Pre-order my new course, book a coaching session
The Creative Upgrade (One-Time Consult)
Unlock Your Creative Potential with a One-Time Consult
Are you ready to elevate your creative game? Introducing The Creative Upgrade, a one-hour, one-on-one video consultation tailored specifically to your needs. Whether you’re looking to refine your work, tackle creative challenges, or gain fresh insights, I’m here to help you succeed.
What You Get
The Remix Method course: Plus the Everything is a Remix Toolkit Bundle FREE ($70 Value)
Personalized 50-Minute Video Conference: We’ll dive deep into your creative process, challenges, or projects with tailored, expert guidance.
Detailed Transcript: Receive a complete transcript of our conversation for future reference and continued growth.
Flexible Scheduling: Book your session at a time that suits you. (Sessions must be completed in 2024.)
Why Choose The Creative Upgrade?
Expert Insights: Benefit from years of experience and a fresh perspective on your creative endeavors.
Actionable Feedback: Get supportive, constructive feedback that you can immediately apply to enhance your work.
Significant Savings: Pre-order now to take advantage of our special introductory pricing.
Let’s Make It (Mentor Meeting Series)
Bring Your Creative Project to Life with Expert Guidance
Are you ready to take your project from concept to completion? Introducing Let’s Make It, a comprehensive consulting package designed to help you create your masterpiece through six personalized one-on-one video sessions. Whether you’re working on a complete project or just starting a first draft, I’m here to be your mentor, cheerleader, and Yoda.
What You Get
The Remix Method course: Plus the Everything is a Remix Toolkit Bundle FREE ($70 Value)
Six Video Conference Sessions: Receive tailored guidance and support over six sessions, scheduled at your convenience. The first and last meetings are 80 minutes each; the rest are 50.
Detailed Transcripts: Keep a record of our conversations to reference and build upon as you progress.
Flexible Scheduling: Start your sessions whenever you're ready, with all sessions to be completed in 2024.
Exclusive Bonus
Special Thank You: Your name will be featured in the closing credits of the course!
Why Choose Let’s Make It?
Expert Mentorship: Benefit from my experience and personalized coaching to help you stay on track and achieve your goals.
Supportive Feedback: Receive constructive, actionable insights that propel your project forward.
Accountability Partner: Stay motivated and accountable with consistent check-ins and encouragement.
Spaces are limited, so secure your spot today!
Looking for my video production workshop? That’s over here! That one is a cohort workshop entirely dedicated to video production.
Pre-order my next course, The Remix Method
I'm thrilled to announce that pre-orders are now open for my upcoming on-demand video course, The Remix Method!
This course is the culmination of my creative journey, distilling years of experience into an accessible and fun format. Think of it as "Everything is a Remix: The Course."
What You’ll Learn
The curriculum is still being developed but here’s a glimpse of what you’ll learn.
How I Got My Big Idea: The origins of Everything is a Remix revealed
Mastering Copy, Transform, and Combine: Harness the basic elements of creativity
Case Studies in Remixing: See how giants like A24, Greta Gerwig, James Clear, and Eddie Van Halen achieved success through remixing.
The Truth About Inspiration: Uncover the real secrets behind inspiration
Finding Your Unique Style: Learn how to develop and hone your personal style
Navigating Copyright: Understand how to obey (and occasionally disobey) copyright law
10 Great Ideas in 10 Minutes: Quickly learn the greatest creative ideas from other thinkers
Essential Tools of the Trade: Equip yourself with the best tools for creativity
And much more! (Content may evolve as the course develops.)
Why Pre-Order?
Exclusive Early Bird Pricing: Save money by ordering now.
First Access: Be the first to experience the course upon release.
Special Bonus: Get the Everything is a Remix Toolkit Bundle FREE ($70 Value)
Mark Your Calendar: Launch Date – September 6, 2024
Get ready to boost your creativity this summer and start the fall with fresh, innovative ideas. While life might throw curveballs, I’m gunning to launch on schedule – just like my last course!
The Remix Method (The Video Course)
Over 2 hours of on-demand video content, plus worksheets, exercises, and other goodies.
Plus! Get the Everything is a Remix Toolkit Bundle FREE ($70 Value)
My Oddest Invention
I have a unique creative workflow trick. I call it The Odds System. It’s possible I copied it, but I think I invented it. Although “invent” might be a lofty term considering how simple this is.
