PRINTCast: PRINT's Podcast Studio – PRINT Magazine https://www.printmag.com/categories/printcast/ A creative community that embraces every attendee, validates your work, and empowers you to do great things. Tue, 28 Jan 2025 21:21:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://i0.wp.com/www.printmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-print-favicon.png?fit=32%2C32&quality=80&ssl=1 PRINTCast: PRINT's Podcast Studio – PRINT Magazine https://www.printmag.com/categories/printcast/ 32 32 186959905 Everyone is a Salesman | Gael Towey https://www.printmag.com/printcast/everyone-is-a-salesman-gael-towey/ Fri, 31 Jan 2025 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=786008 On this episode, a conversation with designer Gael Towey (Martha Stewart Living, MSLO, Clarkson Potter, House & Garden, more).

The post Everyone is a Salesman | Gael Towey appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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In 1995, New York magazine declared Martha Stewart the “Definitive American Woman of Our Time.” And, as the saying goes, sort of, behind every Definitive American Woman of Our Time is another Definitive American Woman of Our Time. And that’s today’s guest, designer Gael Towey.

But let’s back up. It’s 1982, and Martha Stewart, then known as the “domestic goddess” — or some other equally dismissive moniker — published her first book, Entertaining. It was a blockbuster success that was soon followed by a torrent of food, decorating, and lifestyle bestsellers.

In 1990, after a few years making books with the likes of Jackie Onassis, Irving Penn, Arthur Miller, and, yes, Martha Stewart, Towey and her Clarkson Potter colleague, Isolde Motley, were lured away by Stewart, who had struck a deal with Time Inc. to conceive and launch a new magazine.

Towey’s modest assignment? Define and create the Martha Stewart brand. Put a face to the name. From scratch. And then distill it across a rapidly expanding media and retail empire.

In the process, Stewart, Motley, and Towey redefined everything about not only women’s magazines, but the media industry itself — and spawned imitations from Oprah, Rachael, and even Rosie.

By the turn of the millennium, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, as it was rebranded in 1997, included seven magazines, multiple TV projects, a paint collection with Sherwin-Williams, a mail-order catalog, Martha by Mail, multimillion-dollar deals with retailers Kmart, Home Depot, and Macy’s, a line of crafts for Michael’s, a custom furniture brand with Bernhardt, and even more bestselling books. And the responsibility for the visual identity of all of it fell to Towey and her incredibly talented team. It was a massive job.

We talk to Towey about her early years in New Jersey, about being torn between two men (“Pierre” and Stephen), eating frog legs with Condé Nast’s notorious editorial director, Alexander Liberman, and, about how, when all is said and done, life is about making beautiful things with extraordinary people.

Read the full episode transcript here.


Print Is Dead (Long Live Print!) is a podcast about magazines and the people who made (and make) them. Magazines that combined thought-provoking attitudes and values with a distinctive look and feel, and cast a long and powerful shadow on American culture and public discourse. Hear stories and learn lessons from legendary designers, editors, writers, publishers, photographers, illustrators, photo editors, and more—stories and lessons that capture a magical history of innovation and inspiration, and that point the way forward. We’ll go deep into the lives and careers of this astonishingly talented group of creators, and tease out what these giants—past and present—have to teach the next generation of creators.

If you’re in the magazine business—if you’re in any business focused on content creation—this podcast is for you.

This episode is a special collaboration with The Spread and is made possible by PIDLLP sponsors Commercial Type, Mountain Gazette, and Freeport Press.

The team behind Print is Dead (Long Live Print!) also produces The Full Bleed, a podcast about the future of magazines and the magazines of the future.

The post Everyone is a Salesman | Gael Towey appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Min Lew https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-min-lew/ Wed, 29 Jan 2025 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=786693 In this episode, Min Lew talks about her path into design, how to move up the ladder within agency environments, and what she looks for in solid client relationships. Lew also offers up some advice for emerging designers.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Min Lew appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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This week’s episode welcomes Min Lew, partner, executive creative director & managing director at BaseNYC. Born in Germany, raised in Seoul, and now living in Brooklyn, Lew brings 20 years of experience across culture, technology, luxury, fashion, and more. Her impressive portfolio includes collaborations with clients like Apple, The New York Times, JFK T4 Terminal, and MoMA. In this episode, host Nicola Hamilton talks to Lew about her path into design, how to move up the ladder within agency environments, and what she looks for in solid client relationships. Lew also offers some advice for emerging designers.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

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Do GLP-1s Change the Meaning of “Obesity”? https://www.printmag.com/printcast/do-glp-1s-change-the-meaning-of-obesity/ Thu, 23 Jan 2025 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=786264 In this episode, co-hosts Brad Davidson and Gabriel Allen-Cummings discuss this controversial drug class and the equally contentious conversation around the disease of obesity.

The post Do GLP-1s Change the Meaning of “Obesity”? appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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With the advent of GLP-1 drugs, it was only a matter of time before co-hosts Brad Davidson and Gabriel Allen-Cummings dove into a discussion about this controversial drug class and the equally contentious disease of obesity. In this episode, they explore a range of topics—from the history of obesity and its recognition as a disease to how GLP-1s like Ozempic are influencing the conversation around the legitimacy and stigma of obesity beyond just Body Mass Index (BMI).

One of the most compelling ideas from this thought-provoking episode centers on control—how we perceive our own health and judge others, assuming people have more control over their health outcomes than they really do. This theme cuts to the heart of the obesity debate: are we excusing unhealthy habits, or are we acknowledging that the issue is far more complex than we originally thought?

Inspiration for this episode came from this op-ed in The New York Times: Are We Thinking About Obesity All Wrong?


Welcome to Breaking the Code! Behavioral science is a cornerstone of modern marketing practice, but much of what passes itself off as behavioral science is just bs. Good social science gives us the insights and roadmap we need to change behavior, but bad social science just muddies the water and tarnishes the social sciences. As behavior change is a core objective of marketing, getting behavioral science right is crucial. Listen in as hosts Brad Davidson, PhD and Sonika Garcia, MPH, Medical Anthropology Strategists at Havas Health, sound off on what is, and isn’t, good social science, from a variety of disciplines covering new topics every podcast.

Learn more on LinkedIn and Spotify.

The post Do GLP-1s Change the Meaning of “Obesity”? appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Greg Hoffman https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-greg-hoffman/ Wed, 22 Jan 2025 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=786258 In this episode, Greg Hoffman, the former chief marketing officer at Nike, discusses what it takes to steer a 600-person design team, how to grow in big corporate environments, and why exploring interests outside of design makes us better designers. 

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The guest this week is global brand leader Greg Hoffman, the former chief marketing officer at Nike. For 28 years, Hoffman held marketing, design, and innovation leadership positions at Nike. His role in the rise of marketing and design through that period was recognized when Fast Company named him one of the Most Creative People in Business. Today his primary role is as founder and principal of the brand leadership platform, Modern Arena. In that position, Hoffman advises Fortune 500 brands, startups, and nonprofits about creating brand strength, business growth, and social impact. He engages teams ranging from Apple, Google, and Netflix, to Lego, and Target, on how to build stronger emotional bonds through branding and creativity. In this episode, host Nicola Hamilton and Hoffman discuss his years at Nike, including what it takes to steer a 600-person design team, how to grow in big corporate environments, and why exploring interests outside of design makes us better designers.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

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The Brand Called Us | Alan Webber and Bill Taylor https://www.printmag.com/printcast/print-is-dead-long-live-print-podcast-the-brand-called-us-fast-company/ Fri, 17 Jan 2025 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=785959 On this episode, a conversation with Fast Company founders Alan Webber and Bill Taylor.

The post The Brand Called Us | Alan Webber and Bill Taylor appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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What we unleashed was a point of view about the future that took the form of a magazine. The magazine was the vessel, but the magazine wasn’t the point. The message was the point.

In the summer of 1995, host Patrick Mitchell got an offer he couldn’t refuse. It came from this episode’s guests, Alan Webber and Bill Taylor, the founding editors of Fast Company, widely acknowledged as one of the magazine industry’s great success stories.

Their vision for the magazine was an exercise in thinking different. “Nothing we did hewed to the conventional wisdom of magazine-making. Our founders came from politics and activism, born in the ivy halls of Harvard. Our HQ was far from the center of the magazine world, in Boston’s North End—“leave the pages, take the cannolis.” And Fast Company was not a part of the five families of magazine publishing. It wouldn’t have worked if it was.

