“The Paris Review” – Julianne Escobedo Shepherd (Hearing Things)

“These songs and more (“Infinity,” “If the Earth Is Spinning” featuring Sia) may have you contemplating the sanitized way Las Vegas lobby culture changed dance pop; the centrifugal pull of corporate raves are one thing, but something about the chlorine smell of a casino has wafted too heavily into the studios where many such songs are being crafted”

https://www.hearingthings.co/paris-hilton-infinite-icon-review/

“I know what happened” – David Bernstein (Good Politics/Bad Politics)

“It was impressed upon me regularly that ‘scapegoating’ – the practice of laying blame for a society’s woes upon an identifiable minority – was one of the great recurrent evils of mankind’s history, and a moral failing that pretty much meant you were responsible for Holocaust-level evil. Is this no longer a term of shame and disgrace in our society? The GOP, and others, have never fully stopped scapegoating of course, but it was so clearly shameful one had to be coy about it”

https://goodpoliticsbadpolitics.substack.com/p/i-know-what-happened

“a more subtle cost disease” – Dan Davies (Back of Mind)

“I would actually be quite interested if any of the current objections to flexible work ever get repurposed for the AI revolution. “If all these tasks are done by AI, how will our junior staff serve their apprenticeship?” “This is a relationship business and you can’t build trusted relationships with AI content”. Will we ever get CEOs sending all-staff emails saying “It has been a valuable experiment and I appreciate that some colleagues feel that AI has improved their productivity, but we work best when we work as a team, and that means a team of human beings. So, allowing six months notice for those colleagues who need to adapt their arrangements, we will be a no-AI company once more starting from Labor Day”. I have an intuition that they won’t”

https://backofmind.substack.com/p/a-more-subtle-cost-disease

“Nintendo DS at 20 – the console that paved the way for smartphone gaming” – Keza MacDonald (Pushing Buttons, Guardian)

“In retrospect, the Nintendo DS prepared the world for the iPhone, and for the explosion in touchscreen smartphone gaming that would eventually kill off the whole idea of a handheld games console. We don’t need them any more, now that we have one device that fits in our pockets and can do everything from giving us directions and taking photos to playing games. The DS was a half step between the Game Boy and the smartphone – a device that played games but could also do other things”

https://www.theguardian.com/games/2024/nov/12/pushing-buttons-nintendo-ds-at-20-smartphone-gaming

“Why I Will Always Be Angry About Software Engineering” – Ludic

“For the first time in many years, I was participating in a system where I was acutely aware that there were adults in the room. Adults who do not have recourse to blaming Deloitte when things go wrong, for whom the phrase “post-mortem” means something decidedly more serious than yet another flaccid meeting on why the tenth project in a row has failed”

https://ludic.mataroa.blog/blog/why-i-will-always-be-angry-about-software-engineering/

“The TikTok electorate” – Max Read

“It’s absolutely true that the tone and content of the videos people consume on TikTok or Instagram affect their understanding of the world around them–but so too do their non-phone experiences, their relationships, their jobs, their mental states, their social worlds, their spending habits, etc. Why do doomers and reactionaries so thoroughly dominate the feeds of young men? Is it something about the specific form of the TikTok feed? Is it billionaire astroturfing? Is it that videos like this are what that audience wants, for reasons largely external to TikTok?”

https://maxread.substack.com/p/the-tiktok-electorate

“How the “Queen of Canada” and Conspiracy Theorists Splintered a Small Town” – Rachel Browne (The Walrus)

“Anger and frustration in town have been boiling ever since: one person threatened to burn the school down with everyone inside it. A kind of madness has washed over the town, with people who otherwise led quiet lives being brought to the edge. One person told me they’d endure physical violence, even take a bullet if necessary, in order for the RCMP to lay charges against Didulo or her followers”

https://thewalrus.ca/queen-of-canada/

“How Three Big Conspiracy Theories Took Root in Canada” – Daniel R. Meister, Daniel Panneton (The Walrus)

“In recent years, ideas once considered beyond the pale have made inroads into legitimate institutions and among Canadians. We’ve seen credentialled medical professionals play footsie with anti-vaccine activists wielding sciencey vocabularies, accomplished lawyers push dubious and convenient interpretations of the law, elected officials entertain baseless claims about governmental conspiracy, Convoyites swear themselves in as so-called peace officers with imagined arresting powers, and livestreamers LARP as tenacious, evidence-based journalists”

https://thewalrus.ca/conspiracy-theories-canada/

“On political naiveté” – J.J. McCullough

“What makes a belief enticing, in turn, seems to be some mixture of comprehensiveness (does it provide a lot of answers), intuitiveness (does it feel correct based on what you already know), flattery (does it make you feel superior for knowing), and relevance (does it allow you to do something in the real world). Beliefs and belief systems that check these boxes are very attractive when we’re young, because they can provide a shortcut to many of the things we crave in early adulthood — certainty, confidence, authority, independence”

https://jjmccullough.substack.com/p/on-political-naivete