Deep Questions with Cal Newport - Ep. 394: Do I Need a Better Planning System?
Episode Date: March 2, 2026It’s hard to live deeply in a distracted world if you don’t have control over how you spend your time. This goal requires a planning system that both works and can last. Do you have a reasonable p...lanning system in place? If not, don’t worry. Today, Cal is joined by planning expert Sarah Hart-Unger (author of “Best Laid Plans”) to discuss the nitty-gritty details of creating sustainable systems that can help you regain autonomy over your schedule without becoming an over-scheduled drone. Below are the questions covered in today's episode (with their timestamps). Get your questions answered by Cal! Here’s the link: bit.ly/3U3sTvo Video from today’s episode: youtube.com/calnewportmedia IDEAS SEGMENT: Interview with Sarah Hart-Unger [2:12] AUDIENCE FEEDBACK, NOTES, AND CHATTER: Dopamine addictions and TV shows [1:05:06] Watching entire films [1:09:43] Attention span and movies [1:16:38] WHAT CAL IS UP TO: Update on my AI Programmer Project [1:21:12] Other Updates [1:28:02] What Cal Consumed [1:29:17] The Last Kings of Hollywood (Paul Fischer) Movies: The Smashing Machine Song Sung Blue Links: Buy Cal’s latest book, “Slow Productivity” at www.calnewport.com/slow Get a signed copy of Cal’s “Slow Productivity” at https://peoplesbooktakoma.com/event/cal-newport/ Cal’s monthly book directory: bramses.notion.site/059db2641def4a88988b4d2cee4657ba? vanityfair.com/hollywood/2023/07/why-are-movies-sooooo-long-an-investigation science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adz9311 Sarah Hart-Unger online: Sarah Hart-Unger (MD, if you want to use that but I typically don't even bother in my creative work!) practicing pediatric endocrinologist, author, and podcaster Best Laid Plans Podcast Best of Both Worlds Podcast (cohosted with Laura Vanderkam) Best Laid Plans: A Simple Planning System for Living a Life That You Love, Sourcebooks Dec 2025 Website (since 2004 . . .): theshubox.com Social media: none :) Partially due to your influence, I quit FB in 2016, IG in 2021, and thankfully never got into anything else! I guess I do have minimal Youtube (occasional planner videos + feed of podcast eps) @youtube.com/@BestLaidPlansVideo Thanks to our Sponsors: This show is sponsored by Better Help: betterhelp.com/deepquestions zapier.com/deep calderalab.com/deep shopify.com/deep Thanks to Jesse Miller for production, Jay Kerstens for the intro music, and Mark Miles for mastering. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Okay, so I have a question for you.
How do you figure out what to do with your time during any given day?
Now, I think this question matters more now than it ever has before, because if you don't have a good answer to it, if you just sort of wing it as your day unfolds, guess what forces are going to take control of your intention?
Email, slack, social media, online chat, or YouTube, streaming services.
This is a show about finding depth in a distracted world.
And to succeed in this goal, you need a good planning system.
But how do you create a system that's not only going to work, but it's something you're going to stick with over time?
This is what I want to talk to you about today.
And I have an expert that's going to join me that help us in this conversation.
Her name is Sarah Hart Unger.
She's a doctor and a mother.
And also a planning aficionado.
She's the host of the best laid plans podcast on which I've been a guest.
And in December, she published a book with that same name that had the subtitle,
A Simple Planning System for Living a Life That You Love.
Amazon selected it as one of the best nonfiction books of the month.
So I invited Sarah on to get into the nitty, gritty details of how to build a useful and realistic planning system.
She even helps me figure out solutions to some problems I've been having with my own
system. So there's some changes I make after talking to her. She also makes a case for why she only
uses analog tools, which I think is interesting. I'm not quite sold on that, but I think it's
an interesting case. So anyways, this is a deeply practical discussion and one that I think is
absolutely vital to our mission here on this show. So let's get into it. As always, I'm Cal Newport,
and this is Deep Questions, the show for people seeking depth in a distracted world. And we'll get
started right after the music.
All right. Hey, Sarah. Welcome back to the show.
Thank you so much for having me on. I'm excited to be back.
Of course. I mean, I'm excited about your book and I'm excited to get into the weeds on planning.
I have a whole list here of practical things. I want to learn from you. I want to talk about like
what makes a good planning system good. How do you keep systems sustainable over the long run,
digital versus analog, family versus personal versus work tasks and planning and how that differs.
I actually saw a lot of connections between your new book and slow productivity, so I want to get into that as well.
So we're going to walk away from here with like lots of ideas about how to get your life under control.
But I want to start by just motivating this entire conversation for my audience.
Like why is planning important?
We need to ask that question.
Why is it being talked about like, why do I care about it on this show, which is,
largely about fighting back against digital distractions.
I actually think that it's really well connected.
So I'm going to give you my take for why I think planning is important, Sarah,
and then I'm going to ask you the sort of give the way you think about it, right?
So from what I noticed is there was a period,
I really kick it off around 2019 with Ginny O'Dell,
who brought a sort of anti-neoliberalism, anti-capitalism critique,
to the world of things like planning and productivity
and the sort of related topics.
And essentially the anti-nealiberal critique was to care too much about planning is to commoditize time,
to think about your efforts as things that can be turned into productive value.
And the sort of ideal anti-productivity vision that was being pushed,
starting with Odell and then lots of commentators during the pandemic,
was really what you should be doing is just in an unstructured way walking through fields
and watching birds and uncommodifying your life.
And that this was the tension between commodifying your time and watching birds in a park in San Francisco.
And this was sort of the setup.
That never rang true for me.
You know, like you, I have three kids.
I have seven jobs.
Like there's a lot going on.
And to me, the opposite of having a planning system is not walking through the fields and enjoying birds.
It's chaos.
It's stress.
It's anxiety.
And this is how I connected back to my program here on the,
the show, it puts you into exactly the state where the digital overlords can dominate.
Because when you are overwhelmed and reactive and don't know what's going on, guess what suddenly
becomes really appealing? Well, let me just pull up the phone. Or let me just fall back onto like
email and just sort of shoot messages back and forth. Let me zone out to a streamer because it's
going to numb out the anxiety I feel. So I thought of planning as a key step towards a deeper life,
not as something that was getting in the way of a deeper life.
And there was this sort of clash that was happening.
All right.
So that's my soapbox speech.
But you've been working on this topic so practically for years with your podcast and now with your book and with your blog.
Why do you think about planning as being important?
Yeah.
Well, first, I guess it's super interesting to bring back to that like Jenny O'Dell kind of movement
because I do think people get stuck in thinking about planning as having to be married to productivity.
meaning if I want to plan, it means that I'm trying to cram in as many, quote, productive things as possible,
and capitalism, you know, the wheels spinning, et cetera.
But that to me is such a unfair way to characterize planning,
because to me, planning is so much more about thinking ahead of time,
about what you want to do in your life and then making sure that you have things lined up
so that you can do those things.
And for me, if I were to want to go bird watching in a San Francisco park,
let me tell you what I'd have to do. I would have to do a lot of planning to make sure that that
could be accommodated in my life without having a kid not get picked up from an activity or not pay
the bills or whatever it is. So I guess that kind of goes along with what you're saying as well,
which is that those two things don't have to be mutually exclusive. The free time, the intentional leisure,
and the planning. And in fact, I think if anything, for many people, depending on their stage of life,
the planning piece is actually required in order to make the best use or, I don't know,
the use that fits aligns most with what they really want to do with their time. And so that is what
has driven my passion about planning. It's not about turning out more widgets, you know,
earning more money necessarily, but it's about fitting in the things that you want to do in this
one life that we all have. You know, I'm also a huge fan of sort of the mortality-focused literature,
the sort of Oliver Berkman, Jody Wellman type stuff.
And that just for me lights a fire around planning, which to me also has sort of two prongs to it.
In a way, one is about making sure we're not just going on autopilot and making sure that we are fitting in the things that we want to do.
And the other side is making sure we're not getting overwhelmed by little tasks coming at us, trying to kind of take a bite into our lives.
And by making sure you're managing all those tasks and making sure you're purposefully adding in the things you want, then hopefully you get to do more things you want to do.
like, I don't know, birdwatch in a San Francisco park.
Well, let me give you an analysis.
I'm going to, not psychoanalyze, but I'm going to analyze you.
And then you're going to tell if I have this right because I have this theory about partially why you're,
you personally are in a very good situation to be leading people through these topics.
And I think it, I don't really understand your profession.
You're a pediatric endocrinologist, right?
Clinical doctor.
Yes.
But I think it's important that you're a clinical physician because,
my understanding in, in some sense, that's a, that's a very demanding job, but it's also very structured, right?
You have this sort of cadence of appointments that's like probably pretty standardized in your practice,
whereas a lot of people, and maybe in the Ginio-O-Dell camp and people in my world,
you're often in like a more vague knowledge work environment where there is this sort of,
which is this where I get the O'Dell critique, there is this sort of sense of like an endless
knob of productivity that you can turn that seems tied to like busyness and how many hours
you're willing to work outside of work.
And there's like a rightful, you know, negative association that people in like an email-based
office jobs start to build where they're like, all right, enough of this productivity talk because
my boss just wants me to do emails till midnight and like enough is enough.
Did it matter that your job had enough structure that you could stand aside a little bit from
some of the maladaptive stuff that was happening in certain knowledge work jobs?
It was, I think, smoke screening, the importance of organization and planning because it was sort of like an orthogonal issue that also needed to be solved.
Am I getting medicine right there or am I just romantic?
Am I romanticizing?
I've personally experienced both sides because I've had more like leadership type roles where the emails are like rolling in and the meetings and everything is a little bit more, you know, kind of like a world without email, but the opposite of that kind of.
But then yes, the rest of my job has been very, very structured.
And you are right.
a lot of my passion was born out of a time period when almost all of, not all, but like a very
large fraction of my hours were very much accounted for by others. Like it was during my residency
training where we had caps at 80 hours per week that we could be at the hospital. But other
than that, you know, our time was not really our own. And it made sense to be incredibly
attentional with the hours that were left. And I guess that is where a lot of my passion around
planning was born. But you're right that my current life is.
is much more around that.
