Two major appointments landed this week that share the same logic: hire makers, not marketers. Sarah Burton's first Givenchy campaign was shot by Juergen Teller on a lo-fi London aesthetic, a deliberate rejection of the maximalist spectacle her predecessor built. Moschino handing the keys to Loris Messina and Simone Rizzo of Sunnei, a cult Milan label known for conceptual rigour and near-zero commercial compromise, signals that the house wants credibility with an audience it has consistently failed to reach. Both moves are bets on the same thesis: that restored craft legitimacy is now worth more than sustained visibility.
Burton at Givenchy shooting lo-fi in London, Sunnei taking Moschino's creative brief, and Universal pulling the Nolan film back from creator culture all point to the same structural reversal: the institutions that over-invested in spectacle and influencer infrastructure are now paying people to undo it.
The Oura IPO reframe from wearable to physiological model is the outlier that proves the rule from the other direction: when infrastructure becomes the product, the visible layer stops mattering. Across fashion, entertainment, and health, the brands moving fastest right now are the ones stripping out the performance layer and betting on the thing underneath it.
For people who’d rather be early and wrong than late and safe.