The World-Famous Monkey Selfie, FIFA Is Ruining the World Cup and the Legacy of Tim Cook

Dear Fellow Non-Obvious Thinker,

At a bar earlier this past Sunday, the local TV evening news happened to be on in the background and over the course of 15 minutes I saw stories about a shooting, a car accident, a building fire, an abducted child and the upcoming weather. Seeing the world from that perspective was all sensational and negative. I felt sorry for the people who chose to shape their perspective by watching that, and I kept thinking about the difference between watching “the news” versus actually understanding the world beyond its most negative stories.

In one of the lead stories this week, we explore the warped world view that prediction markets may be causing by flattening global events into fodder for betting. This short-sighted view of the world rarely works. A similar challenge is facing Apple now that Tim Cook has announced his departure, and the brand needs to choose a new path.

Finally, Heinz creates the Mr. 57 prize to celebrate the 57th pick in the NFL Draft, a cultural reimagining of Hamlet hits theatres, a monkey selfie that predicted the future of copyright and how FIFA is actively ruining the World Cup.

Enjoy the stories this week and stay curious!

This Week’s New Videos …

What If the Biggest Threat to Human Thinking Isn’t AI?

Most conversations about the future threat to human reasoning start and end with artificial intelligence. That misses a big threat that’s finally getting more attention: prediction markets. The idea behind prediction markets is that anyone can place a wager on the outcome of a real-world event — an election, a war, a policy decision — and the collective odds supposedly reflect the wisdom of the crowd. Kalshi founder Tarek Mansour has vocally defended the concept in interviews, arguing that these markets democratize information and are really nothing new. Some mainstream outlets seem to agree.

Last Week Tonight recently dedicated a segment to exposing the problems with prediction markets, a feature in The Walrus explored how they’re turning geopolitical events into money-making schemes, and Forbes briefly experimented with its own non-monetary prediction market to collect reader perspectives on mass shootings — a move that triggered immediate backlash.

That Forbes experiment reveals why these markets can be problematic. To make an event “bettable,” you have to reduce it to a binary outcome — did a word get mentioned or not, did a thing happen or not. All the nuance, context, and human meaning of the event get stripped away in the process. That’s the real issue with prediction markets and the risk it presents to human thinking.

While AI at least attempts to summarize even complicated ideas, prediction markets usually aim to eliminate it in favor of quick answers. There’s a real difference between crowdsourcing wisdom and crowdsourcing odds because one tries to make sense of the world while the other just tries to profit from it. When the substance of geopolitical events and their human significance get reduced to the most basic elements such as whether a single word is mentioned or not, then the value of understanding gets replaced by triviality.

What We Can Learn from the Complex Legacy of Tim Cook

One of the biggest tech stories this week was related to Apple CEO Tim Cook’s decision to step down after 15 years leading Apple into a future without Steve Jobs. Many business articles are reducing his time down to the bullet point of how he grew Apple’s market cap from $350 billion to an estimated $4 trillion today. Adweek takes a deeper dive into the ups and downs of his tenure, which included very little in terms of real product innovation but a relentless focus on growing services and cutting costs. Looking back, AdWeek suggests his biggest miss may be when it comes to AI:

“Every company has to be on top and ahead with AI. But it’s particularly crucial for Apple, whose brand is built on three pillars: simplicity, humanity, and creativity. It should have led into the AI era. Instead, Siri is an idiot in a classroom filled with geniuses. And there appears to be little if any plan to fix things any time soon. The honest assessment: Cook is a superb operator and a competent strategist who has been a mediocre product visionary.”

Conversely, this lack of product vision and caution-led approach (particularly when it comes to privacy) is being held up by other critics as Cook’s biggest achievement. Indeed, Cook’s greatest legacy may be how he took a brand that was legendary because of a visionary founder … and managed to make it ordinary and every day without killing it. Apple products were once luxurious, fashionable, beautiful, high-end, game-changing status symbols sought after by tech-obsessed early adopters. A decade and a half later as Cook leaves his mark, Apple makes every day, mostly average products following innovative ideas pioneered by competitors, and benefit primarily from trapping consumers into loyalty through the notoriously closed ecosystem they themselves created and their continually profitable app store monopoly.