Much of my time is fairly structured, and that is one of the things I love about my
clinical job is that I can go in, see my patients, write my notes, and kind of feel like
I did everything for the day.
Is it true you had your first kids when you were still, this overlaught residency?
My first kid was during fellowship.
So that's the subspecialty training after residency.
Can I ask you a brief unrelated question that is related to the pit on HBO?
I love the pit.
You can ask me anything about the pit.
My husband and I, because he's a vascular surgeon, we like sit there and analyze every episode
for correctness and maybe misinformation.
Vascular surgeons think that they should be bringing, they're doing too many things in the
ED that they should be bringing consults in.
That's what I heard.
It's like, no, you can't, don't mess with that nerve in the hand.
You've got to bring down.
Okay, but here's a question on behalf of my whole audience.
It's more important than anything else we're going to talk about.
Can you please distinguish between third year medical student, intern, like pre-residency,
first. I cannot, my sister is a attending, you know, ER doctor and I still don't understand.
Can you just, what is the order of things that happen? Then we'll get back to Plattie.
But I got to understand this. I don't understand which character is what, when.
Well, I'm trying to remember, like, who's a third year and who's a fourth year. Like, Javadi,
is she a fourth year maybe? So in med school, you usually do your core rotations. So that's the very
first year in the clinic, your third year of med school. And then the fourth year is more like
sub-specialty rotations. I don't feel like the pit does a great job of saying who's a third
year and who's a fourth year. Is that intern yet or not fourth year? Is fourth year the same as intern or is
that post-fourth year? No. So medical school has four years. I didn't know that. Then begins your
intern year, which is also known as the first residency year. And most residencies, well, the ER residency is
actually four years long. So sometimes it's totally unclear, but we know Santos is R2 because
I keep saying it over and over again. Yes. And the really young doctor's,
in the first season, I think, was third year or fourth year?
Maybe like a fourth year.
Okay.
And then when do you get called doctor?
You get called doctor when you begin your residency.
So after med school.
Before that, I used to use like an archaic student doctor.
Yeah.
Heart hunger or whatever.
But yeah.
Interesting.
All right.
Well, now we got the important stuff covered.
We can get back to the easy stuff like trying to manage life in this chaotic world.
All right.
So let's go back then.
You've been thinking about planning an organization for a long time.
You've had your podcast, your blog, and your book.
I think I have that order not quite right, probably blog podcast book.
That is correct.
How today do you think about the elements that have to go into a successful planning system?
Yes.
So in my opinion, and I know it might differ a little bit from how you talk about it,
but I feel like there are three big ones.
The first one is a calendar that's completely functional and shows everything.
And in my book, I refer to that as like one master calendar.
and that can be, it sounds so straightforward.
Like, of course I have a calendar,
but a lot of people are actually consulting multiple places,
even on a day-to-day level,
to actually figure out where they're supposed to be.
So master calendar is number one.
Number two is a really robust task management system.
I've coined the term airtight task management
because I want to communicate that like,
you know exactly what's coming in,
where to look for it, how often to look for it,
and where to put it so that you know you will see it.
And to me, that's the part where you're so,
of preventing the moth-eating, like, things coming at you from really getting too much of your time
and attention and, you know, putting the tasks in their place where they belong. And then finally,
you need a fantastic and robust goal-setting system. You talk about yours in like a multi-level
scale planning, and I have a very similar version of that called Nested Goals. It has a couple more
levels than yours has, because I love a month. I love the monthly level, which you don't really talk
about. But similarly, you know, you're planning every year and then every season, you're looking at that yearly plan. Every month, you're looking at that seasonal plan. Every week, you're looking at your monthly plan and every day you're looking at your weekly plan. And that sounds so much more involved as it is than it actually kind of is in practice. But by doing that and having like a really clear-cut, purposeful ritual at each of those time points, you know that you're going to be integrating kind of the urgent and what you need to do in a given day or week with the kind of higher-level goals that you've set.
in more thoughtful planning sessions.
Right.
So this is fascinating.
I think this is a key distinction.
I struggle to communicate this sometimes as well, is that there's these different elements that all go under the umbrella of planning.
You have the whole sort of information organizational aspect of it.
And then you have the sort of time control aspect of it, which you're calling it like goal setting system.
And I think often people will zoom in on just one piece.
Could be the, like I have a planner, a planner called a time block planner, but it's not a planning system.
It's like one piece, like in your terminology, it's like one of multiple pieces that goes into a goal setting system that itself could be part of a larger planning universe.
But there's people who say, I bought my time block planner.
So can I organize my whole life with this thing?
And I was like, no, no, no, no.
That's like you just, you bought an exercise band.
That's probably a good thing to use as part of a large health and fitness routine.
But just having that exercise ban is not the whole thing.
Okay.
So I want to go through.
let's go through these in this order because I think it actually, I think calendar to
airtight task management, the goal setting system is easiest to hardest or simplest,
the most complex.
I feel like things get more and more complex as we move down.
All right.
So master calendar, when you say shares everything, so you're talking about professional,
personal family, we need everything in one place.
Are you a digital person?
Are you a Google calendar where you could have like multiple different calendars that
you turn off and on?
You're going to be like shocked and everyone is always shocked, but I'm largely
paper-based. I have three kids. I also have like five, not five jobs, but maybe three jobs,
if you count, like the podcast is one, and then on my other media stuff and then my physician job,
which is three days a week. I do work part-time as of now on my clinical side. But for me,
I'm able to actually have my master, have it right next to me, my master be paper, meaning,
okay, is every detail of every little thing in here? No, meaning there are blocks in here. This is not going to show up,
where it just says patience.
And I can't like see exactly what the patients are that I'm going to see because first of all,
that would not be hippocompliant.
And second of all, that would be, you know, way too much to put on paper anyway.
But I know that when I go to work, I'm going to log into our electronic health, you know,
system and see exactly which patients I have to see.
But still, this is enough for me to know.
This is where I have to be on any given day.
And on my, you know, kids level, I have a whole section on the bottom that talk about like
where the drop-offs and pickups are.
Wait, what do you mean by section on the bottom?
Because outside of the flow of time, it's like at the bottom, you have like kind of like a to-do list
for like listing out, drop-off pickoff times.
That's a choice that I've made.
But I do use a vertical planner so I can see pretty much everything kind of like scaled
to time, just like you would pull up an outlook or Google Calendar.
But because I don't always do all the driving, you know, I'm like we have a nanny.
I have my husband.
I drive.
I have three kids.
They're going in different directions.
I kind of like to still know where all the kids are.
So I kind of put a row beneath there where I put all the comings and go.
of gymnastics and basketball and dance and all that.
So it would be like drop off at 3.30 pick up. So just like listing it. Okay. Yeah. Oh, that's
interesting. We've taken to, so we're Google calendar people, my wife and I, because then I have my
work calendar so she can see and I can see what she's doing. But we put the kids, like family stuff.
We put those as those are like appointments on there as well. And we'll try to span the time the
driving actually takes. So like that half hour will be now a reality of this calendar is there's
a ton of overlap stuff happening because now everything is on the same screen so you know in Google
calendar things that intersect time wise overlaps. There's a lot of like you can you can hide right let's
you can decide to only look at your part. You can unclick it off yeah. Yeah. No and I'm not against
digital whatsoever but you did ask what I use personally. I think both are fantastic. I just sometimes
people write off paper kind of thinking like well if your life is you know complicated there's no way that
work. I'm like, I've been making it work for a really long time. I do a very small writing, and I
enjoy using paper. So if that does not apply to you, I 100% say embrace the digital solution.
When my kids get a little bit older as well, and, you know, right now I kind of have one using
digital, but my two younger ones, not so much, but I could imagine us migrating when it makes
more sense for everybody. Could I ask how large the formatting is? So is it day per page, five
day per page? Like, how big are these columns? So the, my calendar.
Exist on the weekly pages, like kind of can see on the video, of a Hobunichi Cousin Planner, which is A5 size.
So each column is like a little more than an inch wide, but it has a very small gridlines and it goes
all the way from, you know, midnight to midnight.
So you can see a whole week.
You can see an entire week at a glance.
Yeah.
Okay.
Interesting.
And then how much are you putting non-appointment things on there?
In other words, and when are you putting those things on there?
So things that are not, you know, I need to be here.
There's a meeting.
There's an appointment.
I'm seeing patients doing these areas.
But optional tasks that you're adding just kind of keep track what you're doing with your time.
Is that?
And now we're bleeding into task management.
And goal setting probably as well, right?
This probably touches on everything.
Yes, a little bit.
So this is super interesting because people love to like fixate on like, well, is it all in one tool or is it not?
And in my case, it is.
But I do think like this is an important time to step back and like realize it's still
performing different functions for me.
And there's no reason it has to be all in one tool.
But for me, I do actually do most of my, pretty much all of my shorter term task management
on paper as well.
So I have two places.
Well, we're kind of skipping ahead to task management.
But when you are deciding where to put a task, you want to put it in a place that it makes
sense that you're going to see it at the right time.
You can either assign it to a very specific time.
Like you can literally calendar it in.
You can assign it to a day.
And you can do all these things digitally as well.
or you could assign it to a week. That's a little bit harder to do digitally, but you can find
some workarounds. And so for me, many of my day-to-day tasks, and I use the word task instead of goal
here, because I often talk about kind of goals turning into tasks around the weekly level.
But I have a more like the eighth column on the left-hand side has a lot of tasks that I want to do
for the week. If I have a task that I come across that isn't that urgent, then I might assign it
to a future week. So, well, next week doesn't have anything, but the week,
after that has a couple of tasks, or I may actually stick a task up at the top of a day
if I don't have a specific time slot for it, but I want to assign it to a specific day.
And what I do with this is so arbitrary.
Like you can do the exact same thing in Apple Notes or to-doist or to-do or things.
Like the actual place, the vessel where you're holding these things is going to be unique
to what your style is and how often you like to use devices versus paper.
etc. The important thing is defining for yourself where these holders are. Where do you put
tasks that you want to see for the week, but you don't want to, you know, assign to a specific
day? Where do you put a task that you know you're going to see at the beginning of each day?