The Odds System is a quick and easy way to file stray bits that don’t fit with what you’re working on but might be useful later.
Here’s how it works.
Let’s say you’ve got a good sentence, but it doesn’t fit your article. That sentence is “odd.” “Odd” as in “different.” “Odd” as in “odds and ends”.
Cut that good sentence
Scroll to the end of your doc
Add the heading “Odds”
Paste in the sentence
Other stray bits get pasted into Odds as you continue writing and editing the article.
Mostly what gets pasted into Odds is gone forever. But sometimes you miss that part you cut and decide it does belong. It’s now easy to put it back in.
The Odds System is less permanent than deleting text. It lets you move quickly with minimal friction.
Another trick I often do is this.
You’re not sure if a part needs to be in or out. Do this.
Cut the bit
Paste it in Odds
See if you miss it
If not, great, you just shortened and simplified the piece.
Turns out you need it, it’s in Odds.
And here’s The Odds Sytem's killer feature: sometimes a cut bit grows into a new piece. This happens for many creators – the next thing grows out of some misfit fragment from the last thing.
And you can use the Odds system in work other than writing. When I’m editing, I also create an “Odds” timeline where I paste in clips that don’t fit.
That’s The Odds Systems. Try it out.
And call it whatever you want, but “odds” is quick to type.
Finding Bliss in Creativity
Aftersun
One of my fixations throughout life has been finding bliss in creative works. My level of interest has ranged from pure obsession to minor hobby, which is about the level I’m at here in the toddler-parent, make-money era.
But I think my moderate interest level isn’t just because of a lack of free time or even because I’m middle-aged and seen a lot. We seem creatively stagnant right now. I do a deep dive on this topic in an upcoming video for The New York Times. However, as you’ll see, there’s still lots of amazing work being done.
Here’s my question for you: where are you finding bliss in creativity? Or are you not finding much?
I’ll start. Here’s some of the amazing things I’ve experienced in recent months.
Some of these are affiliate links where we earn a small commission.
Aftersun is a masterpiece
The Make Art Not Content YouTube channel is something bold and different
The Bizarro Elaine Dance is a seriously hot remix
I thought Dune 2 was just as great as everybody else
Sidenote: I saw Alex Garland’s Civil War and it was fine. Click the link to read more. (Get more articles like that via the Everything is a Remix newsletter, another weekly newsletter that focuses exclusively on creativity.)
Overall, and very oddly, I’m finding the aging medium of the novel the most exciting right now.
I recently read Nathan Hill’s The Nix, a sweeping, 2000s-style novel, what now gets called “white-guy fiction” (David Foster Wallace, Jonathan Franzen, Don Delillo, etc). I fit that demo! Hill’s book is a lighter, poppier version of that style, with a tight, propulsive plot.
Literary science fiction is the most stunning. I recently read and loved Adrian Tchaikovsky’s Children of Time, much of which is written from the perspective of highly intelligent spiders. You read that correctly.
But the 800-pound gorilla in sci fi is Liu Cixin’s Three Body Problem trilogy. I read the first book and was floored. I intended to savor the series and slowly make my way through it. Then I plowed through The Dark Forest, which is much more of an intense page-turner than the first book, and continued a fast pace through Death’s End, which I’m about a quarter of the way into.
The brilliant thing about the series is the way it creates utterly baffling mysteries and then resolves them in a fascinating and entirely satisfying way.
What about the Netflix series?
I’m sorry to say, but it’s weak tea. If you’ve read the books (all of them, because it does adapt sections of all three), then it’s a fun companion.
If you’re never gonna read the books for whatever reason, the series is good but doesn’t capture the magic of the books. Read the books, then watch the series.
Is social media harming teens?
New commission I just completed for Bloomberg Law.
Hundreds of lawsuits claim social media platforms have caused a youth mental health crisis. They argue social media apps, like cigarettes, are products and the tech industry knew their product causes harm. In this video, we look at the legal battle over social media's impact on teens.
Flow: The First Great Creative Idea I Discovered
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
The first great creative idea I ever discovered was the concept of flow.
You’ve experienced flow. It’s the sensation of immersion you get when you’re in the zone. Time disappears and you’re entirely absorbed in what you’re doing.
