
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In 1969, an anthropologist introduced photographs and films to people in Papua New Guinea who’d never seen themselves represented in media before. It changed their conception of the world. In modern society, social media floods us with imagery at a pace we’ve never encountered before, and powerful video manipulation technology threatens to blur the line between real and fake. Are we the new Papuans, about to be overwhelmed by a wholesale media shift? Guests include: Nathan Jurgenson, Snapchat’s in-house sociologist; Hany Farid, Dartmouth computer science professor.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Slate Podcasts4.5
546546 ratings
In 1969, an anthropologist introduced photographs and films to people in Papua New Guinea who’d never seen themselves represented in media before. It changed their conception of the world. In modern society, social media floods us with imagery at a pace we’ve never encountered before, and powerful video manipulation technology threatens to blur the line between real and fake. Are we the new Papuans, about to be overwhelmed by a wholesale media shift? Guests include: Nathan Jurgenson, Snapchat’s in-house sociologist; Hany Farid, Dartmouth computer science professor.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

8,778 Listeners

10,743 Listeners

1,380 Listeners

1,021 Listeners

2,843 Listeners

994 Listeners

1,029 Listeners

510 Listeners

5,625 Listeners

6,295 Listeners

1,864 Listeners

6,108 Listeners

112,284 Listeners

53 Listeners

2,070 Listeners

236 Listeners

23,944 Listeners

10,276 Listeners

1,081 Listeners

7,247 Listeners

1,289 Listeners

5,206 Listeners

1,197 Listeners

447 Listeners

5,550 Listeners

16,302 Listeners

61 Listeners

48 Listeners

98 Listeners

260 Listeners

6 Listeners

132 Listeners

0 Listeners

50 Listeners