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Monthly Archives: May 2026

Nature Knock-offs? Or a new fabric of Life? What’s the story?

19 Tuesday May 2026

Posted by Thin Air Factory in Uncategorized

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bio-fabrication, Communications, Language, ordinary-people-extraordinary-science, Science, Sustainability

Bio-fabricating materials for consumer goods is the ‘thing’ amongst super-smart early adopters – but will ordinary people ‘buy’ it?  

In a recent Future Laboratory report on Bio Fabricated Futures, focused on bio-fabrication and its potential to rewrite the sustainability story, I was unsurprised to read that, though staggering progress has been made on the science, still far more must be done regarding communicating the genius of these new processes and, more importantly, the desirability of them to ordinary people:

Conservation and environmental organisations’ efforts to rebrand nature drive experiences to engage the next generation have also gained traction, but there is still a way to go with consumer products.

The report tells us that this points to a consumer contradiction – where the greatest proponents and advocates of a more sustainable future, Gen Z, are equally if not more so addicted to fast fashion, and celebrity levels of consumption. [Temu’s ‘shop like a billionaire’ positioning is a clue] This suggests that they live far beyond both their means and their values. They’re not alone.

We seem to struggle with the conundrum of ‘talking’ certain values in terms of sustainability without ‘walking’ them. The mass consumer being averse to purchasing innovative, more sustainable or zero impact alternatives is not new. Neither is the potential cause IMHO: that of the language used and the story being told.

All I have to say is ‘fish skin.’

The report tells us that:

Many early and accessible sustainable material explorations, such as Nike’s Air Hobbits, Osmose’s rustic leather and Boas Kristjánsson’s fish skin collection, were characterised by organic,`raw and occasionally even grotesque aesthetics that signalled a close affinity with nature. While these were positive and potentially viable steps forward, they may have unintentionally made sustainability seem less appealing. This created a landscape where sustainability had to work harder than ever to attract consumers.

Now I don’t know about you but, if someone was to drop ‘fish skin,’ or the phrase ‘characterised by organic, raw and occasionally even grotesque aesthetics that signalled a close affinity with nature’ into a conversation with me at a Friday night barbecue, at best I might be curious, but I wouldn’t be sprinting off to purchase some – and I’m interested in this stuff. If we’re speaking to the ascendent consumer generation focused on looking good, social chops and belonging, fish skin is not where I’d start.

There seems to be an intellectual blind spot when it comes to talking to ordinary people about extraordinary things – and an assumption that by simply setting out the wonder of its science and ingenuity, ordinary people will be awe-struck and compelled to buy into them.    

I’ve spent years sitting in the space where extraordinary scientific ideas and ordinary people collide. I’ve spent countless hours toiling away at how to make deeply engineered scientific constructs convert into a compelling and aspirational conversation with an ordinary person. Cue the ‘can I explain this to a 6-year-old or my nan?‘ challenge.

If I’m brutally honest, we still find ourselves between an intellectual rock and a popular hard place. We have not crossed the ‘chasm’ between the early adopter and the early majority.

Ordinary people still find that most innovators and experts speak in ‘riddles’ when it comes to all things scientific – in Bio-fabrication’s case, Sustainability, genetic science, engineering and Nature. What’s more, the die-hard devotees of these sciences seem to struggle with what they see as intransigence or a wilfully ignorant dismissal of their brilliant cause by ordinary folks. The devotees also seem to miss the fact that in many of these conversations, there’s a logic gap for most ordinary people. This gap is inextricably linked to the vast difference in the context in which. the science was developed, and the context in which those people live and where their horizons are set – which is mostly on getting to the end of each month.  It’s bumpy out there.

With climate science for example, many ordinary people know that circa 80% of the world’s energy is derived from fossil fuels – so punchy mantras like ‘just Stop Oil’ in support of the environment and the championing of clean energy technologies seems not only ill informed to them, but also either delusional or slightly suicidal in regards to the energy the world uses right now. The mantra screams ‘switch it off’ – and the following question is ‘…and replace it with what?’

