A Peter McKinnon video-based Viki about using notebooks to track creative work, memories, habits, time, and personal systems without copying someone else's process wholesale.
Tracking Your Life in a Notebook Is Really About Finding Your System
Peter McKinnon's notebook video starts with a familiar problem: every digital tool is available, but the work still needs one place to land. For him, that means calls, meetings, shot lists, gear lists, content schedules, creative ideas, and reminders all end up in a notebook because the goal is simple: make more videos, take more photos, and waste less energy managing the process.
The video works because it does not treat journaling as one perfect method. Peter compares Casey's archival notebooks, John's detailed tracking, and a typewritten snapshot system, then filters all of it through a practical question: what actually helps him create?
The Notebook Becomes the Command Center
00:01 - The Notebook Becomes the Command Center Peter opens by listing the digital tools he already has, then points to the notebook as the thing he still reaches for during meetings and planning. The gist is that a notebook is useful when it becomes the central operating surface for real work: to-do lists, shot lists, calls, gear, brand meetings, and the pieces that help him make more videos.
Casey Uses Notebooks as Archives
02:52 - Casey's Notebooks Work as Functional Archives Casey explains that he does not keep notebooks to be romantic in the moment; he keeps them because they are functional, and the romance arrives later when a full book becomes a dated archive. The gist is that notebooks can preserve context that apps often flatten, from phone numbers and studio notes to sketches, travel details, scraps, and the feeling of a specific period.
Journal Entries Can Become Stories
05:50 - Journal Entries Can Become Video Ideas Peter locks onto Casey's point that things once recorded in notebooks often become videos now. The gist is that a journal entry can be more than a private note; a feeling, conflict, lesson, or unresolved question can become the plot of a future piece of creative work.
Tracking Time Changes the Question
06:35 - Time Becomes the Real Constraint Casey's old travel notebooks and minute-by-minute records push the conversation from memory into time management. The gist is that Peter's real constraint is not ambition or interest; it is time, so any notebook system worth trying has to help him see where time goes and how to use it better.
John's System Makes Time Visible
09:30 - John Tracks Every Task Switch Peter visits John to understand a much more intense system: tracking every 15-minute task switch across work, driving, habits, late nights, and wasted time. The gist is that John's approach creates accountability by making invisible patterns visible, especially for someone who owns a company and does not have a traditional clock-in structure.
Two Notebooks Split the Work
12:26 - The Two-Notebook System Separates Time and Habits John shows that his system is not just one giant log; one notebook tracks time, while another tracks sleep, workouts, cool things that happened, work areas, projects, and habits. The gist is that separating time tracking from habit and project tracking can make the notebook easier to read because each page has a job.
Peter Keeps What Actually Helps
14:40 - Peter Tests the System and Rejects the Excess After trying the 15-minute system, Peter decides it is interesting but too granular for his own life. The gist is that the best system is not the most detailed one; for him, tasks, ideas, feelings, workflow notes, people to call, and possible video ideas are more useful than recording every small block of the day.
Notebooks Can Be Slow on Purpose
16:09 - Typewritten Snapshots Show Another Kind of Notebook A typewritten notebook shows the opposite of maximum efficiency: entries typed out, taped in, paired with running logs, photos, family notes, and small mementos. The gist is that a notebook can be valuable because it is slow and tactile, especially when the goal is memory, texture, and attention rather than pure optimization.
The System Has to Fit You
18:24 - Build the System That Moves You Forward Peter closes by rejecting the idea that he needs to copy Casey or John exactly. The gist is that the useful notebook is the one that helps you move forward, sharpen, improve, and get to tomorrow with more clarity, whether that means detailed tracking, creative notes, scraps, lists, or a few lines on a sticky note.
Summary
The strongest idea in the video is that notebooks are not magic because they are analog. They work when they create a system you will actually use. Casey's notebooks preserve context, John's tracking exposes patterns, and Peter's version needs to feed creative output. The right notebook system is the one that turns attention into better work.
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