The Honest Catapult

The Calorie Chain Reaction: Ozempic and the Future of Consumption

18 min · I går
episode The Calorie Chain Reaction: Ozempic and the Future of Consumption cover

Beskrivelse

Everyone is talking about what Ozempic does to the human body. Almost nobody is talking about what it does to the economy. In this episode of The Honest Catapult, we explore the surprising chain reaction triggered by the rapid adoption of GLP-1 drugs such as Ozempic and Wegovy. What begins as a medical breakthrough quickly becomes a story about consumer behavior, delivery platforms, restaurants, labor markets, digital services, and the future of economic growth. Using Mexico's intensifying food-delivery wars as a starting point, we examine how companies are already adapting to a world where millions of people may eat differently, shop differently, and make different decisions about health and consumption. This is a story of impact, the butterfly effect: Because when human behavior changes at scale, entire industries are forced to evolve. In this episode: • Why GLP-1 drugs could become one of the most important economic forces of the decade • How Ozempic is influencing food delivery, restaurants, and consumer spending • Why Mexico may become a testing ground for the post-obesity economy • The hidden connection between health, technology, apps, and economic growth • What business leaders, marketers, and investors should be watching next • The power of second-order effects and systems thinking If you enjoy economics, business strategy, technology, behavioral science, and unconventional perspectives on the future, this episode is for you. Subscribe to The Honest Catapult for thought-provoking conversations about the forces quietly reshaping our world. Chapters: 00:00 Introduction: The Economic Story Nobody Is Talking About 01:15 Why Ozempic Is Bigger Than Weight Loss 03:05 The Economics of Appetite 05:10 Mexico's Food Delivery Battleground 07:20 How Delivery Apps Are Adapting 09:10 The Consumer Behavior Revolution 11:05 Winners and Losers in the GLP-1 Economy 13:05 Health, Technology, and Economic Growth 15:05 The Power of Second-Order Effects 17:00 What Happens Next? 18:05 Final Thoughts

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32 episoder

episode The Calorie Chain Reaction: Ozempic and the Future of Consumption cover

The Calorie Chain Reaction: Ozempic and the Future of Consumption

Everyone is talking about what Ozempic does to the human body. Almost nobody is talking about what it does to the economy. In this episode of The Honest Catapult, we explore the surprising chain reaction triggered by the rapid adoption of GLP-1 drugs such as Ozempic and Wegovy. What begins as a medical breakthrough quickly becomes a story about consumer behavior, delivery platforms, restaurants, labor markets, digital services, and the future of economic growth. Using Mexico's intensifying food-delivery wars as a starting point, we examine how companies are already adapting to a world where millions of people may eat differently, shop differently, and make different decisions about health and consumption. This is a story of impact, the butterfly effect: Because when human behavior changes at scale, entire industries are forced to evolve. In this episode: • Why GLP-1 drugs could become one of the most important economic forces of the decade • How Ozempic is influencing food delivery, restaurants, and consumer spending • Why Mexico may become a testing ground for the post-obesity economy • The hidden connection between health, technology, apps, and economic growth • What business leaders, marketers, and investors should be watching next • The power of second-order effects and systems thinking If you enjoy economics, business strategy, technology, behavioral science, and unconventional perspectives on the future, this episode is for you. Subscribe to The Honest Catapult for thought-provoking conversations about the forces quietly reshaping our world. Chapters: 00:00 Introduction: The Economic Story Nobody Is Talking About 01:15 Why Ozempic Is Bigger Than Weight Loss 03:05 The Economics of Appetite 05:10 Mexico's Food Delivery Battleground 07:20 How Delivery Apps Are Adapting 09:10 The Consumer Behavior Revolution 11:05 Winners and Losers in the GLP-1 Economy 13:05 Health, Technology, and Economic Growth 15:05 The Power of Second-Order Effects 17:00 What Happens Next? 18:05 Final Thoughts

I går18 min
episode LinkedIn and The 'Performative Professional': Status and Signaling in Digital Purgatory cover

LinkedIn and The 'Performative Professional': Status and Signaling in Digital Purgatory

