From Beta to Bedrock: Build Products that Stick.
As a product builder over too many years to mention, I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve seen promising ideas go from zero to hero in a few weeks, only to fizzle out within months.
Financial products, which is the field I work in, are no exception. With people’s real hard-earned money on the line, user expectations running high, and a crowded market, it’s tempting to throw as many features at the wall as possible and hope something sticks. But this approach is a recipe for disaster. Here’s why:
The pitfalls of feature-first development
When you start building a financial product from the ground up, or are migrating existing customer journeys from paper or telephony channels onto online banking or mobile apps, it’s easy to get caught up in the excitement of creating new features. You might think, “If I can just add one more thing that solves this particular user problem, they’ll love me!” But what happens when you inevitably hit a roadblock because the narcs (your security team!) don’t like it? When a hard-fought feature isn’t as popular as you thought, or it breaks due to unforeseen complexity?
This is where the concept of Minimum Viable Product (MVP) comes in. Jason Fried’s book Getting Real and his podcast Rework often touch on this idea, even if he doesn’t always call it that. An MVP is a product that provides just enough value to your users to keep them engaged, but not so much that it becomes overwhelming or difficult to maintain. It sounds like an easy concept but it requires a razor sharp eye, a ruthless edge and having the courage to stick by your opinion because it is easy to be seduced by “the Columbo Effect”… when there’s always “just one more thing…” that someone wants to add.
The problem with most finance apps, however, is that they often become a reflection of the internal politics of the business rather than an experience solely designed around the customer. This means that the focus is on delivering as many features and functionalities as possible to satisfy the needs and desires of competing internal departments, rather than providing a clear value proposition that is focused on what the people out there in the real world want. As a result, these products can very easily bloat to become a mixed bag of confusing, unrelated and ultimately unlovable customer experiences—a feature salad, you might say.
The importance of bedrock
So what’s a better approach? How can we build products that are stable, user-friendly, and—most importantly—stick?
That’s where the concept of “bedrock” comes in. Bedrock is the core element of your product that truly matters to users. It’s the fundamental building block that provides value and stays relevant over time.
In the world of retail banking, which is where I work, the bedrock has got to be in and around the regular servicing journeys. People open their current account once in a blue moon but they look at it every day. They sign up for a credit card every year or two, but they check their balance and pay their bill at least once a month.
Identifying the core tasks that people want to do and then relentlessly striving to make them easy to do, dependable, and trustworthy is where the gravy’s at.
But how do you get to bedrock? By focusing on the “MVP” approach, prioritizing simplicity, and iterating towards a clear value proposition. This means cutting out unnecessary features and focusing on delivering real value to your users.
It also means having some guts, because your colleagues might not always instantly share your vision to start with. And controversially, sometimes it can even mean making it clear to customers that you’re not going to come to their house and make their dinner. The occasional “opinionated user interface design” (i.e. clunky workaround for edge cases) might sometimes be what you need to use to test a concept or buy you space to work on something more important.
Practical strategies for building financial products that stick
So what are the key strategies I’ve learned from my own experience and research?
- Start with a clear “why”: What problem are you trying to solve? For whom? Make sure your mission is crystal clear before building anything. Make sure it aligns with your company’s objectives, too.
- Focus on a single, core feature and obsess on getting that right before moving on to something else: Resist the temptation to add too many features at once. Instead, choose one that delivers real value and iterate from there.
- Prioritize simplicity over complexity: Less is often more when it comes to financial products. Cut out unnecessary bells and whistles and keep the focus on what matters most.
- Embrace continuous iteration: Bedrock isn’t a fixed destination—it’s a dynamic process. Continuously gather user feedback, refine your product, and iterate towards that bedrock state.
- Stop, look and listen: Don’t just test your product as part of your delivery process—test it repeatedly in the field. Use it yourself. Run A/B tests. Gather user feedback. Talk to people who use it, and refine accordingly.
The bedrock paradox
There’s an interesting paradox at play here: building towards bedrock means sacrificing some short-term growth potential in favour of long-term stability. But the payoff is worth it—products built with a focus on bedrock will outlast and outperform their competitors, and deliver sustained value to users over time.
So, how do you start your journey towards bedrock? Take it one step at a time. Start by identifying those core elements that truly matter to your users. Focus on building and refining a single, powerful feature that delivers real value. And above all, test obsessively—for, in the words of Abraham Lincoln, Alan Kay, or Peter Drucker (whomever you believe!!), “The best way to predict the future is to create it.”
An Holistic Framework for Shared Design Leadership
Picture this: You’re in a meeting room at your tech company, and two people are having what looks like the same conversation about the same design problem. One is talking about whether the team has the right skills to tackle it. The other is diving deep into whether the solution actually solves the user’s problem. Same room, same problem, completely different lenses.
This is the beautiful, sometimes messy reality of having both a Design Manager and a Lead Designer on the same team. And if you’re wondering how to make this work without creating confusion, overlap, or the dreaded “too many cooks” scenario, you’re asking the right question.
