
Remi Carlioz on Luck & Contradiction
THAT BUSINESS OF MEANING Podcast
Evolving Relationship with Generative AI
Remi shares initial guilt, environmental and job concerns, then choosing to use AI ethically and purposefully.
Remi Carlioz is a French-born creative director, writer, and cultural strategist based in New York. Founder of Studio Paname and Love Machine, he has led campaigns for Lizzo, Rihanna, and PUMA, bridging art, politics, and commerce through a humanistic lens that explores creativity, technology, and cultural transformation. He has a fantastic newsletter, La Nona Ora
So I start all my conversations with the same question, which I borrowed from a friend of mine who helps people tell their story. And itâs such a beautiful question, which is why I stole it. But itâs pretty big, so I kind of over-explain itâthe way that Iâm doing right now. So before I ask it, I want you to know that youâre in total control, and you can answer or not answer any way that you want to. But the question is: Where do you come from? And again, you can answer any way that you want to.
Well, thatâs a loaded question. I think, look, thereâs the obvious answerâthe very basic one. Iâm French. I live in New York City. I work globally. Iâm actually not only French nowâIâm also a U.S. citizen, which probably matters for our conversation.
So thatâs the obvious, but itâs not very helpful. Itâs interesting because people ask me, âWhere is home?â and I canât answer that question anymore.
Obviously, Iâve been in the U.S. for 15 years now. I used to answer âParis,â but New York is not really home, and Paris is not really home anymore.
So I struggle to answer this question. I think if I were to answerâbecause I was thinking a lot, given the political situation in France and in the U.S., about my own situationâI come from luck.
And Iâm saying I come from luck because I was reading this very interesting philosopher called Milanovic, who worked on this concept he called âcitizenship premium,â which means that 50 to 60% of your total life income is just determined by where youâre born or your country of citizenship.
And I have this double advantageâbeing born in France, living in the U.S., and having dual citizenshipâwhich means 60 to 70% of my life income is just determined by the pure luck of being born in France and being both a French and U.S. citizen.
Which, I guess, gives me a moral duty to think about it. I could have been born in Uganda. I could have been born in Bangladesh. And obviously, the citizenship premium for those countries is way lower.
So I come from luck. And itâs very important in my trajectory.
I also think I comeâand I used to feel guilty about this, you know, 2,000 years of Judeo-Christian guiltâand I come from a bunch of contradictions. Who said that? Bob DylanâI come from multitudes.
So I come from the collision between high and low, between theory and practice, between French rationalism and U.S. capitalism. I come from a lot of contradictions, which I feel now are part of me, and Iâm fairly comfortable with.
And the American citizenship is relatively recent, is it not?
Yeah, I think I got the citizenship in June or something like that. So itâs like four or five months.
And what was that like, to become a citizen?
Yeah, I mean, you know what? For me, itâs important because Iâve been living here 15 years. But once again, I was in a room when I took the oath with, I donât know, 100 people, and it was clear that for some people, it was way, way more important. And Iâm not saying important morally, but like economicallyâlike, as security, the ability to stay in this country, to be safe. So I had mixed feelings.
It was important to me, to my wife, to my kids. But then I realized that for me, it was less important than for some people. And we can see that if you read the press and look at the newsâfor some people, itâs actually a matter of life or death.
And it was not to me. But it adds a level of contradiction. To hold two passports adds a level where, when people ask you where is home, it becomes harder to answer.
I love how you said itâs not a matter of life and death, even though it was for people that you saw there. What is it a matter of for you? Why do it at all?
I did it because it made sense after 15 years. I had a green card for five or six years. My kids grew up here. It made sense. And I wanted to be involved. I wanted to have the right to vote.
I donât know if you saw, but there were elections last November where President Trump was elected for another four years. I submitted my application literally the day after because I wanted to have the right to vote. I wanted the First Amendment and the freedom of speech. And I wanted to be free.
But also, you know, this country gave me a lotâa lot of opportunities, to me, to my kids. And I wanted, in a way, to give back. And it just made sense.
When I say life and death, Iâve worked a lot recently on this notion of border and this notion of frontier. You know, American people love this notion of frontier, and they hate borders, which is interesting because in French, itâs the same word. We donât have two words. Itâs âfrontière,â and it means both border and frontier.