Ever get that creeping sense of inauthenticity while updating your professional bio? Like you’re just a fraud acting out the role of a "successful business person" in a highly formulated digital theater? You are far from the only one feeling trapped in it. In this episode, we take a deep dive into "The Performative Professional," an incredibly sharp essay by clinical psychologist, former Google marketing executive, and founder of The Honest Catapult, Santiago Durán Mejía. We unpack why highly intelligent, self-aware people willingly participate in a corporate system they know is absurd. Grounded in Eugene Healy’s theories of status migration and the evolutionary biology concept of "the costly signal" (think: the peacock’s tail), we explore how LinkedIn posts have become the modern professional's primary currency. When objective metrics of merit disappear from abstract corporate roles, the appearance of competence takes its place. We break down the taxonomy of the LinkedIn feed—from "broetry" to the humble-brag confessional—and expose how the algorithm rewards conformity dressed up as individuality. Finally, we look toward the future: In a world where generative AI can fake vulnerability in two seconds, does the performative professional theater finally collapse, or do we just invent an even more exhausting game? If you've ever felt cynical about corporate storytelling, thought leadership, or the invisible class systems dictating modern employability, this deep dive is for you. Episode Chapters * 00:00 Introduction: The Dread of the Professional Bio * 00:37 Introducing Santiago Durán Mejía and the Mandatory Pedigree Drop * 01:48 From Performative Consumer to Performative Professional * 02:55 The Economics of Status Migration: Why Tangible Merit Disappeared * 07:30 The Peacock’s Tail: Understanding the Costly Signal * 09:32 Knowledge vs. Legitimacy: The New Invisible Class System * 11:03 "Ex-Google" and Symbolic Capital: The Modern Aristocratic Titles * 13:09 Anatomy of a LinkedIn Post: Broetry, Pauses, and Hero's Journeys * 14:10 The Psychology of Algorithmic Dwell Time and Vulnerability Hooks * 14:59 The Purpose Post: Corporate Culture as a Secular Religion * 16:24 The Trait of the Matrix: Why Awareness Can't Dissolve the System * 18:42 The AI Threat: What Happens When Costly Signals Become Free?

17. juni 202619 min
episode Mercury Blood: Tracking your Health Metrics is Killing You cover

Mercury Blood: Tracking your Health Metrics is Killing You

In this episode "Mercury Blood: Tracking your Health Metrics is Killing You," clinical psychologist Santiago Durán Mejía critiques modern society's obsession with health tracking and relentless self-improvement. The author argues that reducing our bodies to a collection of data points—such as step counts, macronutrient splits, and marathon times—disconnects us from authentic wellness, making the numerical "map" more important than the actual "territory" of our health.The text traces this issue to a deeper struggle for power and agency. Historically, the medical establishment has utilized standardized metrics and the "medical gaze" to strip individuals of their subjective reality, converting them into manageable, profitable "patients" rather than fostering true, self-sustaining health. While the wellness movement initially sought to reclaim control from these institutions, it has instead devolved into a highly commodified industry where individuals simply replaced "doctors with dashboards".Lacking fundamental education about their own physiology, people now desperately seek control through extreme optimization and external metrics. Drawing on Scott Galloway's concept of "Perfection Maxxing," the text highlights how this gamification of life mirrors harmful perfectionism, creating a culture of relentless optimization that correlates with anxiety, OCD, and depression in a desperate attempt to exert personal power.Ultimately, Durán Mejía invites readers to step away from the measurement trap and the illusion that standardized metrics represent absolute truth. Reminding readers that they have "warm blood" rather than "cold mercury," the author urges a return to a more intuitive, organic relationship with our bodies, rejecting the idea that human life is merely a spreadsheet or a score on a leaderboard

5. juni 202628 min
episode The Zoom T-Shirt and the Myth of the Objective Professional cover

