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    your undivided attention

    Explore " your undivided attention" with insightful episodes like "Spotlight — A Whirlwind Week of Whistleblowing", "Making Meaning in Challenging Times — with Jamie Wheal", "Spotlight — The Facebook Files with Tristan Harris, Frank Luntz, and Daniel Schmachtenberger" and "A Renegade Solution to Extractive Economics — with Kate Raworth" from podcasts like ""Your Undivided Attention", "Your Undivided Attention", "Your Undivided Attention" and "Your Undivided Attention"" and more!

    Episodes (4)

    Spotlight — A Whirlwind Week of Whistleblowing

    Spotlight — A Whirlwind Week of Whistleblowing

    In seven years of working on the problems of runaway technology, we’ve never experienced a week like this! In this bonus episode of Your Undivided Attention, we recap this whirlwind of a week — from Facebook whistleblower France Haugen going public on 60 Minutes on Sunday, to the massive outage of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp on Monday, to Haugen’s riveting Congressional testimony on Tuesday. We also make some exciting announcements — including our planned episode with Haugen up next, the Yale social media reform panel we’re participating in on Thursday, and a campaign we’re launching to pressure Facebook to make one immediate change. 

    This week it truly feels like we’re making history — and you’re a part of it.

    Making Meaning in Challenging Times — with Jamie Wheal

    Making Meaning in Challenging Times — with Jamie Wheal

    What helps you make meaning in challenging times? As you confront COVID, the climate crisis, and all of the challenges we discuss on this show, what helps you avoid nihilism or fundamentalism, and instead access healing, inspiration, and connection? 

    Today on Your Undivided Attention, we're joined by anthropologist and writer Jamie Wheal. Wheal is the author of Recapture the Rapture: Rethinking God, Sex and Death In a World That's Lost Its Mind. In the book, he makes the case that in order to address the meta-crisis — the interconnected challenges we face, which we talked about in Episode 36 with Daniel Schmachtenberger, we must address the meaning crisis — the need to stay inspired, mended, and bonded in challenging times. Jamie argues that it doesn't matter whether we're staying inspired, mended, and bonded through institutionalized religion or other means as long as meaning-making is inclusively available to everyone.

    What we hope you'll walk away with is a humane way to think about how to address the challenges we face, from COVID to climate — by enabling us to make meaning in challenging times.

    Spotlight — The Facebook Files with Tristan Harris, Frank Luntz, and Daniel Schmachtenberger

    Spotlight — The Facebook Files with Tristan Harris, Frank Luntz, and Daniel Schmachtenberger

    On September 13th, the Wall Street Journal released The Facebook Files, an ongoing investigation of the extent to which Facebook's problems are meticulously known inside the company — all the way up to Mark Zuckerberg. Pollster Frank Luntz invited Tristan Harris along with friend and mentor Daniel Schmachtenberger to discuss the implications in a live webinar. 

    In this bonus episode of Your Undivided Attention, Tristan and Daniel amplify the scope of the public conversation about The Facebook Files beyond the platform, and into its business model, our regulatory structure, and human nature itself.

    A Renegade Solution to Extractive Economics — with Kate Raworth

    A Renegade Solution to Extractive Economics — with Kate Raworth

    When Kate Raworth began studying economics, she was disappointed that the mainstream version of the discipline didn’t fully address many of the world issues that she wanted to tackle, such as human rights and environmental destruction. She left the field, but was inspired to jump back in after the financial crisis of 2008, when she saw an opportunity to introduce fresh perspectives. She sat down and drew a chart in the shape of a doughnut, which provided a way to think about our economic system while accounting for the impact to the world around us, as well as for humans’ baseline needs. Kate’s framing can teach us a lot about how to transform the economic model of the technology industry, helping us move from a system that values addicted, narcissistic, polarized humans to one that values healthy, loving and collaborative relationships. Her book, “Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st Century Economist,” gives us a guide for transitioning from a 20th-century paradigm to an evolved 21st-century one that will address our existential-scale problems.