In English, you have two words. But I realized that for me, and for people in my situation, I can cross borders. I can use whatever passport I need so easily. I just jump on a plane. I go for the weekend to Paris or for work. I come back. I go to Mexico City. For me, borders are not an issue. Itâs immaterial.
Whereas for 90% of the population, a border is literally a wall. So it was interesting for me to think about what âborderâ means for me, and what this notion of frontier means as well.
Yeah, thatâs amazing. The language part of thatâI remember that youâve written. I want to go back. Do you remember as a child what you wanted to be when you grew upâyoung Remy in France?
Yeah. I wanted firstâI was fascinated by the ocean. It didnât last very long, but I wanted to beâI donât know the word in English. In France, itâs âocĂŠanographe.â Sorry, the guy who goesâlike...
It lasted like two years, but I was absolutely captivated by the ocean. I donât know why.
And then quite early, I think I was involved in politics. Quite earlyâat 13 or 14. And then I wanted to be a diplomat. My dream was to be an ambassador.
And then I met someone who was fairly high up in the French government who told me, âYou need three criteria to be a diplomat, and you have none of them.â The criteria being: coming from moneyâI donât. Coming from a noble family in FranceâI donât. And having done one of the elite schools in France called LâENA, which is the equivalent of Harvard or Yaleâand I hadnât.
So he said, âYou can try, but youâll never be a diplomat.â Which was hard to hear, but it was a good piece of advice because at least I didnât waste my time.
Wow. And you said you were involved in politics at 13. What was your involvement?
Well, I thinkâIâm sorryâI think I grew up in the â80s, and we had a conjunction of very interesting events. And probably the collision of all those political events was very formative to me.
So for example, I was very young, but in â81, we got the first socialist presidentâknowing that in Europe, âsocialistâ is not an insult. It means left-wing. It means caring for a greater good or for public service.
We got the first French president elected in â81 after 25 years of right-wing presidentsâDe Gaulle, etc. His name was François Mitterrand. And what he didâand for my family, it was a huge relief. Itâs actually the first timeâI was 10 years old, something like thatâthe first time that I drank champagne with my parents.
And then he abolished the death penalty. He decriminalized homosexuality. He introduced a fifth week of time off. He reduced the working week toâI canât remember exactly, probably 45 hours a week or something like that. So at least the first two years, it was like this new utopia.
Then it became more complicated because the left converted to neoliberalism. But at least the first two years were very hopeful.
Then at the same time, there was this movement in Poland, if you remember, with Lech WaĹÄsaâthe SolidarnoĹÄ movement of unions and strikes in GdaĹsk. And I donât know whyâI need to do some researchâbut it was extremely popular in France. We were all wearing the pin. There was a great movement of solidarity.
At the same time, two or three years after, there was this anti-racist movement called SOS Racisme in France. And then what happened in â86, the majority lost the election, and it was a right-wing government for the first time in two yearsâbut a very bad one. Thatâs when the National Front started to gain ground, had members of parliament, and there was repressionâvery hardliners on security, and so on.
So those five years were very formative to my political and intellectual beliefs. And I guess thatâs where I started to be involved in politics.
Yeah. And what are you doing now? Catch us upâsort of, where are you now, and what are you doing for work? I know itâs a big leap from there to where you are now.
Yeah, yeah. I basically sold my soul to capitalism when I came to the U.S.
So yeah, I spent 10 or 15 years in politics, and 10 or 15 years working with brands. And your question is interesting because six months ago, it would have been very easy for me to answer. For the past 10 years, I was basically a creative director in-houseâmostly global creative director for Puma, then at Crocs, Hedo, then at Blue Bottle Coffee, then at Fabletics. So it was very easy to answer, âIâm a creative director.â
Since June, I took a different turn, and now I actually donât know how to answer this question. Because Iâm back toâI contain multitudes. Or Iâm the b*****d child of many contradictions.
I still have my creative and brand strategy agencyâthatâs doing okay for some clients. I co-created with partners in France a global information warfare agency to fight disinformation in France. I spend 50% of my time heading strategy and being chairman of the advisory board of a major philanthropic fund against antisemitism here in the U.S. And then I co-created, with partners in Portland, Oregon, an AI content studio.
