For my 2025 kickoff of Insider Interviews marketing luminaries Lou Paskalis and David Sable joined me for one of the most candid conversations on the media and ad world for an incredibly candid conversation on the media and ad world that cuts through what David famously coined as “digibabble” years ago.

We moved from their personal passions (don’t get David started on The Doors!) to how advertising evolved in the tech era… to its future, jam packed with opinions based on their decades of award-winning experience.

(Lou, who previously ran global marketing at a couple of small brands you may have heard of, like Bank of America, American Express, and where I first met him, E.J. Gallo, is now the strategic mind behind news assessor Ad Fontes Media, The street cred of David – a top voice on LinkedIn, thanks in part to his terrific blog, “Imagine,” stems from being former global CEO/Chairman of Y&R (now VMLY&R) and board member for a ton of big companies like American Eagle and Ethan Allen. He is now Vice-Chairman at the forward-thinking mid-size holdco, Stagwell, where Lou is also an advisor, I discovered!)

What informs a lot of the conversation is David’s explanation of how Stagwell flipped the traditional agency model on its head: Instead of buying up creative agencies, founder Mark Penn premise to build around tech.”… We began by buying tech, aggregating tech and creating a tech platform. Then we went out and wrote in the creative pieces of business.” But as David emphasized,

“Tech leads the way for everything. But our model, which is the model that’s working the best, is that tech is an enabler: Our job is to tell stories and to tell them well.”

Stories – and art itself, even using the most sophisticated tech and AI – is only a result of the information fed to it. David shares a beautiful analogy about what a Monet envisioned using different brushstrokes on, say, Water Lillies. We have to inform our models to consider “impressionism,” just as we have to provide data for use.

He says,

“Data is a picture of what happened before. That’s it. Now, I can interpret it, I can use it, I can I can create algorithms or models, but at the end of the day, data is a picture of what was. It can predict, and AI is going to be better at that, but that’s all it is. So it’s only as good as the data that it has.”

And don’t get him started on OMNICHANNEL as a buzzword, either. The through line of this episode is to appeal to and follow the consumer. Not jam tech terms or “digibabble” down their throats. Unsurprisingly, Lou agrees, comparing ineffective presentations to Charlie Brown hearing his teacher: “Wah wah. Wah wah. Digital.” His point when pitching the CFO could also apply to the consumer:

“If you don’t contextualize everything into the growth agenda, you might as well not go to the meetings. They don’t care what we do, they care how what we do achieves growth.”

Be human, even in an AI world. That applies to retail, to advertising and, as we learn, the news media.

The Future of News

Perhaps most compelling was our discussion about the critical importance of news. Insider Interviews followers know this is a clarion call for Lou, which he focused on in his first appearance here last year. Now, backed by Stagwell’s staggering study of 50,000 people, Lou shared a startling insight: “The ROI, or return on advertising — ROAS, on news is higher than any other content vertical you can buy.” Marketers are missing out on if they are “news-averse,” based on some misguided perceptions about “brand suitability.”

“11% are self-identified as news junkies who only read or watch the news when they’re consuming media. That’s 11% more business for any marketer in America in 2025 who will achieve the growth agenda and win by reaching these very influential people.”

(To learn more, all Insider Interviews fans who are publishers are invited to apply to attend Stagwell’s Future of News next meeting at 1WTC on January 29th.)

But he also raised important concerns about modern journalism:

“Today, in desperation to get digital eyeballs there may be a different person writing the headline for the article than who wrote the article… We need product innovation in news, but we need advertisers to understand the importance of driving their business and supporting our democracy.”

Prognostications not Predictions

For Lou “the nuclear engine” driving advertising in 2025 will be “the symbiosis between connected TV, or what we call CTV, retail media networks… and podcasts.” He explained how advertisers are looking to connect “the upper funnel that CTV gives you and podcast and the lower funnel opportunities in the retail media networks.”

For David, it’s simply:

“I think the world craves simplicity and I think we’ll see a lot more around simplicity as we go forward.”

Key Takeaways:

  • How connected TV, retail media, and podcasts are creating the perfect storm for advertising success
  • Why technology should enable storytelling, not replace it
  • The surprising ROI of news media advertising
  • How to translate digital complexity into real business growth
  • The delicate balance between tech capabilities and human insight

Time Codes:

01:05 Lou Paskalis introduction

01:47 David Sable’s background

03:58 Personal insights and The Doors

06:00 Exploring “digibabble”

09:03 Modern retail evolution

12:16 Human-centric marketing

15:52 Technology’s role

21:47 AI in marketing

22:49 Ethics and governance

24:26 Creative directors’ evolution

25:34 Media consumption patterns

31:28 Supporting quality journalism

44:22 Future predictions …and closing thoughts on Los Angeles Wildfires to support the composer of the Insider Interviews theme.

Connect with E.B. Moss and Insider Interviews:

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mossappeal
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Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/InsiderInterviewsPodcast/
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Blusky: https://bsky.app/profile/mossappeal.bsky.social

The episode concludes with my personal note about the Los Angeles wildfires and information about supporting affected communities, including the Grammy-winning composer of my Insider Interviews theme, John Clayton. (You can see a few images of what his home WAS in our episode last year of “It’s Quite a Living”.)

John Clayton and lost compositions

DONATION RESOURCES:

American Red Cross to support the communities in need.

World Central Kitchen has mobilized across Southern California, providing sandwiches and water throughout the region.  

Los Angeles Fire Department Foundation to go toward equipping firefighters with tools and supplies to contain the infernos.

GoFundMe.org started a 2025 Wildfire Relief Fund that will “go directly to people impacted who are seeking help through GoFundMe fund-raisers, and to nonprofit organizations on the ground providing relief.

And, as mentioned, I’ll be donating a portion of any support of this episode that is sent to buymeacoffee.com/MossAppeal