The state of flow is where you do all your best work. For some of us, it can happen while playing a sport. Your focus narrows to just the game and you play your best. The same thing happens in creative work. You get lost, the hours fly by, and at the end of it, you’ve done some good writing or good coding or made good art.
When you’re in a state of flow you feel a sense of joy, satisfaction, and mastery over what you’re doing. Flow is not only when you will do your best work, it’s where you will grow and gain mastery of your skills.
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi defined flow like this:
“Enjoyment appears at the boundary between boredom and anxiety, when the challenges are just balanced with the person’s capacity to act.”
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
Flow is when the challenge of the work is just right: not so easy that it’s boring, not so difficult that it’s discouraging.
Having a name and definition for this wonderful state we’ve all experienced is great… but it’s not that impactful. What’s impactful is this: how do you get into a state of flow?
Here’s how you get into flow.
Challenge and Concentration. Choose tasks that challenge you just enough to stay focused. For example, if you enjoy playing a musical instrument, learn a complex piece that pushes your skills to the next level. You’re aiming for an activity that is just a bit beyond your current abilities.
Set clear goals. If you’re writing a report, set a goal to complete the introduction section within the next thirty minutes. Immediate feedback can be achieved by tracking your progress and setting a timer.
Timeblock. Remove distractions and set aside time to focus. If you’re studying, turn off your phone notifications, close social media tabs, and find a quiet place to work.
Identify triggers. Create cues that will help you achieve flow. For example, before writing, listen to a specific playlist that helps you get into a focused and creative mindset. After a few successful sessions of flow, you’ll come to associate this music with flow and it’ll help you get there.
If you do creative work—or any kind of work that requires advanced skills—you need to design your life to foster a state of flow.
I finally saw Civil War and…
I finally saw Civil War and…
Could be some minor spoilers ahead.
I’m a huge Alex Garland fan. I especially love his recent-ish sci-fi projects: Annihilation, Devs, and above all, Ex Machina, which I thought was a classic before I stood up from my theater seat.
If you’ve been watching my stuff over the years, you’ve probably noticed a fixation on Ex Machina. It’s here. It’s here. It’s here. I think there are more.
I’m a big Garland fan, and I’m also a big A24 fan. Ari Aster, Jonathan Glazer, and the Safdie brothers are among the best in the game. Aftersun is another film that you know is a masterpiece as soon as the credits roll. The Florida Project, another masterpiece. Moonlight. Eighth Grade. I could go on.
Civil War is Alex Garland’s new film and it’s an A24 production. So far, so great. I was eager to see it, but because of work and The Winter of Infinite Illness, I didn’t get to until just now.
TL;DR: it’s fine.
Some of you might be thinking: your expectations were too high, dude.
That’s not it. I already knew Aftersun was likely a masterpiece before I watched it. I’ve gone into lots of films, books, and albums expecting the sublime and still got it. Civil War just isn’t that great.
To be clear, it is quite good. The performances and filmmaking are pretty much faultless. And it contains great moments.
But the ways that it’s not good are more interesting. These are the major problems.
What Garland is great at doesn’t fit this material. He’s great at kinda abstract fantasy. This is gritty reality. The film is kinda on-the-nose and could use some fantasy and obliqueness. Garland is also not a world-builder, which this needed.
The film has almost nothing to say about politics or media. Civil War is about politics (war) and media (war journalists) and yet it has nothing much to say about either. Civil War is high concept first, and the writing is surprisingly thin and unsubstantial. It’s also kinda weirdly apolitical and toothless.
And finally, Civil War doesn’t feel fresh. We don’t experience anything here we’ve not seen before. It’s a war film, it’s a collapse film, it’s the savagery of humanity. This stuff has been done a lot. Even schlocky TV like The Walking Dead has done a lot of this. If you’ve seen Children of Men, you’ve already seen a masterwork.
Again, Civil War is quite good, it’s better than most films, it is worth watching. But overall, I think Garland picked the wrong battle here.
Meet My Newsletter Subscribers
I publish a weekly newsletter called The Midlife Remix, which is about finding happiness, purpose and prosperity in your second act. Subscribe here.
There are many, many great things about running a good ol’ fashioned email newsletter, but one of the best is that anybody can reply. I’ve heard from many hundreds of you over the years. I read every one of these emails and whenever I can, I reply back.