So I guess thatâs a lot. I guess I would need to think about whatâs the red threadâand talk to my shrinkâbut Iâm comfortable with that now. I think, back to your question, I donât know exactly where home is, but I know that Iâm very good in all the spaces between things. And I feelâand I felt very guilty or unsure about that for many years. Now Iâm very comfortable with it, and itâs how my brain operates. Iâm very happy to be in betweenâin spaces in between.
Yeah. As much as this space doesnât really have any labels or titles, when do you feel like you first discovered that it was a way you could make a living?
I think by accident. I was reflecting on this imposter syndrome that a lot of creative people say they have. And in a way, I did have it. I also think itâs kind of like false or fake modesty sometimes.
Itâs very easy to say, âOh, I have imposter syndrome,â but at the same time, Iâm global creative director for a $5 billion brand.
I remember preciselyâI got let go in June from my previous job. And what I would have done previously is go to LinkedIn straight away, update my resume, do some b******t post trying to sound smart, send 100 resumes, and get two answers.
But I woke up one morning and consciously decided I didnât want to work for Corporate Americaâat least not in-houseâbecause the violence of capitalism really impacted me mentally, psychologically, and my family. And I was like, I donât have to play this game.
I still have corporate clients, but Iâm on my own. I decide. I donât have a boss. Itâs not easy. Itâs more challenging, but itâs also way more rewarding.
So I genuinely remember this morning when I was like, âF*** it. Iâm not going back. Iâm going to do my own things. Letâs see if it works.â And I was lucky enoughâit works.
Iâm curious about what to ask now. Maybe Iâm curious about the violence of capitalismâyou mentioned it. What were you thinking of when you said that? As a creative director, as somebody who works in this space?
Yeah. Look, I thinkâitâs a weird thing. Because obviously, coming from my positionâI discussed what Milanovic called the citizenship premiumâIâve highly benefited from capitalism, or from neoliberalism. I live in a nice apartment in Brooklyn. Iâm a wannabe hipster. I benefitâI highly benefitâfrom capitalism. My kids did, my wife did.
So itâs a bit ambivalent, the relationship I have with it. I donât want to abolish capitalism. I donât want that. But I think there are ways to make it more humanâlike in Northern Europe, like in France.
In France, when youâre fired, you have a three-month notice period. You have an adult conversation where you sit with your boss to understand the decision. Then you have some kind of unemployment wages, some kind of coaching. Iâm not saying itâs perfect, but at least itâs human.
Here, after spending 10 hours a day working at a jobâspending more time with your colleagues than with your familyâyouâre let go in 15 minutes. They basically cancel your life from their system. You lose your email access within two minutes, and your colleagues donât call you back. Not out of maliceâitâs just because they move on. Because youâre not useful anymore.
Compared to other countries in which Iâve worked, the violence of capitalism hereâwhich, by the way, is probably very much rooted in slavery, which we donât have in the same way in Franceâwe had other problems. France was a very bad colonialist country. But the second you start looking at individuals like goodsâwhere you can put a price tag on themâit has consequences on how you look at value.
Thatâs the first part. The second partâI think in America, thereâs a tendencyâdo you know the McNamara fallacy? Robert McNamara was Secretary of Defense during the Vietnam War. He was trained as an accountant, I think, at GM or somewhere. He didnât mean to, but he was counting everything in the Vietnam War on a spreadsheetâthe number of deaths, the body count, etc. At the same time, he was losing the war.
It became the McNamara fallacy: if you canât count it, it doesnât matter.
I think that became foundational to American capitalism. Everything has to be quantified. If itâs not quantified, it doesnât have value.
Whereasâat least from my perspectiveâeverything that matters to me is not quantifiable. Honestly, when Iâm on my deathbedânot too soon, hopefullyâwhat will matter to me is not whatâs quantifiable. Itâs my wife, my kids, an artwork, a landscape in Tuscany, the smile of my first childâor second child, sorry if sheâs listening.
All of thisâyou canât put a price tag on it. And that really matters. So yeah, the violence of capitalism really wore me down, year after year, here. France isnât perfect. Itâs just more human in how we deal with individuals.
Yeah. Yeah. Thatâs amazing. I really appreciate you sharing all that. And I know thatâI mean, that soundsâitâs a horrible experience.
No, itâs not. Sorry to interrupt you, Peter. Itâs not a horrible experience. I mean, the American Dream worked for me. But I got swallowed. I got imprisoned. I lost my freedom.
Have you been on LinkedIn recently?
Yeah.