The traditional answer has been to draw clean lines on an org chart. The Design Manager handles people, the Lead Designer handles craft. Problem solved, right? Except clean org charts are fantasy. In reality, both roles care deeply about team health, design quality, and shipping great work.
The magic happens when you embrace the overlap instead of fighting it—when you start thinking of your design org as a design organism.
The Anatomy of a Healthy Design Team
Here’s what I’ve learned from years of being on both sides of this equation: think of your design team as a living organism. The Design Manager tends to the mind (the psychological safety, the career growth, the team dynamics). The Lead Designer tends to the body (the craft skills, the design standards, the hands-on work that ships to users).
But just like mind and body aren’t completely separate systems, so, too, do these roles overlap in important ways. You can’t have a healthy person without both working in harmony. The trick is knowing where those overlaps are and how to navigate them gracefully.
When we look at how healthy teams actually function, three critical systems emerge. Each requires both roles to work together, but with one taking primary responsibility for keeping that system strong.
The Nervous System: People & Psychology
Primary caretaker: Design Manager
Supporting role: Lead Designer
The nervous system is all about signals, feedback, and psychological safety. When this system is healthy, information flows freely, people feel safe to take risks, and the team can adapt quickly to new challenges.
The Design Manager is the primary caretaker here. They’re monitoring the team’s psychological pulse, ensuring feedback loops are healthy, and creating the conditions for people to grow. They’re hosting career conversations, managing workload, and making sure no one burns out.
But the Lead Designer plays a crucial supporting role. They’re providing sensory input about craft development needs, spotting when someone’s design skills are stagnating, and helping identify growth opportunities that the Design Manager might miss.
Design Manager tends to:
- Career conversations and growth planning
- Team psychological safety and dynamics
- Workload management and resource allocation
- Performance reviews and feedback systems
- Creating learning opportunities
Lead Designer supports by:
- Providing craft-specific feedback on team member development
- Identifying design skill gaps and growth opportunities
- Offering design mentorship and guidance
- Signaling when team members are ready for more complex challenges
The Muscular System: Craft & Execution
Primary caretaker: Lead Designer
Supporting role: Design Manager
The muscular system is about strength, coordination, and skill development. When this system is healthy, the team can execute complex design work with precision, maintain consistent quality, and adapt their craft to new challenges.
The Lead Designer is the primary caretaker here. They’re setting design standards, providing craft coaching, and ensuring that shipping work meets the quality bar. They’re the ones who can tell you if a design decision is sound or if we’re solving the right problem.
But the Design Manager plays a crucial supporting role. They’re ensuring the team has the resources and support to do their best craft work, like proper nutrition and recovery time for an athlete.
Lead Designer tends to:
- Definition of design standards and system usage
- Feedback on what design work meets the standard
- Experience direction for the product
- Design decisions and product-wide alignment
- Innovation and craft advancement
Design Manager supports by:
- Ensuring design standards are understood and adopted across the team
- Confirming experience direction is being followed
- Supporting practices and systems that scale without bottlenecking
- Facilitating design alignment across teams
- Providing resources and removing obstacles to great craft work
The Circulatory System: Strategy & Flow
Shared caretakers: Both Design Manager and Lead Designer
The circulatory system is about how information, decisions, and energy flow through the team. When this system is healthy, strategic direction is clear, priorities are aligned, and the team can respond quickly to new opportunities or challenges.
This is where true partnership happens. Both roles are responsible for keeping the circulation strong, but they’re bringing different perspectives to the table.
Lead Designer contributes:
- User needs are met by the product
- Overall product quality and experience
- Strategic design initiatives
- Research-based user needs for each initiative
Design Manager contributes:
- Communication to team and stakeholders
- Stakeholder management and alignment
- Cross-functional team accountability
- Strategic business initiatives
Both collaborate on:
- Co-creation of strategy with leadership
- Team goals and prioritization approach
- Organizational structure decisions
- Success measures and frameworks
Keeping the Organism Healthy
The key to making this partnership sing is understanding that all three systems need to work together. A team with great craft skills but poor psychological safety will burn out. A team with great culture but weak craft execution will ship mediocre work. A team with both but poor strategic circulation will work hard on the wrong things.
Be Explicit About Which System You’re Tending
When you’re in a meeting about a design problem, it helps to acknowledge which system you’re primarily focused on. “I’m thinking about this from a team capacity perspective” (nervous system) or “I’m looking at this through the lens of user needs” (muscular system) gives everyone context for your input.
This isn’t about staying in your lane. It’s about being transparent as to which lens you’re using, so the other person knows how to best add their perspective.
Create Healthy Feedback Loops
The most successful partnerships I’ve seen establish clear feedback loops between the systems:
Nervous system signals to muscular system: “The team is struggling with confidence in their design skills” → Lead Designer provides more craft coaching and clearer standards.
Muscular system signals to nervous system: “The team’s craft skills are advancing faster than their project complexity” → Design Manager finds more challenging growth opportunities.
Both systems signal to circulatory system: “We’re seeing patterns in team health and craft development that suggest we need to adjust our strategic priorities.”