And where do you maybe put a longer term task that you don't want in your face for a given week,
but you know you're going to want to see later?
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All right, Jesse.
Let's get back to the show.
Well, okay, so let's move on
the airtight task management. So the word airtight here, this is a reference to like a David
Allen style full capture, not in your head and not somewhere where you're going to forget
that it exists. Correct. And I make a big emphasis on making sure that you are very aware of
where tasks come at you because it's usually for most of us not just one place. You might have
text messages, your WhatsApp chat, your email, your work email and your personal email,
people that just like stop you on the street and tell you they want to do XYZ.
And you need to have a really thoughtful way to make sure that each of these pathways has a pipeline that makes sense.
Like you're checking them enough, but not necessarily all the time.
And I actually kind of teach people that every given box that you might receive a task in might have its own cadence that makes sense.
So maybe you look at the sports team app twice a week, but you only look at your email three times a day or something like that.
Like I'm making that up.
And then to be very clear about once those tasks come in, where are they going so that you are not going to lose track of them and you see them at the right time?
Sometimes the answer is to just do the task.
You know, something comes at you that's one minute or less.
You just get it done.
But then a lot of the times the answer is to put it into whatever system you're using for task management so that you see it at the right time.
Okay.
And so you're vessel agnostic, but the idea is you have a singular vessel that when you check these various pipelines,
stores the tasks.
And then there's a separate sort of system or cadence for taking it out of that vessel
and getting it on to your weekly plan, your daily plan.
Is that more or less right?
Yes.
I mean, sometimes there's not really like an extra step there.
Like if the vessel is your text messages and someone send you a task there,
it's not like it's going to some holding place.
You would then, you know, let's say you make sure that at the part of your processing,
And I know you talk about processing at the end of every day, either with a TXT file or however they're doing it.
But as you're processing the end of each day, you take any text message that's left, you leave it unread if it's something you have to handle, and you put it straight into whatever tool that you're going to use, whether that is, again, the to do is to app, your planner, whatever it is.
And being very careful about once you've chosen where these tasks are living, you cannot be swapping around and using multiple storage vessels.
you've got to be like, this is my one place.
And you have to have rituals that include looking at that place.
And again, that seems kind of obvious.
But I get a lot of people, they're like, well, I put some stuff on my monthly and some
I'm week.
I was like, well, when are you looking at those pages, right?
You want it to be somewhere that you're going to be checking at the appropriate
cadence so you know you're going to see it.
All right.
So what do you use right now?
I do a few things.
So if something comes at me like randomly throughout the day, I do exactly what I just
said, which is that I will text myself or email myself and leave it unread. And one of the things I do at
the end of every single day before as I'm shutting down is to make sure that those, anything that's
left unread is captured. I do that with WhatsApp as well. Like if I get something from school and
I'm like, oh, I need to deal with that. That needs to go into my system. That gets left unread.
And that inbox gets checked by the end of the day.
But she said unread emails and unread messages. Text or WhatsApp messages.
Okay. So that's what that's going to be doing your processing step, what you're looking for.
So if you think up something, just, you know, X Nilo, like, oh, God, I forgot.
I need to, like, start planning for X.
You might send yourself an email.
Yes.
So that it'll be there unread.
And I'm leaving it unread because it means it hasn't been processed.
Okay.
So then when you process, you process when end of the day?
End of the day.
I want to see no unread text, no unread what's at messages and no unread emails.
So what are the, like, archive them or dealt with them, but they are, they're not black.
So then what are the, I don't even know how you, can you send yourself tech?
I'm so tech bad.
Can you send yourself text messages?
And then you can actually leave them, you can like, I don't know, you swipe over and you click the things so it, so it shows that it's unread.
My fingers know how to do it.
Yeah.
There's some sequence of things I do all day long, which I can't actually tell you what it is.
Okay, so then what are the options then?
This is fascinating to me.
I like into the nitty gritty here.
At the end of the day, you're processing.
What are the options for what happens to the information in like one of these unread emails or text messages?
Yeah.
So that is where this, like, where my task management system comes into play, which again,
tool agnostic, but I largely use my planner.
So I'm either assigning it to like this week, if I need to get it done this week.
I'm assigning it to a future week or I'm giving it a specific calendar slot within my planner
so that I know on Wednesday I'm going to wake up and be like, oh, at 10 a.m.
I said I had to sign the kids up for that camp that's going to sell out in 30 seconds.
Perfect.
I'm going to see that that morning.
I'm going to know about it.
And then I'm going to do it.
So this is interesting.
So your main place you store the task is your planner itself.
It exists somehow tied to time, be it at the weekly scale or the daily scale or in like a particular
slot.
I put almost all of my tasks and even my goals tied to time.
I mean, that's kind of how I link.
I call them goals kind of at the larger time horizons, like year or season.
And I call them tasks when I get down to the weekly or daily level.
Again, they're not always specifically tied to time.
But I mean, I guess they kind of are because even if I'm putting it in a future week's time frame,
and even though I haven't entirely committed to dealing with it in that.
future week. It means I'm going to see that task on that given week. Because again, just like the day,
and I have things that I want to make sure I process by the end of the day, I'm never going to exit a
week without doing something. And this is actually a very key point of task management to everything
I've put there. It doesn't mean I've gotten them all done, but I've either decided, you know what?
I don't want to do that anymore. I'm crossing it off or I'm migrating it. And actually, this is kind of
comes from the bullet journal world that I tend to put a little, yeah, like an arrow through it.
and then I move the tasks to somewhere else.
Oh, interesting.
Okay.
And then do you do that at the end of each day?
Is that when you're looking at tasks that were assigned to that day you didn't do?
Or is it more at the weekly cadence?
You look at the whole week of things that were assigned either to the week or to particular days that didn't get done.
So I do make a list for each day as well.
We didn't even get into that.
But I tend to do the exact same process.
Again, this is going to be much, much quicker on a daily level.
Maybe I had six tasks I assigned myself.
There was one I didn't get done.
but as I'm doing that sort of like end-of-day processing,
if I have an empty checkbox on my planner,
I better figure out what I need to do with that task.
If I miss a day here or there,
usually I'm able to kind of catch up
by making sure I haven't crossed it off the weekly.
So there's kind of multiple layers in there.
But in general, I do that processing really at the end of every day
and as I move forward to the next week.
Something that's interesting to me about this approach
is it may be a way around a real issue I have,
and I think a lot of people have,
which is task system a version,
which is this notion of if things are going into a task system,
it could be a singular vessel in a very good program,
and things are being stored and categorized in there.
There's a sort of activation energy that builds up,
especially if, like, you're stressed or you're overwhelmed
or the week is going difficult, and you're like, my day is full.
Like, I often have days where, you know,
because I work within a very fixed amount of time,
where I'm constantly racing the clock.
It's, you know, I got to get this article in,
these edits are due.
there's these urgent things or whatever.
And the activation energy of like, let me now load up a task system and read all these tasks
and confront all that I have to do.
And like, I don't have time to do anything in this day.
And I don't want to do that.
And then I fall out of the task system for multiple days.
So if you're just on your can, the one tool, I always say like everyone uses at least this one
productivity tool or organization tool as a calendar because you can't remember when your dentist
appointment is without it.
So you know you're going to look at your plan.
Like the weekly, like what am I doing today?
what am I doing this week?
Like that will get used because you have to see.
And so having the task in there means there's no separate activation energy.
This is huge.
And it's actually like why David Allen stuff doesn't totally work for me.
And it's what you say.
It's like that residue of like I don't want to look at all the things I want to do.
I don't want to look at like six weeks worth of accumulated stuff when I know I have like two free hours on a given day.
So like that's exactly that activation energy.
I haven't heard it described in that way.
but I think you're right.
For me, it's so much less stressful to be like, okay, what's on today?
Oh, look, today's really crowded.
Let's only look at that weekly list.
We're not looking beyond that.
And then like selecting maybe one thing, if that's all I have time for, creating my new
list for the day and then never looking back for the rest of that day until I, you know,
maybe when it's time to do monthly planning, I'm going to go larger scale.
But I designed this system in part because I am like you stressed out by the idea of
seeing everything I need to do more often than I actually need to.
And things that are non-trivial in terms of time but are still in that task category,
I mean, in my experience, the way those things get done is they're on your calendar for the day.
Yes.
Like, that's how it happens.
It's like, no, this is what I'm doing at 12 is I'm going to the dry cleaner and then calling
like whatever.
Information at list that exists in list is not very, it's much less actionable.
But okay, so are you also, here's the other idea that I'm just thinking about ideas
that are catching my attention is like, oh, wait a second, yes.
I think there's there's something here that's like explaining an issue that I want to solve.
Because when I'm thinking about my task vessel, I'm using primarily things three right now.
One of the things I do is like I'll often, there'll be like a bigger project and I'll generate.
As I come up with like steps and tasks related to that project, I'll be adding them to this list.
And I'm like, okay, I can't have, I couldn't put all of these on my calendar.
I have hundreds of tasks in there.
But it sounds like, until I have this right, what you would say is you shouldn't be.
you're expanding too much of the goal
and the practicality too early.
That project should exist as a goal.
And when we get to your goals
setting system, which we'll do next,
there's a cadence in which
those goals or projects
generate tasks for the near future.
And that probably you would say,
if I have this right,
like, yeah, your list are too long
because you're unfurling too much
from these things you're working on.
You don't need to do that in advance.
You need to see what the projects are.
look at your week and figure out what am I going to try to make progress on this week with
these projects and what does that actually look like practically? And let me put those tasks for the
week or for particular days. Is that? Yeah. And there's nothing bad. I don't think about keeping
future potential project steps somewhere convenient. Like for you, it might be things. For me,
I love using. I'm looking at my list while you talk, by the way. Now I'm thinking.
It's something fun. We can experiment with like an actual thing that you wanted to do. Like there's nothing
wrong with having a receptacle for ideas. Like, I'm imagining maybe you have like a renovation
list and there's a whole bunch of things on there. But the truth is you're not assigning yourself
all of those things at once because there's no way that fits in Kalinoport's lifestyle when he's
also working and dealing with kids from day to day. So that's exactly right. You might have that
as a reference, but you're not like putting on your plate all those things until you've decided
to put one of them on your plate, if that kind of makes sense. And that might happen,
not to skip ahead at a higher level goal setting system.