A drawback of the email newsletter is that you only from me, not each other. So I’d like to introduce you to some of the other subscribers to this newsletter. These are some of the awesome entrepreneurs, freelancers, educators, and makers who I’ve had the honor of having in my audience for years.
Paul Anderson is an educational consultant who has a hugely popular video YouTube channel. Paul recently launched a product that was inspired… by me! See below for photographic evidence. Check out Paul’s new systems thinking toy, Switch Its!
Jeffrey Vinokur created and hosts Generation Genius, whcih streams high-quality science and math video lessons for kids K–8. Amazing product, amazing company, and Jeff accomplished this while being annoyingly young.
Jay Acunzno is a maven of sane marketing in the modern mediacape. He and I chat every few months. I always leave our conversations inspired. I’ve been very influenced by our conversations. Jay has a brand new podcast series called How Stories Happen.
Adam Westbrook produces videos for The New York Times, writes a newsletter about creativity, productivity & storytelling,and even writes and draws a comic book zine, the excellent Bite Guard Fever Dreams.
Brendon Miller is a filmmaker who writes the the best newsletter there is about explainer videos and hosts the YouTube channel, The ideas that explain the news.
Smriti Mehta co-hosts the science podcast Nullius in Verba.
Jordan Terry redesigned and overhauled his dad’s all-in-one portable gym idea, BodyGym. Really impressed by the quality of the marketing the marketing and the product.
Hans Sharler has a blog called About Things. He post about whatever he’s into! Of late, that’s lots of AI and Atomic Habits. He also makes a mean brisket and will show you how.
Michael Taylor runs the marketing agency Saxifrage and he created a best-selling ChatGPT prompt engineering course!
David Ryan sails catamarans that he built himself! If you ever find yourself in Montauk, New York, check out Montauk Catamaran.
Keith Obsourne is a super talented 3D animator.
Ronnie Higgins has a B2B Marketing newsletter and podcast called Marketing Under the Influence.
My long-time buddy and This is Not a Conspiracy Theory contributor Louis Wesolowsky is an amazing illustrator and animator.
Antonio Garcia is a designer, maker, and much more and wrote this brand new piece, Cultivating Creativity in the Shadow of Generative AI.
Joshua Nelson is the co-founder of the marketing analytics company, MashMetrics.
Peter Nillson is an educator who has a newsletter, Educator’s Notebook, where he shares the latest education-related news. Peter’s also written a couple education-themed musicals!
These are just the people I’ve been in contact with in the last little while! I am missing many of you in this list.
Learn Everything I Know About Making Videos
I am thrilled to announce my next project! It’s my first-ever cohort class and I am using all the exclamation points!!!
It’s called Everything I Know About Making Videos. And it’s exactly what it sounds like – it’s everything I know about writing, research, editing, design, mixing audio, and more. It’s over a decade of knowledge about video essay production distilled down into a single class.
Join me, Kirby Ferguson, a pioneer in video essay production, for a live, interactive six-week journey into the art of video production.
Here’s what makes this class unique.
2 Interactive Zoom Sessions Per Week: Engage in live presentations, discussions, and practical sessions twice weekly.
Direct Mentorship and Feedback: Get personalized critiques from me on your video projects.
Proven Tools and Techniques: Learn my complete workflow and the secrets behind successful video essays.
Special Early Pre-Order Offer: Save $550!
Reserve one of only 6 remaining pre-order spots at the special rate of $750. (Regular price will be $1300.) Get ’em while you can. This course is designed for a very select audience and I might never do this again.
The course will run from September 20th - October 25, 2024.
What time are the classes?
Classes are at 9 AM PST / NOON EST / 5 PM GMT
What day of the week are classes?
Classes be Tuesdays and Fridays. Tuesdays will be lectures (with plenty of room for discussion). Fridays will be workshop sessions: presentations, Q&A, discussion, and co-working. Fridays are intended to be more casual, relaxed, and unstructured.
What are the dates?
Class would begin on a Friday and there would only be one class that week.
Complete class dates are:
September 20, 24, and 27.
October 1, 4, 8, 11, 15, 18, 22, and 25
Again, class times would be 9 AM PST / NOON EST / 5 PM GMT.
(First draft of the curriculum will be coming next.)
How long are classes?
Classes are 60 - 90 minutes long.
What happens if I can’t make a class?
Class recordings will be released shortly after class ends.