Handle Handoffs Gracefully
The most critical moments in this partnership are when something moves from one system to another. This might be when a design standard (muscular system) needs to be rolled out across the team (nervous system), or when a strategic initiative (circulatory system) needs specific craft execution (muscular system).
Make these transitions explicit. “I’ve defined the new component standards. Can you help me think through how to get the team up to speed?” or “We’ve agreed on this strategic direction. I’m going to focus on the specific user experience approach from here.”
Stay Curious, Not Territorial
The Design Manager who never thinks about craft, or the Lead Designer who never considers team dynamics, is like a doctor who only looks at one body system. Great design leadership requires both people to care about the whole organism, even when they’re not the primary caretaker.
This means asking questions rather than making assumptions. “What do you think about the team’s craft development in this area?” or “How do you see this impacting team morale and workload?” keeps both perspectives active in every decision.
When the Organism Gets Sick
Even with clear roles, this partnership can go sideways. Here are the most common failure modes I’ve seen:
System Isolation
The Design Manager focuses only on the nervous system and ignores craft development. The Lead Designer focuses only on the muscular system and ignores team dynamics. Both people retreat to their comfort zones and stop collaborating.
The symptoms: Team members get mixed messages, work quality suffers, morale drops.
The treatment: Reconnect around shared outcomes. What are you both trying to achieve? Usually it’s great design work that ships on time from a healthy team. Figure out how both systems serve that goal.
Poor Circulation
Strategic direction is unclear, priorities keep shifting, and neither role is taking responsibility for keeping information flowing.
The symptoms: Team members are confused about priorities, work gets duplicated or dropped, deadlines are missed.
The treatment: Explicitly assign responsibility for circulation. Who’s communicating what to whom? How often? What’s the feedback loop?
Autoimmune Response
One person feels threatened by the other’s expertise. The Design Manager thinks the Lead Designer is undermining their authority. The Lead Designer thinks the Design Manager doesn’t understand craft.
The symptoms: Defensive behavior, territorial disputes, team members caught in the middle.
The treatment: Remember that you’re both caretakers of the same organism. When one system fails, the whole team suffers. When both systems are healthy, the team thrives.
The Payoff
Yes, this model requires more communication. Yes, it requires both people to be secure enough to share responsibility for team health. But the payoff is worth it: better decisions, stronger teams, and design work that’s both excellent and sustainable.
When both roles are healthy and working well together, you get the best of both worlds: deep craft expertise and strong people leadership. When one person is out sick, on vacation, or overwhelmed, the other can help maintain the team’s health. When a decision requires both the people perspective and the craft perspective, you’ve got both right there in the room.
Most importantly, the framework scales. As your team grows, you can apply the same system thinking to new challenges. Need to launch a design system? Lead Designer tends to the muscular system (standards and implementation), Design Manager tends to the nervous system (team adoption and change management), and both tend to circulation (communication and stakeholder alignment).
The Bottom Line
The relationship between a Design Manager and Lead Designer isn’t about dividing territories. It’s about multiplying impact. When both roles understand they’re tending to different aspects of the same healthy organism, magic happens.
The mind and body work together. The team gets both the strategic thinking and the craft excellence they need. And most importantly, the work that ships to users benefits from both perspectives.
So the next time you’re in that meeting room, wondering why two people are talking about the same problem from different angles, remember: you’re watching shared leadership in action. And if it’s working well, both the mind and body of your design team are getting stronger.
Serenity Villain Personifies the Sinister Side of Star Trek’s Politics
As disparate as they may feel today, Star Trek and Firefly started with similar impulses. “Wagon Train to the Stars” is how Gene Roddenberry pitched his show to producers, evoking the TV series about explorers on the Western frontier that ran from 1957 to 1962. For Firefly Joss Whedon looked to a perhaps more storied […]
The post Serenity Villain Personifies the Sinister Side of Star Trek’s Politics appeared first on Den of Geek.
It’s fashionable nowadays to criticize Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson’s acting choices, but there was a time not long ago where the wrestler-turned-actor’s natural charisma garnered somewhat different notices. While never celebrated as a prospective awards contender, he was still cheered on as “franchise viagra” on SNL, and if not celebrated by critics, then definitely respected for a boundless charisma and a nature so sunny that “even when he’s not wearing a smile, his facial muscles carry the ghost of one.”
Which is what makes seeing that smile turned mirthless in the latest trailer for Benny Safdie’s The Smashing Machine seem haunted and eerie.
“For me, a day without pain is like a day without sunshine,” Johnson’s Mark Kerr says in the new teaser. A day without pain, or sunshine, also feels like anathema to Johnson’s onscreen persona of the last 20 or so years—which might be why the role is already earning raves out of Venice where the film also picked up the Silver Lion for Safdie’s direction. Somehow, it would seem, sun in that smile has gone out. It’s been replaced by a steel we have not seen since Pain & Gain.