The Zoom T-Shirt and the Myth of the Objective Professional

Why does a casual hoodie on a video call still trigger corporate rage? Drop the blazer and join us this week as we break down why the shift to remote work didn’t completely erase our obsession with old-school corporate dress codes. In this episode, we unpack the history of "professionalism" and expose how modern dress expectations are deeply intertwined with respectability politics, classism, and bias. We tackle why authentic self-expression in hybrid work spaces faces subtle (and not-so-subtle) pushback, how remote settings shifted the goalposts of workplace decorum, and why it’s time to separate wardrobe choices from actual work competence. Whether you love your work-from-home sweatpants or are navigating a strict corporate return-to-office mandate, this conversation will change the way you think about what it means to look "professional." Key Takeaways From This Episode: * The origin of the corporate uniform and why it resists evolution. * How remote and hybrid work environments redefined—and complicated—Zoom etiquette. * The intersection of dress codes, identity, and workplace inclusion. * Practical ways managers can move past superficial optics and focus on performance. 💬 What's your go-to Zoom uniform? Drop a comment below or answer our episode poll! Don't forget to Subscribe/Follow, rate us 5 stars, and turn on notifications so you never miss an episode. Follow us on social media: @thehonestcatapult Chapters * 00:00 - Introduction: The Post-Pandemic WardrobeAn opening look at how the shift to remote work promised an era of casual comfort—and why the corporate world is still resisting it. * 04:15 - Anatomy of a Zoom T-Shirt: Why Casual Clothes Trigger RageDiving into the psychological pushback against casual clothing on camera and why a basic t-shirt can make traditional leaders uncomfortable. * 11:30 - The History of "Professionalism" and Respectability PoliticsUnpacking the roots of the standard corporate uniform and how professional dress codes have historically been used to enforce class, race, and gender conformity. * 20:45 - The Objective Professional MythEvaluating the flawed assumption that an individual's wardrobe correlates directly with their cognitive capability, work ethic, and objectivity. * 28:10 - Redefining Inclusivity in Modern Work CultureHow companies can build true culture-first environments by replacing superficial aesthetics with trust and performance-based evaluation. * 37:55 - Q&A & Final Thoughts: Dressing for YourselfAnswering listener questions on navigating hybrid workplace cultures and setting boundary lines for your personal style.

22. maj 202638 min
episode Your Phone Is Not The Problem | Addiction In The Age Of Algorithms cover

Your Phone Is Not The Problem | Addiction In The Age Of Algorithms

In this episode of The Honest Catapult, we dive deep into the recent lawsuits against Meta and YouTube and why they are fundamentally missing the point. We’ve seen this script before: a "War on Drugs" that attacks the substance rather than the compulsion. Now, social media has become the new "Schedule I" substance of the digital age. As a clinical psychologist and marketing scientist, I explore how the pursuit of "more time of consumption" isn't just a social media glitch—it’s the foundational architecture of the modern economy, from Amazon’s one-click buying to Spotify’s predictive playlists. We also discuss why the "opposite of addiction is connection," drawing on Johann Hari’s groundbreaking work in Chasing the Scream. We examine the real root of our digital dependency: the deterioration of the social nucleus and the "death" of the American nuclear family. Is the algorithm really the villain, or are we just living in a "Rat Park" that has become increasingly cold and isolated? It’s time for an honest look at addiction, consumption, and the voids we are trying to fill. CHAPTERS 00:00, The Digital Skeleton in the Closet,"The hosts discuss our obsession with diagnosing screen addiction as a medical issue, similar to a broken bone." 01:14, Lawsuits and Digital Fentanyl,"A look at the legal battles against tech giants and the narrative of social media as an "illegal drug." 01:54, Inverting the Assumption: Meet Santiago Duran,Introduction to Duran’s unique perspective as both a former Google/Riot Games executive and a clinical psychologist. 02:51, The Public Health Whiskey Test,"A hypothetical scenario comparing two types of drinkers to define what ""addiction"" actually means clinically." 04:15, The Substance Fallacy,"Explaining why addiction resides in the relationship with a behavior and the deterioration of" "life spheres," "not the substance itself." 05:07, The Refrigerator Analogy,Why blaming a smartphone for doom-scrolling is like blaming a fridge for binge eating. 06:06, High-Velocity Compulsive Consumption,Duran’s macroeconomic argument: how the global economy relies on us buying things compulsively to survive. 07:22, The Cannabis Ledger,Using the legalization of marijuana as an example of the state prioritizing tax revenue over public health data. 08:33, A Structural Problem of the Self,Moving from economics to psychology: defining addiction as a lack of internal structural integrity to handle discomfort. 10:14, The Opposite of Addiction is Connection,"A deep dive into the" "Rat Park" "experiment and how the social environment dictates addictive behavior." 12:06, The Modern Bare Cage,How modern remote work and suburban isolation mirror the conditions of the isolated rats in the original experiments. 13:00, The Architecture of Digital Exploitation,"How features like ""One-Click Buy"" and ""Autoplay"" are engineered to remove ""cognitive friction"" and bypass impulse control." 15:06, The Map and the Destination,"Duran’s analogy that algorithms are just" "maps"" that find the most efficient route to fill our internal voids." 15:58, The Death of the Social Nucleus,A sociological look at how the breakdown of extended kinship networks has left us more vulnerable to digital substitutes. 17:15, Conclusion: Building a Life Robust Enough,"Final thoughts on why the cure for addiction is rebuilding social fabric and embracing the ""messy friction"" of real life."

1. apr. 202642 min