There are some ideas so wrong that only a very intelligent person could believe in them.
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Steve McQueen in "The Great Escape," 1963.
(Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images)
Thursday - March 09, 2017 Thu - 03/09/17
rantnrave:// I’m more “connected” than I’ve ever been. I know more things. I know more people. I have access to more information. I know myself better. But more and more I feel disconnected from a big common shared experience. I was watching RON HOWARD and BRIAN GRAZER’s BEATLES doc. I wasn’t born at the time but my mom and I used to discuss the period. Television was still new. All of AMERICA seemed to tune into THE ED SULLIVAN SHOW to see them. The nation focused on one thing or maybe it just seemed that way to people under 30. When I was a kid there were three broadcast networks. Cable was nascent. Then media exploded. A thousand channels. Millions of niche publications. Social media. YOUTUBE. NETFLIX. Algorithms feeding us more of the same going narrower and deeper. It’s not just that many are spending too much time with media and not enough time with each other. It’s that we’re all watching our own, personalized media. We avoid each other by turning on our devices in the first place, then we avoid each other even further by rejecting the idea of shared experiences on these devices. I’m not pointing fingers. I’m looking for ingredients to the causation. This is not a conspiracy no matter how many dopey politicians and their constituents rail on about it. It's fragmented and incremental. I take responsibility for my own actions and habits. But in the bid to entertain ourselves and programmers’ hunger for our engagement, we do indeed spend more time with media. As a collective, are we more disconnected in terms of a common focus or common good? A lack of a shared experience. And then we talk about partisan news and facts. Is there even a shared reality now? Yes, there are commonalities but choice, connectivity, and access make them seem scarce. Time to start re-reading and watching MARSHALL MCLUHAN again. Maybe some WALL-E... Friend of REDEF ALYSSA MILANO on taking down TRUMP… Comedies are better watched with friends... Maybe it's generational but GMAIL UI and threading is perplexing. .. There will be no Friday edition of MediaREDEF this week... Happy Birthday to SALIL MEHTA, LUCY FISHER, BLAKE INDURSKY, ROMAN TSUN, DANNY M.ORROW and ALICE PETERSON.
- Jason Hirschhorn, curator
thumbs
POLITICO Magazine
How the CIA Forgot the Art of Spying
by Alex Finley
With the war on terror came a new, more militarized way of gathering intelligence. But now, America needs the kind of spooks who can work the cocktail party circuit--more James Bond, less Jason Bourne.
Edge
Closing the Loop
by Chris Anderson
If we could measure the world, how would we manage it differently? This is a question we've been asking ourselves in the digital realm since the birth of the Internet. Our digital lives-clicks, histories, and cookies-can now be measured beautifully. The feedback loop is complete; it's called closing the loop.
Blog Maverick
Some Thoughts on Fixing Obamacare – Shoot Holes in this Please
by Mark Cuban
I'm not a healthcare policy expert. Not by a long shot. The challenges facing healthcare in this country are enormous. While I may not have answers, there is no downside to generating discussion on alternatives. Feel free to comment on anything you feel is wrong with my suggestion.
Los Angeles Times
A cautionary tale of what can happen when a sports parent pushes too hard
by Bill Plaschke
Mark Cullen is a former athlete who feels he pushed his son, Aidan, too hard in sports. Aidan has been diagnosed with a disease partially caused by being pushed to play sports through injury.
The Undefeated
The notorious night Biggie was murdered in Los Angeles
by Justin Tinsley
Shaq, Baron Davis, and Nick Van Exel reflect on The Notorious B.I.G., his murder, and the city they called home.
Rolling Stone
Why the Russia Story Is a Minefield for Democrats and the Media
by Matt Taibbi
The Russia scandals have bloodied the Trump administration. But it carries dangers for those in media reporting it as well.
Foreign Policy
Why Is China So … Uncool?
by George Gao
The country's got all the right stuff to be a soft-power giant. But Beijing won't get out of its own way.
STAT
How a biotech billionaire used a donation to boost his business
by Rebecca Robbins
Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong was hailed for donating $12 million to University of Utah. But the contract ensured that $10 million came back to his company.
The Verge
Tech's ruling class casts a big shadow
by Walt Mossberg
Is the dominance of the “Gang of Five” healthy?
Racked
Immigrant Women on Navigating American Beauty Standards
by Lilian Min
On what is carried over, and what is left behind, when moving to a new country with a new set of expectations.
elbows
Harvard Business Review
The Blockchain Will Do to Banks and Law Firms What the Internet Did to Media
by Joichi Ito, Neha Narula and Robleh Ali
What we can learn from the evolution of another groundbreaking technology.
The Baffler
Outsmarted
by Rick Perlstein
On the liberal cult of the cognitive elite.
Vox
The dark psychology of dehumanization, explained
by Brian Resnick
What's happening to Muslims under Trump isn't new. Humans can be wired for it.
Salon
Trump's election has created 'safe spaces' for racists: Southern Poverty Law Center's Heidi Beirich on the wave of hate crimes
by Chauncey DeVega
There's a big spike in hate crimes, says the director of SPLC's Intelligence Project -- and “Trump is the cause.”
Co.Design
The Art Of Manipulating Algorithms
by Kelsey Campbell-Dollaghan
Meet the "AI nudge," a method of subtly "persuading" algorithms.
The Ringer
The Vending Machine Revolution
by Alyssa Bereznak
They aren’t the most exciting piece of technology out there, but the advanced contraptions popping up in airports and elsewhere could redefine how we consume, well, everything.
recode
Internet Archive founder Brewster Kahle on Recode Decode
by Kara Swisher, Brewster Kahle and Eric Johnson
The Internet Archive’s historical search engine, the “Wayback Machine,” grows by half a billion pages a week.
Thump
The Racist Legacy Of NYC's Anti-Dancing Law
by Penn Bullock and Eli Kerry
The cabaret law-and its prejudicial history-is one of the city's darkest secrets.
Quartz
Moore's Law can't last forever--but two small changes might mean your phone battery will
by Michael Mo
Harder, faster, better... longer?
Wired
I Tried Trump's Media Diet. Now Nothing Surprises Me Anymore
by Dan Runcie
Even presidents live in filter bubbles. See what the world looks like through Trump's own reality distortion field.
The New York Times
Snap Makes a Bet on the Cultural Supremacy of the Camera
by Farhad Manjoo
Our rising dependence on cameras is changing our language, and the company behind Snapchat is counting on the eventual dominance of visual culture.
Bloomberg
You Can't Escape The Movie Toys This Year
by Kim Bhasin
Almost a third of action figures, race cars, and spaceships are tied to Hollywood. But with 25 movies shilling fun stuff, 2017 will be unprecedented.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"Big Empty"
Stone Temple Pilots
“REDEF is dedicated to my mother, who nurtured and encouraged my interest in everything and slightly regrets the day she taught me to always ask ‘why?’”
@JasonHirschhorn


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