Like maybe you're planning your summer and you're like, you know what?
Now is the time.
I'm ready to tackle that bathroom reno and maybe I'll just put like begin bathroom
reno on the list.
And then on the monthly level, you think about, well, what piece am I going to do first?
I'm going to get quotes.
And then again, that kind of generates more smaller tasks at the weekly level where you're
like, oh, let me text my friend and find out which contractor he used or whatever.
So things will trickle down.
but the idea that you kind of need to have all of them assigned you as tasks when they're not really happening yet, I find that stressful.
And again, I think that's partly why I built the things the way that I did.
Well, like, I just noticed looking at my list now that there's like multiple pretty technical tasks related to one of the courses I'm teaching right now.
Because, you know, at some point, I was like, this needs to get done.
I need to post the syllabus for the second half of the year.
And I need to, you know, checking with the TAs on this or that, right?
I'm kind of like putting these things down so that it's not just in my head.
But there's also a notion of like, well, if you trust yourself that there's just like a standing project for the semester, which is the course.
And like if I just at the beginning of each week was like, where am I in the course?
What's coming up?
What needs to get done this week?
I'm not going to forget though.
Like, I mean, I will be able to generate those things as the time comes up, most likely, right?
I said, okay, I'm looking ahead at this week.
You know, like I need the rest of my syllabus should probably go up.
like we're getting towards the end of it.
So let me schedule that for this week.
Or I don't need the TA thing maybe is relevant when there's an exam to grade or something
like that.
So there's some interesting balance here.
Hopefully you have some sort of system.
And I'm sure you already do something like this where you're like looking ahead at your week.
And that's often going to generate tasks that kind of like makes sense for what's coming up.
So, you know, part of planning at every time horizon and this even includes the day,
you're not just looking back at like, well, what did my previous stuff want to do?
You're like, oh, what's actually coming up ahead?
is there anything associated?
And you being Cal, you would do it.
You can trust yourself.
Like I'm sure that you would look ahead of the week and be like, oh, you know, we had this coming
up.
up.
And if you had to do something that's longer range, maybe you would leave yourself some kind of a note
prior to that.
But I feel like if these are things that are just like generally part of your job and your flow
anyway, that yeah, you'd come up with them and you probably don't need to have them
somewhere separate.
Now, if having a list of everything is just helpful to like have a reference, I don't
even know if I would call it part of your task management system, almost just more of like a
collection or reference, then that could make sense. But you haven't like truly assigned it to
yourself. So let me tell you my goal setting system and then I want to hear, let's do,
there's a CS term, we'll do a diff. It was an old command line program. You give it to text
files and it would highlight exactly where they differed. So it was, it was like how you would tell
if there's like changes the source code in a shared code repository. This is the type of stuff
people come here for Sarah. They want to hear about. Yeah, this is the type of stuff where you're
I'm like, okay.
Linux command line interfaces.
All right.
So my multi-scale, so now I know my multi-scale planning is what you would call goal setting system.
Nested goals.
Nested goals.
All right.
So the way I run it is I typically have like a semester or quarterly check in.
Like what are the big things that are happening this season?
I mean, they roughly correspond to my academic semesters.
And I write it out freehand.
It's in a text file.
It's like, hey, this is, I don't want this to be too structured yet.
So it'll be things like I'm teaching this course and here's the type of things I have to keep in mind.
Where am I on like if I'm writing a book?
Like where I'm really looking to be, you know, done with submit the manuscript by December,
which means like I probably need to be doing a chapter a month.
So it's sort of like thinking through at a high level like what's happening at this scale.
Then, and this has sort of been my secret sauce that I think you were one of the few people
who actually talked about this scale as well is actually for me is the weekly scale is critical
because it's where I interface that plan in the calendar.
And this was always this was like a big thing for me.
I look at that, okay, what are these things that are these big picture goals?
I look at my task lists, which now I'm learning are probably too detailed.
And so this could be a lot easier.
These could be like more stakes in the ground instead of like long list of things.
I look at my task list and I look at my calendar, which at this point is really just going
to have things that are appointments and meetings.
So I can see like what's the layout of my week?
When do I have time?
When do I not have time?
Which days are busy or not?
Are there, this was a key innovation.
I came at some point.
is like, oh, this is the time to look for big win changes.
If I cancel this one appointment Friday at 11 a.m., that's going to free up like six straight hours.
And so, like, I see now I'm going to be frustrated when I get there.
I'm just going to move that to like another day or something like that.
And this is when I start putting stuff on the calendar that's not meeting or appointment.
So now I'm like, I want to make progress on this goal.
I'm going to now block time on my calendar like a meeting or appointment for that particular goal.
Like I'm going to be writing this day, this day and this day.
I'm going to work on this like project this afternoon.
and now I'm starting to protect time at that scale.
It's also where if there's key tasks, I'll start, when am I going to get these done?
And I'll start actually adding them to my calendar.
So by the end of my weekly plan, the calendar is like a lot fuller.
There's a lot less space in it.
But only some of it is actually meetings or appointments.
A lot of it's what I came up with.
And then I go to the daily scale every day.
I make a time block plan for the day.
Now what I found is if I don't time block plan, it's unless it's a writing day where it's like all that really matters is I write as much as possible.
like I'm on deadline and then it's just survival mode for everything else.
Outside of those days, a lot of that day by the time I get to it, the calendar is pretty full
because I've been making use of it, but I transfer that into a daily time block plan and I fill
in the remaining gaps in the workday for what do I want to do during that time.
And then I execute off of the daily time block plan for the day as opposed to like list reactive method.
All right.
So that's my goal setting system.
What's our diff there?
Where are the places where we differ?
Or do I do things differently?
So I would say I lean a little bit less heavily on scheduling things, which is interesting.
So like when I go, I actually will also add that I love to have a monthly level as well because I have actually figured out that I'm going to pull my little monthly out.
And yes, this one's analog too.
My schedule is very weird and varies a lot for month to month because I have weeks where I'll be entirely on call, entirely clinical.
I can't do anything for the podcast.
and then I'll have other weeks that maybe I've taken time off to do work for the podcast.
So my months can be incredibly variable.
So I actually have a step in here, even on the monthly level, we're all look to see how many
like kind of work days do I have.
When I say work days, I mean like how many clinical work days and how many work for myself
days and how many days is a family going away, et cetera.
And that's how I will kind of decide how much I want to take on from a creative perspective
because that's the lever that kind of moves the most.
can go high on some months and low on other months.
So month of month kids,
it's not just week to week.
You're like,
this month might be a clinical month.
Correct.
Or maybe not the entire month is clinical,
but like,
whatever,
that's like the feel of this month is like,
I'm actually doing a lot more like in office stuff.
So it's,
okay,
interesting.
Correct.
Like January,
I had lots of days that I could play around and work.
And then February,
we had a week of family vacation.
I had something medical going on.
And I had a week of call.
So that left me like,
I don't know, this is like one out of four days is today that I actually have time to do anything.
So that kind of helps me take a larger overview, like how much can I actually take on here?
Do I even want to add anything kind of new over the course of the month?
And then that kind of informs, you know, the bigger things that I'm taking on and I actually do usually create a list for the month that I look, look towards as I'm planning each week.
And then my weekly process is similar to yours, but I don't tend to do as much of what you're saying, which is where,
I'll say, oh, I have to write this. I'm going to like give it a specific time slot. I tend to just sort of look, okay, I have this many hours. I have this many projects. And on a day to day basis, as I'm planning my day, that is when I'll actually commit to like what fits where. And that's just personal preference. I don't like to feel entirely locked in. Like I think maybe it is kind of a backlash to on my clinical days every minute is spoken for. So on my non-clinical days, I want to be like, do I want to write from 10 to 12 or 1 to 3? I want to make that decision.
that day. And I do purposefully make it on that day, kind of my own version of time block planning
and think about what fits where. But I don't go ahead and kind of pre-schedule it throughout the
week. So my weekly schedule, aside from the clinical days, actually probably looks less full
than yours does when I'm going to the daily level. And then it's on the daily level where I say,
okay, which of these tasks am I selecting? And where do I actually want to fit it within the day?
But otherwise, I think our systems have a lot of parallels. I think I mean, I prefer that.
My issue, the reason why I have to do the way I do it is that if I don't protect that time like Monday morning, God, everyone comes and takes it.
So that's my main issue is like, I'm like, if I say I'll figure out Thursday when I get the Thursday, everyone in the world wants that time.
And by the time I get the Thursday, like the time to work on these things is gone.
So it helps me, basically helps me say no to appointments.
But I had this conversation when Oliver Berkman stopped by earlier this year and we were, you know, talking about various things.
he was like here's he was like here's my ideal schedule and I agreed with him he's like the ideal
schedule just from like human nature not fix a particular job would be kind of deep work in the
morning like you're working on something important and then when you're done then you're like
based on how much energy I have like let me like do a few other smaller practical things more
or less dependent on my mood and then be done and I was like Oliver I'm with you man like that would
be that's my rhythm as well unfortunately the world has concerns
inspired to prevent that because I'm not a full-time writer.
Okay, so that's interesting, though.
I get that, right?
I also, I get stressed out by my calendar.
And I think this would be, and I feel like I have to do it because otherwise it's just,
it's the chess game's too complicated on playing.
But I think that's more a problem with the game on playing.
Well, I think, again, you're an academic, I don't know, sorry.
I don't even know how to pronounce the word.
But with certain careers, people can dump things on your calendar if they see open space.
And I can see why that would really lend it to like, no, no, no, this says writing.
So don't you dare put anything there.
I am lucky in that, well, my patient time is all up for grabs and that will get as filled as I get filled.
But my time for myself, I'm really the only one who could dump stuff on there.
That's just how I've designed things.
And I think that allows me to be a little bit less scheduled.
I'll tell you my big innovation of this year.
Now, and I can get away with this now because like I'm out of promotions to get, you know, I'm a full professor, been tenured for a decade.
Like there's no, there's nothing else that, you know, for me to worry about upsetting people about.
I introduced the notion of a studio day.
And for me, it's Tuesdays.
