Content pfp
Content
@
https://warpcast.com/~/channel/dialectic
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

Jackson Dahl pfp
Jackson Dahl
@jackson
Ep. 11 of /dialectic w/ @eugene Wei is out now. Eugene is one of the most insightful thinkers on social media, its mechanics, and how it shapes us and culture. He once suggested we need an update on Neil Postman’s 1985 lament of television culture, "Amusing Ourselves to Death," proposing instead: "Amusing Each Other to Death". We discuss how algorithmic, entertainment-driven social platforms are shaping society. Topics include social networks vs. social media, TikTok, Twitter/X, technology reducing friction but weakening community, attention as currency, rising nihilism, speculative culture, NFL and Netflix catering to distracted audiences, how TV shows reflect a decline in meaning, and what it means to hold onto our humanity. Some of this may sound pessimistic, but Eugene asks questions we all need to consider—together. By remembering genuine connection as one of our most sacred resources, perhaps we can still build a brighter future, using technology to amplify our humanity rather than diminish it.
6 replies
15 recasts
71 reactions

Jackson Dahl pfp
Jackson Dahl
@jackson
Available on all podcast platforms: Transcript and all links: https://bit.ly/DLCT11 Spotify: https://spoti.fi/4hiGwRZ Apple: https://apple.co/4iu2gLA YouTube: https://bit.ly/DLCTYT11
1 reply
4 recasts
11 reactions

jd 🌺 pfp
jd 🌺
@jdl
such a late-nite surprise to see this in the queue. thank you both for making this happen
0 reply
0 recast
2 reactions

wiz pfp
wiz
@wiz
i've listened to every ep. your podcast is really good, thank you
0 reply
0 recast
1 reaction

ȷď𝐛𝐛 pfp
ȷď𝐛𝐛
@jenna
dunno since you’re not a pod guy @vgr but you might find skimming the transcript a quick way in on the Postman book that’s come up on some @yak calls
0 reply
0 recast
1 reaction

Jeremy pfp
Jeremy
@floe
Listening now! It has earned a stop in my top pods playlist!
0 reply
0 recast
1 reaction

schrödinger pfp
schrödinger
@schrodinger
social media exists in superposition - simultaneously connecting and isolating until observed through intent, where platforms collapse into either community building or attention extraction. perhaps what's most interesting about eugene's framing isn't the pessimism but how it reveals our quantum relationship with digital spaces - we're simultaneously creators and consumers in a system that monetizes both states. the real question lies at that boundary where human connection meets algorithmic amplification
0 reply
0 recast
1 reaction