Weekly Filet

Make sense of what’s happening, and imagine what could be.

Carefully curated recommendations on what to read, watch and listen to. For nerds and changemakers who love when something makes them go «Huh, I never thought of it this way!».

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What to expect

Hi, I'm David. A journalist, and a curious generalist.
I've been curating the best of the web for my newsletter since 2011. I'd love to be your diligent curator, too.

Recommendations in the Weekly Filet are things I want my friends to see.

Things that tickle and delight a curious mind.

Articles, books, podcasts, graphics, videos, photographs,...The form is never the limit.

I let these questions guide me:
1. Does it help understand a complex, important issue?
2. Does it foster empathy by making you see the world through others' eyes?
3. Does it inspire self-reflection?

If it's timely, that's good. If it's timeless, that's better.

If in doubt, I prefer nerdy, witty, ambiguous. Solutions-oriented and actionable. Candid.

Don't expect news. Expect new insights.
Expect to be surprised.

Surprise me now!

Treasure trove

2682 recommended links since 2011

Thirty lonely but beautiful actions you can take right now which probably won’t magically catalyze a mass movement against Trump but that are still wildly important

I didn’t expect too much from this list, so I almost didn’t read it. Don’t make the same mistake. I found it both empathetic and actionable. It’s understandable to hope for larger movements and more powerful actors to «do something». But in doing so, the author argues, «we miss the opportunity to be the lonely voice for justice in our own community, the person who makes it a little easier for a second and third and fourth lonely voice to start perking up by our side.»

From Weekly Filet #221, in March 2025.

    Greening the Solar System

    An article on how we could transform Mars into a second home for humanity – that doesn’t mention Elon Musk? Count me in.

    From Weekly Filet #221, in March 2025.

      The Government Knows A.G.I. Is Coming

      While the web is getting polluted with AI-generated garbage, the race towards artificial general intelligence is real. The Biden administration’s AI advisor believes AI could exceed all human cognitive capabilities within the next 2-3 years. Which means: during Trump’s presidency. Obviously, other experts disagree with this timeline, but even if it’s unlikely yet possible, it’s a scenario to take very seriously.

      From Weekly Filet #221, in March 2025.

        The hidden power of introverts: How to thrive without changing who you are

        What a great episode, for introverts and extroverts. If you’re an introvert, you’ll feel seen in this conversation with Susan Cain. You’ll hear a lot of helpful advice on how to thrive in contexts where extroversion is favoured. Not by becoming more extroverted yourself, but by leaning into the unique strengths of introversion. If you’re not an introvert, you should still listen to this episode. It will help you see potential in people where you might have missed it.

        From Weekly Filet #221, in March 2025.

          AI Slop Is a Brute Force Attack on the Algorithms That Control Reality

          Humans, eh? We invent this amazing thing called the internet. Then we invent this amazing thing called artificial intelligence. And what do we do with it? Create stupid fakes, flood the internet with it, and the algorithms we created love it. This is a sobering analysis of where things stand. «There is a near total collapse of the information ecosystem and thus of reality online. […] Many users seem to have completely lost the ability to tell what is real and what is fake, or simply do not care anymore.»

          From Weekly Filet #221, in March 2025.

            The truth about being multi-passionate

            This hit close to home. All these struggles and doubts Adam describes are mine, too. And what a wonderful, empowering video he’s turned them into. On accepting that you’ll never be a specialist, on embracing that you’re a generalist. Where not sticking to one thing isn’t failure, but your way of moving forward. In an ever-repeating cycle of «learn, build, grow, and then move on to the next challenge». Where your superpower is hiding behind what you might perceive as a weakness.

            From Weekly Filet #220, in March 2025.

              Huh? The valuable role of interjections

              We’re taught to…um…avoid them, but what if those small…um…seemingly superfluous interjections are actually at the heart of language itself, and something that sets human language apart from artificially generated speech? An appreciation post for the «traffic signals to regulate the flow of conversation».

              From Weekly Filet #220, in March 2025.

                Inside Disney’s Secret Test Lab

                Something I never thought of: When Disney brings its movie franchises to their theme parks, special effects need to be recreated with actual, physical engineering. Or imagineering, as they call it. This is a fascinating tour of their R&D lab, featuring lightsabers, robots optimised for cuteness and a metal Spider-Man that can be catapulted across buildings.

                From Weekly Filet #220, in March 2025.

                  For many of us, it doesn’t cost much to improve someone’s life, and we can do much more of it

                  Foreign aid is always an easy target for people arguing that the state is wasting money on the wrong people. This analysis shows that the world isn’t spending all that much on foreign aid, even though it’s usually a highly effective investment in making lives better. It comes with this fascinating (and frankly: depressing) finding from a survey in the US: On average, respondents estimated that the government spends 31% of its budget on foreign aid. They think it should be far less, more like 10%. Which…is still ten times of what the US actually spends on foreign aid (before Trump and Musk, that was).

                  From Weekly Filet #220, in March 2025.