Because now that I'm doing a lot more digital ethics and not sort of hardcore computer science, I was like, look, this podcast, my newsletter, this is a big part of like my work as a public intellectual on technology, etc.
So studio days, as I just tell my employer, I'm not available on Tuesdays.
I don't, I don't do meetings on Tuesday.
I'm in my studio.
I'm recording, I'm writing, and this is, I've consolidated it this one day, but it's like I'm
reaching millions of people and this is important.
And I'll ask for, you know, forgiveness instead of permission.
And that's been like a huge, that's been a big boon, actually.
It's like, yeah, I just don't, I don't do things on Tuesday and people grumble and then
they have lives and they stop caring because it's not that interesting to them.
That totally makes sense.
And I feel very privileged that I'm doing this not on your studio day, but thank you for accommodating
my patient schedule.
Oh, I'm happy to do things on other days too, but I just don't put, like, I have to go in to I have to go teach today, you know, that's, which I, which I do enjoy. Okay, so then let's talk about seasonality because this is something in your book, Best Lay Plans the book, not the podcast, Best Played Bands. There's a lot on this. And I think we're like very congruent on this idea of moving away from the notion of just year round, no variation to your, it's just like you're turning the crank at like a certain level of intensity and,
February feels the same as June, feels the same as December.
Talk to me about varying rhythms, pace, workloads over time.
Well, first of all, I just love the concept of seasons in general.
And I don't know if that's partly because I live in South Florida and I don't really get to experience them.
But I just like to really, really, like, think about them and think about how my year makes sense divided up.
And I actually kind of talk about different ways that you might think about dividing up your year other than the traditional quarters or even trimesters if you're an academic.
But I really do like to take a very purposeful, like almost half a day kind of planning session
four or five times a year. For me, it's five because I like to divide the year up into five pieces
and think about what do I want out of the upcoming season and not to assume that, you know,
season C is going to be exactly like season A. For me, the first season of the year is like January
first to spring break and that's usually a very go, go, go season. And then we kind of have a very
kid focus season from spring break until the end of the year when we have all that like may stuff and every single kid is in every single competition or whatever. And then summer I treat as much more like let's just be lower key do fun stuff. And by the way, I didn't mention this previously. But I think one other place we differ a little bit is I am very passionate about not just planning my work, but planning the fun stuff. Like planning the get togethers with friends and the travel and the massage or you know, whatever it.
is that I'm trying to build into my life to make it more fun. And so summer might be a time that I
have like a lot of fun planned and it's just like a looser time period. Then we have back to school,
which has that rhythm of like, okay, kids are going back. We're in our routines. I'm also, because I'm in
the planning world, tend to be really, really busy in like January and back to school season. So that
kind of makes sense. And then I have what's called reflection season from November 1st to the end of the year
where I just feel like the world takes on a different pace. It's a little celebratory. Everyone's
reflecting and I just like to like acknowledge that as having its own energy. So yes, I'm super,
super big into A, like acknowledging the seasonal flows and B like purposefully setting time to think
very hard about what you want each season to be like in advance of that season. So your quintiles are
so you got like New Year's through spring break. Spring break to the end of the school year.
Like into school year. Yeah, period. Which I agree with you. It's kind of like I think if it's the time when
it's coaching time for me too.
It's like I coach multiple different things.
Summer.
Then back to school to like Thanksgiving.
And then until Halloween and then November 1st to December 31st to me just feels a little bit different.
Well, but you got like holiday.
Yeah.
And you have, there's like the Thanksgiving holiday.
There's going to be like the Christmas holiday.
It's just going to be and people wind down.
What I think, hey, I love it.
And I think similarly.
And I think what's important here though is because a lot of times when I talk about seasonality,
you probably get the same thing.
People will push back because they'll say, well, like, my job isn't seasonal.
But like this is true for you, right?
Like nothing about pediatric endocrinology changes in March versus January.
But I think what's captured by the way you talk about it is so much of the feeling of your day
and what you're focusing on busyness, like expands beyond just what you're doing in your job.
It's what you're doing on the weekends and the evenings on the day that you're not in the office.
And turning the knob on those things you do control is actually has a much bigger impact in people.
people realize that it's not just I can't take time off of work in this summer so I can't have a
seasonality like well it's completely different what you're doing with your time even outside of
work and then my argument you can't do that in your job I don't think this would work but in like a lot
of knowledge work jobs because it's a lot of it's a little more BSE you have like a lot of
give and you can really turn intensity up and down is something that I'm often telling knowledge
workers in general because the job is so amorphous and there is no
just like here's, you know, here's a list of things that you're working on and here's your
progress. It's all like email and meetings or this or that. And you can often get away with like,
oh, I want to turn things down in the summer and you can do it for a couple months. And no one will
notice. If you do it for a year, they'll eventually notice. But you're just like taking on less
things and moving slower and then you speed up in other times. So I think people have
way more control over the rhythm of their life. Well, even if you have a totally structured job for
me, I get around that by taking more vacation in the summer. So, you know, many jobs,
even if they're extremely structured and yeah, I can't get away with, oh, let me see 75% of my patient volume in July.
Like that wouldn't fly.
But I can take two weeks off and like save my vacation time for those times when I want things to be slower and then maybe take on a little bit less on the creative side and then kind of create that slower rhythm for myself.
Isn't this like the people who do this to the most extreme?
Do I have this right?
There's like it's like ER doctors who sort of travel, right?
And it'll be like, okay, I'm going to come spend three months at this hospital in Boulder so that I end up going to ski for three months.
And they really got that locked in, right?
Because it's shift work.
There are definitely certain professions who either have tons of vacation time or tons of flexibility or there are a lot of doctors these days that will do like Locum's work.
So they could decide that like they're going to work their butt off in March and April and then like not at all for two months.
So that would be the extreme version.
Yeah.
And it's all like the pit.
It's all.
Yeah.
Everything I do all day is just like that.
Everyone is super reasonable like on the pit, right?
That's just every doctor's experience where people just talk slowly and quietly and are just very reasonable.
It's never chaotic at all in the ER.
It's very peaceful.
Yeah.
It's very peaceful.
Okay.
I like that then.
Okay.
So we agree on the seasonality.
All right.
So the pull this together for people, can we build?
I want to build an on ramp.
So like for a typical member of my audience might be they've messed around with individual
type of tools you might use in this conversation.
they've had a to-do manager, they have a calendar that they sometimes use.
They've used a time block planner and then stopped using a time block planner.
They have a task list.
They haven't looked at in a month because it stresses them out.
But they're liking what you're saying.
And like, okay, I think I'm going to be less susceptible to being pushed around by big tech and distractions and numbing if I can take more intention about my life.
Knowing now, as we talked about it, intention might be like I'm intentionally slowing down and then speeding up here.
And it's not just, it's not productivity.
It's not trying to increase the amount of work.
How do we on ramp?
Because we talked about a lot of things.
How do we on ramp someone?
The obvious answer is read Sarah's book.
I was going to say, you buy Best Light plans.
Yes.
And I'm just kidding.
Which I blurred.
And it's a great book.
I mean,
it really walks through all these details, lots of examples.
And you can kind of pick and choose.
I feel like in your book, there's,
that you don't do it explicitly.
There's sort of like, here's what's key.
And then here's like a little bit more advanced things you can add on.
And so like the reader already has a system can plus it up.
But like the new reader.
Yeah.
So how do we onboard the new?
the new thing they're planning.
So I would just focus on those three things that I talked about.
Like, do you have a calendar that makes sense where you're really able to see what you have to do each day in a way that makes sense to you?
Do you have a task management system that works and it enables you to see what you need to see at the right time?
And are you checking your various inboxes in a thoughtful manner versus a when things come at me manner?
And how are you organizing your goals, both larger scale and smaller scale and adapting
some sort of, it could be a bare bones version. And by the way, the tools really truly don't matter.
Like, I could do all of this in a binder, in Apple notes, on paper, on like a really notion and a
really fancy system. Like, there's no specific tool. But to have somewhere, to have rituals around
setting larger scale goals, whether you're doing the yearly or seasonal level, and then also
ways that you're going to bring that into the more practical timelines. So a way of looking at
your seasonal stuff every week, maybe incorporating monthly in there, and then day-to-day assigning
yourself the task that makes sense. So I think that would be my sort of like bare bones minimum
calendar, understand your task management, and have some kind of larger and smaller scale way
of looking at your goals on a, you know, daily or weekly level plus seasonal or yearly.
That would be the most bare bones version. And that ladder piece requires a thing to write
things down in, right?
So there's the latter piece of like, I want to look at the, the monthly scale and the seasonal scale.
For you, that's a notebook.
And it's a separate notebook than your planner.
But you need somewhere where you're, and it could be a Google Doc.
It could be a text file.
You need somewhere where you're taking notes.
So many people have done, like a lot of people that I've worked with have had really cool systems
and even just like Google Sheets where things are actually very much like, you know,
they'll have a whole page for the year.
And then you can actually tab it and separate by seasons.
And they have different categories of their life, all color coded.
So yes, you do have to capture all this stuff. The medium in which you do that doesn't really
matter, but you're going to have to commit to something and continue to use it and to look at it.
And I usually also talk about creating rituals that make sense for the time scale. So if you're
planning the year or the season, you want to dedicate like a good amount of presence and
time to that. So you're going to really want to clear out an afternoon or for the year.
Laura Vandercombe, who has been on this show before, I believe, as well. She and I host a like live
planning retreat that lasts two days. And I'm not saying everyone needs to, you know, come to our
retreat specifically, but we do not run out of things to talk about with our participants in those
two days for planning the year. So really giving yourself the gift of space when it's a larger time frame
to think about what's coming up and what do you want out of that time frame. It makes sense.
And then when you're going to the day, you want something very, very quick. Obviously, we can't do a
two-day retreat every day, right? But we should have things kind of laid out so that you can look at your
calendar, which is organized, look at your week, which has already been thought through,
and select your tasks for the day in like five to ten minutes and be done with it.
And then let me, finally, I have to rope you in as I do with all guests into some sort of
AI realism rant because, you know, this has been my correcting the narrative on AI has
been a big part of my work recently.
