Why our brains keep choosing aesthetics over logic — and how it’s quietly shaping the future of work.
♦Automatic Rendering: How our brains “fill in the blanks” before we even process the substance. (Image generated by the author using Google Gemini)There’s an invisible variable shaping more of our lives than most of us are comfortable admitting. It doesn’t show up on resumes, no recruiter will ever say it out loud, and yet it quietly influences who gets attention first, who gets trusted faster, and who gets remembered longer. The more I pay attention to it, the more it feels less like a personal trait and more like a background system, something always running, rarely questioned, but constantly affecting outcomes.
We call it pretty privilege. And honestly, the name still feels too soft for how much impact it actually has.
The Moment I Stopped Believing in Meritocracy♦The Halo Effect: When the shadow of perception outshines the reality of the work. (Image generated by the author using Google Gemini)I didn’t arrive at this idea through theory. It came from small, forgettable moments that started stacking up into a pattern I could no longer ignore. Try to remember your last Zoom meeting. Not the agenda or the metrics, but the screen itself. Those small rectangles lined up in silence, each one waiting for its turn to speak. Someone leans slightly closer to the camera, inhales like they’re about to contribute something important, and then it happens. Another voice cuts in. A different square lights up. The first microphone flickers on, then off again. No one calls it out, but everyone notices.
Same meeting. Same topic. Same level of competence.
Different gravity.
At some point, I stopped asking who was better. I started asking something more uncomfortable. Why does it feel like the room has already decided before the conversation even begins?
Why Our Brains Love “Automatic Rendering”We’ve spent years swallowing the promise of meritocracy. Work hard, be competent, and things will align. I used to believe that almost by default because it offers a clean narrative and a sense of control. But the more you observe how people respond to each other in real situations, the harder it becomes to ignore the cracks. Put two equally capable people in the same room and something shifts before either of them completes their first sentence. One is read as confident almost instantly, while the other has to earn that label slowly, sometimes painfully. Same idea. Same delivery. Different starting line.
Psychology calls it the halo effect, but that term feels too polite for what’s actually happening. If I’m being honest, it feels more like Automatic Rendering. The brain upgrades the visuals before it processes the substance. When someone attractive speaks, their ideas seem sharper, more structured, more convincing, as if you’re watching them in high resolution with perfect lighting. Someone else might be delivering something equally valuable, but it lands flatter, like the connection isn’t quite stable.
And here’s the part that stays with me.
We don’t feel like we’re being unfair when it happens. We call it intuition. We trust it. But in reality, it’s often just the brain taking a shortcut, choosing efficiency over accuracy, and disguising that shortcut as insight.
Legacy Software in a Digital WorldBlaming modern culture alone feels too easy. This didn’t start with social media. Evolution doesn’t care about your meritocracy; it cares about efficiency. Our brains are still running legacy software from a time when quick visual judgment meant survival. There’s a biological layer behind it that’s hard to ignore. When we see symmetry or conventionally attractive features, the brain triggers small dopaminergic rewards, subtle signals that say, this feels right. That reaction happens before logic even has a chance to load.
It’s a survival shortcut that simply hasn’t been updated, running legacy code in a high-speed digital world.
Before the internet, these biases had physical limits; they were confined to offices, classrooms, and small social circles, which made them easier to overlook because their impact felt localized. But the moment the feed replaced the room, those boundaries disappeared. First impressions are no longer handshakes, they are scrolls, repeated hundreds of times a day, turning something once situational into something constant.
Algorithms don’t care about fairness. They care about eyeballs.
An attractive face functions like a perfectly optimized thumbnail. It buys you a second of attention, just enough to interrupt someone’s scrolling pattern. That second becomes a pause, the pause becomes engagement, and the system quietly amplifies it. More reach leads to more visibility, and more visibility starts to look like credibility. Over time, the line between perception and merit begins to blur, until the advantage feels earned, even when it wasn’t neutral to begin with.