Mitchell was one of the first people Webber and Taylor hired, and as the magazine’s founding art director, he could tell Fast Company was going to be big. And it was big. Huge, in fact. Shortly after its launch, a typical issue of the magazine routinely topped out at almost 400 pages. They had to get up to speed, and fast.

Its mission was big, too. Webber and Taylor’s plan sounded simple: to offer rules for radicals that would be inspiring and instructive; to encourage their audience to think bigger about what they might achieve for their companies and themselves, and to provide tools to help us all succeed in work … and in life. Their mantra: Work is personal.

The effect, however, was even bigger. The magazine was a blockbuster hit, winning ASME awards for General Excellence and Design. It was Ad Age’s 1995 Launch of the Year. Webber and Taylor were named Adweek’s editors of the year in 1999. It even spawned its own reader-generated social network, the Company of Friends, that counted over 40,000 members worldwide. And it brought together an extraordinary team of creatives who, to this day, carry on the mission in their own way—including the founders.

Nearly thirty years after the launch of the magazine, Alan Webber is currently serving his second term as the mayor of Santa Fe, New Mexico. Bill Taylor is the best-selling author of Mavericks at Work, among other books, and continues to lead the conversation on transforming business.

Mitchell often said that Fast Company was the one that would ruin all future jobs. It was a moment in time that he and his colleagues will treasure forever. He shares that story with us today.


Print Is Dead (Long Live Print!) is a podcast about magazines and the people who made (and make) them. Magazines that combined thought-provoking attitudes and values with a distinctive look and feel, and cast a long and powerful shadow on American culture and public discourse. Hear stories and learn lessons from legendary designers, editors, writers, publishers, photographers, illustrators, photo editors, and more—stories and lessons that capture a magical history of innovation and inspiration, and that point the way forward. We’ll go deep into the lives and careers of this astonishingly talented group of creators, and tease out what these giants—past and present—have to teach the next generation of creators.

If you’re in the magazine business—if you’re in any business focused on content creation—this podcast is for you.

This episode is made possible by PIDLLP sponsors Commercial Type, Mountain Gazette, and Freeport Press.

The team behind Print is Dead (Long Live Print!) also produces The Full Bleed, a podcast about the future of magazines and the magazines of the future. Check out their newest podcast, The Next Page.

The post The Brand Called Us | Alan Webber and Bill Taylor appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Gail Anderson https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-gail-anderson/ Wed, 15 Jan 2025 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=785923 In this episode, Nicola Hamilton talks with influential designer, writer, and educator Gail Anderson about the value of mentors in our early careers and the challenges of switching lanes in design.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Gail Anderson appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Host Nicola Hamilton said that getting to chat with designer, writer, and educator Gail Anderson was a dream. Today, Anderson is Chair of BFA Design and BFA Advertising at the School of Visual Arts, but she spent the first part of her career working in publishing: books and then stints at The Boston Globe Sunday and Rolling Stone. She went on to make poster art for Broadway and off-Broadway productions at SpotCo before starting her own small design firm, Anderson Newton Design. Anderson is also one of the most influential Black designers in the game. In this episode, Hamilton and Anderson roll it way back to the early days of her career, discussing the value of mentors in our early days—and modeling success later in life. They also talk about the challenges of switching lanes within the design realm. And of course, the discussion covers her experience teaching design at the School of Visual Arts.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Gail Anderson appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Understanding the Hearts and Minds of Multicultural Patients https://www.printmag.com/printcast/understanding-the-hearts-and-minds-of-multicultural-patients/ Thu, 09 Jan 2025 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=785058 This episode is the first part of a two-part series on multicultural patient experience.

The post Understanding the Hearts and Minds of Multicultural Patients appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Equity in Action PART 1, with Eirásmin Lokpez-Cobo, EVP of Brand Strategy at República Havas Health

In this episode, hosts Brad Davidson, Sonika Garcia, and Gabriel Allen-Cummings are joined by Eirásmin Lokpez-Cobo, República Havas Health’s EVP of brand strategy, to dive into the insights from her team’s recently published white paper, Equity in Action: Mapping the Multicultural Patient Journey for Inclusive Strategies. This insightful paper sheds light on the systemic barriers and health-related behaviors that shape the experiences of diverse U.S. audiences throughout their patient journey.

This is part one of a two-part series focusing on the multicultural patient experience. The conversation starts by building a shared understanding of the barriers that prevent engagement with health systems. From there, they uncover overlooked elements of their journey, such as the unique health priorities of multicultural patients and the sources of trust they rely on. Disengagement isn’t solely rooted in mistrust, nor does the desire to achieve better health simply fade away. To truly “meet patients where they are,” we must understand where they are willing—and able—to go.


Welcome to Breaking the Code! Behavioral science is a cornerstone of modern marketing practice, but much of what passes itself off as behavioral science is just bs. Good social science gives us the insights and roadmap we need to change behavior, but bad social science just muddies the water and tarnishes the social sciences. As behavior change is a core objective of marketing, getting behavioral science right is crucial. Listen in as hosts Brad Davidson, PhD and Sonika Garcia, MPH, Medical Anthropology Strategists at Havas Health, sound off on what is, and isn’t, good social science, from a variety of disciplines covering new topics every podcast.

Learn more on LinkedIn and Spotify.

The post Understanding the Hearts and Minds of Multicultural Patients appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Chip Kidd https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-chip-kidd/ Wed, 08 Jan 2025 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=785393 In this episode, Chip Kidd and host Nicola Hamilton talk at length about designing book covers and also how loss can affect your creativity.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Chip Kidd appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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This week, host Nicola Hamilton chats with graphic designer and writer Chip Kidd. At Alfred A. Knopf—where he has worked for over 38 years—Kidd has designed thousands of book covers. A writer as well, he has authored two novels—The Cheese Monkeys and The Learners, both national bestsellers. His bio also includes lines like: He was an extra in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker and an answer on Jeopardy in 2002. In this episode, Kidd and Hamilton talk at length about designing book covers. They get into why Kidd got into books in the first place, what his process looks like, and all the trends he’s avoiding. The conversation also touches on loss and the ways it does or doesn’t affect your creativity. This one is pretty special.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Chip Kidd appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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She Looks Forward to Your Prompt Reply | Jody Quon https://www.printmag.com/printcast/print-is-dead-long-live-print-podcast-jody-quon/ Fri, 03 Jan 2025 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=784951 On this episode of the Print is Dead (Long Live Print!) podcast, a conversation with photography director Jody Quon (New York, The New York Times Magazine, W, and more).

The post She Looks Forward to Your Prompt Reply | Jody Quon appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Jody Quon’s desk is immaculate. There’s a lot there, but she knows exactly where everything is. It’s like an image out of Things Organized Neatly.

She rarely swears. Or loses her temper. In fact, she’s one of the most temperate people in the office. Maybe the most. She’s often been referred to as a “rock.”

She remembers every shoot and how much it cost to produce. She knows who needs work and who owes her favors.

She’s got the magazine schedule memorized and expects you to as well. She’s probably got your schedule memorized, too. She’s stylish, graceful, and charming. And she doesn’t take ‘no’ for an answer.

She’s usually one of the first in the office and last to leave. In fact, on the day she was scheduled to give birth to her first child, she came to work and put in a full day. When her water broke at around 6 pm, she called her husband to say, “It’s time.”

I don’t know if any of this is true. Except the baby thing. That is true. Kathy Ryan told me so.

I had a teacher in high school, Ms. Trice. She was tough. I didn’t much like her. She would often call me out for this or that. Forty years later, she’s the only one I remember, and I remember her very fondly. In my career, I’ve often thought that the best managing editors, production directors, and photography directors were just like Ms. Trice. These positions, more than any others, are what make magazines work. They’re hard on you because they expect you to be as professional as you can be. They make you better. (I see you, Claire, Jenn, Nate, Carol, and Sally.)

I suspect that a slew of Jody Quon’s coworkers and collaborators feel that same way about her. Actually, I don’t suspect. I know. I’ve heard it from all corners of the magazine business. I heard it again yesterday from her mentor and good friend, Kathy Ryan.

“She just has that work ethic,” Ryan says. “It’s just incredible when you think about it. The ambition of some of the things that they’ve done. And that has been happening right from the beginning. Ambition in the best sense. Thinking big. And she’s cool, always cool under pressure. We had a grand time working together. I still miss her.”

Jody Quon is one of those people who makes everybody around her better. That’s what I believe. And after this conversation, you probably will, too.

Read the full transcript here.


