The recession has encouraged us to cut our frivolous spending. Environmentalism has encouraged us to cut our frivolous waste. The result? The market for sustainably-branded products is more competitive than ever.


Take, for example, your options for purchasing a sustainable water bottle. Consuming water may seem like one of the simplest human functions, but each hydration delivery system in the crowded eco market offers a different environmental pedigree. My Eco Can advertises its “reusable, earth-friendly can made from corn-starch based polylactic acid.” The Eco-Canteen is a “BPA free, food grade stainless steel carabiner” that’s “made in a sustainable manner in China.” The Rive’s glass water bottles “combine fashion, function and sustainability” and are free of BPA, phthalate, PVC, cadmium, and lead. A portion of H2OMG‘s sales go toward making “clean water a reality for families in rural india.” Lifefactory cuts to the chase: It claims to make the “purest water bottle on the market.”

When I get on the phone with a Lifefactory rep, she admits that more investigation may be necessary to anoint Lifefactory the definitive “purest.” But that’s the point—the sustainable water bottle market is so crowded, its terms advancing so quickly, that the consumer needs to be extraordinarily well-informed to keep up with who’s on top.

Lifefactory, which is based in San Francisco, provides an extensive eco-resume to back up its claim. The bottle is “specially made in France.” It’s the “first reusable glass beverage bottle that is free of toxins and BPAs.” Virtually “every part of its construction is recyclable—even the plastic cap,” and is “designed to last a life-time.” The bottle provides a “fresh clean taste, and absolutely no chemical leaching.” Aesthetics come into play, too. The bottle has an “intelligent glass design.” Its co-founders “explore the mystery of color” to help you find which hue “best matches you.”

The company’s “main priority is developing the healthiest products possible for families,” a spokesperson tells me, and its “reusability is considered an ecological advantage over the many disposable options that currently dominate the bottle market.” But in this sea of eco-friendly bottles, communicating Lifefactory’s real advantage to consumers requires the company to deploy a host of increasingly complex buzzwords, from “toxin” to “BPA” to “chemical leaching” to “France.”

“Our customers already understand the benefits of going reusable,” a Lifefactory spokesperson says. They “tend to be very well informed and demand a high level of transparency from the brands they bring into their homes.”

The more sophisticated the water bottle drinker becomes, the more eco credibility a sustainable company must lock down to win their business. It’s not enough to claim to be “recycled” or “reusable” or “sustainable” or “eco-friendly” or “pure” anymore—the most informed drinkers want to know whether their bottles are made with “polypropylene (pp#5)” or not. Transparency is a positive trend, but full disclosure isn’t for everyone. The risk is that more casual earth-friendly consumers may be alienated by the flurry of buzzwords and just end up refilling the same mason jar—a form of eco-consumerism they implicitly understand.

  • A Cornell Study says smart people are less likely to hide behind corporate buzzwords
    Photo credit: CanvaA man meditates at the center of a work meeting.

    If you ever sat through a business meeting where someone calls out, “We need to circle back and socialize this cross-functionally,” and thought, “You could have just said let’s talk more before deciding anything,” congratulations: science is on your side.

    A new study from Cornell University suggests that people who are less impressed by corporate jargon may actually think more clearly and make better decisions. Cognitive psychologist Shane Littrel introduced something called a Corporate Bullshit Receptivity Scale (CBSR), which is exactly as amazing as it sounds.

    business meeting, leadership, critical thinkers
    A woman leading the business meeting is unimpressed.
    Photo credit Canva

    Strongest thinkers in the room

    The study, published in the Journal of Personality and Individual Differences, examined how workers responded to vague corporate language intended to sound impressive. The research revealed that people who rate jargon-heavy phrases as especially “profound” or “informative” also tended to score lower on analytical thinking and workplace decision making.

    In other words, the people most impressed by phrases like “all hands on deck” and “this is mission critical” probably aren’t the strongest thinkers in the room. Anyone who’s ever rolled their eyes during a meeting full of corporate buzzwords and thought, “This is nonsense,” the findings are validating.

    confusion, terminology, clarification, jargon
    A boring meeting.
    Photo credit Canva

    Why some people are impressed by buzzwords

    The CBSR scale was created to measure how easily people are impressed by polished but meaningless corporate language. In a story for the Cornell Chronicle, Littrell described this workplace talk as “a specific style of communication that uses confusing, abstract buzzwords in a functionally misleading way.” He added, “Unlike technical jargon, which can sometimes make office communication a little easier, corporate bullshit confuses rather than clarifies. It may sound impressive, but it is semantically empty.”

