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With Andrew MacDougall, former Director of Communications to Prime Minister Stephen Harper
This week, we’re joined by Andrew MacDougall, a fellow Harper PMO alum and one of the sharpest communications minds in the business. His latest paper for the Macdonald-Laurier Institute makes a bold case: that the attention economy, powered by Big Tech platforms, is actively undermining Western democracy—and that we’re letting it happen.
In this episode:
📱 What is the attention economy—and why it’s designed to addict, distract, and divide
🧠 Why today’s tech platforms are built to exploit your brain’s dopamine pathways
💥 Free speech vs. free reach: why more speech doesn’t mean better speech
🗞 How the collapse of traditional media business models is breaking political accountability
🗳 Why politicians like Trump and Farage thrive—and leaders like Harper and Starmer struggle—in today’s media environment
Also in this episode:
🧃 “The vegetable is the news, the dessert is content—and nobody’s eating their vegetables”
🧨 Why platforms like YouTube and TikTok aren’t neutral—they actively reward the worst takes
🤳 Why even good communicators struggle to compete with rage bait and algorithmic triggers
📊 What happens when every push notification must compete with Kim Kardashian, a war in Ukraine, and your local school board
And don’t miss:
🧾 Andrew’s proposal for an engagement-based tax to discourage addictive platform design
📉 How banning smartphones for kids—and showing users their “attention cost”—could help
🔌 What would happen if we unplugged the internet for just a month (hint: less Trump, more sanity)
Plus:
😬 Percy tries to warn us about AI-generated ‘80s nostalgia reels
📵 Joseph tries not to check his phone for a full 45 minutes (he fails)
💡 A very serious policy discussion… followed by a confession that we’re all still putting the clips on TikTok
By Joseph Lavoie and Andrew PercyWith Andrew MacDougall, former Director of Communications to Prime Minister Stephen Harper
This week, we’re joined by Andrew MacDougall, a fellow Harper PMO alum and one of the sharpest communications minds in the business. His latest paper for the Macdonald-Laurier Institute makes a bold case: that the attention economy, powered by Big Tech platforms, is actively undermining Western democracy—and that we’re letting it happen.
In this episode:
📱 What is the attention economy—and why it’s designed to addict, distract, and divide
🧠 Why today’s tech platforms are built to exploit your brain’s dopamine pathways
💥 Free speech vs. free reach: why more speech doesn’t mean better speech
🗞 How the collapse of traditional media business models is breaking political accountability
🗳 Why politicians like Trump and Farage thrive—and leaders like Harper and Starmer struggle—in today’s media environment
Also in this episode:
🧃 “The vegetable is the news, the dessert is content—and nobody’s eating their vegetables”
🧨 Why platforms like YouTube and TikTok aren’t neutral—they actively reward the worst takes
🤳 Why even good communicators struggle to compete with rage bait and algorithmic triggers
📊 What happens when every push notification must compete with Kim Kardashian, a war in Ukraine, and your local school board
And don’t miss:
🧾 Andrew’s proposal for an engagement-based tax to discourage addictive platform design
📉 How banning smartphones for kids—and showing users their “attention cost”—could help
🔌 What would happen if we unplugged the internet for just a month (hint: less Trump, more sanity)
Plus:
😬 Percy tries to warn us about AI-generated ‘80s nostalgia reels
📵 Joseph tries not to check his phone for a full 45 minutes (he fails)
💡 A very serious policy discussion… followed by a confession that we’re all still putting the clips on TikTok