In this episode we sit down with Billy Oppenheimer (researcher/writer for Ryan Holiday and Rick Rubin; author of the Six at Six newsletter) to talk about taste, note cards, and using AI without losing the human filter.
We get into:
- AI as tool, taste as foundation: why resonance with readers remains an impossible bet
- Ryan’s note card system: “make notes for an ignorant stranger” so future-you can use them
- From serendipity to synthesis: stacking 8–12 cards into a theme and letting weird specificity emerge
- Where AI fits: upstream tutoring for tricky references, downstream lists and sentence variants—never the spark
- Speed vs. substance: is AI actually good, or just fast
- Neck-down work: when to stop optimizing and just do the tedious thing
- Reading as an edge in the AI era: finding stories outside the training data
If you make things, Billy’s playbook is simple: read widely, capture diligently, stack note cards until a theme clicks—then use AI as a tutor and helper, not a substitute. Subscribe for more candid conversations on craft, research, and making work that lasts.
Whoa Vol. 2
This episode is part of a limited series of ten in-depth conversations put together by sublime.app with some of our favorite thinkers and creatives where we explore how artificial intelligence is changing and challenging creative work.
👉 Get your copy of the zine: https://sublime.app/whoa
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