Everyone loves a punchy slogan, and ‘let’s smash a robust energy transition strategy‘ isn’t quite as catchy or edgy. Thie issue is that this kind of extreme messaging simply pushes the two camps further apart. Three words deployed with the best of intentions have wreaked havoc with any potential consensus. It simply exacerbates the division, not heals it.

So what does all of this mean for Bio-Fabrication?

Bio-fabrication is an extraordinary leap forwards rooted in bleeding edge science. The report tells us that ‘It is created by using biological processes, often involving living organisms or their components like cells, proteins or DNA. Biofabrication techniques can range from fermentation of micro-organisms to grow materials that replicate leather or silk to genetic engineering to produce novel materials with specific properties. Not only are they a scientific breakthrough with massive social and cultural impact, but also as the report tells us, capable of offering  ‘businesses a pathway to sustainable growth, particularly in a landscape contemplating concepts like de-growth and post-growth.’ Mind blowing frankly.

Bio-fabrication is a remarkable thing; but it is complex. And no one in Tik Tok world is buying complex. So I wonder how we might reorganise the chips on the table to make it more appealing without losing its integrity.

My first staging post in this process might be the Hotness Test. Given that bio-fabricated materials are to be used in what are effectively fashion, lifestyle and ‘identity’ products; those bastions of what’s hot and what’s not, it seems a reasonable first step.

The Hotness Test came to the fore for me while sitting on a call with some sustainability folks in San Francisco discussing Levi’s zero-water denim offering [well, 96% less water used in production, so VERY close]. The Levi’s people were slightly crest fallen when we pointed out to them that looking hot was more of a priority for what a teenager wanted out of their jeans than the save water story. It was a great second story but no. No. 1 – look hot and No. 2 – ‘look ma, no water!’ But waterless as first base? Nope. You only get to eco-hotness via hotness. Hotness first. Eco second. Double bubble. Frustrating I’m sure if you’ve innovated in every direction to make the product so low impact as to be almost environmentally invisible. But none the less: that’s reality.

So speaking to Fashion Forever as the mantra for the most sustainable new processes and materials might start us in the right place. Who wouldn’t embrace hot new items that come free of the creeping guilt of environmental impact.

Another example here is Pleather, or plastic leather-look fabric. Now when we look at pleather up through the engineering, it’s a marvel of sustainability and utility. But seen through the eyes of a Gen Z devotee for whom looking rizz, the whole meal and ate iseverything, choosing between a complex, slightly self-righteous sustainable shoes story and a pair of silver glitter P488s worn by Gigi Hadid popping on TikTok somewhere near you sometime soon, I think the answer seems obvious. If the latter ‘story’ is a more appealing route to you, you’ve accepted that ‘hotness’ and aspirational things beats the underlying science hands down. This is not to dismiss the science, just to help it ‘know its place’ in the story.

Manufacturers making Bio-Fabrication ‘second nature’ to how they do business and make products – as a central foundational tenet of their production – is half the battle. But I sense we’ll struggle to peddle it to the Temu-adjacent majority if we start from science and benefits. But, find a new framing for it focused on aspiration and ‘hotness,’ and you might create a rather compelling pincer movement. People might actually buy what the manufacturers are selling

Positioning, framing and language will be key for Bio Fabrication – and it won’t be the language of science and benefits that wins the day.

This is not only a reoccurring theme in the world of sustainability, climate, and all things eco. It is the same for all extraordinary advances in science.

For over a decade I’ve worked at finding new conversational doors between the extraordinary science of genomics and ordinary people. The only simple rule is start where people are, not where you want to take them. Find the connections and the bridges between your extraordinary something and their everyday needs and desires.  

In that way it is possible to take sometimes highly engineered and arcane sustainability innovations and make them more palatable to ordinary people whose minds are on just about anything other than extraordinary science.

Bon chance Bio-fabrication. May the force be with you.

