WFMU Techtonic Episode
Widening inequality and Big Tech surveillance, feat. Dan Currell
Mark Hurst interviews Dan Currell about his recent article in the New York Times (boo hiss) about widening inequality, using Disney World as an example. Surveillance and data analytics, combined with the wealth gap, create a two-tier system at the park: the ultra-rich and everyone else. The author of the Times piece, Dan Currell, explains what's going on.
I read this book recently and still processing it, would love to think through some of these ideas if you've read it. From the publisher: βThe zany, the cute, and the interesting saturate postmodern culture. They dominate the look of its art and commodities as well as our discourse about the ambivalent feelings these objects often inspire. In this radiant study, Sianne Ngai offers a theory of the aesthetic categories that most people use to process the hypercommodified, mass-mediated, performance-driven world of late capitalism, treating them with the same seriousness philosophers have reserved for analysis of the beautiful and the sublime.β
Our Aesthetic Categories
Zany, Cute & Interesting by Sianne Ngai