『Infodump dot Club』のカバーアート

Infodump dot Club

Infodump dot Club

著者: Shane Rice
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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

An infodump is what happens after someone with an ADHD brain falls down a research rabbit hole and comes back wanting to tell you everything. Infodump dot Club host Shane Rice has spent his whole life obsessing over seemingly random topics — reading encyclopedias as a kid, losing hours to Wikipedia, disappearing into books about things nobody asked him about. Turns out that's just one thing ADHD brains do when they need dopamine: they learn things. Then after learning things, ADHD brains get more dopamine by sharing what they learned to build connections with other people. This is all of that, but as a podcast. Shane picks a topic he's done deep dive research on — could be bananas, could be ancient history, could be a person nobody remembers but should — and infodumps it from memory. No script. Just the info that stuck. 10–30 minutes. One topic. Dopamine for everyone.2026 世界 社会科学
エピソード
  • Marshall McLuhan (and the Technology of How We Think)
    2026/03/26

    Episode 2: Marshall McLuhan (and the Technology of How We Think)

    Shane traces his college decision to study communication theory back to a feeling most ADHD people know well — sensing that something's getting lost between what you're thinking and what other people are hearing. That search led him to Marshall McLuhan, and McLuhan leads somewhere much bigger: the idea that every major shift in communication technology rewires how society works — and that we're living through one right now.

    In this episode:

    • Who Marshall McLuhan was — Canadian communication theorist, professor, 60s intellectual, and the man who gave us "global village" and "information superhighway"
    • Hot media vs. cold media: McLuhan's framework for how different formats demand different levels of participation from their audience
    • Writing as the original communication technology — and how the need to record information changed the structure of early societies
    • Oral tradition before writing: the people whose entire job was to remember things, and what that world actually looked like
    • Gutenberg's printing press and why timing and geography made all the difference
    • Why Martin Luther succeeded where John Wycliffe and John Hus didn't — and what cheap, printable ideas have to do with it
    • The internet as our printing press moment, and why the unsettled feeling most of us carry right now might just be what it feels like to live through a civilizational gear-shift

    Research rabbit holes to explore:

    • Marshall McLuhan — Wikipedia
    • Understanding Media by Marshall McLuhan — archive.org — the book his theories come from
    • The Dick Cavett Show — Wikipedia — the talk show McLuhan appeared on in the 60s
    • The Gutenberg Bible / Gutenberg's printing press — Wikipedia
    • Martin Luther and the Ninety-five Theses — Wikipedia
    • John Wycliffe and Jan Hus — Wikipedia — the reformers who came before Luther without the printing press to protect them
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    14 分
  • Bananas
    2026/03/15

    What starts as a fun fact about Walmart's best-selling product turns into one of the wildest business stories you've probably never heard — corporate espionage on banana plantations, a homemade coup in Central America, and a Russian immigrant who took over one of the most powerful companies in America by dumping a bag of proxy votes on a boardroom table.


    In this episode:

    • Walmart's single best-selling item every year — and why every one of them is genetically identical
    • The Cavendish vs. the Big Mike: what happened to the banana we used to eat, and why history might be repeating itself
      • Also, Shane called it 'Gros Miguel' instead of 'Gros Michel' 😅
    • Samuel Zemurray — the immigrant who bought rotting fruit off a dock in Mobile, Alabama and turned it into a banana empire
    • Plantation wars: the corporate violence between Zemurray's operation and United Fruit Company
    • The origin of "Banana Republic" — and how Zemurray invented the CIA's Central American playbook before the CIA existed
    • How Zemurray pulled off a coup using a surplus Navy ship, a soldier of fortune, and a pirate radio broadcast
    • The boardroom scene that might be the greatest power move in American business history

    Research rabbit holes to explore:

    • The Fish That Ate the Whale by Rich Cohen — the book Zemurray's story comes from
    • Samuel Zemurray — Wikipedia
    • Cavendish banana — Wikipedia
    • Panama disease — Wikipedia — (the blight threatening the Cavendish
    • Gros Michel ("Big Mike") banana — Wikipedia
    • United Fruit Company — Wikipedia
    • The United Fruit Company building, New Orleans — Atlas Obscura — still standing at 321 St. Charles Ave.
    • Zemurray's mansion, now the Tulane University president's residence — 64 Parishes


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    11 分
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