Print Is Dead (Long Live Print!) is a podcast about magazines and the people who made (and make) them. Magazines that combined thought-provoking attitudes and values with a distinctive look and feel, and cast a long and powerful shadow on American culture and public discourse. Hear stories and learn lessons from legendary designers, editors, writers, publishers, photographers, illustrators, photo editors, and more—stories and lessons that capture a magical history of innovation and inspiration, and that point the way forward. We’ll go deep into the lives and careers of this astonishingly talented group of creators, and tease out what these giants—past and present—have to teach the next generation of creators.

If you’re in the magazine business—if you’re in any business focused on content creation—this podcast is for you.

This episode is made possible by PIDLLP sponsors Commercial Type, Mountain Gazette, and Freeport Press.

The team behind Print is Dead (Long Live Print!) also produces The Full Bleed, a podcast about the future of magazines and the magazines of the future. Check out their newest podcast, The Next Page.

The post She Looks Forward to Your Prompt Reply | Jody Quon appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Grace Hwang https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-grace-hwang/ Wed, 01 Jan 2025 13:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=784943 On this episode, host Nicola Hamilton and Grace Hwang talk about our responsibility as designers, the future of computing, and the ways we bring our own behaviors into our work. 

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Grace Hwang appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Up until very recently, Grace Hwang was working at Microsoft as Partner Director of Device Research + Design. That role encompassed Device Design, Mixed Reality hardware and software, Accessibility, and Sustainability. She believes in the power of human-centered design to cultivate positive change in people, systems, and society—and she brought that belief to that role. In this conversation, Nicola Hamilton and Hwang talk about our responsibility as designers, the future of computing, and the ways we bring our own behaviors into our work.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Grace Hwang appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Brian Collins https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-brian-collins/ Wed, 25 Dec 2024 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=784361 In this episode, host Nicola Hamilton and Brian Collins talk about the importance of language in our work and risk-taking.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Brian Collins appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Brian Collins has presented memorable DesignThinkers talks dating back as far as 2006. He is a designer and co-founder of COLLINS, a business transformation company based in San Francisco and New York City. Collins co-founded COLLINS with Leland Maschmeyer in 2008 with a focus not on what they would make, but what they would make possible through design. In this episode, host Nicola Hamilton and Collins talk about some of his past presentations, the importance of language in our work, and riff on the idea of risk-taking.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Brian Collins appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Chic, But Make it Nice | Samira Nasr https://www.printmag.com/printcast/chic-but-make-it-nice-samira-nasr/ Fri, 20 Dec 2024 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=784173 It’s a cliché because it’s true: in the fashion world, you’ve got your show ponies and you’ve got your workhorses. We mean it as a compliment when we say that Samira Nasr truly earned her place at the helm of the 156-year-old institution, Harper’s Bazaar.

The post Chic, But Make it Nice | Samira Nasr appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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It’s a cliché because it’s true: in the fashion world, you’ve got your show ponies and you’ve got your workhorses. We mean it as a compliment when we say that Samira Nasr truly earned her place at the helm of the 156-year-old institution, Harper’s Bazaar.

Don’t get us wrong. Samira is seriously glamorous—she’s the kind of woman who phrases like “effortless chic” were invented to describe. But she did not cruise to her current perch on connections and camera-readiness alone. Rather, she worked her way up, attending J-school at NYU, then making her way through the fashion closets of Vogue, Mirabella, Vanity Fair, InStyle, and Elle—where we met in the trenches, and got to see firsthand how she mixes old-school, roll-up-your-sleeves work ethic and her own fresh vision.

I just want to bring more people with me to the party.

When Samira got the big job at Bazaar in 2020, she became the title’s first-ever Black editor-in-chief. The Bazaar she has rebuilt is as close as a mainstream fashion magazine gets to a glossy art mag, but it is far from chilly. As she has long put it, “I just want to bring more people with me to the party.” Which, when you think about it, is a brilliant mantra for a rapidly-shifting era in media and culture. How to keep a legacy fashion magazine going circa 2025? Drop the velvet rope.

The timing for this mantra could not have been better. After her first year in the role, Bazaar took home its first-ever National Magazine Award for General Excellence.

In our interview, Samira talked about remaking one of fashion’s most legendary magazines—plus, jeans, budgets, and even the odd parenting tip. We had fun, and we hope you do too.

Read the full transcript here.


Introducing our newest show, The Next Page Pod, featuring a conversation with former designer—books at Knopf, magazines and more at Martha Stewart Living, apps at The New York Times—and now bookstore proprietress Barbara deWilde.

Find out more and listen here!


Print Is Dead (Long Live Print!) is a podcast about magazines and the people who made (and make) them. Magazines that combined thought-provoking attitudes and values with a distinctive look and feel, and cast a long and powerful shadow on American culture and public discourse. Hear stories and learn lessons from legendary designers, editors, writers, publishers, photographers, illustrators, photo editors, and more—stories and lessons that capture a magical history of innovation and inspiration, and that point the way forward. We’ll go deep into the lives and careers of this astonishingly talented group of creators, and tease out what these giants—past and present—have to teach the next generation of creators.

If you’re in the magazine business—if you’re in any business focused on content creation—this podcast is for you.

This episode is made possible by PIDLLP sponsors Commercial Type, Mountain Gazette, and Freeport Press.

The team behind Print is Dead (Long Live Print!) also produces The Full Bleed, a podcast about the future of magazines and the magazines of the future.

The post Chic, But Make it Nice | Samira Nasr appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Robert Wong https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-robert-wong/ Wed, 18 Dec 2024 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=784169 In this episode, Host Nicola Hamilton and Wong retrace his steps to becoming a designer, discuss how the Google Creative Lab operates, and dive into how he's thinking about AI.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Robert Wong appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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This week’s guest is Robert Wong. Wong was born Chinese, grew up Dutch, was Canadian, and is now American. While studying to become an accountant in Toronto, Wong woke up one day, flew to New York, and became a graphic designer instead. Wong is best known for his time leading design at Starbucks and as one of the co-founders of Google Creative Lab, where he still works. In this episode, Host Nicola Hamilton and Wong retrace his steps to becoming a designer, discuss how the Google Creative Lab operates, and dive into how he’s thinking about AI.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Robert Wong appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Jennifer Kinon https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-jennifer-kinon/ Wed, 11 Dec 2024 14:50:02 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=783880 In this episode, host Nicola Hamilton talks to Jennifer Kinon about her early career, the ups and downs of creative business ownership, and tackling big systems.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Jennifer Kinon appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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This week’s guest is Jennifer Kinon. Kinon founded Champions Design with Bobby C. Martin, Jr in 2010. Today, Kinon leads business, design, and strategy at Champions. For more than a decade, the firm has crafted meaningful brand strategy and visual identity systems for some of the world’s best brands. At every point in her career, Kinon has tackled big systems. She served as design director of Hillary for America in 2016, design director of New York City’s 2012 Olympic Bid, and worked in Pentagram’s New York City office with Michael Bierut. In this conversation, host Nicola Hamilton and Kinon start with the early parts of her career and make their way through the ups and downs she’s experienced as a designer and as a business owner.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Jennifer Kinon appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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A Pretty Complicated Organism | David Haskell https://www.printmag.com/printcast/a-pretty-complicated-organism-david-haskell/ Fri, 06 Dec 2024 14:31:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=783206 In this episode of Print is Dead (Long Live Print!), a conversation with New York magazine editor David Haskell.

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Like many of you, I was stunned by what happened on November 5th. It’s going to take me some time to reckon with what this all says about the values of a large portion of this country. As part of that reckoning—and for some much-needed relief—I’ve opted to spend less time with media in general for a bit. 

But on the morning after I couldn’t ignore an email I got from today’s guest, New York magazine editor-in-chief David Haskell.

What struck me most about his note—which was sent to the magazine’s million-and-a-half subscribers—was what it didn’t say. There were no recriminations. Nothing about how Kamala Harris had failed to “read the room.”  Not a word about Joe Biden’s unwillingness to step aside when he should have. No calls to “resist.” In fact, the hometown president-elect’s name went unspoken (as it is here).

What Haskell did say that left a mark on me was this:

I consider our jobs as magazine journalists a privilege at times like this. 

I was an editor at Clay Felker’s New York magazine, the editor-in-chief of Boston magazine, and I led the creative team at Inc. magazine. And it was there, at Inc., that I had a similar experience. It was 9/11.