I’ve answered more anticipated questions below. If there are further questions, contact me!
Reserve your spot now. Again, there are only 6 pre-order slots remaining. Let’s make something great together!
Answers to anticipated questions
What if the schedule doesn’t fit my schedule?
Alas, the schedule can’t fit every schedule or time zone. However, you can download the sessions afterward and follow along on your own schedule.
What will I produce in this class?
You can pursue whatever goal you want, but I recommend you, y’know, create a video! If you don’t have a project ready to go, I’ll help you make one up. It doesn’t have to be amazing, it’s an exercise.
Do I have to be a video maker?
The class is aimed at people making videos, but lots of what I teach could apply equally well to text, audio, visual, or other projects. I’ll cover writing, knowledge management, research and how to manage small but complex projects.
Is this a video editing course?
This is not a video editing course. There are loads of ways to learn video editing software. There will be some video editing tips and tricks, but you’ll need to learn how to use that software on your own. I won’t be doing comprehensive instruction on any particular software.
Do I have to use a particular video editing software?
No, use whatever you want. I’m experienced with Davinci Resolve, Premiere Pro, and Final Cut and will feature them all.
Rip-offs: Immoral or Uninspired?
There are two ways the Everything is a Remix paradigm can backfire. The first is rip-offs.
What does it mean to rip-off?
To rip-off is copying too much from another artist or artists. The copying is not exact and the sources have been transformed enough that it’s not plagiarism.
The real issue is how recognizable the copying is. For instance, you don’t need to copy melodies or lyrics. If you copy the overall feel of another artist’s sound, that’s plenty.
Being a rip-off means you’re too derivative. You’re a clone, a knock-off, even uncreative. Being a rip-off can hurt your reputation in your creative field.
Coldplay were widely considered rip-offs by rock nerds (raises hand). Their early sound especially resembles a combination of U2, Radiohead, and perhaps Oasis.
However, lots of artists have a rip-off phase, especially when they’re young. Coldplay arguably developed a more distinct sound as they matured. Also, plenty of people loved this early music and didn’t care that it resembled other bands.
You might be in your rip-off phase right now. If you’re really into a creator, their voice might creep into yours without you even knowing it. Most people don’t rip off intentionally.
What qualifies as a rip-off is highly ambiguous. The look of the band Black Veil Brides was widely considered a rip-off of KISS. (I think they look more like Motley Crue.) For me, they’re clearly doing their version of 80s metal, but they changed it enough to make it theirs.
Being a rip-off is forgivable. You’re just being immature or perhaps mediocre or outright bad. To rip off is not outright immoral.
How to avoid being a rip-off
Find unusual sources of inspiration
Draw inspiration from outside your field
Merge innumerable influences
Transform your sources extensively
Connect sources that seem unrelated
Which path to take?
If you’re wondering if you missed last week’s post, you did not! Here’s what happened.
I wrote a post announcing pre-orders for a new product. It was all set to go.
But something didn’t feel quite right. It felt rushed – and not in a good way.
This year, I’ve mostly embraced rushing. Rushing is good. Not everything has to be perfect. I make mistakes and learn. It’s mostly typos – the ones in email subject lines are especially irritating for me. (Note: even Grammarly doesn’t catch all errors.)
But those are minor errors. This could have been a more serious mistake. If something is wrong with my pricing or what I promise to deliver, that’s a real problem for the business.
I’m pumping the breaks just a bit on the next launch. The next launch is coming very shortly, but I have to:
Choose which product to launch first
Price it right and ideally, have a couple pricing tiers (which I’ve never done before)
The two possible products are:
The creativity course I mentioned at the start. This would be an on-demand video course, perhaps with a live teaching option.
Everything I Know About Making Videos. This is a niche product. It will be aimed at a tiny audience and have a premium price tag. This would perhaps be a cohort-based course with a limited number of seats. It might be a one-time-only offering.
(Both of these were determined to be viable based on your feedback. Thank you all!)
Nora is better at pragmatic thinking than I am. She’s been helping me figure out pricing and structure, and determine which one makes the most sense to do next.
Both of these are likely to come this year, I just don’t know the order yet.
Gonna leave it at that! Super exciting launch is coming soon! Meanwhile, I’m neck-deep with two commission videos that I hope to wrap in the next few weeks.
Have an awesome week everyone!
Love,
Kirby