I mean, the level of b******t on LinkedInâthe quotes, the self-congratulationsâitâs like LinkedIn is probably today the epitome of what neoliberalism has become. And itâs frightening.
So when you said, âIt must have been terribleââno. I was privileged and lucky enough, and the American Dream worked for me. Itâs just that at my age, after a certain timeâsorryâit was not for me anymore. It was too violent.
And I was like, why do I have to put myself through this? And I canât even imagine what it means for most people, for whom the American Dream is not working.
Yeah. I appreciate the correction very much. Tell me more about what you see. I want to hear more about your diagnosis of LinkedInâwhat you see when you go there.
I mean, itâs everything I hate. Itâs just purely performative. Including for myself. I realized that when I have to postâand I try to post less and lessâbut sometimes I have to, because itâs an important professional network. Thereâs nothing authentic. Thereâs nothing genuine.
Thereâs this fake vulnerability. Everyoneâs fishing for compliments. Now itâs 90% AI-generated. Itâs just the same quotes, the same... Yeah. âSo my routine is: I wake up at 4 a.m., Iâm doing 100 squats. Then I read and write my gratitude journal for two hours. Now itâs 6 a.m., I take care of my kids for two hours.â Itâs justâfirst, itâs false. And then itâs b******t.
Itâs not helpful. But alsoâitâs like, come on. Canât people just be likeâI was going to say âthemselves,â but maybe the problem is they are themselves. I donât know. But likeâlet me know the last time you saw something interesting on LinkedIn.
I mean, something thatâlike, âHuh. That made me think differently.â Yeah. It can be interesting from a business standpoint. âThis company acquired this company.â âThis company released this new ad campaign.â Okay. You look at it. So I still go on LinkedIn from time to time. But itâs some kind of b******t generator. Yes. Quotes always from the same people. Itâs tiring.
Yes. I love tooâyou reminded me. So, my daughter goes to a Waldorf school. And so I found myself at some lecture, I think a while ago, with a woman in that communityâsort of a matriarch. And youâre familiar with Waldorf and Rudolf Steiner? Do you know him?
Yep.
And so I always rememberâshe had this quote, which I paraphrase, but she said something to the effect that Steiner had written these observations about the West and the East. And he said about the Westâthat it wanted to be a machine when it grew up. That was what I took from what she said. I donât know what she was saying about it, but I thought about that.
And I think about that a lot. As somebody whoâI love talking to people. Iâm a qualitative researcher. Itâs a human experience to understand everything. All the value happens in these qualitative interactions. So Iâm always looking to make the case for the qualitative.
And you justâI mean, you just articulated perfectly the terror of the quantification of everything. And I just want to sort of celebrate how clear you were about it, because I totally think itâs the case. And AI only seems to sort of manifest it at another levelâyou know what I mean? Where we stillâwe just have this instinct.
And maybe thereâs something about the articulationâthat itâs an aspiration. Thereâs something aspirational about this mechanization that we have in the West. What does that do? What do you make of that?
So what do you meanâwhen Steiner said, âbuilding a machineââwhat do you think he meant? Or what do you think your daughter meant by âa machineâ? Because a machine can be very positive. It can be very negative. It can break you. Soâwhat kind of machine?
Yeah, wellâit was a woman in the community, not my daughter. It was a woman in the community who was talking at a lecture for parents. And what I took her to be sayingâwas that Rudolf Steiner said the West kind of wants to be a machine when it grows up. And maybe he was writing between the wars. Maybe he wasâI thought about it as maybe just this industrialization of the civilization in the West.
Yeah. And maybe sometimes, unfortunately, itâs a Rube Goldberg machine. But yeah, itâs interesting. I donât know if it answers your question, but obviously I thought a lot about this. And I read a lot about this as well. And as you know, I have my own newsletter.
I think whatâs interesting in the Westâor at least in this current neoliberal modelâis that, and you can see it with President Trump right nowâthereâs a French philosopher who just wrote a book called Finitude Capitalism. So, the fact that capitalism isâdo you say âfiniteâ or âfiniteâ? F-I-N-I-T-E.
Finite.
Finite, sorry. Capitalism is finite right now. So for the past 300 years, to use a very stereotypical analogy, we would grow the pie, with the hope that everybody could have a piece of the pie by growing it. But then what we realized, for the past 30 years, is that the pie is finite.
