat. and cry. and embrace the rage we feel. and admire even more the artists who dedicate their life and craft to live/irl performances. everything today seems so recorded/edited and made for screens, so the feeling of seeing something live is quite powerful. the level of artistry they bring to the stage is exactly what we need in times like this. the techno-jazz choreography, the cadence of the moves, the gender diversity of the cast, the ode to club-culture, the breaking of the 4th-wall, the exploration of mental health, the importance of community… i mean, they punched a whole through the zeitgeist. they were able to condense the spirit of our time while showing a deeply personal story about grief, loss and the solace of chosen-family: the chemistry of the group made us feel part of the performance. i do know connor and most of the dancers in the piece, so it did bring an extra layer of relatability (and admiration). also, the stage itself made such an stimulating experience turn inwards: the audience-facing huge mirror full of distortions hypnotized us while inviting us for self-reflection and the moving suspended curtain is present the whole time, as if saying: i’m showing you what is underneath all that grief and rage.
i mean, i’m no art/dance critic, but i needed to express how it made me feel and here is my space to do it. with this i need to say: support your local artists, go see your friends’ art and friends of friends’. the tour is still going through the netherlands, so if you can, go experience their art. brainsparks: euterpians (tn#197), architecture of the invisible (tn#193), somebody that i used to know (tn#163), artistry & worldbuilding (tn#192), body is art (tn#192), duelo (tn#188), artist imperfection (tn#38) ⏭hyper-optimizationMatt Klein shared this report about hyper-optimization (with a referral code to download the manifesto) and it has rented an entire canal house in my mind. it’s impressive how oas (office of applied strategy) is able to sum up so many phenomena i’ve brought here in the nexialist (check brainsparks below) and build upon that.
what happens when culture is reduced to (ultraprocessed) content and made for algorithmic optimization? oas warns us about cultural singularity:
i only had access to the manifesto, which is already full of brainsparks, but they close it with a more propositive teaser to six counter-forces to hyper-optimization: emicness, metabolism, entropy, self-destruction, pluralism and de-growth. i can’t wait to read more about it. brainsparks: life after lifestyle (tn#91), enshittifcation lifecycle (tn#106), context collapse (tn#25), culture is not an industry (tn#203), super industry of the imaginary (tn#28), hyperindustry of the artificial imaginary (tn#118), a frictionless world is boring as f*ck (tn#163), the moodboard effect (tn#81), the vanishing designer (tn#81), the age of average (tn#115), technologies of convenience (tn#122), revival as loss of identity (tn#103), calling artists ‘creators’ (tn#208) 📮releasing > postingMetalabel has been getting my attention lately, and now Yancey Strickler is releasing the 2025 creative playbook which now i’m thinking can also be seen as a counter-force to hyper-optimization. in this post they show how “an artist on Metalabel sold out an entire collection of NYC garbage — literal trash from the streets of NYC packaged in glass cubes for $100 each — in under an hour. No viral TikTok. No paid ads. Just by following a different way of releasing creative work.” metalabel invites us to adopt a “release” mindset and strategy, which breathes life back into our creative output.
brainsparks: post-individualism (tn#196), content capital (tn#96), 4 c-words (tn#45), 🙃hypernormalization
this is another video that reached my eyeballs and brain by rahaf harfoush, welcoming us to the hypernormalization club. the term was coined by by Alexei Yurchak in his 2006 book Everything Was Forever, Until It Was No More: The Last Soviet Generation, in which he describes the paradox of life in the soviet union in the 70s-80s when everyone knew the system was failing and people couldn’t imagine any alternative to the status quo, “so politians and citizens alike were resigned to maintaining the pretense of a functioning society.” rahaf also mentions the 2016 adam curtis’ documentary (now in my watchlist) called hypernormalisation, in which he argues “that following the global economic crises of the 1970s, governments, financiers and technological utopians gave up on trying to shape the complex "real world" and instead established a simpler "fake world" for the benefit of multi-national corporations that is kept stable by neoliberal governments.” brainsparks: hypernormative (tn#200), normosis: the pathology of normality (tn#38) ♂self-esteem crisisthis weekend we met up with a friend who told how frustrating it is to see her teenage son falling for masculinist and right wing discourse. the next day i read this article by leo rogers for psyche ideas: the ‘masculinity crisis’ is actually a crisis of self-esteem (via Creative Destruction’s rabbit hole #103). i have to say i usually attributed the “masculinity crisis” to men’s realization that the privilege they were promised is not quite there in reality (except if you’re rich and white), but here i saw another idea that has more to do with inequality (at least in my perception): the frustration at the fallacy of meritocracy—and since under patriarchy they need to be the providers and protectors, it leaves them feeling like failures (another argument why feminism benefits everyone). what is weird to me, is that these men are still idealizing the very people who perpetuate the meritocracy discourse, and directing their anger towards women and other minorities. the level of brainswashing.