I wrote my monthly column in the haze that immediately followed the attacks, though it wouldn’t appear in print until the December issue. It was titled, “Think Small. No, Smaller.” In it, I urged our community of company builders to focus their attention on the things we can control. This is how it ended:

What we can say for certain is that the arena over which any of us has control has, for now, grown smaller. In these smaller arenas, the challenge is to build, or rebuild, in ourselves and our organizations the quiet confidence that we still have the ability to get the right things done.

For all the attention that gets paid to EICs, most of the work you do is done through the members of your team: writers, and editors, and designers, and so many others.

My friend, Dan Okrent, the former Life magazine editor and Print Is Dead guest, once said, “Magazines bring us together into real communities.”

Moments like this demand something different—something direct and personal from an editor to that community. Something that offers a challenge, but also an opportunity, to answer the question in a clear and credible way: So what do we do now?

Read the full episode transcript here.


Print Is Dead (Long Live Print!) is a podcast about magazines and the people who made (and make) them. Magazines that combined thought-provoking attitudes and values with a distinctive look and feel, and cast a long and powerful shadow on American culture and public discourse. Hear stories and learn lessons from legendary designers, editors, writers, publishers, photographers, illustrators, photo editors, and more—stories and lessons that capture a magical history of innovation and inspiration, and that point the way forward. We’ll go deep into the lives and careers of this astonishingly talented group of creators, and tease out what these giants—past and present—have to teach the next generation of creators.

If you’re in the magazine business—if you’re in any business focused on content creation—this podcast is for you.

This episode is a special collaboration with The Spread and is made possible by PIDLLP sponsors Commercial Type, Mountain Gazette, and Freeport Press.

The team behind Print is Dead (Long Live Print!) also produces The Full Bleed, a podcast about the future of magazines and the magazines of the future.

The post A Pretty Complicated Organism | David Haskell appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Liza Enebeis https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-liza-enebeis/ Wed, 04 Dec 2024 13:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=783158 In this episode of DesignThinkers, host Nicola Hamilton talks with Studio Dumbar's Liza Enebeis about the value of a little discomfort in our process.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Liza Enebeis appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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This week’s guest is Liza Enebeis, partner and creative director at Studio Dumbar/DEPT®. Studio Dumbar is an award-winning international agency with Dutch heritage. They specialize in visual branding and motion, and Enebeis is directly involved in all their main projects. She also co-founded and co-hosts Typeradio.org, a podcast on type and design, and is co-initiator of the Design in Motion Festival, also known as DEMO. In this episode, host Nicola Hamilton and Enebeis talk about her early career and the value of a little discomfort in our process. She also spills the beans on DEMO 2025, which will happen in January. There will be screens around the world—and for the first time ever, also in Vancouver.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Hans Thiessen RGD https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-hans-thiessen-rgd/ Wed, 27 Nov 2024 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=782878 In this episode, Hamilton catches up with Hans Thiessen RGD. Thiessen leads the design team at Rethink—an agency that’s been named AdAge’s Creative Agency of the Year, one of Fast Company’s Top 10 Most Innovative Creative Agencies, and Strategy's Creative & Design Agency of the Year five years in a row.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Hans Thiessen RGD appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Each year, RGD asks a different Canadian design agency or studio to tackle the conference identity. In these shorter episodes, host Nicola Hamilton will speak with some of those folks—past DesignThinkers Design Partners. In this episode, Hamilton catches up with Hans Thiessen RGD. Thiessen leads the design team at Rethink—an agency that’s been named AdAge’s Creative Agency of the Year, one of Fast Company’s Top 10 Most Innovative Creative Agencies, and Strategy‘s Creative & Design Agency of the Year five years in a row, and counting. Rethink was the DesignThinkers Design Partner in 2017 and Hans was on the team that executed that work. Listen in as they recount that process—and the speed bump they hit along the way.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Hans Thiessen RGD appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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What Makes Steve Brodner Happy https://www.printmag.com/printcast/what-makes-steve-brodner-happy/ Fri, 22 Nov 2024 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=782375 On this episode of Print is Dead (Long Live Print!), a conversation with illustrator Steve Brodner (The Nation, The New Yorker, Esquire, more).

The post What Makes Steve Brodner Happy appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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When your boss tells you to track down an amusing Steve Brodner factoid to open the podcast with, and one of the first things you find is a, uh, a “dick army,” welp, that’s what you’re going to go with.

Lest you judge me, I can explain. Brodner’s drawing of this army was inspired by a guy who was actually named Dick Armey (A-R-M-E-Y)! He was Newt Gingrich’s wingman back in the nineties. I thought to myself, The people need to know this.

However, with the election now a few days behind us, maybe the time for talking about men and their junk is over?

What you really want to learn about is this Society of Illustrators Hall of Famer’s career. Brodner’s work, which has been called “unflinching, driven by a strong moral compass, and imbued with a powerful sense of compassion,” has been featured in Rolling Stone, The Washington Post Magazine, Esquire, The New Yorker, and many others.

In this episode, Brodner talks about how the death of print has led to the current misinformation crisis. As it gets harder and harder to tell what’s true, the future becomes increasingly uncertain. Even his most biting drawings are rooted in truth.

Satire doesn’t work if you are irresponsibly unreasonably inventive. If satire doesn’t have truth in it, it’s not funny.

A production note: This episode was recorded exactly one week before the election. As our conversation began, we took turns telling stories about memorable election night parties, and our plans for November 5th. Here’s Steve, talking about his plans…

Check out the episode page for the full transcript and illustrations by Brodner.


Print Is Dead (Long Live Print!) is a podcast about magazines and the people who made (and make) them. Magazines that combined thought-provoking attitudes and values with a distinctive look and feel, and cast a long and powerful shadow on American culture and public discourse. Hear stories and learn lessons from legendary designers, editors, writers, publishers, photographers, illustrators, photo editors, and more—stories and lessons that capture a magical history of innovation and inspiration, and that point the way forward. We’ll go deep into the lives and careers of this astonishingly talented group of creators, and tease out what these giants—past and present—have to teach the next generation of creators.

If you’re in the magazine business—if you’re in any business focused on content creation—this podcast is for you.

This episode is made possible by PIDLLP sponsors Commercial Type, Mountain Gazette, and Freeport Press.

The team behind Print is Dead (Long Live Print!) also produces The Full Bleed, a podcast about the future of magazines and the magazines of the future.

The post What Makes Steve Brodner Happy appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Michael Johnson https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-michael-johnson/ Wed, 20 Nov 2024 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=782130 In this episode, host Nicola Hamilton welcomes Johnson to discuss starting and sustaining a design business, the value of strategy in our practice, and the criticism the internet lobs at rebranding projects.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Michael Johnson appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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This week’s guest is Michael Johnson. He set up Johnson Banks in 1992, after a decade spent learning design, branding, and art direction across the globe. His company is known for how they define, then design, brands that make a difference. ‘Do great work for good people’ is their mantra. Johnson has produced an enviable portfolio of work and received countless awards, including D&AD’s highest honor, the President’s Award in 2017. In this episode, host Nicola Hamilton welcomes Johnson to discuss starting and sustaining a design business, the value of strategy in our practice, and the criticism the internet lobs at rebranding projects.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Michael Johnson appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Jessica Hische https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-jessica-hische/ Wed, 13 Nov 2024 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=781462 This week's guest is Oakland-based designer, lettering artist, and New York Times best-selling author, Jessica Hische.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Jessica Hische appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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This week’s guest is Oakland-based designer, lettering artist, and New York Times best-selling author, Jessica Hische. If you’re a child of the internet, you’re probably already familiar with Hische’s work. She kicked off her career working at Headcase Design and later as a senior designer working under the great Louise Fili. In 2009, Hische stepped out on her own as a freelancer. You might remember her Daily Drop Cap project—or more recently, you’ve likely seen her tidying up some of your favorite wordmarks. In this episode, Hische and host Nicola Hamilton look back at her early days as a creative, the process of reclaiming artist as a title, and her transition into children’s books and shop ownership.

https://videopress.com/v/pnzKYP2D?resizeToParent=true&cover=true&preloadContent=metadata&useAverageColor=true

For more, read PRINT’s interview with Hische about her latest children’s book, out Oct 2024, My First Book of Fancy Letters.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Jessica Hische appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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She’s Our Type | E. Jean Carroll https://www.printmag.com/printcast/print-is-dead-long-live-print-podcaste-e-jean-carroll/ Fri, 08 Nov 2024 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=781164 On this episode of Print is Dead (Long Live Print!), a conversation with writer E. Jean Carroll (Elle, Esquire, Playboy, Outside, more).

