Published on 2026/04/03
CLEANING JOBS
There�s a pretty widespread narrative that claims
men get paid more than women �for doing the same job�. It sounds strong, easy to digest� and when repeated often enough, it starts to feel like a given.
The problem is that this idea of �the same job� often stays at the level of a
label�how it�s defined on paper. Same sector, same category, same title� but not always the same
conditions.
Because within the same line of work, the reality can be completely different. Some roles are relatively comfortable, controlled, predictable� while others push the level of demand way higher, where the margin for error drops to
zero and not everyone is willing to take that on.
And that�s where the comparison starts to fall apart. Because it�s not just about what the contract says�it�s about what the job actually involves. The
exposure, the context, the
risk.
It�s not about putting one against the other. It�s about
nuance. Understanding that under the same label, you can find very different realities.
And once you look closer, that idea of �doing the same thing� isn�t as clear as it first seemed.
Take cleaning, for example. It�s not the same to
clean an office, sweep the floor, mop it, dust shelves� as it is to
hang several stories up on ropes to clean the outside windows. It�s not the same.
And then people wonder why men account for more workplace fatalities than women.
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Personal trainer.
Published on 2026/04/03
ANIMATED MOVIES BROUGHT INTO REAL LIFE
There�s something fascinating about how artificial intelligence is starting to play with our
perception of reality� and, more importantly, with our
cultural references. What used to feel
untouchable �those iconic characters we�ve had burned into our brains for years� can now be
reimagined, reshaped, and even �recast� like you�re putting together a real Hollywood casting.
You take a movie like
Shrek,
The Flintstones, or
Hotel Transylvania, and suddenly someone goes, �What if these characters were played by real actors?�� and they don�t just think it � they actually pull it off with a level of
realism that, not long ago, would�ve been completely out of reach without a massive studio budget.
What�s interesting isn�t just the result. It�s what it
does to you.
Because these images are built so well that they sit in a dangerous spot � the one where your brain
hesitates for a second. That moment where you go, �Wait� is this real or am I being played?� And that�s where the current context kicks in. We�ve seen AI grow, we�ve seen its flaws, its patterns, its little tells� and that has trained us. It�s given us a kind of
radar.
Today, the second something feels slightly off, our first instinct is: �this is AI.� And most of the time, we�re right. But not because it�s obvious� just because we know it�s
possible.
A few years ago, this exact same content would�ve been a completely different story. It would�ve passed. A lot of people would�ve taken it as
real without even questioning it. Because that mental framework didn�t exist yet � that �this could be generated.� And that changes everything.
Even now, it still happens. There are people who don�t question it, who don�t apply that filter, and consume these pieces as if they were part of a real project, a shoot, a leaked casting, or something actually in production. And that�s where the real shift is.
It�s not just that the technology has improved. It�s that it has
democratized something that used to be completely out of reach. You don�t need CGI knowledge, a technical team, or a ridiculous budget anymore. With a bit of skill, patience, and knowing how to handle
prompts, you can shape reality however you want. Literally.
You can take something everyone knows� and
rewrite it visually until it feels believable.
And that, used well, is insane from a creative standpoint. But it also opens an interesting door: a reality that�s increasingly
malleable, more reinterpreted, more �custom-made.�
Because it�s no longer just about consuming content. It�s about being able to
create it� and doing it in a way that, at times, is hard to tell apart from the real thing.
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