    What’s perhaps more troubling is that coworkers, the most susceptible to the BS, rated supervisors higher. They also reported improved job satisfaction and were more likely to spread it themselves. A reality that helps explain why this language survives.

    Every profession has terminology that serves a purpose. Doctors or engineers use specialized language because precision matters. However, language designed to sound strategic only makes the feebleminded happy, according to the study.

    frustration, translation, professionalism
    Receiving a frustrating email.
    Photo credit Canva

    The study validates relatable frustration

    The Cornell study validates a frustration that many workers have struggled with throughout their careers. People can tell the difference between someone trying to explain something and someone trying to sound important.

    A 2022 study in Springer Nature Link found that clarity improves comprehension. Experts who truly grasp a topic are far better at translating it. The people who communicate the most clearly are often those who understand what’s going on the best.

    The World Economic Forum shared a survey of 1,000 American workers, which found widespread irritation with corporate buzzwords. More than a quarter of the workers reported hearing corporate jargon every day. People generally found these interactions more annoying and less professional.

    celebrating, research, clarity, honesty
    Celebrating at work with a High 5.
    Photo credit Canva

    Potential benefits of implementing CBSR

    Implementing tools like CBSR may help companies recognize communication habits that aren’t working. It offers a measurable way to examine how incorporating shorthand speech affects decision-making. In theory, the scale could encourage workplaces to prioritize clarity over sounding impressive.

    If organizations become more aware of how often buzzwords replace direct communication, they can reduce misunderstandings while building trust between employees and leadership. Language influences the perception of leadership. When the critical thinkers secretly revolt over current expectations and practices, that’s probably a real problem.

    For people exhausted by an endless procession of buzzword-filled meetings, the research suggests that the annoyance probably comes from valuing plain English and practical thinking. Simply put, sometimes the smartest response is asking people to say what they really mean.

  • Window washer’s free cleanings are saving struggling Kansas City restaurants through social media
    Photo credit: CanvaA window washer's social media is helping boost local business.

    No matter where you hang your hat in today’s world, a social media presence can impact your business. Former social media content manager turned window cleaner Davis Roethler knows this more than most. But he isn’t just using social media to boost his Window Wolf cleaning service. He’s actually highlighting other local businesses along the way.

    Knowing that the restaurant industry is one of the hardest to break even, Roethler wanted to help out struggling eateries in Kansas City. Wearing his Meta glasses, Roethler eats from a local restaurant and offers to clean their windows for free. While washing the windows, he records video from his Meta glasses to make a quick profile to promote the eatery. 

    A small video led to huge impact

    The restaurant owners aren’t only thankful for the free window cleaning, but also for the boost in foot traffic that Roether’s covert videos have provided. Yeyo’s Bakery is one of them.

    “He offered to clean our windows for free, and my wife was like, ‘Sure, why not?’” said Pedro Sagrero, co-owner of Yeyo’s Bakery to KCTV 5. “For the last two or three weeks [after Roethler posted a video], we’ve been noticing our sales are increasing tremendously. From, I would say, a hundred per day to four hundred.”

    Another restaurant, Tasty African Food KC, was struggling with an incorrect address listed on Google and low attendance. About 24 hours after Roethler cleaned their windows and posted a video about them, the restaurant’s address was corrected online and they had a line form before they opened.

    “By Friday at 9:30, and I was like, ‘Why are they out there? What’s going on?’ and so I finally just flagged one of them and said, ‘What’s going on?’” said Florence Muni of Tasty African Food KC. “I haven’t seen this much traffic since we’ve been here for two weeks, and he’s like we’re just waiting for the restaurant to open.”

    Social media creating local community

    “When you just look at the data, opening up a restaurant, from a business standpoint, it’s a terrible idea. It’s a huge risk. The numbers are not on your side,” Roethler told the Kansas City Star. “When you realize that, you realize that there’s so much opportunity in KC to help out these small businesses to make sure that they’re not part of that statistic of closing down.”

    While Roethler is a businessman, the focus on the videos was from a community perspective. While he would give a good review of the food, his videos provided a window into the people who prepared it.