Whether itâs in terms of natural resources, or people, or whateverâitâs now finite. There is no new territory to explore. Thatâs probably why Musk wants to go to Mars. So the only way to grow the pie is not to share the common goods or the resources with your neighborâitâs to steal it.
Itâs to literally steal the pizza slice from your neighbor. Meaning, âWe want to annex Greenland.â Or âCanada is going to be the 51st state.â Or âWeâre going to take over the Panama Canal.â So back to violenceânow that we canât grow the pie, you have to steal the pizza slice from your neighbor. And itâs pretty brutal. Because itâs back to mercantilism and imperialism.
And thatâs why some of the right-wing people admireâwhat was the name of that president? Edward McKinney, or whatever? At the end of the 19th century.
McKinley.
Yeah, McKinley. So I think it adds another level of violence. Rather than sharing the resources with everyone in an equal wayâand once again, sorry to come back to thatâthis citizenship premium I benefited from is a pure accident. A pure coincidence. Pure luck.
So if you donât realize that, why would you share common goods or resources with other people? Youâre like, âIâm fine stealing the pizza slice and eating it myself.â So in a finite world, this machine that is breaking a lot of peopleâit completely redefines how we need to interact, in terms of sharing resources and wealth, and this notion of solidarity.
Iâm looking at my notes and reminded of yourâyou mentioned your newsletter. Whatâs theâcan you talk about the inspiration for the newsletter? And the name itself, I think, has a meaning.
Itâs called La Nona Ora, which in Italian means âthe ninth hour.â And itâsâIâm a huge fan of a contemporary artist called Maurizio Cattelan. Heâs also, by the way, a creative director, a very brilliant creative director, but heâs mostly known for being a contemporary artist. Very well known. Almost as a joke, you knowâheâs the guy who taped a banana at Art Basel on the wall and sold it for $300,000 or something like that.
But he did a piece where the PopeâI think it was John Paul IIâis hit by a meteorite. Meteorite, meteorite. I never know how to say âIâ or âEâ in English. Meteorite. On the ground.
I saw this piece the first time in Italy, and then in France, and so on. And itâs basically a long story about how to questionâconstantly questionâthe seats of power and the systems of power. And so my newsletter, in a very pretentious wayâbut Iâm French, so Iâm allowed to be pretentiousâis looking at, through language, through art, through economic models, through everything, at the systems of power. And how language is a power, how art or propaganda can be a power.
Becauseâback to your question about capitalism and a machineâwhatâs very specific about the U.S. compared to France is that everything is very individual in a way. In the U.S., your success is individual and your failures are individual. So if you fail in America, itâs because you didnât work hard enough, or itâs because youâre bad, or itâs because youâre stupid. Which can be true, but it also completely cancels the systemâand how people, what people place and room in these systems. And itâs not true. But itâs the same when youâre successfulâitâs individual. Itâs because youâre a genius, and itâs because youâre smart, and so on. Forgetting about the fact that most of the innovation and most success came from publicly funded labs and universities. And what about the roads, and what about childcare, and what aboutâ
So there is no myth of the lone genius. As smart as people are, they are part of an ecosystem. So the fact that American capitalism individualizes failure and individualizes success made me think about the system theyâre part of. Because if you donât look at the system, I think the picture you have of society is only partial.
Yes. I mean, this makes me want to ask you aboutâmaybe exploreâthe sort of nameless role that you play in between things, right? Itâs sort of a banal question though, but when we think about what is the role of creativity, that you can be doing what you do in the context of antisemitism in the U.S., and that you can be doing it also about disinformation in France, that you can be doing it about coffee or sneakersâlike, what are you doing? Or whatâs the role of what you do in all of those contexts? Whatâs the role of creativity in combating antisemitism? Whatâs the role of creativity in fighting disinformation?
Well, if I had the answer, I would be very, very happyâand probably very rich as well. So thatâs literally the question youâre asking. Itâs not banal at all. Itâs literally what keeps me up at night.
I want to believe that for everything you mentionedâwhether itâs a brand campaign for Blue Bottle Coffee or Puma, or whether itâs fighting antisemitism, or whether itâs misinformationâI want to believe that creativity more and more, by the way, has a huge role to play. Especially because of the algorithm world weâre living in. So, you know, itâs harder and harder to cut through the noise, to rig the algorithm, to play with the algorithm. And I think one of the ways is creativity.
