- Leading Ideas at Culture Pilot
- Posts
- CULTURE:📍Judging Wes Anderson Poster Art, Your AI Needs a Manager, and Have You Named It?
CULTURE:📍Judging Wes Anderson Poster Art, Your AI Needs a Manager, and Have You Named It?
Culture, creativity, and some important questions you didn’t see coming...
We don’t always know how to manage non-human entities. And so we ask…
SERIOUS
QUESTIONS
YOU SAID IT:
Last issue we asked: Would you rather get rough ideas early? Or polished ideas later?
The final vote was a dead heat: 50/50!
You said:
Rough ideas. » Sometimes, I need to share early progress or see it in front of me and talk about it before my client or I fully understand the problem we’re trying to solve. It’s messy, but it’s also alive. That’s good collaboration.
Polished. » I usually ask for the end results because I don’t have the bandwidth to walk through every version. And when I present, I try only to share the polished version because unfinished work can feel too raw to explain. I’d rather make sure the end result speaks for itself.
These two need to meet. If only there were enough time.
Next up:
Have you named your AI yet?
How personal is your relationship with AI: Do you like when it tells you how smart you are? Do you get frustrated when it’s not always right? Do you talk to it more than anyone with a pulse? It’s okay, you’re not weird. Mostly. The real question is:
Did you give your AI a name?
Reply back and let us know – Yes? No? Names? Opinions on the topic?
Inquiring minds want to know. And while we’re on the topic, have you ever realized that we don’t really talk enough about the emotional burden of managing our AI? Not training it. Managing it.
“…like a golden retriever who read the entire internet and still asks how you’re feeling.”
Geoff Nelson dives in with a cathartically unhinged take on: Managing Your AI (Before It Manages You) →
SOMETHING JUDGY:
How hard is it to judge every Wes Anderson movie poster from best to worst?
Susan Renaud found an answer, as two graphic designers try to rate and critique each one. From the typography of Moonrise Kingdom to the pastel color palettes of the Grand Budapest Hotel, which design is officially the most Wes Anderson-y?
Reply