    “What’s missing is like the story behind the owner and the person and the magic behind the food,” Roethler said to KCTV 5.  “But ultimately, I know it’s right when I show up and you’ve got mom or dad behind the register and you’ve got their kids working in there…that’s where I’m like, all right, they deserve the limelight.”

    The success that Roethler brings to local businesses isn’t mere social media marketing. His Instagram account has less than 10,000 followers. That number is meager compared to true influencers. But it’s the local community that does follow him that shows up to enjoy good food and uplift one another.

  • Voice actor explains why Americans instantly trust people with British accents, even if they’re lying
    Photo credit: CanvaA traditional town crier, left, and a happy, applauding audience, right.

    Americans have this strange love of British accents—so much so that even when someone is speaking absolute gibberish, we find ourselves transfixed and absurdly trusting them.

    Tawny Platis, a professional voice actor and content creator, expertly captured the phenomenon in her YouTube video, “Why Americans Love This Accent.” In the video, she analyzes why Americans find Billy Butcher’s voice so compelling despite the character’s violent and morally chaotic behavior on the TV show The Boys.

    Americans trust and love rough, working-class British masculinity

    “So Karl Urban is a New Zealander doing a Cockney, working-class, East End London accent,” Platis explained. Regardless of how well the actor nails the accent for his character, Butcher, Americans buy right into it anyway. “That’s because working-class English masculinity is coded in American media as authenticity,” she added.

    She goes on to give examples to help substantiate her point: “Every Guy Ritchie movie, British gangster film, and working-class antihero from Michael Caine to Tom Hardy has trained American audiences to hear that voice as unfiltered and honest.”

    A 2024 study published in SAGE Journals found that listeners unconsciously form social biases based on accents. People rapidly make assumptions about personality and identity.

    decision making, accents, familiarity, credibility
    A young businessman speaks into a microphone.
    Photo credit: Canva

    Make ordinary information sound important

    The accent becomes a shortcut the brain uses to make immediate decisions about intelligence, honesty, confidence, warmth, and even competence. When it comes to characters like Butcher, the key detail isn’t so much the “Britishness” itself—it’s the association.

    “Butcher is using the working-class Brit voice to showcase honesty,” Platis said. “Butcher is a liar who manipulates Hughie, hides things from his team, and is willing to take out children. But the audience keeps forgiving him because his voice sounds like a man who’s earned the right to do all that, when he very much hasn’t.”

    Psychologists believe part of this effect comes from something called “processing fluency.” A 2023 study published in Scientific Reports found that increased exposure to certain accents reduced listeners’ cognitive effort. As a result, people made more positive social judgments about the speaker.

    Accents that feel familiar after years of movies, television, and media unconsciously influence people. Audiences automatically attach credibility and trustworthiness to them. Simply put, people mistake familiarity for truth.

    A 2024 study found that Americans rate the standard British accent most positively, strongly associating it with traits like intelligence, status, and competence. The Northern English accent is viewed slightly less favorably. Scottish accents are considered strong and friendly. Meanwhile, the Welsh accent falls somewhere in the middle, depending on how well the listener recognizes it.

    factual, educated, casual interactions, performance
    Blocks spell out the words “fact” and “fake.”
    Photo credit: Canva

    Accent bias sways people’s opinions

    The same instinct that makes one accent sound “trustworthy” can also make another sound “unreliable.” In real-world interactions, working-class accents can be perceived as less intelligent or less educated. This can affect hiring decisions and even workplace promotions.

    A 2024 study focusing on “Americanness” found that accented speakers were perceived as “less American.” In simulated hiring scenarios, they were less likely to be hired, demonstrating that an accent can override other judgments.

    When a person speaks, people instantly begin building a story about who they are. Many decide whether a voice sounds trustworthy long before consciously realizing it. Platis points out that a lifetime of exposure to social media, movies, and television has shaped that perspective.

    “Butcher’s accent is the most effective because it’s the only one many viewers don’t even recognize as a performance,” Platis said. Which basically means somewhere out there right now, a confident British accent is talking nonsense that feels totally believable.

Explore More Stories

Environment

How the ‘fog harvesting’ women of Morocco are influencing how desert areas get drinking water

News

Florida man found $30K in a fanny pack in a Wawa bathroom. He knew exactly what to do.

Health

More women are rejecting ‘optimization culture’ for realistic wellness plans

Everyday Economics

What a roommate can save you in 100 US cities: 2026 study