The post She’s Our Type | E. Jean Carroll appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Everybody knows that in May 2023, a jury found Donald Trump liable for defaming and abusing E. Jean Carroll, and awarded her $5 million. And everybody also knows that in January 2024, another jury found Trump liable for defamation against her to the tune of $83.3 million. P.S., with interest, his payout will now total over $100 million.

But not everybody remembers—because we were guppies, and because, ahem, Print is Dead, y’all—that E. Jean is a goddamn swashbucking magazine-world legend: a writer of such style, wit, and sheer ballsy joie de vivre that she carved out a name for herself in the boys club of New Journalism, writing juicy and iconic stories in the seventies and eighties for Outside, Esquire, Playboy, and more—and then finally leapt over to women’s magazines, where she held down the role of advice columnist at Elle for, wait for it, 27 years. Elle is where we intersected with E. Jean and where we first saw up close her boundless enthusiasm and generosity for womankind.

We’ll also never forget sitting at one of the magazine’s annual fancypants dinners honoring Women in Hollywood—these are real star-studded affairs, folks—when Jennifer Aniston stood up to receive her award and started her speech with a shoutout to her beloved “Auntie E.,” whose advice she and millions of other American women had devoured, and lived by, for decades.

Here’s the truth: The woman that most of the world came to know through the most harrowing circumstances imaginable really is and has always been that fearless, that unsinkable. It’s not a persona—it’s the genuine article. And when you hear her stories about how hard she slogged away for decades to finally get her big break in publishing, listeners, you will have a whole new respect for her.

As E. Jean tells us herself in this interview, she does very, very little press. So we couldn’t be more honored that our friend and idol and the Spread’s most enthusiastic hype woman sat down after hours with us for this interview. We just hope we did her justice!


Print Is Dead (Long Live Print!) is a podcast about magazines and the people who made (and make) them. Magazines that combined thought-provoking attitudes and values with a distinctive look and feel, and cast a long and powerful shadow on American culture and public discourse. Hear stories and learn lessons from legendary designers, editors, writers, publishers, photographers, illustrators, photo editors, and more—stories and lessons that capture a magical history of innovation and inspiration, and that point the way forward. We’ll go deep into the lives and careers of this astonishingly talented group of creators, and tease out what these giants—past and present—have to teach the next generation of creators.

If you’re in the magazine business—if you’re in any business focused on content creation—this podcast is for you.

This episode is a special collaboration with The Spread and is made possible by PIDLLP sponsors Commercial Type, Mountain Gazette, and Freeport Press.

The team behind Print is Dead (Long Live Print!) also produces The Full Bleed, a podcast about the future of magazines and the magazines of the future.

The post She’s Our Type | E. Jean Carroll appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Gifted, Neurodivergent, or Nerd https://www.printmag.com/printcast/breaking-the-code-gifted-neurodivergent-or-nerd/ Thu, 07 Nov 2024 14:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=781161 On this episode of Breaking the Code, the hosts talk to Dr. Matt Zakreski about the semantics of giftedness and inclusive design for neurodivergent people.

The post Gifted, Neurodivergent, or Nerd appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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The Highs and Lows of Growing Up Tagged as “Gifted”

Our fascination with neurodivergence continues as we are joined by PsyD, Dr. Matt Zakreski, to break down the semantics of giftedness, and inclusive design for neurodivergent people in a variety of public spaces. The term “gifted” was of particular interest to us and our guest because, at one point in each of our lives, we had been called out of the classroom to take an exam that would ultimately label us as gifted. While it does make some complex topics clear, some seemingly simple topics are much harder to resolve for gifted children – the mistake lies in assuming that exceptional skills make them exceptional at everything.

One thread that connects this episode to our previous conversation with Kathryn Parsons was the idea that neurodivergent people may consciously modify behavior to receive the expected response from the world. To varying degrees, they anticipate their settings, surroundings, and (most importantly) the people they come into contact with in order to socially adapt and make it through the day. This gives meaning to the phrase “meeting someone where they are,” especially important as something to strive for, but it’s also clearer why it can be hard to do: people habituated to their circumstances and can end up suffering in silence.


Welcome to Breaking the Code! Behavioral science is a cornerstone of modern marketing practice, but much of what passes itself off as behavioral science is just bs. Good social science gives us the insights and roadmap we need to change behavior, but bad social science just muddies the water and tarnishes the social sciences. As behavior change is a core objective of marketing, getting behavioral science right is crucial. Listen in as hosts Brad Davidson, PhD and Sonika Garcia, MPH, Medical Anthropology Strategists at Havas Health, sound off on what is, and isn’t, good social science, from a variety of disciplines covering new topics every podcast.

Learn more on LinkedIn and Spotify.

The post Gifted, Neurodivergent, or Nerd appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Khoi Vinh https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-khoi-vinh/ Wed, 06 Nov 2024 14:32:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=781153 On this episode, host Nicola Hamilton talks to Khoi Vinh, senior director of design at Adobe about all things AI: the acceleration of the creative process and what we might lose in that acceleration.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Khoi Vinh appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Khoi Vinh is a senior director of design at Adobe. He’s been a leading figure in the design community for more than two decades, leading design teams at both large companies and startups. Host Nicola Hamilton first sat down with Khoi during the pandemic-era Virtual DesignThinkers conference, where they had a pretty in-depth conversation about the intersection of design and technology. In this episode, they dive right into artificial intelligence, talking about all the wonderful ways AI and machine learning are accelerating the creative process. They also discuss the things we might lose during that acceleration and the things that can’t be automated. And of course, they take a quick detour into Khoi’s love of film.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Khoi Vinh appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Tina Mackenzie RGD Emeritus https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-tina-mackenzie-rgd-emeritus/ Wed, 30 Oct 2024 13:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=779778 In this episode, Hamilton catches up with Tina Mackenzie RGD Emeritus; they discuss the importance of momentum both internally and within the design industry at large.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Tina Mackenzie RGD Emeritus appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Each year, RGD asks a different Canadian design agency or studio to tackle the conference identity. In these shorter episodes, host Nicola Hamilton will speak with some of those folks—past DesignThinkers Design Partners. In this episode, Hamilton catches up with Tina Mackenzie RGD Emeritus. Mackenzie is a very accomplished graphic design manager. In 2012, the award-winning in-house graphic design team at the City of Mississauga—which Mackenzie was leading—was invited to be the first-ever, in-house group to design DesignThinkers. Listen in as Hamilton and Mackenzie talk a bit about the importance of that moment both internally and within the industry at large.

If you’re curious to see and read more about the 2012 DesignThinkers branding, you can do that here.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Tina Mackenzie RGD Emeritus appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Soul Survivor | Richard Baker https://www.printmag.com/printcast/soul-survivor-richard-baker/ Fri, 25 Oct 2024 13:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=779783 On this episode of the Print is Dead (Long Live Print!) podcast, a conversation with designer Richard Baker (Us, Life, Premiere, Inc., more).

The post Soul Survivor | Richard Baker appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Just about every magazine Richard Baker worked for has died. Even one called Life.

Also dead: The Washington Post Magazine, Vibe, Premiere, and Parade. Another, Saveur, also died but has recently been resurrected. And Us Magazine? A mere shadow of its former self.

Sadly, Baker’s career narrative is not that uncommon. (That’s why you’re listening to a podcast called Print Is Dead).

But Richard Baker is a survivor. He’s survived immigrating from Jamaica as a kid. He’s survived the sudden and premature loss of three influential and beloved mentors. And he’s survived a near-fatal medical emergency in the New York subway.

Yet, in the face of all that carnage, Richard Baker just keeps on going. To this day, he’s living the magazine dream—“classic edition”—as a designer at a sturdy newsstand publication (Inc. magazine), in a brick-and-mortar office (7 World Trade Center), working with real people, and making something beautiful with ink and paper.


Print Is Dead (Long Live Print!) is a podcast about magazines and the people who made (and make) them. Magazines that combined thought-provoking attitudes and values with a distinctive look and feel, and cast a long and powerful shadow on American culture and public discourse. Hear stories and learn lessons from legendary designers, editors, writers, publishers, photographers, illustrators, photo editors, and more—stories and lessons that capture a magical history of innovation and inspiration, and that point the way forward. We’ll go deep into the lives and careers of this astonishingly talented group of creators, and tease out what these giants—past and present—have to teach the next generation of creators.

If you’re in the magazine business—if you’re in any business focused on content creation—this podcast is for you.

This episode is a special collaboration with The Spread and is made possible by PIDLLP sponsors Commercial Type, Mountain Gazette, and Freeport Press.

