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Laura Burkhauser: Surviving the AI hype, one sandwich bet at a time

Dave Hayward

Dave Hayward

Founder Europa Creative Partners

March 29, 2026

Slideshow with Dave Hayward, Ep 4, Season 2 (#17)

Episode links

We’re honoured to have amazing guests on Slideshow, but even by those standards, this episode’s guest is bloody amazing! Laura Burkhauser runs a $550 million AI company, and her most-used tool for navigating the hype isn’t a model or a product. It’s a sandwich bet.

In this episode of Slideshow with Dave Hayward, Dave Hayward (that’s me, I’ve got to talking about myself in the third person now) speaks with Laura Burkhauser, CEO of Descript, the AI-native video and audio editing platform used by millions of creators, podcasters, and business teams. She knows the AI landscape from the inside, and her take on the discourse is unusually grounded as a result.

Our conversation centres on Laura’s framework for cutting through the AI hype cycle: a technique she calls the sandwich bet. Every week brings headlines declaring that AI will either destroy all white-collar jobs or transform human potential beyond recognition. Notably, a sandwich bet is a powerful framework to use in life or in business. It’s just that “AI hypests” and “AI doomers” are all around us now.

Laura’s argument: both camps are using the same playbook. Fear and euphoria generate engagement. Nuance doesn’t get clicks. Neither gives you anything to act on. The sandwich bet is her antidote. When a conversation tips into doom-spiral territory, she asks the other person to get concrete: what exactly do you think will happen, by when, and how would we measure it? If they’re right, you buy them a sandwich. The low stakes lower the emotional temperature. The specificity forces rational thinking. And let’s face it, sandwiches are delicious.

Episode highlights

The episode also covers Descript’s history as an AI-native company that predated the AI discourse entirely; the “work slop” problem that led Laura to write an internal memo on human collaboration in the age of AI; why generative media is still missing its “Finding Nemo” moment; Dave’s audience sandwich bets, collected from Bright Objects readers after Laura’s LinkedIn post went wide; and the leadership word Laura keeps returning to as CEO of a company navigating one of the most disruptive moments in software history. That word is intrepid.

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Produced by Europa Creative Partners

Chapters

00:00 Cold open: intrepid
00:45 Introduction
02:00 Why AI hype exists: the cynical and good-faith takes
03:30 The AI political horseshoe: doomers vs hypers
05:30 Descript’s AI-native origins (before AI was a discourse)
08:00 The generative AI problem: slop and the wrong conversation
09:00 Finding Nemo and what generative media is still missing
10:30 Human creativity will survive this moment
11:30 Vibe-coded briefs and the limits of AI in creative work
12:00 Work slop at Descript and the human collaboration memo
13:30 Writing as two acts: what you cannot delegate to AI
15:00 From hype to action: becoming a translation layer
16:30 AI hasn’t reduced the workload: the rising tide reality
17:30 AI vs the internet: scale of impact and the 30-year problem
20:00 Non-linear careers: German literature meets tech
22:00 The sandwich bet: framework explained
24:00 Why sandwich bets shift conversations from fear to curiosity
25:00 Sandwich bets as an internal leadership tool at Descript
26:30 The Lisa Oakley crossover: depersonalising difficult decisions
27:30 Bread talk and Vogels toast
28:00 The Descript Slack bet: getting concrete on the labour market
29:30 From vague doom to specific, measurable hypotheses
30:30 Kahneman’s system 2 and shifting from reacting to thinking
31:00 Optimism, the pandemic, and humanity’s problem-solving capacity
32:00 Andrew Mason identified Laura as his successor within weeks
33:00 Intrepid: the leadership quality for a disruptive moment
34:30 Serenity prayer, Rumsfeld, and the limits of what you can control
35:00 The VP-to-CEO paradox: more accountability, less control
36:30 Wrap up

Keywords

AI hype, AI doom, sandwich bet, future of work, business leadership, AI adoption, AI strategy, video editing, Descript, technology anxiety, work slop, generative AI, leadership, New Zealand business, productivity

FAQ (for humans and search engines)

What is a sandwich bet and how does it work?

A sandwich bet is a conversational technique for defusing AI doom-spiral conversations. When someone makes a large, fear-inducing prediction about AI, you ask them to make it specific and measurable: what exactly will happen, by when, and how would we prove it? If they’re right, you buy them a sandwich. The low stakes lower the emotional temperature. The act of getting concrete forces rational thinking. Laura Burkhauser developed the approach and uses it internally and externally at Descript when AI discourse becomes unproductive.

How should business leaders think about AI's impact on jobs and the economy?

Dave and Laura’s position: people consistently overestimate AI’s short-term impact and underestimate its long-term impact, exactly the pattern that played out with the internet. The internet took 30 years to fully reshape the economy and that process is still going. AI likely works on the same horizon. At Descript, full adoption of AI coding tools has actually increased the urgency to hire engineers, not reduced it. That’s the paragraph version. The hype machine only ever gives you the headline.

What is "work slop" and why does it matter for teams?

Work slop is a commonly used term that Laura uses at Descript specifically: for AI-generated workplace documents, including product requirements and strategies, that have been fully outsourced to AI without the author first doing the underlying thinking.

Her distinction: writing has two acts. Figuring out what you think is something you must own entirely. Articulating it in words is where some AI assistance may be reasonable. Delegating your actual thinking to AI and presenting the result as your own is, in her view, a serious professional lapse that led her to write an internal memo on human collaboration in the age of AI.

Why does AI hype exist, and should we just ignore it?

Laura makes two points. The cynical one: nuance doesn’t get clicks. The generous one: lightning-rod content often serves a legitimate purpose in getting people thinking and talking. The problem isn’t that hype exists; it’s treating it as literal truth. The job of thoughtful people is to serve as a translation layer between hype and action: extracting the signal without being paralysed by the noise.

What is Descript, and what does it do?

Descript is an AI-native video and audio editing platform that lets users edit footage by editing a transcript, the same way you’d edit a text document. Remove a sentence from the transcript and it disappears from the video. Its AI tools handle filler-word removal, audio enhancement, B-roll generation, captioning, background replacement, and voice cloning. Underlord, its AI co-editor, executes entire editing workflows from a single text prompt. The platform is used by podcasters, content creators, business teams, and marketers who want professional results without specialist editing skills.

If you know your business is all steak and needs some sizzle….. we’d love to hear from you.

Dave Hayward

Dave Hayward

Founder  Europa Creative Partners

Dave, the founder of Europa Creative Partners, has over twenty years of experience in sales and marketing. He reserves the right to shoehorn in his interests such as astronomy and sport into our company blog.
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