mrkd

Paul Talbot

Pirate Radio for the Tattooed & Restless Pronounced 'marked' - MRKD™ is a tattoo related podcast all about the passions, the marked men and women of tattooing pursue beyond the tattoo machine. The stuff that keeps us inspired, balanced, and ultimately makes us better tattooists - and how these interests feed into our creative processes, perspectives, and careers. They’re professional-but-personal conversations that I hope will inspire, educate and most importantly entertain you.

  1. 4D AGO

    Make Art, Not Content

    A warning shot for anyone who’s starting to feel like tattooing is becoming a perfectly lit factory. On the surface, the craft has never looked better. Open Instagram and within seconds you’re hit with flawless blends, razor lines, and photos that look like product ads. Everything is crisp. Everything is polished. Everything is performing. It looks like evolution. Like tattooing has levelled up into some high-definition utopia. But look closer. Something darker is happening under all that perfection: the work is starting to blur into one aesthetic. Different artists, same output. Different studios, same “vibe.” The feed becomes a loop—endless déjà vu. Not growth. Stagnation wearing a filter. An algorithmic treadmill that convinces you you’re moving forward while you’re actually standing still. This episode pulls apart how “content thinking” quietly rewires the craft. When the goal becomes the post—not the piece—you start designing for the grid, not the body. You chase what’s proven, not what’s true. You optimise for likes, saves, and shareability… and the work gets safer, smoother, and less human. Because content wants repeatable. Art wants risk. And tattooing—at its best—has always been risk. Taste. Collision. A living thing made between two people in a room, not a thumbnail built to survive an algorithm. So the call here is simple: stop making work that only exists to be seen. Make work that exists to last. Make tattoos that don’t rely on perfect lighting to feel alive. Make choices the feed can’t predict. Let the work be messy. Let it be personal. Let it be yours. Make art, not content—because content gets consumed. Art gets remembered.

    16 min
  2. MAR 8

    The End of Tattooing

    A reality check for anyone doom-scrolling their way into believing the craft is finished. Everywhere you look, someone’s yelling “it’s over.” Blogs, podcasts, Instagram celebrities, TikTok prophets—same recycled headline: the end of tattooing. And I can’t help thinking… I’ve heard this song before. Every era swears it’s the last one. Bans came and went. Moral panics came and went. New tech arrived, and the craft didn’t die—it sharpened. What’s different now isn’t the threat. It’s the volume knob. Social media amplifies fear because panic performs. One loud opinion becomes “social proof,” then turns into 10,000 nervous DMs. Not because it’s true—because it’s viral. Collective stupidity drowns out critical thinking. And in the outrage economy, being calm doesn’t sell courses, quick fixes, or snake oil. So this episode zooms out. Before you react, check your numbers. Ask what’s actually happening in your world, not on your phone. Ask who benefits from the panic. Follow the incentives and you’ll usually find the answer. Then get practical: make work that’s hard to automate or scale. Build routes the algorithm can’t throttle. Focus on craft, not clout. Hype fades. Mastery endures. Tattooists survive by thinking, questioning, and resisting the pull of instant outrage. The outrage economy wants reactive artists. The craft needs reflective ones—people who keep showing up, sharpening their skill in silence, and making the art instead of chasing the headline. Because tattooing isn’t ending. It’s mutating—like it always has. We’re just the next chapter in a story that’s been evolving for 150 years. And when the chorus starts yelling “It’s over!” we’ll be in our booths—machines tuned, minds quiet—building what comes next.

    15 min
  3. MAR 1

    Tattooing in the age of AI

    A blunt look at what happens when machines stop being “a future thing” and start rearranging the present. AI is here. And in the short term, it’s going to shake the world—because a lot of people are about to try getting rich by replacing humans wherever they can. Jobs will disappear. Efficiency will spike. The already wealthy will likely do what they always do: get wealthier. But the bigger story isn’t the tech. It’s the feeling. After more than a decade working in marketing, I’m less interested in predicting which tools win, and more interested in predicting what people will crave when the dust settles—based on how we feel about the recent past. For the last century, the world has pivoted hard into a productivity-first model. We’re “better off” on paper than ever… and yet so many people feel lonely, numb, and directionless. Our scarcest resource isn’t time or money. It’s meaning. Not because machines exist—but because of how greedy humans choose to use them. Instead of solving real problems, we’re heading toward a culture stuffed with synthetic replacements: AI music built on equations, galleries of machine-made “art,” fake news, fake stars, fake influencers… fake everything. A polished, perfectly optimised void. So where does tattooing fit? Right in the middle of the backlash. The next 5–10 years will reward the people and businesses who double down on what can’t be automated: honesty, presence, taste, imperfection, local culture, real conversations, real experiences. Slow content. Live music. Messy art. No snapping to guides. No performance for the algorithm. Sweat the small stuff. Treat people well. Nurture fans, not followers. Be human. Be silly. Do what machines can’t. Because the future might belong to the efficient… …but the loved will win. And, I’d rather be loved than efficient any day.

    26 min

About

Pirate Radio for the Tattooed & Restless Pronounced 'marked' - MRKD™ is a tattoo related podcast all about the passions, the marked men and women of tattooing pursue beyond the tattoo machine. The stuff that keeps us inspired, balanced, and ultimately makes us better tattooists - and how these interests feed into our creative processes, perspectives, and careers. They’re professional-but-personal conversations that I hope will inspire, educate and most importantly entertain you.