In Smashing Machine, Johnson plays Kerr, a two-time UFC Heavyweight champion and former wrestler who was the subject of a 2002 HBO documentary of the same name. A mixed martial artist who admitted to struggling with substance abuse and professional setbacks, Kerr appears an apropos subject matter for Safdie. The previous two films he co-directed with brother Josh, Good Time and Uncut Gems, were relentlessly bleak in their tales which intersected with the sports world, and together they promise a film that’s likely thornier than the conventional sports movie trailer Smashing Machine offers above.
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Johnson definitely shows a side in this sizzle reel we haven’t seen from him in over a decade. Here is the bold and eccentric character actor who could steal scenes from John Travolta in conventional studio fare like Be Cool, and be the heart of the more enigmatic Southland Tales. He even allowed himself to become the clay with which Michael Bay would paint his scathing portrait of American greed and arrogance in Pain & Gain.
Since the beginning of his pivot from wrestling to film acting, Johnson has proven to have deep pools of charisma and a more ambiguous reserve of talent that has only been occasionally tapped. Yet there’s a reason Arnold Schwarzenegger seemed to designate him heir apparent, even if in lighthearted if energetic schlock like The Rundown.
Johnson has chosen not to deeply tap into that talent over the last 12 years, but it was there faintly when getting to riff on Big in Jumanji, and it could have been there when acting opposite talents like Emily Blunt. Indeed, the pair worked together in 2021’s Jungle Cruise, a by the numbers studio product that asked Johnson and Blunt to, in theory, modernize Bogie and Hepburn, but in truth amounted to glorified cast members on a theme park ride.
Yet in this new Smashing Machine trailer, the pair suggest tangible chemistry when Blunt’s Dawn tends to a wounded boyfriend with empathy but also a guarded weariness. Johnson and Blunt both appear out of their respective milieus in the setting of gritty drama or grittier gym. Granted, we’ve seen Blunt adapt between disparate roles and genres before—including opposite Benny Safdie in a quite different biopic, Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer—but having real, pained sparks with Johnson marks something new. With any luck, it’ll hit as hard as Kerr in the octagon.
A24 releases Smashing Machine on Oct. 3.
The post See Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt Like Never Before in The Smashing Machine Trailer appeared first on Den of Geek.
See Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt Like Never Before in The Smashing Machine Trailer
It’s fashionable nowadays to criticize Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson’s acting choices, but there was a time not long ago where the wrestler-turned-actor’s natural charisma garnered somewhat different notices. While never celebrated as a prospective awards contender, he was still cheered on as “franchise viagra” on SNL, and if not celebrated by critics, then definitely respected […]
The post See Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt Like Never Before in The Smashing Machine Trailer appeared first on Den of Geek.
It’s fashionable nowadays to criticize Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson’s acting choices, but there was a time not long ago where the wrestler-turned-actor’s natural charisma garnered somewhat different notices. While never celebrated as a prospective awards contender, he was still cheered on as “franchise viagra” on SNL, and if not celebrated by critics, then definitely respected for a boundless charisma and a nature so sunny that “even when he’s not wearing a smile, his facial muscles carry the ghost of one.”
Which is what makes seeing that smile turned mirthless in the latest trailer for Benny Safdie’s The Smashing Machine seem haunted and eerie.
“For me, a day without pain is like a day without sunshine,” Johnson’s Mark Kerr says in the new teaser. A day without pain, or sunshine, also feels like anathema to Johnson’s onscreen persona of the last 20 or so years—which might be why the role is already earning raves out of Venice where the film also picked up the Silver Lion for Safdie’s direction. Somehow, it would seem, sun in that smile has gone out. It’s been replaced by a steel we have not seen since Pain & Gain.
In Smashing Machine, Johnson plays Kerr, a two-time UFC Heavyweight champion and former wrestler who was the subject of a 2002 HBO documentary of the same name. A mixed martial artist who admitted to struggling with substance abuse and professional setbacks, Kerr appears an apropos subject matter for Safdie. The previous two films he co-directed with brother Josh, Good Time and Uncut Gems, were relentlessly bleak in their tales which intersected with the sports world, and together they promise a film that’s likely thornier than the conventional sports movie trailer Smashing Machine offers above.
cnx({
playerId: “106e33c0-3911-473c-b599-b1426db57530”,
}).render(“0270c398a82f44f49c23c16122516796”);
});
Johnson definitely shows a side in this sizzle reel we haven’t seen from him in over a decade. Here is the bold and eccentric character actor who could steal scenes from John Travolta in conventional studio fare like Be Cool, and be the heart of the more enigmatic Southland Tales. He even allowed himself to become the clay with which Michael Bay would paint his scathing portrait of American greed and arrogance in Pain & Gain.
Since the beginning of his pivot from wrestling to film acting, Johnson has proven to have deep pools of charisma and a more ambiguous reserve of talent that has only been occasionally tapped. Yet there’s a reason Arnold Schwarzenegger seemed to designate him heir apparent, even if in lighthearted if energetic schlock like The Rundown.
