Hi, Alex here,
This is SpeakEasy, the communication newsletter helping you turn small talk into smart talk.
Today:
The Age of� - What comes next?
π―π΅ Populist Japan? - Peace under pressure
βπ» Stop Interruptions - Control your conversations
π£οΈ Chat attack - Words for when they wonβt stop talking
π₯οΈ Black Mirror - Predicting the future?
β¦and more.
Language, knowledge, and culture! π§
Better conversations with every scroll.
(First time reading? You can subscribe here for free.)
TALKING POINT

π€ The Age ofβ¦?
This week in history, two moments changed the world:
β’οΈ July 16, 1945: the first successful atomic bomb test
π July 20, 1969: humans walked on the moon.
The first birthed the Atomic Age.
The second was the pinnacle of the Space Age (forget billionaires in space.)
History talks in βagesβ from Industrial to Information β and they often trigger the same reaction: awe, fear, and a lot of βThis is itβ¦Weβre all doomed, DOOMED!β
Funny thing is, we werenβt.
Somehow, every time the future shows up looking terrifying, messy, or just weird, we muddle through.
Often better off than before (unless you worked at Blockbuster.)
So, now that tech is accelerating faster than the grey hairs in my beardβ¦it got me thinking: What age are we in now? And how worried should we be?
π The Internet Age?
Started with hope, ended with pop-ups and TikTok.
Already peaked. Nearly half of Gen Z wishes there were no internet. (Can you blame them? It's now 90% bots arguing with trolls about whether birds are real.)
Dead Internet Theory, anyone?
π€ The AI Age?
Lies, cheats, blackmails, and maybe wants to kill us all.
Governments (and Big Tech) are pouring billions into it β even the Pentagon dropped $200M on Musk's Grok (βMechaHitlerβ as it calls itselfβ¦)
China's "borrowing" every breakthrough they can get their hands on.
Adoption's skyrocketing, but as we covered in issue #20, AI lies more than my daughters after biscuits go missing in the kitchen.
It also still writes emails that sound like a haunted Excel sheet.
π¦Ύ The Robot Age?
They took our jobs β then fell down the stairs.
All-robot factories, Amazon workers no longer peeing in bottles, and Musk talking of a million Optimus bots in the workforce soon.
(Great, our bosses will be named after a Transformerβ¦)
Are they coming for our jobs? Do they even want them?
Throw AI in, and they'll probably just start a podcast.
βοΈ The Quantum Age?
It bends space, time⦠and my brain
Issue #7 tackled this. Google made a wormhole. But they didnβt. Nobody knows whatβs going on, but itβs exciting and terrifying.
Like science class with tequila.
π₯ The Fusion Age?
Infinite clean power! One dayβ¦
Forget fission, with its nasty waste and meltdowns.
Fusion promises sun-level energy with zero risk.
Right now, it can powerβ¦a kettle. A small one. If the lights are off.
Progress!
So⦠where does that leave us?
We might be in the Too Much Age β too much info, too many opinions, too much noise!
But thatβs why talking still matters.
Because real connection β human-to-human, not bot-to-brain, is more important than ever.
And these big, weird topics?
Theyβre conversation gold if you know how to use them.
π‘ PRO TIP: Skip the βTikTok is killing usβ rant. Talk about tech ages instead β itβs small talk upgraded to smart talk.
Youβll sound like a philosopher, not your uncle on Facebook.
π¬ FOLLOW-UP: βWhat do you think the future will actually feel likeβTerminator or WALL-E?β People love picking sides, as it gives them a clear framework to work with.
β DON'T SAY: "Back in my day, we didn't needβ¦" (Congrats, you've just aged yourself out of the conversation. Get ready for the eye rolls π)
DECODE THIS
AI is everywhere these days β you probably know it stands for Artificial Intelligence.
But ChatGPT and Gemini? Theyβre actually LLMs.
What does that mean?
π Answer at the end of the issue.
THE CULTURE CODE