You constantly have to be more creative than your competitor, or your adversary, or your enemyâbecause youâre losing. And then the larger question is, like, what is creativity? And I have a fairly loose definition of this because, once again, I come from high and low. So creativity is not just Mark Rothko and David Hockney and, you know, Philip Roth. Itâs also the memes. You know, a meme can cut through the noise, and can be viral, and can be extremely brilliant.
The problem is, when youâre fighting against antisemitismâor, as you might have understood by now, Iâm fairly left-wingâis like, what kind of tools do you adopt to counter what your opponent or adversary is using? You know? And itâs hard. Itâs very, very hard.
I very much admireâI think itâs Michelle Obama who saidââWhen they go low, we go high.â And on paper, itâs very noble. In an age of algorithm and TikTok and misinformation, does it work, really? When they go low, you go high? I donât know. I donât have the answer. Thatâs something that really, morally and in terms of efficiency, keeps me up at night. Because yes, I want to keep my moral principles, but alsoâwill I be able to create a piece of creative thatâs going to be picked up by the algorithm by, you know, âwe go highâ? I donât have the answer.
But for example, when it comes to antisemitismâthe Jewish population is 0.2% of the 8 billion population in the world. So Jews are outnumbered, by definition. On social media, everywhere. So if youâre not creative, you donât have a voice. You simply donât have a voice.
And itâs the sameâI donât want to compare antisemitism with anything thatâs less serious or less importantâbut itâs the same when youâre a challenger brand. You know, if youâre creating a challenger DTC brand in the same space as Apple, Intel, or Nikeâif youâre not creative, you have absolutely no way of cutting through the noise. So I think itâs very interesting.
My last point is, Iâve always had a veryâalways, I mean itâs been two yearsâbut a complex relationship with AI. Because, you know, a lot of my peers, or including my own job and so on, are threatened with AI. But I kind of changed my mind.
Itâs very dangerous in the way it is used today. And it raises a lot of ethical questions. But for me, itâs amazing. Because my entire career, people told me, âRemy, we love you, but itâs too conceptual,â or whatever. And now, with AI, the only thing that matters is to be too conceptual. Because we all have the same tools. So we can all do the same. Itâs dead easy to create a 10-second video or an image thatâs almost perfect and so on. So now everything comes back to creativity as a new potentiality.
Because we all have the same tools. So itâs all about storytelling, script writing, being smart, and being too conceptual. So if I were pretentiousâor if I were in a session with my shrinkâI wonât. Not with AI, but I wonât. Because the only thing that matters now is concept and execution.
Yeah. Can you say more about this? And youâre talking aboutâis it Love Machine? Is that what it is?
Yeah, itâs Love Machine. It was created by a friend of mine. Actually, his client was at Puma. He had an amazing creative studio called Juliet Zulu in Portland, working with Nike and big brands. Then we created another creative agency together during COVID called Never Concept. And then we reunited this year around Love Machine.
Itâs just likeâweâre both creative directors and brand strategists. How can we use AI in an ethical way, but as a new way to unlock creative possibilities? And itâs pretty amazing, I can tell you. What AI allows me to do personally in my work every day is to focus on things that matter.
I used to spend way too much time on paid media and creating assets for paid media. Now I can do that in one hour, because itâs dead easy and it should be systematized. And so now I can spend my brain and my time on what makes a difference. How can I fight misinformation? How can I do something cool for a brand that has not been done before?
And I donât have any technical or budget limitations. When you can create an amazing 10-second video in five hours for $500âor zero, by the way, because itâs just our brainsâthe marginal cost, itâs a game changer. How can you use this power to move really in a direction that matters, whether itâs for causes absolutely paramount like antisemitism, but also for brands, or for nation branding, or other things, or to fight misinformation online?
Creativity is, to me at least from my vantage point, the answer to this.
And did you have aâwas there a turning point for you with generative AI? Or a moment where you went from âI donât know about thisâ toâ? Or were youâhow has your relationship with it evolved or shifted?
Oh, you know, itâs likeâonce again, I feel youâre measuring this morning, Peter. My dad was raisedâhow do you say in EnglishâJesuit. My dad was veryâyeah, he was raised Jesuit. Being raised Jesuit, which was a key part of my childhood, means you are literally wearing the burden of 2,000 years of Judeo-Christian guilt on your shoulder. Like everything is about guilt.