Johnson has chosen not to deeply tap into that talent over the last 12 years, but it was there faintly when getting to riff on Big in Jumanji, and it could have been there when acting opposite talents like Emily Blunt. Indeed, the pair worked together in 2021’s Jungle Cruise, a by the numbers studio product that asked Johnson and Blunt to, in theory, modernize Bogie and Hepburn, but in truth amounted to glorified cast members on a theme park ride.
Yet in this new Smashing Machine trailer, the pair suggest tangible chemistry when Blunt’s Dawn tends to a wounded boyfriend with empathy but also a guarded weariness. Johnson and Blunt both appear out of their respective milieus in the setting of gritty drama or grittier gym. Granted, we’ve seen Blunt adapt between disparate roles and genres before—including opposite Benny Safdie in a quite different biopic, Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer—but having real, pained sparks with Johnson marks something new. With any luck, it’ll hit as hard as Kerr in the octagon.
A24 releases Smashing Machine on Oct. 3.
The post See Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt Like Never Before in The Smashing Machine Trailer appeared first on Den of Geek.
Only Murders in the Building Takes on the Mob in Season 5
This article contains spoilers for Only in the Murders season 5 episodes 1, 2, and 3. When Only Murders in the Building first premiered in 2021, it was difficult to imagine the premise being one that could create a half-decade’s worth of quality TV. A mystery show that always takes place in the same apartment […]
The post Only Murders in the Building Takes on the Mob in Season 5 appeared first on Den of Geek.
It’s fashionable nowadays to criticize Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson’s acting choices, but there was a time not long ago where the wrestler-turned-actor’s natural charisma garnered somewhat different notices. While never celebrated as a prospective awards contender, he was still cheered on as “franchise viagra” on SNL, and if not celebrated by critics, then definitely respected for a boundless charisma and a nature so sunny that “even when he’s not wearing a smile, his facial muscles carry the ghost of one.”
Which is what makes seeing that smile turned mirthless in the latest trailer for Benny Safdie’s The Smashing Machine seem haunted and eerie.
“For me, a day without pain is like a day without sunshine,” Johnson’s Mark Kerr says in the new teaser. A day without pain, or sunshine, also feels like anathema to Johnson’s onscreen persona of the last 20 or so years—which might be why the role is already earning raves out of Venice where the film also picked up the Silver Lion for Safdie’s direction. Somehow, it would seem, sun in that smile has gone out. It’s been replaced by a steel we have not seen since Pain & Gain.
In Smashing Machine, Johnson plays Kerr, a two-time UFC Heavyweight champion and former wrestler who was the subject of a 2002 HBO documentary of the same name. A mixed martial artist who admitted to struggling with substance abuse and professional setbacks, Kerr appears an apropos subject matter for Safdie. The previous two films he co-directed with brother Josh, Good Time and Uncut Gems, were relentlessly bleak in their tales which intersected with the sports world, and together they promise a film that’s likely thornier than the conventional sports movie trailer Smashing Machine offers above.
cnx({
playerId: “106e33c0-3911-473c-b599-b1426db57530”,
}).render(“0270c398a82f44f49c23c16122516796”);
});
Johnson definitely shows a side in this sizzle reel we haven’t seen from him in over a decade. Here is the bold and eccentric character actor who could steal scenes from John Travolta in conventional studio fare like Be Cool, and be the heart of the more enigmatic Southland Tales. He even allowed himself to become the clay with which Michael Bay would paint his scathing portrait of American greed and arrogance in Pain & Gain.
Since the beginning of his pivot from wrestling to film acting, Johnson has proven to have deep pools of charisma and a more ambiguous reserve of talent that has only been occasionally tapped. Yet there’s a reason Arnold Schwarzenegger seemed to designate him heir apparent, even if in lighthearted if energetic schlock like The Rundown.
Johnson has chosen not to deeply tap into that talent over the last 12 years, but it was there faintly when getting to riff on Big in Jumanji, and it could have been there when acting opposite talents like Emily Blunt. Indeed, the pair worked together in 2021’s Jungle Cruise, a by the numbers studio product that asked Johnson and Blunt to, in theory, modernize Bogie and Hepburn, but in truth amounted to glorified cast members on a theme park ride.
Yet in this new Smashing Machine trailer, the pair suggest tangible chemistry when Blunt’s Dawn tends to a wounded boyfriend with empathy but also a guarded weariness. Johnson and Blunt both appear out of their respective milieus in the setting of gritty drama or grittier gym. Granted, we’ve seen Blunt adapt between disparate roles and genres before—including opposite Benny Safdie in a quite different biopic, Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer—but having real, pained sparks with Johnson marks something new. With any luck, it’ll hit as hard as Kerr in the octagon.
A24 releases Smashing Machine on Oct. 3.
The post See Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt Like Never Before in The Smashing Machine Trailer appeared first on Den of Geek.
Sci-fi Comic Time Sensitive Will Make You Question Reality
“Existential, terrifying, fun as hell.” This is how Joshua Rubin describes his upcoming graphic novel Time Sensitive. Written by Rubin and illustrated by Jorge Coelho, Time Sensitive follows Detective Caleb Stone and his wife Sarah through extraordinary circumstances. On a day just like any other, Sarah suddenly vanishes, and when Caleb looks to get help […]
The post Sci-fi Comic Time Sensitive Will Make You Question Reality appeared first on Den of Geek.