π―π΅ Japan's Peace Under Pressure?
If I asked, "What's the safest country in the world?"
Many would instantly say: Japan.
Living here, my preteen daughters walk to school, shop, and ride trains solo β no one even blinks.
In 29 years here, I've seen three fights. In the UK? Three per night.
So it was a shock to see Japan ranked only #14 on the Global Peace Index 2025. (Bad relations with China didn't help.)
But the real threat to Japan's peaceful image? A rising far-right party called Sanseito. Their "Japan First" slogan riffs on Trump's MAGA and Reform UK's playbook: blame outsiders.
The perfect storm:
π Japan's economy is struggling.
π Tourists are flooding in β 3.7 million per month (suitcases huge, train space small).
β οΈ Sanseito warns of a "silent invasion" and wants strict limits on foreign workers.
Why now? Young voters feel foreign people get "better treatment" than locals β a classic populist recipe: economic anxiety + nationalism.
The government's move? A new Cabinet office for "orderly coexistence" with foreign people. PM Ishiba cited "crime, nuisance behaviour, and system abuse" as creating "anxiety and unfairness" among citizens.
The stakes: Japan desperately needs foreign workers β its population is shrinking by over 500,000 annually. Yet, with only 3% foreign residents, anti-immigration talk finds easy support.
The reality: Japan has more vending machines (about 4 million) than foreign people, yet they're treated as an existential threat.
From America First πΊπΈ to Brexit π¬π§, Hungary's OrbΓ‘n ππΊ to Germany's AfD π©πͺ.
The populist waves keep spreading globally.
Can Japan's famous harmony survive this trend?
π‘ PRO TIP: When immigration debates heat up, focus on policies, not personalities: "What do you think about skilled worker visas?" works better than "These politicians are idiots." (Even though they usually are.)
π¬ FOLLOW-UP: "How should countries balance economic needs and cultural identity?" Open-ended, thoughtful, and safeβ¦probably.
β DON'T SAY: "Foreign people are scary." Guaranteed to shut down the table faster than a bullet train.
TALK TOOLBOX
Ever notice how some topics turn normal people into human bulldozers? Immigration, politics, crypto β suddenly theyβre an βexpertβ who wonβt let you finish a thought.
Why?
Hot-button topics trigger our βmust respond NOWβ reflex. We interrupt before we actually hear.
Why it matters:
Interruptions donβt just kill conversations β they kill understanding. Unheard people donβt change their minds; they just dig in deeper.
The fix?
Handling interruptions isnβt just polite β itβs how you keep heated chats from turning into verbal cage matches.
Check out my complete guide here:
WORD WISE
π£οΈ Chat Attack: When They Wonβt Stop Talking
We all know that person β the one who treats every conversation like a TED Talk audition. Hereβs your vocabulary upgrade for the chronically chatty:
π The Polite-ish Ones:
a bit of a talker β "He's a bit of a talker.β (British understatement perfection)
a chatterbox β "My neighbour's a total chatterbox. 20 minutes on the weather.β
π¬οΈ The Blunter Options:
likes the sound of his own voice β "He really likes the sound of his own voice."
goes on a bit β "She goes on a bit, doesnβt she?" (Another British gem.)
π₯ The Brutal Truth:
a windbag/gasbag β "The meeting ran over because Daveβs such a windbag."
never shuts up β "My brother-in-law never shuts up about crypto."
π‘ PRO TIP:
Save the last two for when youβre out of patience and politeness.
π¬ YOUR TURN:
Got a favourite word for the unstoppable talker? Hit reply and share it β I might feature it next time!
FAMOUS WORDS
βNever miss a good chance to shut up.β
(Will Rogers, American actor, 1879-1935)

Can you name the film?
π A hustler, a dreamer, and an iconic taxi shout in New York.
β¬οΈ Answer at the end of this issue
BECAUSE THE ROBOTS ARE COMING
πΊ Black Mirror β Predicting the Future?
Sci-fi loves a good dystopia, but no show has nailed modern tech nightmares like Black Mirror.
Itβs a buffet of βwhat could possibly go wrong?β scenarios: surveillance, AI, social credit, digital clones. But one of the scariest (and most believable)?
Those murderous robot dogs in βMetalhead.β
So this gave me cold sweats:
The fastest robot runner ever did the 100 m in 10.4 seconds. Only Olympic sprinters are safeβ¦for now.
π Poll: Which Black Mirror tech freaks you out most?
BITS βN BOBS
Some extras:
π¦ Like sharks? Check out the best shark photos of 2025
π§± Hate paywalls? Try proreader.io (I use it every day).
π€ Want AI? Try Gemini Pro free for 4 months! (First three only!)
ANSWERS
π¬ The Movie: Midnight Cowboy (1969)
Dustin Hoffmanβs Oscar-nominated Ratso Rizzo β the fast-talking, scheming street hustler and naive cowboy Joe Buck (Jon Voight). Big dreams, bigger mouth, and endless chatter about escaping to Florida.
πΏ Cultural Impact
First X-rated film to win Best Picture (later re-rated to R).
Exposed the dark underbelly of the American Dream.
π§ Deep Dive
Gave us "Iβm walkinβ here!" β Hoffman's ad-lib when a real taxi nearly hit him.
π¬ YOUR TURN:
Whatβs your favourite unlikely friendship movie? Hit reply and tell me!
What does LLM mean?
Large Language Model.
LAST WEEK
π Do you βsecond screenβ while watching Netflix?
A) π€³ Always βTV is just expensive wallpaper β 25%
B) π± Sometimes β depends how boring it is β 75%
C) π
ββοΈ Never β I actually watch what I'm watching.
D) πΊ What's Netflix? I only watch YouTube.
π¬ Your Two Cents:
S.Y: βProbably more than I realise to answer burning questions that pop into mind. How far to the Cotswolds? How about on foot? How many days would that take me?β
π£οΈ Comment of the Week

THIS IS THE END
That's all for this week, folks!
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