Jack Fuzz
2.7K posts

Jack Fuzz
@FuzzJack
Amateur midfielder


For any piece of advice there's an equally potent and opposite piece of advice. The only advice that stands the test of time is tautological. But it only makes sense once you've lived it. This is one of my favourite pieces I've written. strangeloopcanon.com/p/strange-loop…







Major League Baseball is aired in the morning for Japan. So technically they eat breakfast with it being on television. Here’s their #openingday commercial. No hyperbole, when I say this, it might be greater than any US MLB commercial I’ve seen. Well done and worth the watch for any baseball fan.







Henrik Karlsson returns to Dialectic. One of my 2025 highlights was meeting one of my favorite writers in Copenhagen and interviewing him on my fairly new podcast. It was a fan favorite. This conversation may have topped it. I talked to @phokarlsson about smashing mental models, navigating confusion, and why getting lost is part of creating the new. We discuss: - rejecting our mind's tendency to hold onto neat, legible ways of seeing (knowledge shields) - why risk should be unevenly distributed, and how Brian Eno uses success to take greater creative risk - why artists ought to embody a ballerina's balance - his obsession with artists' (Bergman, Grothendiek, Knausgaard's) private notebooks - why great art "spits you back out" - introspection as subject, not object - like Nick Cave and Rick Rubin - remembering what childlike desire is like - what he believes in, in the cosmic sense - his late grandfather Nils: an ordinary, extraordinary man Timestamps: 0:00 - Opening Highlights 1:28 - Intro to Henrik 4:05 - Thanks to Notion 5:58 - Begin: Attention, Boredom, Predictability, Aliveness, and Dérive 14:52 - Confusion and Clarity: Mental Balance, Breaking Mental Models, and Making It Through the Woods 31:37 - Henrik's Notebooks, Personal Constraints 40:54 - Introspection as Subject, Not Object: Nick Cave, Rick Rubin, and Attending Outward 46:56 - Creative Risks, Constraints, and the Labyrinth: Eno, Von Trier, Cage, and Herzog 1:03:47 - Agency, The Right Kind of Risk, and What Else Is Possible 1:23:29 - Desire: Trusting Excitement and "Galloping Down the Street" 1:30:44 - Why Good Ideas Come from the Edges and Keeping the Space to Sit in Your Ideas 1:44:58 - Physical Space and Isolation 1:51:19 - Jenga Towers: Why Great Art Has Space and Spits You Back Out 2:01:30 - Conviction, Belief, Navigating Murkiness with Firmness and Openness 2:15:54 - Short Essays and How Reading Is Like Running 2:22:27 - What Love Is Like and Befriend Those We Read 2:29:18 - Grandfather Nils and a Final Reminder Ep. 41: Henrik Karlsson - Strolling Through Life's Labrynths - is out now, below and on all platforms.

Andy Weir, a previous guest on Conversations with Tyler and author of Project Hail Mary, now adapted into a major film, brings economic reasoning to science fiction. In his conversation with @tylercowen, @andyweirauthor explains why he mapped the economics of a lunar colony before writing Artemis, and how incentives shape even the most imaginative sci-fi worlds. 🎧 Revisit Tyler's conversation with Andy Weir: conversationswithtyler.com/episodes/andy-…