I want to rope you into my side on this, the intersection of AI and productivity, because I feel
like there's this, you know, tech people aren't the best people to talk about organizational
systems because what makes a tech person happy is like complexity and pieces fitting together
and whatever.
But they've really been pushing this idea that, oh, the missing piece in people being organized
could be solved by AI.
And it really doesn't seem to be the issue based on like our whole conversation.
The issue is not when I am looking at what I need to do, understanding it,
figuring out priorities, figuring out what I should work on today. We're really good at that.
Like our brains have embedded in it all of the relevant information. What's coming up,
importance, how you're feeling, health, other things that's happening. That's not hard at all.
What's hard is consistency in capture. It's sticking with a system. Maintaining intentionality
instead of just falling back into like, let me just be reactive because like I'm exhausted.
And none of that's helped by AI. So I don't know. Can I can I rope you into my rant
on this is that that I am always up for an AI rant so that's totally works for me yeah I just don't
want to give some large language model like that control over what I do all day I mean I want to be the
one of my tasks I um one of my biggest and again I'm not a techie so I don't understand like
the inner workings like you do but one of my biggest concerns about AI is that it's giving power
to someone else that I you know I'm not consciously giving so even like as simple as
oh, let me have AI plan my vacations for the year. Then, I mean, who's not to say that, like,
various places haven't, like, paid the model to suggest some things versus another, or if we're
not there yet, we're going to be very soon. So, I mean, for me, life, the most precious thing
of life is our time and our relationships, and I would like to maintain control over that myself. And so
I want to decide what goes on my calendar. I haven't, I'm not saying that AI tools might not be
helpful for some people.
Like, you know, there are things like the skylight calendar, and I think some of these
apps where you could take the soccer schedule and it will, you know, scan it and add those
events to your calendar.
Like those kind of rote tasks to see being helpful.
But in terms of selecting what I want to do with my time, I would like to leave computer
algorithms out of that personally.
And I think most people probably don't want to live a life that was just suggested to
them. They want to actively choose what they're going to do. That's kind of the planning in the first place.
I've never seen someone be stumped by looking at their calendar and their to-do list and be like,
I don't know what to do next. I need someone else to come tell me. I've never seen someone stumped on that.
That's not that, not that hard decision. All right, sir, this has been fantastic. I want to make sure
people know where to get more of this information. So you have two podcasts. Tell us about both.
I do. So the first one is the one that's more planning adjacent. It's called best lead plans.
and I literally describe it as all things planning and planning adjacent.
That one is just me with the occasional guest.
Cal has been on it before and I will be having him on again.
The other one is called Best of Both Worlds and that is done with Laura Vanderkin.
We co-hosted it together and that's about making work and life fit together.
She's an awesome writer and time management guru.
So we make a fun team there.
And your book, Best Laid Plans, that come out in the fall?
Not too long ago, right?
No, December of 2025.
It's called Best Laid Plans, a simple system for living a life.
you love. One of Amazon's best nonfiction books of the month, right? Yes, it got chosen for December.
It was like a big shock. People are like, did you pay for that? I'm like, no. So, but that was a
really fun honor. And it says like editors pick on there. Of course, you can get it at anywhere other
than Amazon as well. But that was kind of a fun thing. Excellent. All right. Well, Sarah,
always a pleasure to have you on. Thanks for getting the weeds with us. I think this type of thing
is going to be helpful for a lot of my listeners who you got to take control of your time. If you don't,
Big Tech will happily take control of it for you. So this is the first step. I'm sure we'll be
talking again soon, but thanks as always for coming on. Oh, thank you so much for having me on,
and I very much enjoyed talking about the pit. All right. So that was my discussion with Sarah Hart
Unger. I looked it up. I was on the show, Jesse, so it's worth people going back. Also,
years back, I think we had Sarah on our show. Yeah, we did. Yeah, so sort of a long-term front of the show.
I love geeking out about planning systems.
To me, the key point that prefaces the whole discussion, because I think her advice is spot on.
I actually picked up some ideas there that I think are important.
But the key point that I think ties to here the whole conversation is that Sarah did not like to associate the word productivity with planning.
So, like, that's two different things.
Productivity is about, I don't know, professionally you're trying to increase the amount of something you produce and like that's that.
But what she cared about what's controlling your time.
how do you have a say over what you're doing with your time?
So you have control.
I often use the term internally attention shaping.
How do you shape your own attention so other services don't?
And I think that's really useful.
If we separate planning from productivity, we realize like, oh, this is one of the tier one skills,
not just for living a deep life, but for pushing back on the digital distraction.
So very good.
It's good to have this there on the show.
Let's take another quick break to hear from our sponsors.
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All right.
Let's get back to the show.
All right, so you've heard me talking with Sarah, and now I want to hear from you.
Let's move on to the part of the show where we check our inbox to see what you have to say.
All right, Jesse, what interesting emails or messages have we gotten recently that's worth reviewing?
The first one's from Sandra.
Here's an email from her who is wondering if our dopamine addiction is changing how they make TV shows.
Okay, let's see.
I got this.
It's a good one because we are, it's going to be not until later in the spring,
but we are having Anna Limkeon, who is the researcher who wrote Dopamine Nation.
Like the leading, the world's leading experts on dopamine, how it affects us.
So we're going to get, I'm learning a lot about dopamine now, so I'm glad to have this question.
All right, so let's see here.
I got Sanders email here.
Here's what she said.
Have you noticed that in TV programs such as the Great Pottery Throwdown, when the program,
when the program finishes, they say next time, and then they show you the highlights of the next show like a trailer.
I hate this as I don't want to know what happens next time I want to surprise.
They also do this at the start of the next program saying this time and then show the trailer, which highlights the show again.
Is this an effect of dopamine?
There is no delayed surprise.
Basically, you don't have to watch the whole show.
You can just watch the first five minutes and decide if you really want to see the full detail.
all,
Jesse,
I assume
you are a great pottery
throwdown completest.
You've seen every season
of that show.
I have.
Do you think that's literally
people just making pottery?
Probably.
So when they're like,
all right,
next time,
next time on the show,
and it just shows people
very quietly at the pottery wheel.
And then there's all this drama
if like something's ready to topple over?
Well,
yeah,
like it wobbles a little bit
and then they
straightened it.
And it kind of sticks on that for a second.
And then one of the contestants comes in the frames, stabs him the neck.
See, that's where the drama is.
That's why you got to watch.
Is this going to be a stabbing episode or just an episode where they make pottery?
All right.
There's a couple interesting things here because you know what this reminded me of, Jesse,
is the advice that we heard from professional YouTubers about how you have to build a YouTube video to get big viewership on YouTube.
And remember, like the various YouTube people who work with that told us, like,
Oh, the thing is, like watch a Mr. Beast video.
You'll see this.
You have to show the people, the audience, right off the bat.
This is what's coming.
And you show quick clips of the biggest exciting things that's going to happen.
So like a Mr. Beast video, if they're, you know, crashing a train into something.
You'll see the train crashing into something.
They'll show you.
Here's all the things that are going to come.
And then you go and you deliver the things you said you're going to come later in the show with very limited friction.
So quick cuts, moving, moving, moving, moving.
to the things you're already showed that was going to come.
That sounds like it's exactly what's happening on these TV shows as well.
I don't know the role of dopamine because we haven't had Anna on the show yet.
But there is a bigger phenomenon here that may or may not be tied to dopamine that we need a good name for.
Jesse, we've got to think about like a good name for this.
But there's something about the abundance of choice in media where now if I go into a streaming service,
there is endless things I could choose.
that makes it hard to choose and commit to something to watch
because your brain is always thinking
there might have been a better choice.
And I hear this a lot.
I think we see this in our letters sometimes, right?
Like young people in particular will be like,
I have such a hard time like choosing and sticking with a movie.
I think we got this in response to last week's episode
because a lot of people wrote in about movies.
And a lot of people like, yeah, even people who don't use their phone a lot,
we're like, I just have a hard time sticking with the movie.
And so I wonder if there's something like this going on.
is the abundance of choice makes it really hard for us to commit to something.
Because their mind is like there is other options.
In a way there wasn't, if you were just turning on TV and you flip through the channels,
you're like, this is the literally the only thing on right now that's like a little bit interesting
to me, I have no other option.
Your brain's like, let's watch it.
Or if you're at the movie theater, you're like, there's no other place for me to go,
so I might as well watch it.
But if you have one click away from those horizontal carousels on Netflix, like, my God,
there could be something better.
So maybe that's what these TV shows are recognizing.
We have to show them the audience.
Here's all the stuff that's coming.
you're like, okay, I want to see that, that, that, and that.
All right, this show is worth me watching.
I hate that as well.
My kids hate it.
They're always like, go fast forward, fast forward, whatever we're watching a show that has a next time.
All right.
What else do we got here?
Next up is from Kendra.
We have an email from Kendra with a reaction to your discussion last week of film students who couldn't make it through entire films.
We got a lot of reaction for that one.
Yeah.
Because people, like, it's something a lot of people have personal experience with.
All right, let's see here.
says, what I don't see mentioned here or most other places is that the length of movies has
actually increased over the last 10 plus years.
It used to be that a movie was between 1.5 hours and 2 hours, but that time is creeping up.
Seems like most of them are over 2 hours now.
In personal opinion, it doesn't always make the movie better.
Intuitively, I guess I've had that same effect.
My wife and I started last night Train Dreams, which is one of the best picture nominees
It's out of Netflix studios.
And we noted, like, it actually caught our attention that it was an hour 47.
So this must be a fact.
Like, that felt short, notably short.
I found an article.
I haven't really read this yet.
We're going to kind of do this on the air.
I found a Vanity Fair article about exactly this phenomenon.
I'm a little bit curious about what's going on.
So let's look at this.
I'm going to see if there's any interesting stats in this piece.
I like this ad of James Cameron wearing Rolex.
Why is James? Okay, I'm sorry to go do a divergence here.
If you're James Cameron, why are you agreeing to do a Rolex ad?
You get free watches.
He's so rich.
He's so rich.
I think his net worth is like a billion dollars.
Is it really?
Yeah.
I mean, he's the director and producer with significant profit participation in three out of the top five highest grossy movies of all time.
I think with those watches, they don't really have to do much and they just get
cool watches and cool places.
