
Digital content in the analog world: Snackable ideas while engaging with our lunch
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Alex and Liz talk about what really makes digital content different from physical and analog equivalents, and what distinctive ideological concepts—"everything's binary, monopolies are good, technology itself is the agent, users should be treated with hostility"— are uniquely embodied by it.
And even though everything digital seems ethereal and immaterial, it requires tremendous amounts of real resources—water, electricity, space—behind the scenes. We also dive into Leo Marx's famous "Technology: The Emergence of a Hazardous Concept" essay, discuss Martin Scorsese's dislike of Marvel (and what it says about "content"), how the Hollywood strikes were spurred by the content-ization of movies and TV, and spew some weird facts about vinyl records.
- Scorsese pieces: NYT (2019), GQ (2023)
- My old "content"pieces: A spin on Marx's piece and the 5 core assumptions of "content" as a term.
- Emma Thompson thinks "content" is a rude term.