brainsparks: the other vibe shift (tn#102), parasite culture (tn#191), men in media (tn#28), fruity men (tn#182), on heteropessimism (tn#174), man-loving (tn#190), the disappearance of men (tn#175), the alpha male myth (tn#127), colonial masculinity (tn#127) 🧰toolkit for utopian thinkingthis post that was seen in two of my favorites newsletter: Sentiers n341 and Creative Destruction rabbit hole #103. and it’s worth it. caitlin rajan argues “we need the toolkit of utopian thinking, now more than ever.” and while i love Monika Bielskyte’s protopia rationale that moves beyond the utopia/dystopia dychotomy, this toolkit comes in quite handy and rajan’s arguments are worth the read. utopianism has a bad rep, it could be equated to today’s delulu for some as it denotes lack of realism. it also has a dark past, as utopianism has historically been employed in regimes like in nazi germany. but here she reclaims its roots and uses afrofuturism as an example of utopia as a political and imagionative skill. below, one of my favorite references:
brainsparks: climate storytelling toolkit (tn#131), awesome anthropocene goals (tn#67), can solarpunk save the world? (tn#97), slouching towards utopia (tn#197), protopia dreams (tn#69), imagination as necessity (tn#15), polyfuturism (tn#158), time for indigenous futurism (tn#65) 🍃eco-developmentagain, another idea of utopia caught my eye and i just couldn’t ignore it: The Lost Option of Sustainable Developmentalism. in this article shared in the syllabus, baptiste albertone argues for the revival of radical yet overlooked ideas by latin american structuralists in the 70s such as Raúl Prebisch, Celso Furtado, and Osvaldo Sunkel. they critiqued how development theories initially centered on industrialization and were failing to actually incorporate environmental concerns. also, even mainstream environmentalist movements (such as neo-Malthusianism) were ignoring the economic disparities between developed and developing nations. in the second part i learned a lot of new terms: peripheral alienation and the contradictions of mimetic development:
and in the third chapter: planning a sustainable utopia.
brainsparks: amazonize the world (tn#153), indigenous thinking for troubled times (tn#32), ancestral future (tn#112), freudian slip (tn#191) 🇲🇽willy chavarriathank you, hanier ferrer, for sharing this. in this collection, willy chavarria brought big names like j balvin, indya moore, honey dijon and paloma elsesser to his paris debut. i love how he brings the diversity to church, mixing religious symbols, with streetwear and latin/immigrant references with a super diverse cast. i didn’t know willy chavarria and his work, and his style is not only beautiful and edgy, but he is also in the craft of mixing fashion and activism (watch this if you want to become a fan like me). brainsparks: craftivist manifesto (tn#178) see you next week, hyper-humans 🫀✨❓Wait, what is a Nexialist?🔎If you want to see what I’ve already posted, visit the archive and use the search engine. Even I do that a lot.💌I want to know what you think/who you are! Your feedback is highly appreciated; you can e-mail me or fill in this short survey. Thank you! 🙏🏻🔌Let’s Collab?I truly believe innovation comes from bringing improbable areas together, and that’s why I called this project The Nexialist. Some sectors are known to be self-referencing and hermetic. Sometimes, teams are on autopilot mode, focused on the daily grind, which hinders innovation. As a Nexialist, I like to burst these bubbles, bringing references from different areas, and maintaining teams inspired and connected to the Zeitgeist. I offer inspiration sessions called Brainsparks, creative desk research (Zeitgeist Boost), Plug’n’Play deals for workshops and sprints, and other bespoke formats. If you want to know more about this, send me an e-mail with your challenge(s) and we can figure something out together. Check out my website and some work I’ve done below: You're currently a free subscriber to The Nexialist. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |
🙃✨The Nexialist #0210
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