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Content Chaos

Podcast de George and Col

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Historias personales y conversaciones

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Content Chaos with George and Col: Weekly podcast diving straight into meaningful conversations about navigating modern life. George, WorkTech owner and expert at the intersection of business technology and people, teams up with Col, NYU educator and marketing discovery expert. Using their Weekly Review Framework (What Went Well, What Could Be Better, What Did I Learn), they explore personal growth, professional insights, and cultural observations. No fluff—just authentic dialogue that transforms chaos into clarity.

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39 episodios

episode Outside the Algorithm: Digital Detoxes, Out-of-Touch Speakers, and Human Agility artwork

Outside the Algorithm: Digital Detoxes, Out-of-Touch Speakers, and Human Agility

From tone-deaf commencement speeches to personal digital detoxes, this episode explores the boundaries of artificial intelligence and the value of keeping one foot in reality. In Episode 39 of Content Chaos, George and Col brave a few technical difficulties to deliver a grounded, refreshing conversation about technology, culture, and the challenges of staying present in an "extremely online" world. Broadcasting from a makeshift backyard bird sanctuary, Col sets a relaxed tone that stands in stark contrast to the rapid, often overwhelming pace of the modern media landscape.  The co-hosts begin by celebrating the quiet joy of a full house as college students return home, transitioning into a broader reflection on the current state of entertainment. While recognizing that the media and entertainment sectors are experiencing a chaotic, systemic collapse, Col highlights brilliant pieces of creative work that prove great storytelling is far from dead. They praise the Apple TV film Outcome, starring Keanu Reeves and written by Jonah Hill, noting how it captures the anxieties of the industry in a deeply accessible and hilarious way. They also shout out the independent creativity thriving across platforms like Substack, specifically highlighting comic Jenny Yang’s podcast and the literary deep dives found in the Footnotes and Tangents newsletter.  The core tension of the episode shifts to the tech sector's growing cultural disconnect. George points out the recent wave of "tone-deaf" commencement speeches at major universities, where tech executives and real estate developers praised artificial intelligence as the next industrial revolution, only to be met with a wall of boos from graduates entering a precarious job market. They contrast this with Harrison Ford’s warmly received address, which bypassed technology entirely to urge the next generation to reclaim their power and protect the earth.  This cultural friction leads into a candid discussion about the realities of working with AI tools like Claude. George shares his recent experience of catching an AI tool spinning a circuitous, inefficient web of logic, a reminder that AI is simply predicting the next word rather than delivering objective truth. Col echoes this sentiment by drawing on past experiences working at Google, pulling back the curtain on big tech to reveal that even the most celebrated systems suffer from massive internal inefficiencies and aimless processes.  Ultimately, the episode serves as a guide for operating technology rather than being operated by it. Whether attempting a weekend digital detox or setting boundaries with productivity software, George and Col emphasize that moderation, human direction, and psychological acceptance are essential to navigating the digital ecosystem without succumbing to burnout.  In this episode, George and Col discuss AI limitations, digital detox, content creation, media industry trends, tech culture, independent media, Substack newsletters, and podcast strategy.

20 de may de 2026 - 13 min
episode The Bhutan Hypothesis, AI Slop, and the Radical Roots of Mother’s Day artwork