It’s fashionable nowadays to criticize Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson’s acting choices, but there was a time not long ago where the wrestler-turned-actor’s natural charisma garnered somewhat different notices. While never celebrated as a prospective awards contender, he was still cheered on as “franchise viagra” on SNL, and if not celebrated by critics, then definitely respected for a boundless charisma and a nature so sunny that “even when he’s not wearing a smile, his facial muscles carry the ghost of one.”
Which is what makes seeing that smile turned mirthless in the latest trailer for Benny Safdie’s The Smashing Machine seem haunted and eerie.
“For me, a day without pain is like a day without sunshine,” Johnson’s Mark Kerr says in the new teaser. A day without pain, or sunshine, also feels like anathema to Johnson’s onscreen persona of the last 20 or so years—which might be why the role is already earning raves out of Venice where the film also picked up the Silver Lion for Safdie’s direction. Somehow, it would seem, sun in that smile has gone out. It’s been replaced by a steel we have not seen since Pain & Gain.
In Smashing Machine, Johnson plays Kerr, a two-time UFC Heavyweight champion and former wrestler who was the subject of a 2002 HBO documentary of the same name. A mixed martial artist who admitted to struggling with substance abuse and professional setbacks, Kerr appears an apropos subject matter for Safdie. The previous two films he co-directed with brother Josh, Good Time and Uncut Gems, were relentlessly bleak in their tales which intersected with the sports world, and together they promise a film that’s likely thornier than the conventional sports movie trailer Smashing Machine offers above.
cnx({
playerId: “106e33c0-3911-473c-b599-b1426db57530”,
}).render(“0270c398a82f44f49c23c16122516796”);
});
Johnson definitely shows a side in this sizzle reel we haven’t seen from him in over a decade. Here is the bold and eccentric character actor who could steal scenes from John Travolta in conventional studio fare like Be Cool, and be the heart of the more enigmatic Southland Tales. He even allowed himself to become the clay with which Michael Bay would paint his scathing portrait of American greed and arrogance in Pain & Gain.
Since the beginning of his pivot from wrestling to film acting, Johnson has proven to have deep pools of charisma and a more ambiguous reserve of talent that has only been occasionally tapped. Yet there’s a reason Arnold Schwarzenegger seemed to designate him heir apparent, even if in lighthearted if energetic schlock like The Rundown.
Johnson has chosen not to deeply tap into that talent over the last 12 years, but it was there faintly when getting to riff on Big in Jumanji, and it could have been there when acting opposite talents like Emily Blunt. Indeed, the pair worked together in 2021’s Jungle Cruise, a by the numbers studio product that asked Johnson and Blunt to, in theory, modernize Bogie and Hepburn, but in truth amounted to glorified cast members on a theme park ride.
Yet in this new Smashing Machine trailer, the pair suggest tangible chemistry when Blunt’s Dawn tends to a wounded boyfriend with empathy but also a guarded weariness. Johnson and Blunt both appear out of their respective milieus in the setting of gritty drama or grittier gym. Granted, we’ve seen Blunt adapt between disparate roles and genres before—including opposite Benny Safdie in a quite different biopic, Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer—but having real, pained sparks with Johnson marks something new. With any luck, it’ll hit as hard as Kerr in the octagon.
A24 releases Smashing Machine on Oct. 3.
The post See Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt Like Never Before in The Smashing Machine Trailer appeared first on Den of Geek.
Saudi Arabia’s oil-powered desalination “success” consumes 20% of its domestic oil use
Nearly 20% of Saudi Arabia’s oil powers desalination, with projections rising to 50% by 2030. Experts warn it should remain a last-resort solution due to high energy and environmental costs.
The post Saudi Arabia’s oil-powered desalination “success” consumes 20% of its domestic oil use appeared first on Green Prophet.
Paris said au revoirs to cars and see how air pollution halved.
A new peer-reviewed study in Science connects long-term exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) with higher risk of Lewy body dementia (LBD) in a dataset of 56.5 million US Medicare records, and backs it up with animal experiments that show PM2.5 triggers toxic α-synuclein clumps — the protein aggregates that define LBD.
Crucially, the study clarifies how pollution interacts with brain biology: only mice capable of producing α-synuclein developed dementia-like brain damage after PM2.5 exposure — a mechanistic clue echoed by a Johns Hopkins release and Columbia Mailman overview. As Nature reports, PM2.5 doesn’t necessarily cause LBD from scratch — it can accelerate the development in people already genetically predisposed, notes clinician-neuroscientist Hui Chen (University of Technology Sydney – Nature).
Why millennials should care
PM2.5 is small enough to reach the bloodstream and brain, with established risks for heart and lung disease — and growing evidence for cognitive harm and dementia. See U.S. EPA: PM Basics, EPA: Health Effects, WHO: Air Pollution & Health, and a Harvard meta-analysis on pollution-dementia links (Harvard T.H. Chan School). Policy matters, fast: cutting fossil pollution saves lives and money within years — co-benefits quantified in recent modeling for the US and globally.
