Weekly Filet

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

Carefully curated recommendations for curious minds who love when something makes them go «Huh, I never thought of it this way!».

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Nothing matters more than what you pay attention to.

Welcome to my little corner of the internet. I'm David, a journalist and a curious generalist.

The Weekly Filet is my humble part in the necessary rebellion against the enshittification of the greatest information ecosystem we've ever had.

We live in an age where trustworthy and substantial information is hard to come by.

  • Sloppy AI content is flooding the zone.
  • Autocrats and their billionaire friends attack free speech and undermine any sense of shared reality.
  • Entertainment is where the money flows, while serious news organisations and journalists struggle.

If we don't actively resist, all of this is imposed on us through hyperpersonalised, superaddictive feeds.

They are convenient. And they work so well because they show you what you already like, confirm what you already believe, and get you enraged about what you're convinced is wrong.

Real value, though, comes from things that make you pause. That invite you to take a different perspective. That make you rethink.

That pause and the brief moment of reflection is a win in itself, always. Sometimes, though, it's the seed that grows into something bigger. Changes in how you see the world and how you choose to act often start with that one irritation: Huh, I never thought of it that way!

It comes down to this: Nothing matters more than what you pay attention to. Where you invest your time, what you open your heart and your mind to.

The Weekly Filet is all about mindful attention.

To what really matters. To what truly moves you. And to people who inspire.

I will be there, by your side, trying to be a helpful guide in this endeavour.

Join the rebellion. And get your weekly dose of «Huh, I never thought of it this way!» moments.

Treasure trove

2852 recommended links since 2011

A Time of Monsters

The first in a series of public lectures by everyone’s favourite Dutch historian and Weekly Filet regular Rutger Bregman. In his trademark populist-optimist style, he delivers a scathing critique of progressive elites and of Europe’s failure to fill the moral vacuum left by a United States gone MAGA. The polar opposites between which the future is shaped, Bregman argues, are not left versus right, but rather courage versus cowardice.

From Weekly Filet #553, in November 2025.

    Are we doomed?

    A long essay on how two of this century’s biggest challenges facing humanity are interconnected (by the number 2!). And an exploration of the question whether we are at the very beginning or towards the very end of the human story.

    From Weekly Filet #553, in November 2025.

      I Hate Mysteries

      It feels only apt that I keep you in suspense about why I think you should listen to this.

      From Weekly Filet #553, in November 2025.

        The 2025 Future Perfect 25

        Vox’s annual Future Perfect list if always a great place to discover inspiring people that make you feel a little bit more hopeful about the future. This year’s theme is: meet the heroes keeping global progress alive.

        From Weekly Filet #552, in November 2025.

          The end of progress against extreme poverty?

          It’s one of the biggest success stories of history, and few people are aware of it: Over the past 35 years, on average 115,000 people left extreme poverty behind – per day. Then again, among those who knew about this progress, few might be aware that the trend is about to reverse. What’s going on?

          From Weekly Filet #552, in November 2025.

            How Big Should Your Tent Be?

            As more and more people grow disillusioned by Trump and are ready to cut ties, keep Rebecca Solnit in mind: «You can disagree about almost everything, and a lot of it is moral issues, but if there’s no room for people to change their minds, learn, shift, improve, then there’s no room for your coalition to grow.»

            From Weekly Filet #552, in November 2025.

              In what specific way are you annoying?

              «What makes you annoying to other people is not the thing you’re worried makes you unloveable, but whatever traits or behaviors or knee-jerk ways of operating you’ve developed to correct for said worry.» Thanks for the food for thought. Unfortunately, I now have annoya-paranoia.

              From Weekly Filet #552, in November 2025.

                How to Write a Joke

                This made me laugh, and taught me something. Elliot Kalan, former head writer for The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, on «joke farming», his method of creating jokes without the need for a stroke of genius.

                From Weekly Filet #552, in November 2025.