The team behind Print is Dead (Long Live Print!) also produces The Full Bleed, a podcast about the future of magazines and the magazines of the future.

The post Soul Survivor | Richard Baker appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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The Evolution of Female Success https://www.printmag.com/printcast/breaking-the-code-podcast-the-evolution-of-female-success/ Thu, 24 Oct 2024 13:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=779639 On this episode of Breaking the Code, Claire Knapp (CEO of Havas Lynx) and Denise Melone (Managing Director of Havas Life San Francisco) discuss the implications of the growth of women's sports, as a business and an opportunity.

The post The Evolution of Female Success appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Women, Sports & Leadership

Women’s professional sports are “having a moment”, but this did not happen in a vacuum nor did it happen overnight. In a highly anticipated episode (for us), the hosts finally got a chance to sit down with Claire Knapp (CEO of Havas Lynx) and Denise Melone (Managing Director of Havas Life San Francisco) to discuss the implications of the growth of women’s sports, both as a business and as an opportunity. Both of these female leaders are accomplished athletes, and we discuss the role of things like teamwork, coaching, and mental fortitude learned on the judo mats and tennis courts, in their successes as corporate leaders at Havas.

The growing interest in the competitive aspects of women’s sports has coincided with the appearance of women in a variety of hitherto-denied spaces, such as the boardroom, the judging panel, and even just full-court basketball. While this shift is notable, both Knapp and Melone express the sentiment that disparities in treatment, compensation, and conversation are still as important as ever to address and overcome. What’s important is how we talk about women, not as bodies but as humans and, in the case of this episode, as fierce, aggressive, badass athletes.


Welcome to Breaking the Code! Behavioral science is a cornerstone of modern marketing practice, but much of what passes itself off as behavioral science is just bs. Good social science gives us the insights and roadmap we need to change behavior, but bad social science just muddies the water and tarnishes the social sciences. As behavior change is a core objective of marketing, getting behavioral science right is crucial. Listen in as hosts Brad Davidson, PhD and Sonika Garcia, MPH, Medical Anthropology Strategists at Havas Health, sound off on what is, and isn’t, good social science, from a variety of disciplines covering new topics every podcast.

Learn more on LinkedIn and Spotify.

The post The Evolution of Female Success appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Debbie Millman https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-debbie-millman/ Wed, 23 Oct 2024 13:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=779772 On this episode, host Nicola Hamilton and Debbie Millman discuss turning down big, shiny, professional roles, the value of growth and risk in your work, and why she believes personal branding is a misguided concept.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Debbie Millman appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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This week’s guest has been named “one of the most creative people in business” by Fast Company, “one of the most influential designers working today” by GDUSA, and a “Woman of Influence” by Success magazine. It’s author, educator, curator, and podcast pioneer, Debbie Millman. Host Nicola Hamilton first interviewed Millman in 2020 as part of the pandemic-era, Virtual DesignThinkers, where we talked at length about Millman’s professional history. (If you’re an RGD Member, you can access that conversation at rgd.ca.) But in this episode, we’re talking about how Millman splits her time between hosting Design Matters, one of the first and longest-running podcasts in the world; Being the chair of the first-ever Masters in Branding Program at the School of Visual Arts; Supporting PrintMag.com, where she’s a co-owner and Editorial Director; and working on her own design, art, and writing projects. Hamilton and Millman discuss turning down big, shiny, professional roles, the value of growth and risk in your work, and why she believes personal branding is a misguided concept.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Debbie Millman appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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This is a Prototype: Kevin Bethune https://www.printmag.com/printcast/this-is-a-prototype-kevin-bethune/ Thu, 17 Oct 2024 13:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=779636 On the final episode of Season 2, Doug Powell speaks with renowned design leader and author Kevin Bethune.

The post This is a Prototype: Kevin Bethune appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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In the final episode of Season 2, host Doug Powell speaks with renowned design leader and author Kevin Bethune. Kevin’s remarkably divergent career spans engineering, business, and design over more than 25 years. He’s worked as a nuclear engineer at Westinghouse Nuclear, launched sneaker brands at Nike, and consulted with global enterprises at BCG. Kevin currently leads Dreams • Design + Life, a think tank that delivers design & innovation services using a human-centered approach.

A Board Trustee for ArtCenter College of Design and a Board Director for the Design Management Institute, Kevin is the author of one of the top design books of recent years, Reimagining Design: Unlocking Strategic Innovation, which was published by MIT Press in 2022. Kevin’s next book, Nonlinear: Navigating Design with Curiosity and Conviction will be published in February of 2025.

Look for new episodes in 2025!


As an executive design leader, Doug Powell is fascinated by the experience of designers moving into new leadership roles. For most, this is completely uncharted territory; the jobs are often undefined and there is rarely a roadmap or playbook to help us succeed, so most of us have had to learn on the job. In each episode of This is a Prototype, Powell invites design leaders who have traveled a variety of life and career journeys to share their stories, compare notes, and talk about what it takes to be a leader in this new era of design.

The post This is a Prototype: Kevin Bethune appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Karin Fong https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-karin-fong/ Wed, 16 Oct 2024 13:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=779455 Host Nicola Hamilton welcomes Emmy award-winning director and designer Karin Fong, who works at the intersection of live-action, design, and animation.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Karin Fong appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Karin Fong is an Emmy award-winning director and designer. She’s a founding member of Imaginary Forces, where she works at the intersection of live-action, design, and animation. If you’ve watched shows like Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Little Fires Everywhere, Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan, or feature films like Spider-Man: No Way Home or Slumberland—you’ve encountered Fong’s work. She’s also helmed spots for major brands, including LEGO, Lexus, Target, Google, PlayStation, and Herman Miller. At the root of it all, she is a visual storyteller and in this episode, host Nicola Hamilton and Fong talk about all the ways the film industry has changed and all the ways it’s stayed the same. Plus, Fong takes us behind the scenes and really breaks down the process of designing film titles.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

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Smiling Through the Apocalypse | Will Welch https://www.printmag.com/printcast/will-welch-print-is-dead-long-live-print-podcast/ Fri, 11 Oct 2024 13:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=778426 On this episode of Print is Dead (Long Live Print!), a conversation with editor Will Welch (GQ, GQ Style, The Fader, more).

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In the past few weeks, Will Welch has taken a bit of flack for letting Beyoncé promote her new whiskey label on the cover of GQ’s October issue, with an interview that one X user described as “an intimate email exchange between GQ and several layers of Beyonce’s comms team.”

Whether that kind of thing rankles you or not—and yes, we asked him about it—in the five years since Welch took over, GQ seems to be doing as well or better than everybody else in the industry. Why? Ask around. He’s got a direct line to celebrities, who consider him a personal friend. He’s got real credibility with The Fashion People. And because of both of these things, advertisers love him.

Perhaps most importantly, his boss, Anna Wintour loves him.

The Atlanta-born Welch started his career at the alternative music and culture mag the Fader in the early aughts and jumped to GQ in 2007. For a decade under EIC Jim Nelson, he operated as the magazine’s fashion-and-culture svengali, eventually becoming the creative director of the magazine and the editor of the brand’s fashion spinoff, GQ Style.

In 2019, Wintour tapped him for the big job: Editor-in-Chief of GQ—a title that in 2020 was recast in the current Condé Nast survival mode as Global Editorial Director of GQ, overseeing 19 editions around the world.

After speaking with Welch only a few hours after the Beyonce cover dropped, we get what all the fuss is about. He is a great sport with good hair and just enough of a Southern accent who is confident-yet-never-cocky about his mission at GQ.

Let other people bemoan the “death of print.” Will Welch is having a blast at the Last Supper.

Read the full episode transcript here.


Print Is Dead (Long Live Print!) is a podcast about magazines and the people who made (and make) them. Magazines that combined thought-provoking attitudes and values with a distinctive look and feel, and cast a long and powerful shadow on American culture and public discourse. Hear stories and learn lessons from legendary designers, editors, writers, publishers, photographers, illustrators, photo editors, and more—stories and lessons that capture a magical history of innovation and inspiration, and that point the way forward. We’ll go deep into the lives and careers of this astonishingly talented group of creators, and tease out what these giants—past and present—have to teach the next generation of creators.

If you’re in the magazine business—if you’re in any business focused on content creation—this podcast is for you.

This episode is a special collaboration with The Spread and is made possible by PIDLLP sponsors Commercial Type, Mountain Gazette, and Freeport Press.

The team behind Print is Dead (Long Live Print!) also produces The Full Bleed, a podcast about the future of magazines and the magazines of the future.

