I'm expecting a lot of finger-wavy responses, but broadly I'll just say -- I really like seeing things like this "in print." I feel like in today's (obviously in spaces like this, but generally) LinkedIn world, it is literally important to push back against the seriousness of the work world, since it's not always clear that this flavor of work is always (or even mostly) an air-quotes "good thing."
(Personally, I'm contrasting to my own experiences with a Discord meme fueled company game studio but-it's-everyone's-side-hustle thing that's both really fun and gets stuff done)
Just give them the usual response. If you can't prove it with empirical evidence and there's a mountain of rational counterarguments, it's likely not the panacea you think it is.
The only reason business is invulnerable to logic, is because business holds the reins. Not because their methods are actively shown to be the great.
My dad used to pick three random words from the dictionary and try to work them into whatever him and his coworkers would have to say during a menial update meeting. One time they were able to work all three words into a single sentence.
During a particularly bad period at one company I worked for in the 80s, a coworker declared that there would be points awarded for each reference made to the Titanic during the upcoming project meeting.
He sat quietly making notes during the meeting, while we all tried to work in "lurking beneath the surface", "steaming ahead regardless" and "only 10% of the issues are visible above the waterline".
As the meeting went on the quality got worse. It was quite clear that something was going on, when suddenly he stood up and announced the scores. Even awarding one of the managers points for mentioning Belfast.
Especially since the site is only text content and it bizarrely renders into a 500px strip everywhere. If you're going to insist on "modern browsers" make the effort to use media queries for the viewport.
For some reason the JS is invoked when you manually change the CSS for the width to something sane and it gradually expands the pane with repeated reflows.
Are you serious? Nobody finds it interesting. The people who organize meetings have to do them for various reasons, like a kick-of meeting for starting a project etc. Sometimes meetings are useful, many times they are not, but the organizers rarely care about them being interesting - they just have no other choice so they just go on with their presentation or whatever and finally we can get back to real work.
Fortunately I WFH most of the time so I spend the meetings on a bike, they are a pleasure to participate.
One place I worked had too many meetings. One thing me and a colleague noticed that everyone (including ourselves) tended to sit in the same spots every time. So we started getting there first and picking random seats to sit in each time.
It was fun to then watch the mental gears turn as each person walked into the room, saw we those that arrived before them were sitting somewhere unexpected and then had to figure out where they would then sit. The cultural and power dynamics involved really did annoy some people.
Growing up, #2 was called 'the sermon game', but only letters that started words counted. The goal was not to reach the end of the alphabet but to get further through than your peers.
(Personally, I'm contrasting to my own experiences with a Discord meme fueled company game studio but-it's-everyone's-side-hustle thing that's both really fun and gets stuff done)