I don't, but I mean, a billion dollars, right?
So like, I'm just, let's make this relative, right?
Like, so for us, like, what would be the, the cost of a Rolex to James Cameron,
what would be the equivalent for, like, us and the money we have?
That would be like, I think if someone is like, come do this photo shoot and, like,
I'm going to, if you do it, I'm going to give you a tall coffee from Starbucks at 50% off.
Like, you only got to pay like a dollar.
$1.25 for it.
I'm not going to go to an all-day photo shoot.
Like, I can just buy a cup of coffee.
The only thing I can imagine, I'm sure this is fascinating for our audience.
The only thing I can imagine is that the diving, deep-sea diving aspect.
They sponsored the documentary.
I think they sponsored the documentary he did where he went to the bottom of the Marianas Trench.
It might make more sense.
Do you ever see that documentary where he goes to the bottom of the Marianas Trench?
No, I haven't.
It's really interesting.
But they have a arm coming off of the surmount.
merciful that's just holding, I think it's a Rolex watch.
The show that like, look, this diver watch at the bottom of the Marionine's trench is still working or something like that.
Okay.
So that's probably just part of the deal.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because he didn't want to pay for that documentary.
All right.
We figured it out.
All right.
Anyways, here we go.
Here's some stats about the, let's see if Kendra is right about this.
Here's what Van de Fair says.
In 2002, even as two nearly three-hour Lord of the Ring movies dominated theaters,
the average length of the top 20 box office performers was a breezy one hour and 59 minutes.
20 years later, moviegoers had to sit through an extra 13 minutes of footage on average.
Okay, so we went from hour 59 in 2002 on average to, if I'm doing my math, right, two hours and 12 minutes in 2022.
All right.
Some movies did get longer.
Is there a reason?
I skim some of the rest of this article.
Here's what's interesting about it is they have a lot of people saying,
all right, here, here's a, let me read this quote here.
The studios are definitely not encouraging three-hour movies.
That I can guarantee, says a senior movie executive,
as a consumer speaking for myself on behalf of many other people like me enough already.
All right.
So if the studios aren't encouraging this, why are the movies getting longer?
It seems like it's just the filmmakers want to make longer movies.
Why do you think that is?
They like them.
Like here we go,
well,
let me read you
from the article,
Jesse.
Cinema purist
might see a long film
is a sign
of a director
with something to say.
So,
yeah,
it just seems better.
I have another theory
for this as well,
though.
All right.
So yes,
the studios don't want it.
The audiences
don't necessarily want it.
The directors
want it,
but they've always
wanted long movies,
right?
I suspect the differences
there's fewer movies.
Like, you know,
they mentioned,
like, oh, 2002,
sure,
the Lord of the Ring,
movies were three hours long, but the average movie was short. But at 2002, you probably had a lot more
movies in the theater, and you had a lot of mid-tier movies because there's just a lot more movies
coming out than there are now. And the mid-tier movies, they were not going to allow to be long,
but it seems now there's fewer movies and the movies that are made, they tend to be more like big
event movies. It's going to be like a Chris Nolan movie. It's going to be Martin's Korsese,
Killer of the Flowers Moon, right? It's going to be these big event movies. Maybe those have
always been long. We just don't have shorter movies.
pull it down.
Do you think that's true?
There's less movies now?
Because you always talk about...
No, as many fewer.
Why is that?
Post-pandemic.
They're still recovering from that?
The global box office has not made it back to 2019.
It hasn't come close.
But in terms of book sales, books...
Books are okay.
Interesting.
But even that, it's a little bit misleading.
Book sales industry-wide are doing fine.
They've continued to, like, rise at like, a reasonable pace.
But what's really happening is nonfiction sales are down, which is bad for me.
me, but it's being compensated for because of these massive hits, especially in like women-oriented
fiction and fantasy fiction. So you have like the dark fantasy books where like people are marrying
dragons and books like Colin Hoover books that come out of book talk and they're selling huge numbers,
you know, 20 million copies of a book, like just huge numbers mainly more among female readers
than male readers. Nonfiction is not doing as well. And in part.
that tended to be more of where you had mail book readers and they're not reading as much.
So books are doing fine, but it's a little bit uneven.
But movies are not doing nearly as well.
They just, and even the biggest hits aren't as big of hits as they were sort of pre-pandemic.
Because, yeah, I mean, think about all the movies.
Like, we talked about it last week, like the probably the greatest movie of that decade came out in 2002,
which was to Britney Spears vehicle Crossroads.
But there was a lot of movies like that in 2002.
There's not as many of those today.
And those are all short because they're like, no, you can't make it long.
We want to move as many movies through.
But then when Peter Jackson came along, he was like,
I'd do Lord of the Rings.
He was like, I'm going to do three hours.
Like, I guess, sure.
And now it's like all Peter Jackson movies.
That's my theory.
All right.
Do we have another email?
Yep.
This is from an anonymous person.
It's a comment saying that extends some of the issues you discuss about attention span last week
from the context of movies to the workplace.
All right.
Anonymous.
Let's read this note here.
One angle of smartphone addiction I haven't seen discussed is the fact that it's torpedoing the ability of people to focus at work.
Anecdotally, I've heard from many people saying that they have trouble paying attention in meetings and experienced aloofness from my coworkers firsthand.
If corporate America cares mostly about profits, why don't we see pressure from companies on their employees to curb their smartphone-induced fragmentation?
We'd love to hear your take signed anonymous.
That's an interesting point.
It's become a bigger issue.
These used to be separate magisteria for me in my writing,
and I'd have to always make the point when I would do interviews, et cetera,
like these are two separate issues.
Distraction in the workplace is driven by workplace communication tools like email and Slack.
Distraction at home is being driven by attention economy platform tools on your smartphones like social media.
And I said the effects are similar.
Your attention is fragmented, but the causes are different and therefore the solutions are different.
The issue in work has to do with the way we collaborate.
Because we collaborate with this hyperactive hive mind approach of everyone just talks to everyone on demand as you're needed.
It creates a situation which you have to constantly monitor communication channels,
not because they're super addictive or super stickier because you have bad work habits,
but because that's where the work is happening.
And if you don't monitor it, you fall behind.
And that's what's distracting you.
Whereas on your phone, outside of work, the reason why you're looking at that phone all the time is because it's engineered to be hyper-engaging
and it's creating a reward loop within your short-term motivational system
and then those neuronal bundles are voting for the phone whenever they see it
and it wins out over other activities most of the time.
Two separate problems.
But what Anonymous is saying is something that I've seen to be increasingly true,
which is that the distractions from the phone have gotten so good
that as we talked about last week,
they're overall reducing people's cognitive patients.
They're overall reducing people's comfort with any sort of sustained attention
even when they're in a non-phone context.
like they're in a meeting
and they can't pick up their phone, right?
Because if we want to look inside the brain,
the short-term reward system,
you have these neuronal bundles that vote
if they feel like the expected reward of a behavior
is going to be high.
They're not going to vote for picking up the phone
if you're in the middle of a meeting
with five people with your boss
because it's measuring the benefit
you'll get by seeing something interesting
with the massive negative impact of your boss
being like, are you looking at your phone
right in front of me
while I'm trying to talk to you.
So in a meeting,
we're not being drawn to pick up our phone
because our mind is saying
this is not,
there's a low reward to that.
But we're still,
as reported by anonymous,
having a hard time paying attention.
Drifting aloof,
like can't keep our mind focused.
This is becoming,
this is a sign,
I guess I would say,
of the cognitive impacts
of consumer,
non-professional consumer
digital attention economy tools
moving to a new level
of magnitude of pain.
a new level magnitude of negative impact.
It's not just now, it's hard when I have my phone not to look at it, like when I'm out to dinner with my friends.
It's, I'm beginning to permanently lose my ability to be comfort, sustaining focus, delaying gratification.
Even if I can't look at the phone, I just can't do it anymore.
So these worlds have now come together.
So both of these, again, we have two different problems.
So the solve the phone problem, really the only solution is you have to stop participating in the attention economy.
tired. It's been a decade now of people trying to convince me that this is the
it's inevitable. It's the digital town square.
We still hear these arguments today, you know, that if we don't let 12-year-olds in Australia
be on TikTok, they won't be able to know about world events and all these type of things.
But that, I'm so tired of that argument.
It's just a giant money-making scheme that strip mines your mind to, like, allow Mark Zuckerberg
to buy the second half of Kauai.
So we have to just stop participating that economy and you'll eventually gain back to that cognitive patience.
But then we still have to solve the email and Slack Promit work, which has to do with collaboration style.
So it's a hard, oh God, Jesse, there's a lot of hard challenges out there, but I guess it gives me something to do.
All right.
So also, as always, towards the end of the show, I like to discuss what I have been up to recently in my own quest to cultivate a deep life.
So give you my update.
First, people have been asking about this AI programmer project.
So I'm not sure if you saw this, Jesse, but last, I guess it would be two weeks ago now when this comes out.
I sent out an email to my newsletter list saying, if you're a computer programmer, I want to hear how you're using AI.
The good, the bad, what you love, what you hate, whatever it is.
I just want to, you're not using it all.
You use it every day.
I just want to hear about it because there's a lot of discussion right now about cloud code and agentic AI.
And a lot of discussions a little bit for someone like me who follows the industry closely.
And for a lot of people like programmers, it's a little bit, it's a little confused.
using the sudden attention because these sort of AI tools for programming have been big
since before chat GPT came out, the sort of auto-complete, tab complete.
You know, we go way back.
We go to cursor, these sort of pre-chat GPT products.
And then as I reported in January for the New Yorker, I did a lot of interviews with people
who work on these programming agencies, command light interface agents like Claude Code.
Those really started showing promise in 2024.
And that's what allowed at the beginning of 2025.
this was the article I published in January.
At the beginning of 2025, it led to all these tech leaders to say,
we're going to have agents in all parts of your life this year.
2025 will be the year of the agent because we're seeing how good these are already working in programming.
And then what happened is it turns out non-programming agents are much harder and nothing really happened in 2025.
But the computer programming agents continued to get better.
And about six months ago, I guess it's just like a tipping point thing.