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Bridging Minds https://www.printmag.com/printcast/bridging-minds/ Thu, 10 Oct 2024 12:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=778613 On this episode of Breaking the Code, a discussion of autism, neurodivergence, and inclusive communication in advertising.

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Autism, Neurodivergence, and Inclusive Communication in Advertising

The term “neurodiversity,” introduced 25 years ago by autistic Australian sociologist Judy Singer, marked a milestone in our understanding of autism and the appreciation of “difference, not deficit” in how brains work. More than a buzzword, neurodiversity describes a growing population whose brains work differently from the “neurotypical” and whose historic separation from social engagement has been replaced with a social inclusion that allows them to share their unique talents and perspectives. These differences go beyond functional tasks like working in an office or completing an exam. Their unique interactions with the world inform their fascinating worldview and their day-to-day challenges. For us in advertising, knowing how your audience interacts with the world is crucial to creating communication that speaks to them.

In this episode, hosts Brad Davidson and Gabriel Allen-Cummings are joined by Havas’ own, Kathryn Parsons, a digital marketing expert and an advocate for neurodiversity. Parsons has autism, and she shares multiple anecdotes describing how she’s adapted to a neurotypical world. The three of them also discuss what brands can be doing better to reach their neurodiverse audience – which is one in every five of us.


Welcome to Breaking the Code! Behavioral science is a cornerstone of modern marketing practice, but much of what passes itself off as behavioral science is just bs. Good social science gives us the insights and roadmap we need to change behavior, but bad social science just muddies the water and tarnishes the social sciences. As behavior change is a core objective of marketing, getting behavioral science right is crucial. Listen in as hosts Brad Davidson, PhD and Sonika Garcia, MPH, Medical Anthropology Strategists at Havas Health, sound off on what is, and isn’t, good social science, from a variety of disciplines covering new topics every podcast.

Learn more on LinkedIn and Spotify.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Dominic Ayre RGD https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-dominic-ayre-rgd/ Wed, 09 Oct 2024 12:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=779182 In this bonus episode, host Nicola Hamilton sits down with Dominic Ayre, creative director at Hambly & Woolley. In addition to working on the 2009 conference identity, Ayre plays a big role in helping identify DesignThinkers speakers each year.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Dominic Ayre RGD appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Each year, RGD asks a different Canadian design agency or studio to tackle their conference identity. In these shorter episodes, host Nicola Hamilton will be speaking with some of those folks—past DesignThinkers Design Partners. In this episode, Hamilton sits down with Dominic Ayre RGD. Ayre is the Creative Director at Hambly & Woolley, who worked on the conference identity in 2009. Ayre also plays a big role in helping RGD identify DesignThinkers speakers each year, so you’ll hear a little bit about that process too.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Dominic Ayre RGD appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Steven Heller https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-steven-heller/ Wed, 02 Oct 2024 12:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=778709 Host Nicola Hamilton meanders in conversation with our very own Steven Heller, from how he's seen the industry change to how chronicling things can help us better understand our experiences.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Steven Heller appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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This week’s guest is Steven Heller. Heller is the co-chair and co-founder of the School of Visual Arts MFA Design program. He was a senior art director at the New York Times for 33 years. He is the author or co-author of 200 books, mostly on design and pop culture, and has been a contributing editor to PRINT, BASELINE, EYE, and other design magazines. You’d know his writing best under the slug The Daily Heller. In this episode, host Nicola Hamilton and Heller talk about how he got started, how he’s seen the industry change and the value of chronicling things to better understand our experiences. It’s a meandering conversation—the best kind of conversation in our opinion.

For more on Steven Heller, you can also read PRINT’s recent interview with Heller, his wife Louise Fili, and their son Nicolas Heller (aka New York Nico). Grab a coffee or a cup of tea, the Heller-Fili family roundtable is worth a diversion.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

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When House is Not a Home | Dominique Browning https://www.printmag.com/printcast/dominique-browning-print-is-dead-long-live-print-podcast/ Fri, 27 Sep 2024 13:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=778423 On this episode of Print Is Dead (Long Live Print!), a conversation with editor Dominique Browning (House & Garden, Esquire, Texas Monthly, more).

The post When House is Not a Home | Dominique Browning appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Dominique Browning jokes that after the interview for this episode, she might end up having PTSD. After more than 30 years writing and editing at some of the top magazines in the world, Browning has blocked a lot of it out.

And after listening today, you’ll understand why.

At Esquire, where she worked early in her career, Browning says she cried nearly every day. There were men yelling and people quitting. Apartment keys being dropped off with mistresses. A flash, even, of a loaded gun in a desk drawer.

At House & Garden, where she ended her magazine career in 2007 after 12 years as the editor-in-chief, the chaos was less Mad Men and more Devil Wears Prada. It was glitzy Manhattan lunches mixed with fierce competition and coworkers who complained that her wardrobe wasn’t “designer” enough. The day she took the job, she says she felt like she had walked into Grimm’s Fairy Tales. (Her friends had warned her that it was going to be a snake pit.)

When the magazine unexpectedly folded on a Monday, she and her staff were told they had until Friday to clear out their offices. “Without warning,” she says, “our world collapsed.”

In this episode, Browning talks with Lory Hough, editor of Harvard Ed. magazine, about those chaotic years, which, she admits, could also be fun. (Spoiler: The fun had nothing to do with the loaded gun.) You’ll also hear why in her editor’s columns she often wrote about her kids, why she still thinks of herself as an editor, and why a certain bit of advice from a golfer friend helped her during the stressful parts of her life when she worried too much about what others were thinking: Keep your eye on the ball and just swing through.

Read the full episode transcript here.


Print Is Dead (Long Live Print!) is a podcast about magazines and the people who made (and make) them. Magazines that combined thought-provoking attitudes and values with a distinctive look and feel, and cast a long and powerful shadow on American culture and public discourse. Hear stories and learn lessons from legendary designers, editors, writers, publishers, photographers, illustrators, photo editors, and more—stories and lessons that capture a magical history of innovation and inspiration, and that point the way forward. We’ll go deep into the lives and careers of this astonishingly talented group of creators, and tease out what these giants—past and present—have to teach the next generation of creators.

If you’re in the magazine business—if you’re in any business focused on content creation—this podcast is for you.

This episode is made possible by PIDLLP sponsors Commercial Type, Mountain Gazette, and Freeport Press.

The team behind Print is Dead (Long Live Print!) also produces The Full Bleed, a podcast about the future of magazines and the magazines of the future.

The post When House is Not a Home | Dominique Browning appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Making Sense of “Trigger Warnings” https://www.printmag.com/printcast/making-sense-of-trigger-warnings/ Thu, 26 Sep 2024 13:00:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=776593 In this episode of Breaking the Code, the hosts discuss the relationship between content and audience and the power of words to inspire and harm.

The post Making Sense of “Trigger Warnings” appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Stigma, Taboo, and Trauma

The relationship between content and audience is always complex, and the power of words to inspire or harm is widely debated. In this episode, we discuss the controversial yet ubiquitous “trigger warning,” a specific form of content advisory suggesting that some content is so offensive or traumatic it may “trigger” you. Trigger warnings are relatively new and are seen both as a means of respecting and including your audience by allowing them to disengage from harmful content and as evidence of a decline in the ability to handle difficult content.

While content warnings and advisories have long been part of the landscape, the concept of “trigger” is contentious. It has moved from a clinical environment into a moral one, where “offensive” content is labeled as potentially triggering–even in cases where no underlying trauma exists to be triggered. One under-examined aspect of trigger warnings is the potential re-stigmatization of storytellers whose work is labeled and the reinforcement of cultural taboos. Should scenes of interracial dating or stories of single motherhood come with trigger warnings if the audience finds such content distasteful?

Join us as we explore the emerging literature and experimental data on trigger warnings, their utility, function, and impact.

Correction: In this episode, we mention that Anna Calix had a miscarriage. Anna actually had a 40-week stillbirth. Miscarriage (spontaneous abortion) is a fetal demise in utero at less than 20 weeks of pregnancy, and stillbirth (fetal death) is a spontaneous fetal demise in utero at 20 weeks or more of pregnancy. The two have very different experiences medically, legally, logistically, and socially.


Welcome to Breaking the Code! Behavioral science is a cornerstone of modern marketing practice, but much of what passes itself off as behavioral science is just bs. Good social science gives us the insights and roadmap we need to change behavior, but bad social science just muddies the water and tarnishes the social sciences. As behavior change is a core objective of marketing, getting behavioral science right is crucial. Listen in as hosts Brad Davidson, PhD and Sonika Garcia, MPH, Medical Anthropology Strategists at Havas Health, sound off on what is, and isn’t, good social science, from a variety of disciplines covering new topics every podcast.