The Bhutan Hypothesis, AI Slop, and the Radical Roots of Mother’s Day

George and Col bridge the gap between personal milestones and global shifts, exploring everything from educational AI design to the soaring costs of living. In episode 38 of Content Chaos, George and Col lean into the spirit of Mental Health Awareness Month by grounding their conversation in a practice of gratitude before diving into the complex socio-economic and technological shifts defining the current moment. The episode serves as a barometer for the modern "triple threat" facing most families: navigating the rapid evolution of AI, managing the "Crazy Town" of political and market volatility, and maintaining personal resilience amidst rising costs. George opens the session with a reflection on local community and personal wins, highlighting the simple joy of a small-town carnival and his daughter’s last-minute soccer victory, a "documentation" of success that offers a stark, heartening contrast to the broader chaos. However, the conversation shifts quickly to the "What Could Have Been Better" segment, where George details the visceral impact of inflation. From gas prices nearing $5.00 a gallon to a nearly $500 grocery bill, he explores how these micro-level economic pressures are often early indicators of larger supply chain shortages, particularly in the agricultural sector. Col shares insights from her recent trip to Boston and her participation in a Northeastern University conference focused on AI and education. A central theme of her experience was the "Harvard Center for Digital Thriving" session, which aimed to give people a new vocabulary for the AI age. She introduces listeners to terms like "Slop Fatigue," "AIdar," and "LL-eMpathy," words designed to move users from a state of "shame" and "secrecy" regarding AI use toward a position of agency and mastery. Col also discusses the global reach of her "Bhutan Hypothesis" on LinkedIn and her official start in a doctoral program at Rutgers, where she aims to lead the redesign of learning environments for an AI-integrated future. The episode takes a sharper turn into the political sphere as Col reflects on the "demented" reality of voting rights being stripped in the South and the "fishy" market activity involving oil trades and Axios reporting. To close, George offers a surprising historical "nugget" about the origins of Mother’s Day, revealing it wasn't originally about flowers and cards, but a 19th-century movement for women to seize political power and end the carnage of war. This episode is a masterclass in balancing the "human signaling" of everyday life with the high-stakes navigation of a world in flux. In this episode, George and Col discuss: Artificial Intelligence in Education, Inflation and Economic Resilience, Digital Literacy, Mental Health and Self-Regulation, Bhutan Hypothesis, AI Vocabulary, Political Accountability, Community Gratitude.

12 de may de 2026 - 17 min
episode Lumon Industries, Luxury Book Clubs, and the Vertical Wall of Demand artwork

Lumon Industries, Luxury Book Clubs, and the Vertical Wall of Demand

From the "severed" halls of Lumon Industries to the $50k cost of entry-level jobs, we explore the widening gap between AI hype and economic reality.  In Episode 37 of Content Chaos, George and Col dive into the sobering reality behind the AI hype cycle, exploring why the "math isn't mathing" for the next phase of automation. The conversation kicks off with a surreal visit to the real-life headquarters of Lumon Industries (from the show Severance), setting the stage for a discussion on corporate culture, "megging" life’s challenges, and the personal highs and lows of the week, from community-led mental health initiatives to family health scares. The heart of the episode addresses a burgeoning "pricing reckoning" in the AI sector. George breaks down the hidden economics of the "agentic future." While basic chat interfaces have been subsidized by big tech to encourage adoption, the compute power required for AI agents and autonomous systems that perform complex tasks is five to 30 times more expensive. When these agents interact in a corporate ecosystem, costs can skyrocket to 100 times that of a standard transaction. For the first time, large enterprises are facing a shocking realization: in many cases, it is actually cheaper to hire a human than to run the AI. Col parallels this with the "Concorde moment" for frontier AI models like ChatGPT. Just as the supersonic Concorde was retired due to high operating costs and fuel economics despite its revolutionary speed, AI models are hitting a "vertical wall of demand" that may be unsustainable. We explore the "subsidy for growth" strategy and why the bet that costs would drop faster than scale has yet to pay off. Beyond the economics, the duo discusses the "land of the blind" where technical jargon is used to mystify simple creative processes. Col shares her experience "coding with Claude" to build her new project, The Bhutan Hypothesis, arguing that the most powerful users of AI aren't just technical experts, but creative "predators" (producers/editors) who understand how to manipulate media. The episode concludes with a look at the "Gilded Age" of modern career coaching and the irony of paying $1,000 for book clubs in an increasingly lonely, disconnected world. Colleen's work on Bhutan: https://colleenkenny.com/bhutanhypothesis/ [https://colleenkenny.com/bhutanhypothesis/] In this episode, George and Col discuss: AI Economics, Compute Costs, Content Strategy, Future of Work, Digital Transformation, Agentic AI, Creative Leadership, Enterprise Technology.

5 de may de 2026 - 26 min
episode Squatter Hunters, Silent Screens, and the Bhutanese Model artwork

