EPISODE · Apr 6, 2026 · 36 MIN
29: Pruned Futures
from Unseen Unknown · host Jasmine Bina
Some of our most prominent expectations of the future just died. In this episode, we explore what replaces them. We start with achievement. For decades, culture has been organized around progress and accomplishment. But as AI accelerates discovery and takes over more forms of achievement, that model begins to break. Achievement becomes less meaningful, and attention shifts toward experience, connection, and how life feels. At the same time, AI has become a mythology. As belief in collective human solutions declines, many futures have collapsed into one idea: AI will solve it for us. Not because we know it will, but because it is the only narrative that can hold that scale of hope. This leaves us in a liminal space. Old systems no longer work, and new ones have not formed. You can see this in motherhood and beauty as well. The idea that motherhood can be incrementally improved has given way to a need for entirely new models. Beauty is also fragmenting, moving from a single ideal to many competing definitions, with cultural signals reflecting a rejection of the old standard. Across all of this, the pattern is the same. We are moving from progress to ambiguity. From clear signals to contested ones. From knowing what to strive for to having to invent it ourselves. Links to interesting things mentioned in this episode and further reading: The Futures That Just Died (Concept Bureau) Deep Utopia (Nick Bostrom) Awakening from the Meaning Crisis (John Vervaeke) The Singularity Is Near (Ray Kurzweil) Meta told to pay $375m for misleading users over child safety (BBC) Check out our Substack for more brand strategy thinking, and our community Exposure Therapy.
What this episode covers
Sometimes futures fade, but more often, they die immediately. In this episode we map the branches of the future tree that have just been cut off, from achievement-driven lives to the belief that humans will solve global crises together. In their place, AI has become our default mythology, an answer to problems we no longer believe we can solve ourselves, while meaning shifts from achievement to experience. As these futures collapse, so do the signals that once told us what to strive for. What’s left is a culture between operating systems, trying to redefine identity, value, and desire.
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29: Pruned Futures
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