First Impressions are Now Handshakes with AlgorithmsThe more I observe platforms like LinkedIn, the harder it is to ignore how subtle this has become. A well-lit photo, a clean aesthetic, a face that fits a certain mold, and suddenly the exact same idea feels sharper, more trustworthy. Nothing about the substance changes. Only the packaging does.
The Aesthetic Audit in TechThis becomes even more layered when you look at women in tech.
I’ve seen a female software engineer spend hours solving a deeply complex production issue, breaking it down into something clear and accessible, and sharing it publicly. It’s the kind of content that should trigger thoughtful discussion, maybe even admiration for the technical depth behind it. But look at the comment section, and you’ll see the halo effect mutate into something more subtle and more frustrating. While she’s presenting a masterclass in debugging, the feedback loop drifts toward her lipstick shade, her headphones, or the aesthetic of her workspace.
The 200 lines of elegant, complex logic become a footnote to her appearance. We aren’t auditing her technical depth; we’re auditing how she looks while explaining it.
Another developer builds credibility slowly through consistent, thoughtful contributions. Real effort, real substance. Then something shifts. People start questioning whether her visibility is entirely earned, hinting that appearance might be part of the equation. It’s rarely said directly, but it lingers in tone and implication. And what’s striking is how unevenly that suspicion is distributed.
For a while, I thought this might just be my own pattern recognition going too far. Maybe I’m overthinking this. Maybe I was projecting meaning onto something neutral. But the more I looked into it, the harder it became to dismiss.
The Competence Premium: What the Science SaysThis isn’t just a subjective observation; it’s a quantified bias. Researchers from have found that we instinctively assign a Competence Premium to individuals we perceive as attractive, rating them higher even when their qualifications are identical to others. Experiments from push this further, showing that this bias doesn’t stop at first impressions. It influences salary expectations, shapes hiring decisions, and quietly determines who we see as leadership material before they’ve even had the chance to lead.
So this isn’t just perception. It translates into measurable outcomes.
I keep seeing conversations about pretty privilege collapse into two extremes. One side insists everything is purely merit-based, as if perception plays no role at all. The other treats appearance as the main explanation for success, reducing everything to aesthetics. From what I’ve seen, both positions miss something important.
Attractiveness doesn’t guarantee success. But it shifts the starting point in ways that are easy to overlook and hard to measure in isolation. It smooths first interactions, reduces friction, and builds trust faster than it logically should. Those small advantages compound over time.
You start noticing it in subtle ways. Someone gets interrupted less. Someone’s rough idea is treated as promising, while someone else’s polished explanation is met with skepticism. Someone gets described as naturally confident, while another is asked to prove it repeatedly. None of these moments seem significant on their own, but together they form a pattern that’s difficult to ignore.
Zoom out far enough, and that pattern becomes structural. Certain types of faces appear more frequently in visible positions. Not always intentionally. Not always consciously. But consistently enough to shape expectation. Over time, people begin associating specific appearances with competence, even if they would never openly admit it.
That’s the point where this stops being about individuals and starts influencing who gets seen, who gets heard, and who gets opportunities in the first place.
“Awareness doesn’t uninstall the system. It just exposes it.”
The Power of the Pause♦Seeing honestly requires a moment of hesitation in a world driven by split-second impressions. (Image generated by the author using Google Gemini)And knowing all of this doesn’t magically fix anything. I’ll probably still catch myself trusting a well-lit profile picture faster than I should tomorrow.
But now, there’s something new in the loop. A moment of hesitation that didn’t exist before. And in that split second, we find something small, but real.
A choice.
Maybe this awareness won’t fix the system tomorrow morning. But the next time your finger pauses on a post, or you’re about to cut someone off in a meeting, stop for a second.
Ask yourself something uncomfortable.
Is this really about the quality of the work?
Or are you just reacting to how good it looks?
Because in a world driven by perception, admitting that you can be fooled might be the only way to start seeing honestly.
♦Why Your Brain Keeps Choosing Good Looks Over Good Logic was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.