Squatter Hunters, Silent Screens, and the Bhutanese Model

A deep dive into social synchronicities, the neuroscience of memory, and why the next era of education might look like 1960s Bhutan.  In Episode 36 of Content Chaos, Col and George bridge the gap between the chaotic reality of modern life and the intentionality required to navigate an AI-driven future. As the calendar turns to May, Mental Health Awareness Month, the duo reflects on a week defined by "heads-down" productivity, cultural deep dives, and the pursuit of presence. The conversation begins with a look at local community involvement, with Col preparing to lead a session for New Jersey students on managing anxiety and developing durable skills for an AI future. This leads into a broader discussion on the value of in-person experiences. Col highlights a recent screening of This Is Not a Drill, a Patagonia film detailing the Rockefeller Family Trust’s shift toward climate activism and environmental racism. This theme of physical presence is echoed in a report from the "NYU IRL" initiative, where educators are finding that "secondhand screen distraction" in classrooms is actively degrading student retention and test scores. George shares a fascinating "learned" segment centered on the subculture of squatters and the rise of "Squatter Hunters" like Flash Shelton. By exploring the history of unhoused activists in 1970s London and the modern legal loopholes that allow squatters to occupy homes, George highlights a growing social tension between property rights and the slow-moving judicial system. This re-examination of the 70s leads to a poignant reflection on Joe Strummer of The Clash. George recounts the story of "Rock the Casbah," originally a song about freedom of expression in Iran that was later heartbreakingly co-opted as a slogan on American bombs during the Gulf conflict. The episode culminates in a look at Bhutan’s unique educational model. As Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) levels the playing field for cognitive tasks, Col argues that the "human" differentiator will shift toward empathy, discernment, and spatial intelligence, qualities Bhutan has preserved by remaining somewhat insulated from the wreckage of endless capitalism. Whether discussing the ethics of property or the neuroscience of memory, the episode reinforces a singular theme: the future is unwritten, and reclaiming our attention from screens is the first step in authoring it. In this episode, George and Col discuss: AI Education, Mental Health Awareness, Digital Distraction, Squatter Rights, Social Synchronicity, Neuroscience of Memory, Bhutanese Education, Human-Centric Skills

29 de abr de 2026 - 20 min
episode Circumambulation, Uncertainty, and the Art of Staying Grounded artwork

Circumambulation, Uncertainty, and the Art of Staying Grounded

A conversation that moves from entrepreneurial dread to Buddhist philosophy, AI workflows, and the joy of rediscovering culture. In this wide‑ranging and deeply human episode, George and Col return from travel, cold snaps, and packed schedules to reflect on a week filled with productivity, tension, and unexpected insight. They open with George’s effort to “get back in the groove… getting back at it, coming off of the trip,” as he reenters a rhythm of client briefings, event planning, and tennis. Col shares her own highlights, including a night of stand‑up comedy with friends, the first fire pit of the season, and a thought‑provoking workshop at Rutgers on “Improv for Democracy,” where she wrestles with the introvert’s eternal struggle: icebreakers. The conversation shifts into deeper terrain as George articulates the entrepreneurial paradox of living with both ambition and dread, feeling compelled to “work harder… like a child of the Great Depression,” even when the data shows the market performing better than expected. His review of merger, acquisition, and funding activity leaves him stunned: “It’s just like, this doesn’t make sense… but it’s actually pretty good.” The tension between macro‑level uncertainty and micro‑level responsibility becomes a central thread. Col centers on a different kind of chaos: AI‑generated design. After inheriting a cluttered, error‑ridden flyer created by colleagues, she enters “an AI slop flyer designing hellscape,” discovering that fixing AI mistakes with more AI often produces new mistakes. Her lament, “I miss designers, real designers,” captures a broader cultural moment: the friction between creative craft and automated tools. The episode’s final section, “what we learned,” opens into global, historical, and philosophical territory. George shares the release of Ireland’s 1926 census, “the first year they were an independent state,” and reflects on the power of archival records to illuminate family histories. He also discusses his evolving relationship with AI tools, describing how he now uses them as “a sidekick or two… helping me organize and summarize,” while studying how major marketers like Tony Robbins build automated funnels around AI‑themed events. Col’s learning moment is the emotional centerpiece of the episode: her interview with Oscar‑nominated Bhutanese filmmaker Pawo Choyning Dorji, creator of Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom. She recounts his explanation of circumambulation, a Buddhist practice of walking around something in reverence, and how he applied it to reconnect with his culture through filmmaking. The conversation leaves her energized, inspired, and eager to bring him into her NYU classroom. Together, George and Col weave a narrative about uncertainty, creativity, technology, and meaning‑making, an episode that moves fluidly from the mundane to the profound, reminding listeners that learning often arrives from unexpected directions. In this episode, George and Col discuss entrepreneurship, AI tools, creative process, economic uncertainty, education and culture, podcast conversation, HR tech adjacent themes, and personal reflection.

21 de abr de 2026 - 19 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Fantástica aplicación. Yo solo uso los podcast. Por un precio módico los tienes variados y cada vez más.
Me encanta la app, concentra los mejores podcast y bueno ya era ora de pagarles a todos estos creadores de contenido

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