There's a lot of programmers using these agents because they're really, they were,
good. It was the only thing, agentic thing that was really working well in AI.
But there's more people started using them about six months ago with some of the latest updates,
Claude code switching from Opus to Sonnet. There's like these little things got just good.
Nothing big happened. No new technology was introduced. But just like these little changes happened
where I think it became just easy enough that in more context people used them. And also I think it's
just a reporting thing. People started talking about, yeah, I'm using these agents. They're pretty cool.
and then that got a lot of other people who had it been using them to use them.
So there wasn't really a technological breakthrough six months ago,
but there was a awareness breakthrough within the wider world of these tools,
which have been like, you know, they've been around for a while.
Anyways, I wanted to know what's really going on.
So I've heard from, I'm never going to get through this, Jesse,
350 people have sent me in detailed briefings.
And I'm trying to go through them in detail, take notes, and I'm also coding them.
like, I'm coding the AI use of the person.
So is it like from one excreem like doesn't basically uses rarely or only occasionally uses any AI,
agentic uses rarely all programmers now, people don't understand AI completely changed programming in like 2022.
Like everyone tab completes all sorts of things.
Tab complete is where it'll finish the code that's like right in front of what you're doing.
Because it's like, oh, you start writing a function name and press tab and it'll finish the calls for you.
you. And so like everyone does that. But with agintic coding, it's like rarely uses it, uses it for some types of situations, but not for others. Like there's just depends. It uses it for the majority of their coding and then vibe coding, which is, so use it for the majority of their coding, but closely supervised, I should say. And then vibe coding, which is like the way Matt Schumer talked about in that article we talked about last week. We're like build this app and you come back later and it's built it and tested it.
So I'm also like coding so I can keep statistics and just trying to keep track of notes.
And God, I'm through like 50.
I've made it through 50 of the 350.
People probably write a lot, right?
Yeah.
And I would say a good portion of them are written by AI, which is interesting.
And the people disclose it.
They're like, I'm not a very good writer.
I wrote this by AI.
So it's interesting.
I much prefer the non-AI written reports, though, because AI, like, you can see where it's just,
it's so bland and just like summarizing.
And it's almost like vibey.
So I get better reports when they don't write the report by AI.
Anyways, that's ongoing.
And I don't know what to do with it.
I just want to be more informed about it so that when we talk about these issues in the future, I know exactly what people are doing.
Because there's so much room for hype and vibes as well as fear, dystopia and utopian rhetoric here that I want to be super grounded.
It's really complicated, though.
So I don't have my arms around it yet.
the main thing I can say is I think you have to think about there is for sure a new style of programming that is significantly spreading.
50% of the first 50 reports I've gone through are now largely using agents to produce code under close supervision.
Almost no one's vibe coding.
That's not really a thing.
Vibe coding is fine if you're not a programmer and you need to build a quick web application to help organize your team.
But that's like a separate thing.
And these are all serious programmers.
There's like four of them so far or doing anything that looks like vibe coding.
But half of them are, and the other half aren't, because it also turns out that like it has to be a language and a type of thing on which is trained a lot for it to be good.
So if you're trying to write like advanced rust code or something, it doesn't work well.
If that doesn't work well with go.
And it's a really new type of work where it's very interactive, a lot of like, okay, you're trying to, okay, you're,
trying to converse with the agent with your writing specs and it checks the spec and doesn't
understand what you like all this like specification do all this work and then finally like okay
now build this piece and then it builds that piece and then you you test it and you let it write
test and you have it look at your test and then you fix things you try again and you kind of have
it's like supervising as someone told me it's like supervising like a junior employee who's like
a pretty good coder but like super literal and you have to like really be on them that's like what
it is right now.
I think it's like a beta.
We're in the beta phase of this.
I think there's a core in here that's going to stick and increase the speed with which senior
programmers make progress on what they're doing.
I think there's a lot of other stuff that's surrounding it that's probably unnecessarily
wasting time.
And I think there's going to be new processes and procedures.
There's going to be some things where we strip this back away from and other things where we
keep it.
So my main thing I can say now is the way.
A lot of programmers are experimenting with this.
A lot of programmers are spending most of their time experimenting with it and not actually doing their work.
And it's a beta phase.
And I think it's going to take six months until this shakes out.
And then we see how this more permanently changes, how certain types of programming happens.
So I don't know.
That's what's going on.
I listened to your Zitron interview.
Oh, me on his show.
Yeah.
Yeah.
On his hater season.
Yeah.
What did you think?
I liked it.
I liked how you explained some stuff because I was confused and you explained it.
I've been doing these videos.
I might record another one today with my friend Rob Mons.
We record him here in the studio.
And he's like a philosophy brown Ivy League guy.
So he plays the role of the smart person who doesn't understand technology.
And then he sort of interrogates me on whatever's going on in AI.
So you should check those videos out as well.
Yeah, so I like those.
Quick question.
Before I get into what I've read and watched recently, quick question for the audience.
If you want to send us in to interesting at Calnewport.com.
I'm thinking, I'm scared of this idea to hate new commitments, but I'm thinking because I'm under some pressure about this, about maybe having a standalone short podcast and newsletter just to do the AI reaction.
So they keep this show and the newsletter kind of focused on what it's meant for, which is like helping individuals in their fight for depth in a distracted world, and then have a maybe on this feed or on its own feed.
It's sort of like, here's like, what's in the news on AI this week.
let me give you my AI realist take and then maybe like a newsletter version of it.
I'm terrified of that work, but also I feel I'm going to have a voice in this that's important right now.
I don't know.
So if you have feedback, sent an interesting at calnewport.com.
All right.
What did I read or watch?
So we're recording this, Jesse confirm.
We're recording this on February 24th.
Plenty of days left in February.
I have completed my fifth book for February.
Yeah, maybe.
I read The Last Kings of Hollywood by Paul Fisher.
My wife gave it to me.
Again, I mentioned, maybe I mentioned this before.
This is a book that was basically like invented in a lab to be exactly what I want to read.
The Rise of Spielberg, Lucas, and Coppola.
So obviously, obviously I love this book.
All right.
So that's my fifth book for February.
I would go through them all, but I don't have to list with me.
I forgot.
Lost Island, Intensity.
Last Kings of Hollywood.
Lost Book of the Bible, the hidden book in the Bible.
And Potensify?
I said that.
There's one before.
Just one other one I'm forgetting.
Whatever.
Oh, you said Lost Island.
Yeah, I said Lost Island.
Speaking of Lost Island, I did see in the podcast last week when I was talking about
Lost Island.
I don't know what the hell book cover you found.
I guess it was a book with the same name.
Is that a different one?
Oh, yeah.
So I looked it up.
You put up a book cover for it.
It's a children's book.
So the audience is like, what the hell?
There's a book called The Lost Island that's aimed, it said, for the like nine to
12-year-old market and it's like
kids exploring or whatever. So the other one must
not be popular at all. It's old.
It's like a decade old. Yeah.
So no,
I didn't read a kid's book
in case people are wondering.
I'm also watching things. People
want to hear about movies after the last week's episode. I watched
The Smashing Machine,
which starring Dwayne Johnson. Dwayne Johnson
was great. The filming was in that
like really confident, impressive
like standard safty style naturalism
which I think it's like really impressive.
Baltier filmmaking.
The movie, though, they couldn't, they couldn't find a core of the movie in the script.
It was, at least my opinion, is it was like episodic and impressionistic.
But they struggle to actually have an arc or attention or you just kind of felt like you were in this person's life.
And then they added in the sort of Emily Blunt, sort of like very cliched, not very interesting storyline of like, there's his wife, she be crazy.
And it's a real problem for them.
but then they like make up again after they fight and like they guess that's his main villain was like overcoming his wife's craziness like there was no it's like a beautifully crafted acted movie that they didn't have the core and I think that's why otherwise the pieces were great but it didn't I don't think it came together I'm gonna watch that soon actually yeah it's worth watching rock is great it's a really good acting I also say he's huge he's a monster monster he's like what 85 years old what does he now monster we also watch song song
Blue, which was
starring Hugh Jackman and
Kate Hudson about
dramatizing the life of a
Neil Diamond husband-wife tribute
band from the
90s and 2000s.
You know, it was like, parts of it were like a jukebox
musical, right? Like, it's very like good-hearted
and they're just like
super happy and they're great singers
and like singing Neil Diamond and it's shot like a
concert film those parts and it's really nice. It was fine.
It had to be edited. The problem is, is
not to spoil too much, there's multiple
tragedy beats in it.
So it's like, things are going well
tragedy, things are going well tragedy, and it's like
they have to cover too much ground too quickly.
And just as you're getting started, like, I kind of like this
it's kind of feel good, infectious Tupac
musical, you get to that tragedy beat pretty quickly.
You're like, I don't think I'm bought in enough into these characters
to care. And then,
so again, it's
one of these movies like, good, not great.
Good components, but
good components but didn't all come together.
All right.
So that's what I was up to.
I think that's it for this week.
You and there's a note here about
you're finishing up the best picture nominees.
Oh, yeah.
So that's why we watched,
that's why we were watching train dreams.
Yeah, so my wife and I were trying to finish.
That's one where he's a tree cutter, right?
Yeah.
I saw that.
That was good.
Yeah.
Okay.
I'm about halfway through.
Yeah.
Beautifully shot.
So we try to watch all the best picture nominees.
We're pretty close.
We are doing one exchange where there's one movie she saw I didn't and one I saw she
didn't.
We're going to count it for both.
She didn't want to see Frankenstein.
I don't want to see Hamnet.
And so we're kind of, we're still counting it.
So we've got to see Train Dreams still, Secret Agent, which I'm looking forward to.
And I think there's only one, oh, sentimental value.
All I can think about with the movie watching is in our theme the last couple of
weeks is when you're talking you're at um to take 30 minute breaks and read a article with the three
hour movies I'm like that's going to take a long time it doesn't take it takes five minutes no no I think
it's fine yeah you're right to movies are pretty long I love that's what I do and I have never try it but I
want to try it eventually yeah like reenergizes you it really makes a difference and then you like
learn a lot of film stuff all right anyways enough of this nonsense let's uh we'll call it for now we'll be back
next week with another episode and until then as always stay deep