Eco Action steps that actually help
Drive electric, support clean transit
Vlakfest on a train in Europe
Tailpipe emissions are a prime PM2.5 source; electrifying cars, buses, and freight slashes exposure. EPA and NIH summarize health benefits; U.S. rules are tightening PM standards. From the region: EV adoption and smarter policy can reduce urban smog and climate pollution.
See Green Prophet’s coverage of EV policy and options:
Israel’s EVs & taxation rethink,
Lebanon’s EV Electra.
Power up renewables
Solar and wind displace combustion, cutting NOx and PM2.5 — a direct brain-health win alongside climate action.
Regional snapshots:
Wind farms of the Middle East,
Masdar–Bahrain wind buildout,
Extreme heat & Israel’s solar share.
Get outside: “forest bathing” and brain health
A forest in Nipissing, Ontario near Bearland
Time in nature is linked with lower stress and improved cognition; experimental work shows 90-minute nature walks reduce rumination and dampen maladaptive neural activity.
Local inspo and guides from Green Prophet:
Green self-care & forest bathing,
Overcoming nature phobias,
The post Fine-particle pollution is now directly tied to Lewy body dementia appeared first on Green Prophet.
Choosing Riyadh over Dubai? What Investors Should Know
Saudi Arabia is deploying capital at unmatched scale to catalyze tourism and advanced industry while rewiring its power-and-water backbone. The investable frontier is widening—especially in renewables, grid storage, water efficiency/desal retrofits, and hospitality operating platforms. Prudent investors will insist on phased delivery, enforceable KPIs (energy, water, biodiversity), and RHQ/zone compliance—while pricing political-economy and reputational risks alongside growth upside.
The post Choosing Riyadh over Dubai? What Investors Should Know appeared first on Green Prophet.
Paris said au revoirs to cars and see how air pollution halved.
A new peer-reviewed study in Science connects long-term exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) with higher risk of Lewy body dementia (LBD) in a dataset of 56.5 million US Medicare records, and backs it up with animal experiments that show PM2.5 triggers toxic α-synuclein clumps — the protein aggregates that define LBD.
Crucially, the study clarifies how pollution interacts with brain biology: only mice capable of producing α-synuclein developed dementia-like brain damage after PM2.5 exposure — a mechanistic clue echoed by a Johns Hopkins release and Columbia Mailman overview. As Nature reports, PM2.5 doesn’t necessarily cause LBD from scratch — it can accelerate the development in people already genetically predisposed, notes clinician-neuroscientist Hui Chen (University of Technology Sydney – Nature).
Why millennials should care
PM2.5 is small enough to reach the bloodstream and brain, with established risks for heart and lung disease — and growing evidence for cognitive harm and dementia. See U.S. EPA: PM Basics, EPA: Health Effects, WHO: Air Pollution & Health, and a Harvard meta-analysis on pollution-dementia links (Harvard T.H. Chan School). Policy matters, fast: cutting fossil pollution saves lives and money within years — co-benefits quantified in recent modeling for the US and globally.
Eco Action steps that actually help
Drive electric, support clean transit
Vlakfest on a train in Europe
Tailpipe emissions are a prime PM2.5 source; electrifying cars, buses, and freight slashes exposure. EPA and NIH summarize health benefits; U.S. rules are tightening PM standards. From the region: EV adoption and smarter policy can reduce urban smog and climate pollution.
See Green Prophet’s coverage of EV policy and options:
Israel’s EVs & taxation rethink,
Lebanon’s EV Electra.
Power up renewables
Solar and wind displace combustion, cutting NOx and PM2.5 — a direct brain-health win alongside climate action.
Regional snapshots:
Wind farms of the Middle East,
Masdar–Bahrain wind buildout,
Extreme heat & Israel’s solar share.
Get outside: “forest bathing” and brain health
A forest in Nipissing, Ontario near Bearland
Time in nature is linked with lower stress and improved cognition; experimental work shows 90-minute nature walks reduce rumination and dampen maladaptive neural activity.
Local inspo and guides from Green Prophet:
Green self-care & forest bathing,
Overcoming nature phobias,
The post Fine-particle pollution is now directly tied to Lewy body dementia appeared first on Green Prophet.
Investing in the Middle East? These 20 Energy consultants can de-risk your portfolio
For instance is your clean tech firm or company in wastewater treatment considering an office in Riyadh or should you stick with Dubai? Below is a curated spotlight on 20 firms that shine for their deep expertise and proven ability to manage the complex risks of sustainable energy investment.
The post Investing in the Middle East? These 20 Energy consultants can de-risk your portfolio appeared first on Green Prophet.
Paris said au revoirs to cars and see how air pollution halved.
A new peer-reviewed study in Science connects long-term exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) with higher risk of Lewy body dementia (LBD) in a dataset of 56.5 million US Medicare records, and backs it up with animal experiments that show PM2.5 triggers toxic α-synuclein clumps — the protein aggregates that define LBD.