Learn more on LinkedIn and Spotify.

The post Making Sense of “Trigger Warnings” appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Erin Sarofsky https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-erin-sarofsky/ Wed, 25 Sep 2024 12:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=778171 Host Nicola Hamilton chats with Erin Sarofsky, whose firm, Sarofsky Corp, is best known for title sequences for "The Staircase," "Community," and "Captain America: The Winter Soldier," about the challenges of bouncing between our business and creative brains.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Erin Sarofsky appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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This week’s guest is Erin Sarofsky. Erin is an internationally heralded creative, regularly chosen by brand and entertainment titans to lead their most artful storytelling projects. Erin launched Sarofsky Corp in 2009, in Chicago’s West Loop. The firm has forged long-standing relationships in the advertising and entertainment industries, but it’s best known for title sequences for movies like Peacemaker, The StaircaseCaptain America: The Winter Soldier, We Were the Lucky Ones, Guardians of the Galaxy, and Community. In this episode, Sarofsky and host Nicola Hamilton talk about the challenges of bouncing between our creative and business brains. The two spend a lot of time talking about what it takes to build a sustainable creative business, (i.e. cash flow). And they wrap up by talking about The Skrimps, Sarofsky’s adorable and hilarious AI-generated characters. 


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Erin Sarofsky appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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This is a Prototype: Jenna Date https://www.printmag.com/printcast/this-is-a-prototype-jenna-date/ Thu, 19 Sep 2024 13:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=777673 On this episode, host Doug Powell talks with pioneering design leader and educator Jenna Date about the challenges and joys of professional (and personal) reinvention, and tactics for mid-career job searches.

The post This is a Prototype: Jenna Date appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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On this episode, host Doug Powell is joined by Jenna Date, a pioneering design practitioner, entrepreneur, educator, consultant and executive design leader. With deep experience leading design and innovation programs in the healthcare industry, Jenna spent a decade teaching at the Human-Computer Interaction Institute at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. More recently, she has relocated to Burlington, Vermont, where Doug met her on a recent visit to that city.

Jenna has navigated changing circumstances many times in her long design career, and she brings a refreshing candor to the discussion, openly sharing the challenges and joys of professional and personal reinvention. Doug and Jenna discuss the emotional strain they’re seeing in many of their design leadership peers, the increased need for supportive community connections, and specific tactics for approaching mid-career job searches.

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DesignThinkers Podcast: Mikey Richardson & Mike Kelar RGD https://www.printmag.com/printcast/designthinkers-podcast-mikey-richardson-mike-kelar-rgd/ Wed, 18 Sep 2024 13:30:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=777746 In this episode, Nicola Hamilton chats with Mike Kelar and Mikey Richardson, co-founders and co-ECDs at Jacknife. Learn more about their hands-on approach to designing the identity of the 2008 DesignThinkers conference.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Mikey Richardson & Mike Kelar RGD appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Each year, RGD asks a different Canadian design agency or studio to tackle the conference identity. In these shorter episodes, host Nicola Hamilton will speak with some of those folks—our past DesignThinkers Design Partners. In this episode, Hamilton chats with Mike Kelar and Mikey Richardson, co-founders and co-ECDs at Toronto-based Jacknife. In 2008, the year they were Design Partners, the pair were working as AmoebaCorp. Kelar and Richardson took a very hands-on approach to the work, which they talk about in this episode.


Welcome to the DesignThinkers Podcast! Join host and RGD President Nicola Hamilton as she digs into the archives of the DesignThinkers conference, reconnecting with past speakers about their talks and ideas that have shaped Canada’s largest graphic design conference. Follow the RGD on Instagram @rgdcanada or visit them at rgd.ca. Purchase tickets to the upcoming DesignThinkers conference at designthinkers.com.

The post DesignThinkers Podcast: Mikey Richardson & Mike Kelar RGD appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Fabien Baron | Vive la Créativité! https://www.printmag.com/printcast/print-is-dead-long-live-print-podcast-fabien-baron/ Fri, 13 Sep 2024 13:00:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=777470 On the Print is Dead podcast, a conversation with designer Fabien Baron (Harper’s Bazaar, Vogue Paris, Interview, more), "one of the most sought-after creative directors in the world."

The post Fabien Baron | Vive la Créativité! appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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There are many reasons for you to hate Fabien Baron (especially if you’re the jealous type). Here are seven of them:

  • He’s French, which means, among other things, his accent is way sexier than yours.
  • He’s spent more than his fair share of time in the company of supermodels like Naomi Campbell, Christy Turlington, and Kate Moss.
  • He gets all of his Calvin Klein undies for free.
  • Ditto any swag from his other clients: Dior, Louis Vuitton, Burberry, or Armani.
  • When he tired of just designing magazines, magazines went and made him their editor-in-chief.
  • He was intimately involved in the making of Madonna’s notorious book, Sex. How intimately? We were afraid to ask.
  • Also? Vanity Fair called him “the most sought-after creative director in the world.”

With our pity party concluded, we admit “hate” was probably the wrong word, because after spending time talking to him, it’s easy to see why Baron has been able to live the kind of life many magazine creatives dream of—and why he’s been so incredibly successful.

His enthusiasm is contagious. It’s actually his superpower. And it’s a lesson for all of us. When you get next-level excited, as Baron does when he can see the possibilities in a project, his passion infects everybody in the room. 

And then, when you learn that Baron believes he’s doing what he was put on this earth to do, and claims that he would do it all for free. You’ve kind of got to believe him.

I never, ever worried about money. I never took a job because of the money. Because I think integrity is very important. I think, like believing that you have a path and that you’re going to follow that path and you’re going to stay on that path and that you’re going to stick to that. And that’s what I’m trying to do.

Fabien Baron

Read the full episode transcript here.


Print Is Dead (Long Live Print!) is a podcast about magazines and the people who made (and make) them. Magazines that combined thought-provoking attitudes and values with a distinctive look and feel, and cast a long and powerful shadow on American culture and public discourse. Hear stories and learn lessons from legendary designers, editors, writers, publishers, photographers, illustrators, photo editors, and more—stories and lessons that capture a magical history of innovation and inspiration, and that point the way forward. We’ll go deep into the lives and careers of this astonishingly talented group of creators, and tease out what these giants—past and present—have to teach the next generation of creators.

If you’re in the magazine business—if you’re in any business focused on content creation—this podcast is for you.

This episode is made possible by PIDLLP sponsors Commercial Type, Mountain Gazette, and Freeport Press.

The team behind Print is Dead (Long Live Print!) also produces The Full Bleed, a podcast about the future of magazines and the magazines of the future.

The post Fabien Baron | Vive la Créativité! appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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The Pain We Feel https://www.printmag.com/printcast/the-pain-we-feel/ Thu, 12 Sep 2024 12:00:00 +0000 https://www.printmag.com/?p=776591 In this episode of Breaking the Code, the hosts discuss the role culture plays in the emotional aspects of storytelling.

The post The Pain We Feel appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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Culture in Storytelling and the Learned Expression of Emotions

Something that has fascinated us recently is the role culture plays in the emotional aspects of storytelling. The emotional response, its justification, and the words used to describe it all are heavily influenced by an individual’s identity and how they’ve learned to express themselves. In this episode, we discuss some of the cultural differences when it comes to talking about pain and the importance of being a good listener. In our roles, we are listeners who support other listeners, whether it’s an HCP hearing their patients’ needs or members of a disease community propping each other up. Listening to someone’s pain, however they express it, is how we learn and design successful outcomes for them.

As you’ll hear us say many times in the episode, pain is a broad topic with many interesting facets to discuss and discover – and we intend to do more episodes on other aspects of pain in the future.


Welcome to Breaking the Code! Behavioral science is a cornerstone of modern marketing practice, but much of what passes itself off as behavioral science is just bs. Good social science gives us the insights and roadmap we need to change behavior, but bad social science just muddies the water and tarnishes the social sciences. As behavior change is a core objective of marketing, getting behavioral science right is crucial. Listen in as hosts Brad Davidson, PhD and Sonika Garcia, MPH, Medical Anthropology Strategists at Havas Health, sound off on what is, and isn’t, good social science, from a variety of disciplines covering new topics every podcast.

Learn more on LinkedIn and Spotify.

The post The Pain We Feel appeared first on PRINT Magazine.

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