27: Trust in a Time of Monsters Podcast Por  capa

27: Trust in a Time of Monsters

27: Trust in a Time of Monsters

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Trust has always been the invisible architecture beneath brands, institutions, and markets. But today, that architecture is shifting.

For the past decade, we’ve moved through distinct eras of trust. First came consequence brands, which positioned themselves around measurable moral impact. Then came emotion-led brands, where what felt right became the guiding force. Now we appear to be entering a third era, where trust is built not on credentials or transparency, but on visible sacrifice and embodied virtue.

As institutional continuity weakens and shared reality fragments, credibility reorganizes around individuals. “Proof of knowing” carries less weight than “proof of doing.” Degrees, affiliations, and institutional endorsements are no longer sufficient signals. Instead, audiences look for lived experience, personal risk, and skin in the game.

At the same time, many of the platforms designed to increase transparency have reduced everyday vulnerability. But true trust requires vulnerability. As a result, trust is reemerging in smaller, more intimate spaces where shared stakes and emotional exposure create safety.

In this episode of Unseen Unknown, Jasmine and Jean-Louis explore how trust systems evolve, why incremental positioning feels insufficient in the current cultural climate, and what this shift means for founders and brands trying to remain credible.

When trust becomes the product itself, the rules change.

Links to interesting things mentioned in this episode and further reading:

  • The Futures That Just Died (Concept Bureau)
  • We’re Desperate For Potency (Concept Bureau)
  • Edelman Trust Barometer Reports (Edelman)
  • Who Can You Trust?: How Technology Brought Us Together and Why It Might Drive Us Apart (Rachel Botsman)
  • Strangers in Their Own Land: Anger and Mourning on the American Right (Arlie Russell Hochschild)
  • Gallup is stopping its Presidential Approval tracking (The New York Times)
  • The great nonpartisan divide that's plaguing Americans (Axios)

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