opinionliberal

Labels don't tell the whole story

USA, MilwaukeeThursday, July 2, 2026

The Alchemy of Conflict: Why Great Stories Need Tension

Not all conflict is destructive, Olikara argues. The best stories don’t shy away from tension—they use it to dig deeper.

Consider Ted Lasso. Its guiding principle—"Be curious, not judgmental"—seeped into everyday life, making people pause before slapping labels on others. Even in blockbusters like Spider-Man, the hero doesn’t dismiss his villain. He tries to understand him.

That’s storytelling with transformative power.

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Hollywood’s Blind Spot: The Erasure of Rural America

Yet Hollywood has a habit of flattening people into stereotypes. Rural America is often reduced to clichés—backward, monolithic, one-dimensional. Olikara’s collaboration with Land O’Lakes disrupts this narrative. Real farmers. Real stories. Told with nuance.

Brands and studios should take note. The next time an ad or movie invokes "Middle America," will it add depth—or just recycle old tropes?

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The Tools We Already Have: Curiosity, Contact, and Good Conflict

The ingredients for change aren’t hidden in some secret manual. They’re simple:

  • Curiosity
  • Real human contact
  • Embracing conflict that leads to growth

The hard part? Convincing people it’s worth the effort. Olikara’s mentor once called bridge-building "harder than rocket science." But the payoff?

Electric.

When two people, taught to hate each other, actually listen? Something shifts. Fear lessens. The conversation begins.

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The Urgency of Our Stories

Olikara’s mission is clear: The country’s future hinges on whether we can see past labels.

The antidote isn’t ignoring differences—it’s seeing the person behind them. Hollywood holds immense power to shape perception. If studios choose stories that reflect truth, they won’t just entertain—they’ll heal.

Because at the end of the day, the stories we tell shape the world we live in.


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