Foot Note:

Sustainability Stories: an exercise in Aspirational Language and Framing 

One particular project required me to explore how to take the idea of ‘Sustainable Living Plans,’ a brilliant piece of sustainable social engineering championed by Paul Polman at Unilever. But in wasn’t really chiming with the consumer – and its brilliance was being lost in translation. So a challenge was set to see if we could convert what underwrote it into an everyday conversation. So through a series of workshops we explored ways to reinterpret the sustainability truths that underpinned Sustainable Living Plans and reframe them in an aspirational conversation more likely to gain traction in a pub in Macclesfield on a wet Wednesday night in a bad week.

Smarter Lighter Living was where we netted out.

Having a chat about all things ‘smarter lighter living’ in a pub on a wet Wednesday night just felt a lot more interesting and exciting. It smacked of hacks and nous, and ‘being in the know.’ What’s not to like?

Who doesn’t want to make smarter choices? Who doesn’t want to ‘lighten the load’, starting with their wallet? That you’d be reducing the weight of your impact on ecosystems and planet makes for a wonderful back story. But again, it is Part 2 in the conversation. Smarter Lighter Living makes the individual, their family and their life the priority. Self interested perhaps. But as I say. Stop trying to ‘convert’ people with rationality. Meet people where they are. Invite them to the party. Create some FOMO.

Practically speaking, by reframing exactly the same sustainability truths in a more aspirational phrase we found a better and more positive conversation – one that looked like it might make people shift their behaviours. In that way it was still anchored to the sustainability truths: of planetary limits, full lifecycle responsibility, social interdependence, and purpose-driven growth, but viewed through the lens of the desires and values of an ordinary person in their everyday life. No silver bullet, but it was a start.

Did it irritate the highly intelligent architects of the original. I am uncertain. But experience has shown me that highly brilliant people have a klaxon warning when it comes to what they see as the ‘dumbing down’ of highly engineered or scientific ideas. They worry that integrity and rigour are lost. Our intention was not to lose the rigour that underpinned the idea. We simply elevated the the role of human desire and our wish to ‘thrive,’ make smarter decisions, and alleviate the weight [emotional, financial, social, environmental] in an increasingly squeezed accelerating life.

More soon.   

Advertising, Attenborough, Ham, and Humility.

11 Monday May 2026

Posted by Thin Air Factory in Uncategorized

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David Attenborough, Film, green-eyed-monster-films, Humility, learning-through-landscapes, nature

In Advertising [or at least the advertising world that was] the gifts were obvious, and all about us. Creativity was ostensibly king and the rewards plentiful: Large [and for some vast] salaries, living like ersatz Lords and Ladies; expensed lunches, production company jollies, and the ‘second office’ [whichever pub was closest to the agency] from which to do business. And then there was the old creative team joke of starting a script with the words ‘Open on a pair of international plane tickets…’ There was so much to be enjoyed that, if you weren’t careful, any real gifts could pass you by, and you’d never ever notice.

Spurred by watching David Attenborough’s 100th Celebration. this post is about one of those gifts; a much rarer one; let’s just call it a revelation.

If it is possible to have a Damascene moment in what had become a quite bloated, self-aggrandising industry, mine happened at the tail of my tenure in old school advertising land.

It came via a call from long-time collaborator, the very fine and brilliant Mark Downes, of Green Eyed Monster Films.

“I’ve a small scripting task, if you’re up for it?”

A beer was had and chats revealed that it was for a trust called Learning through Landscapes, a small and rather amazing bunch focused on helping schools unlock the power of their grounds to enrich education, nurture wellbeing, and deepen connection with nature. The jewel in this crown was that one of their Trustees was the indomitable Sir David, and he was prepared to front the film if his schedule allowed. We just needed to spark his interest and commitment to being involved.

We developed a film idea, called ‘Conserving Wonder,’ focused on how the natural world stimulates children’s sense of wonder in nature, and why that’s worth conserving. The film set out to illustrate in simple terms the pressure on schools’ depleting outside spaces, and how nature could work as an offset strategy to school children’s increasing classroom incarceration. It felt like something only Sir David could land, in his own inimitable way.