Youâre not allowed to be happy. Youâre not allowed to be sad. Itâs guilt, and guilt, and guilt, and guilt.
My dad is doing better right now because he stopped believing. But I had to deal with that. And so AI is the same thing. At the beginning, I felt very guilty.
Sheâs rubbish. Itâs going to displace and cancel a lot of jobsâwhich, by the way, itâs going to. Itâs going to change also the systems of power between the West and the Global South. And so it has a huge impact on the environment.
And I know all of that. But Iâm not fatalist. You can either ignore AI and say, âI hate itââbut itâs kind of a losing proposal because itâs here and itâs only the beginningâor you can try to use it in purposeful ways.
I was very intrigued and very impacted by the way the internet evolved. You know, you and I, 20 years ago, the internet was still a place of freedom, and it was magical. And, you know, the HTML and the rabbit holeâand then you could still jump from one place to another. And then, you know, until 2011 with the Arab Spring, where Facebook and some social networks had a real role. And now itâs likeâto quote this guy I fully admire, Yanis Varoufakis, who was a former Minister of Finance in Greeceâall of this is concentrated and held by five techno-feudalists who have total monopoly on all of these social networks, AI, and so on.
But either you give up on AI and stay in your cabin somewhere in the woods, or you say, âIâm smart enough, I have enough experience to try to shape it.â Iâm not pretentious enough to think Iâm going to shape Anthropic or OpenAI, but at least I can use it in a moral, creative, interesting way that can move the needle.
Iâm interestedâweâve got just a few minutes leftâbut you described that as guilt. Your reaction, the rejection or the anxiety about AI, was guilt?
Yeah. Well, it is guilt. Because if I look at my teams over the yearsâa lot of those jobs I had in my previous teamâI had a person who was a proofreader and a copy editor. Their job is probably going to disappear very soon. Entry-level graphic designers, or people who were doing paid media assetsâthatâs probably going to disappear pretty soon. CRM managers. I was looking at my teamâI had 12 or 15 people on my teamâand I was like, s**t, probably 6 to 10 people wonât have a job. Maybe theyâll have different jobs, but itâs going to be very brutal, once again.
So I felt guilt because I wonât lose my job. Iâm actually using AI to my benefit, and it makes my work better and I can work faster. And so once again, itâs about privilege. Itâs not a citizenship premium anymoreâitâs a skills premium, or itâs a job premium, or itâs an experience premium. So I felt guilty that I was benefiting from AI, while a lot of people on my team probably wonât have a job in a year from now. And at the same time, you have people in the Global South who are paid $1 a day to make AI function the way we use itâwhen we ask a question to ChatGPT.
Yeah. One last question. Maybe Iâm just curious to hear you re-articulate what you already articulated about high concept. But I canât remember how you phrased itâthat because of AI, it makes the conceptual... And thereâs this logic that somehow slipsâit always evades meâthis idea that, maybe I just didnât study enough business, but that the new technology comes in and it eliminates all the stuff in the middle, but it creates all this opportunity either at the fringe or at the high end. You know what I mean? Can you tell me what that looks like for you?
Look, and thatâs whyâI come from contradiction. There is a political answer and then there is a business answer.
The political answer is always the same: people like me are going to benefit from AI. People from Wall Street benefited from the 2008 crisisânone of them went to jail, theyâre doing fine. So people areâand Iâm far from being part of the top 1%âbut Iâm part of an elite thatâs going to benefit from AI, thatâs going to benefit from globalization, thatâs going to benefit from crossing borders.
So thatâs the political answer. And I donât have guilt anymore because I think guilt is a waste of time. I have more of a moral responsibility to act and to use it in a meaningful way.
The business answerâthe creative answerâis that, yeah, itâs a complete, absolute game changer. All the limits I hadâbudget limits to do a photo shoot at $250,000, or all the physical, financial, technical limits I had to push a concept or to bring a concept from inception to executionâI donât have those limits anymore.
So itâs pure creativity at its core. You can do whatever you want. Like, literally, whatever you want. There are no limits anymore. And so how do you use this creativity? Yeah, to make money, to win deals, to do brand campaignsâbut also to fight antisemitism, to fight disinformation.
Or, you knowâthatâs absolutely captivating: how you can use this tool.
Remi, I want to thank you so much for accepting my invitation. Itâs been a pleasure to talk to you.
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