Crucially, the study clarifies how pollution interacts with brain biology: only mice capable of producing α-synuclein developed dementia-like brain damage after PM2.5 exposure — a mechanistic clue echoed by a Johns Hopkins release and Columbia Mailman overview. As Nature reports, PM2.5 doesn’t necessarily cause LBD from scratch — it can accelerate the development in people already genetically predisposed, notes clinician-neuroscientist Hui Chen (University of Technology Sydney – Nature).
Why millennials should care
PM2.5 is small enough to reach the bloodstream and brain, with established risks for heart and lung disease — and growing evidence for cognitive harm and dementia. See U.S. EPA: PM Basics, EPA: Health Effects, WHO: Air Pollution & Health, and a Harvard meta-analysis on pollution-dementia links (Harvard T.H. Chan School). Policy matters, fast: cutting fossil pollution saves lives and money within years — co-benefits quantified in recent modeling for the US and globally.
Eco Action steps that actually help
Drive electric, support clean transit
Vlakfest on a train in Europe
Tailpipe emissions are a prime PM2.5 source; electrifying cars, buses, and freight slashes exposure. EPA and NIH summarize health benefits; U.S. rules are tightening PM standards. From the region: EV adoption and smarter policy can reduce urban smog and climate pollution.
See Green Prophet’s coverage of EV policy and options:
Israel’s EVs & taxation rethink,
Lebanon’s EV Electra.
Power up renewables
Solar and wind displace combustion, cutting NOx and PM2.5 — a direct brain-health win alongside climate action.
Regional snapshots:
Wind farms of the Middle East,
Masdar–Bahrain wind buildout,
Extreme heat & Israel’s solar share.
Get outside: “forest bathing” and brain health
A forest in Nipissing, Ontario near Bearland
Time in nature is linked with lower stress and improved cognition; experimental work shows 90-minute nature walks reduce rumination and dampen maladaptive neural activity.
Local inspo and guides from Green Prophet:
Green self-care & forest bathing,
Overcoming nature phobias,
The post Fine-particle pollution is now directly tied to Lewy body dementia appeared first on Green Prophet.
Fine-particle pollution is now directly tied to Lewy body dementia
A new peer-reviewed study in Science connects long-term exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) with higher risk of Lewy body dementia (LBD) in a dataset of 56.5 million US Medicare records, and backs it up with animal experiments that show PM2.5 triggers toxic α-synuclein clumps — the protein aggregates that define LBD.
The post Fine-particle pollution is now directly tied to Lewy body dementia appeared first on Green Prophet.
Paris said au revoirs to cars and see how air pollution halved.
A new peer-reviewed study in Science connects long-term exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) with higher risk of Lewy body dementia (LBD) in a dataset of 56.5 million US Medicare records, and backs it up with animal experiments that show PM2.5 triggers toxic α-synuclein clumps — the protein aggregates that define LBD.
Crucially, the study clarifies how pollution interacts with brain biology: only mice capable of producing α-synuclein developed dementia-like brain damage after PM2.5 exposure — a mechanistic clue echoed by a Johns Hopkins release and Columbia Mailman overview. As Nature reports, PM2.5 doesn’t necessarily cause LBD from scratch — it can accelerate the development in people already genetically predisposed, notes clinician-neuroscientist Hui Chen (University of Technology Sydney – Nature).
Why millennials should care
PM2.5 is small enough to reach the bloodstream and brain, with established risks for heart and lung disease — and growing evidence for cognitive harm and dementia. See U.S. EPA: PM Basics, EPA: Health Effects, WHO: Air Pollution & Health, and a Harvard meta-analysis on pollution-dementia links (Harvard T.H. Chan School). Policy matters, fast: cutting fossil pollution saves lives and money within years — co-benefits quantified in recent modeling for the US and globally.
Eco Action steps that actually help
Drive electric, support clean transit
Vlakfest on a train in Europe
Tailpipe emissions are a prime PM2.5 source; electrifying cars, buses, and freight slashes exposure. EPA and NIH summarize health benefits; U.S. rules are tightening PM standards. From the region: EV adoption and smarter policy can reduce urban smog and climate pollution.
See Green Prophet’s coverage of EV policy and options:
Israel’s EVs & taxation rethink,
Lebanon’s EV Electra.
Power up renewables
Solar and wind displace combustion, cutting NOx and PM2.5 — a direct brain-health win alongside climate action.
Regional snapshots:
Wind farms of the Middle East,
Masdar–Bahrain wind buildout,
Extreme heat & Israel’s solar share.
Get outside: “forest bathing” and brain health
A forest in Nipissing, Ontario near Bearland
Time in nature is linked with lower stress and improved cognition; experimental work shows 90-minute nature walks reduce rumination and dampen maladaptive neural activity.
Local inspo and guides from Green Prophet:
Green self-care & forest bathing,
Overcoming nature phobias,
The post Fine-particle pollution is now directly tied to Lewy body dementia appeared first on Green Prophet.