Obviously, Sir David is written through every moment of my own sense of natural wonder growing up. His voice was seared into my psyche. He was solely responsible for bringing the natural world into my sitting room. Sunday was the perfect day for his wonder-filled sermons on the natural world: there was a sense of reverence and majesty in every episode. And amongst it all, Sir David seemed blissfully unaware that of all the creatures he filmed, he was one of the rarest. In that way Attenborough is a unicorn: a creature whose very existence within it seems to hold the world in balance. So to say that I was excited to be working with him is an understatement of life-sized proportion.

Prior to the shoot, I had both the honour and the pleasure of sitting in Sir David’s library room in Richmond, surrounded by his books and mementoes of travels to far off places, talking about the best script narrative and arc for the film. It was a golden gift, a once in a lifetime experience. But it was only the beginning. He is indeed the gift that keeps on giving.

As we drove to the school where the filming was to take place, I posed him a question. I used to walk around Regent’s Park every morning. At the northern-most point of my walk I would edge along the path next to the zoo. I would delight in the sounds of the animals in their morning reverie. But one thing fascinated and amused me more than any other. There was a bird who would ‘kick off’ every time it heard a police or ambulance siren [which was often]. I had recorded the bird on my phone, so I played it to him. He listened intently to the bird’s call, chiming with the police sirens passing around it, pondered, then said “I think that may well be an Australian Whipbird” My own private nature lesson.

We arrived at the school, excited and expectant. Before filming was to happen, Sir David was going to address the children. It was a master class in story telling. The particular story he told in their assembly was about Crocodiles in the Everglades at night. They were mesmerised, as were all the adults. He knew his audience.

When filming began, another masterclass. His ability to internalise our narrative and execute it reminded me that he is a storyteller of epic proportion: a master of his art. The children adored him of course, and they had none of the legacy of a life time of his storytelling to ignite them. In person he just is that person.

Which brings us to the ham in our story sandwich.

We broke for lunch, and for Sir David to rest. There was some confusion about where the sandwiches were, but they were eventually located in the headmistress’s office. People milled about chattering and grabbing sandwiches and crisps, then suddenly, the door closed, and there I was with Sir David, perched on smallish chairs, with our sandwiches on small paper plates. It can only have been 20 minutes or so, but we sat, eating sandwiches, speaking of his recent travels. He had just returned from his grand tour of a vast community of global scientists and naturalists. Until this moment he had eschewed wading in on the Climate Crisis conversation. He was a scientist. He needed empirical proof of its truth. He’d been given it; and seemed laid low by it. He was obviously troubled by what he’d been told – and he was aware that suddenly time was against him, and he felt there was much to do.

As we nibbled on our ham sandwiches, the one thing that struck me about him, beyond his passion and professionalism, and the visceral sense of care he felt for the natural world, was his humility. Given all he has achieved, he is a remarkably humble man.

As someone who’d spent decades in an industry riddled with hubris and an often wildly misguided sense of its own greatness and importance [I include myself in this], here was a man who was truly engaged in shaping the culture of our world and changing it for the better. But his demeanour was one of sublime humility in the face of the majesty of the natural world he loved and his commitment to conserving it in whichever way possible.

They say ‘don’t meet your heroes, you may well be disappointed.’ In this instance, this was about as far from being the case as is possible. Being with Sir David, for even the shortest time, was revelatory, and for me at least, life changing. My story is I am sure, one of tens if not hundreds of thousands of similar stories told and retold over the years about how Sir David Attenborough has changed people in some profound way; but it’s mine.

Mark Downes made a remarkable little film; discrete, well balanced and beautifully judged. It tells a simple story: of what nature means to children, their education and their sense of wonder in the world, and what we can do to help conserve that wonder. Sir David ends the film with a typically quiet yet profound question: ‘if children do not understand and experience nature, they will not grow up to protect it. And if they don’t, who will?’ Quite.

Watch it here.

It was an honour to be a part of this project, so I thank Mark and the smart folks at Learning through Landscapes for the gift of that experience – and Sir David for opening my eyes a little more to what is possible with the right passion and perseverance. Steely is the word they use for. him. Thank god for that. We are all the. richer for it.

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