It's time to learn a second language.
“Everyone agrees learning a second language is valuable. Almost no one actually does it.”
In this episode of Crack It In An Hour, Romain speaks with Jesse and Biz to unpack a question that feels obvious on the surface and surprisingly broken underneath: why aren’t more people learning another language?
They get into the real barriers: the illusion that it’s too late, the dominance of English, the way education systems strip the joy out of language, and the lack of real-world necessity. But they also challenge the premise: what if the benefits go far beyond utility? Identity, empathy, access to culture, even how you think.
At some point, the conversation turns inward with a personal “taste audit”: what languages do we wish we spoke, and what’s actually stopping us?
From there, it shifts into solutions. Not the usual apps and streaks but more radical ideas. What would it take to force people into learning? Should we design more friction, not less? What would a product or system look like that actually changes behavior?
This one goes beyond language and into how we choose to stay comfortable vs. expand our world.
Did they crack it? Listen and find out.
In this episode of Crack It In An Hour, Romain speaks with Jesse and Biz to unpack a question that feels obvious on the surface and surprisingly broken underneath: why aren’t more people learning another language?
They get into the real barriers: the illusion that it’s too late, the dominance of English, the way education systems strip the joy out of language, and the lack of real-world necessity. But they also challenge the premise: what if the benefits go far beyond utility? Identity, empathy, access to culture, even how you think.
At some point, the conversation turns inward with a personal “taste audit”: what languages do we wish we spoke, and what’s actually stopping us?
From there, it shifts into solutions. Not the usual apps and streaks but more radical ideas. What would it take to force people into learning? Should we design more friction, not less? What would a product or system look like that actually changes behavior?
This one goes beyond language and into how we choose to stay comfortable vs. expand our world.
Did they crack it? Listen and find out.