Now that John Ternus (often described as a “product guy“) is set to take over in September, the big question the industry is wondering is whether Apple will continue to maintain its current success as a fast follower or whether we may see a return to new and bolder bets when the company goes under new leadership.

Heinz Shows the Underappreciated Power of Manufacturing Significance

Brand positioning is usually all about what makes your product or service different. Usually that’s based on something real, but it doesn’t always have to be. This week, in honor of the fact that the NFL Draft is coming to their home city of Pittsburg – Heinz announced that whoever gets selected 57th in the NFL Draft will be crowned “Mr. 57” and given a lifetime supply of Heinz 57 sauce and a brand sponsorship deal. Here’s a fun fact about their iconic sauce – the 57 was completely made up.

In 1896, H.J. Heinz was riding a train in New York City when he spotted a shoe store ad boasting “21 styles.” He liked the idea enough to invent his own number. He chose 5 because it was his lucky number and 7 because it was his wife’s favorite. In other words, the brand assigned significance where none previously existed. It turns out, this idea of significance alchemy isn’t entirely new. Brands have been practicing the art of taking something inherently meaningless and declaring it meaningful for years.

Back in the 1960s, Avis turned the embarrassing fact of being the second-largest rental car company into a brand identity with their iconic “We Try Harder” campaign which remained in use for more than 50 years. Snapple looked at the empty space under a bottle cap and turned it into a canvas for brand personality. Guinness decided settling pub arguments deserved an authoritative institution, accidentally creating one of the bestselling series of all time with their book of World Records. Volkswagen took the Beetle’s most criticized features — being small and un-American — and made smallness an aspiration.

Each of these legendary campaigns invented significance. That’s the non-obvious lesson here. The best marketing move is sometimes about choosing something to matter and then believing it so much that it becomes real.

The Non-Obvious Media Recommendation of the Week

Hamlet (Movie)

There was a time in my life when I had memorized several monologues from Hamlet and spent hours studying the play. I’ve since seen many English language film versions, including going to see Kenneth Branagh’s “full” text version with a running time of over four hours while I was in college (by myself, obviously, since no one else was crazy enough to sit through it with me). Clearly, I’m a fan … so when the newest version with a mostly South Asian cast starring Riz Ahmed was announced, I knew I’d be headed to the theater to see it.

In this actor’s dream role, Ahmed is convincingly conflicted as the emotional prince Hamlet as he struggles to avenge his father. For longtime readers (and watchers) of the play, the nuances in how certain scenes and words are played is what makes watching Hamlet so compelling. What characters are we sympathetic towards? Who are the real heroes and who are the victims? One of the reasons the popularity of this play continues is because of how flexible these interpretations can be.

So yes, this week my choice for the non-obvious media you should definitely check out is this production of Hamlet. Partially because it’s very good and offers a fascinating cultural revision on how the play is usually performed. But also, I love the larger message of any production of Hamlet. That we even pay so much attention to the words, words, words that people say, it is the interpretation of those words into the way a story is told that really stays with us.

The Non-Obvious Book of the Week

Custodians of Wonder

There are people keeping ancient customs alive and their stories are in danger of being lost to the world. This is a book about how we can all remember them. Travel journalist Eliot Stein spent years traveling around the world to spend time with night watchmen, mirror makers, rope bridge builders and many others to ask them about their craft and why they continue to do what they have always done. Equal parts anthropology and travel memoir, this book not only takes you into stories that may soon be forgotten – it offers a bigger idea. In studying these dying cultures, we might also learn something about what it means to keep traditions that matter alive and what role each of us might play in shaping this for future generations.

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About the Non-Obvious Book Selection of the Week:

Every week I share a new “non-obvious” book selection. Titles featured here may be new or classic books, but the date of publication doesn’t really matter. My goal is to elevate great reads that perhaps deserve a second look which you might have otherwise missed.

Even More Non-Obvious Stories …

Every week I always curate more stories than I’m able to explore in detail. Instead of skipping those stories, I started to share them in this section so you can skim the headlines and click on any that spark your interest:

How are these stories curated?

Every week I spend hours going through hundreds of stories in order to curate this email. Looking for a speaker to inspire your team to become non-obvious thinkers through a keynote or workshop? 

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