Aesthetic Intelligence

Pauline Brown

Since 2017, Pauline Brown, former head of LVMH North America and Harvard Business School professor, has been curating conversations at the intersection of creativity, culture and commerce. Produced by SiriusXM, new episodes drop weekly. Curious to learn more? Join Pauline on Substack at @paulinegarrisbrown.

  1. 18 THG 4

    The Blobification of Car Design

    In this solo episode, Pauline takes on an unexpected subject: car design. Drawing on her background in ' the Business of Aesthetics' - and her consulting work with major automakers - she explores what she calls the “blobification” of cars: the growing sameness, softness, and visual boredom of today’s vehicles. Pauline argues that cars have lost much of their emotional and cultural expressiveness, becoming increasingly shaped by engineering efficiency, software logic, and global market convergence rather than bold aesthetic vision. Using a sweeping historical lens, Pauline walks listeners through nine eras of automotive design, from the utilitarian machinery of the original Model T to the flamboyant chrome-and-tailfin exuberance of the 1950s, the rebellious muscle cars of the '60s, the anxious downsizing of the '70s, and the rounded “jelly bean” forms that emerged in the '90s and matured into today’s EV minimalism. Along the way, Pauline discusses how car designs mirror the social mood of their time. But this episode is not just a history lesson; it’s a critique. Pauline examines how the industry’s design culture, long dominated by engineering-driven male archetypes, has flattened distinction across brands, countries, and customer groups. She reflects on the shrinking gap between masculine and feminine preferences, the fading of national design identities, and the way cars today feel less like statements of taste and more like standardized software platforms on wheels. Even color, once a vivid marker of individuality, has largely disappeared into a grayscale landscape. At the same time, Pauline offers a vision for what could come next, calling for cars that feel more human, expressive, emotionally resonant, and inspiring.

    53 phút
  2. 29 THG 3

    Barbie and the Making of a Myth: A Conversation with Author Tarpley Hitt

    In this episode, Pauline sits down with Tarpley Hitt, author of Barbie Land: The Unauthorized History, to unpack the cultural staying power of America’s most famous doll. What begins as a conversation about Barbie’s origins leads into a broader discussion about aesthetics, archetypes, and why certain icons endure long after their commercial peak. Together, Pauline and Tarpley explore how Barbie became more than a toy: it's a symbol of commodified femininity, and the enduring power (and contradiction) of myth-making in a consumer-driven world. Tarpley shares the surprising backstory behind Barbie’s creation, including the doll’s roots in a German predecessor and the outsized role of Mattel’s ambitious and controversial leadership. The conversation traces Barbie’s evolution from a highly stylized adult doll into a sprawling lifestyle brand, revealing how much of her success came not from the doll itself, but from the endless world of accessories, identities, and aspirations built around her. The episode also examines how Barbie reflects broader social currents - from feminism and body image to consumer culture and global manufacturing - and they consider why and how she has survived cultural backlash, shifting norms, and changing retail landscapes in a way few other brands have. By the end, the discussion becomes a larger meditation on dolls, projection, aspiration, and identity - why humans have always made miniature versions of themselves, and what those figures reveal about the societies that create them.

    53 phút

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Since 2017, Pauline Brown, former head of LVMH North America and Harvard Business School professor, has been curating conversations at the intersection of creativity, culture and commerce. Produced by SiriusXM, new episodes drop weekly. Curious to learn more? Join Pauline on Substack at @paulinegarrisbrown.

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