Aural Pleasures for the Ride to BRC

Burning Man

Stuff to listen to on the way to Black Rock City. Or if you're stuck in D Lot. Or anywhere, anytime.

  • 15 minutes
    Mayors of Columbia, SC and Reno, NV Interviewed on Playa
    Burning Man Project Communications Director Megan Miller interviews Mayor Stephen Benjamin of Columbia, South Carolina and Mayor Hillary Schieve of Reno, Nevada during their visit to Black Rock City in 2018. They came as part of a delegation of 11 mayors from the U.S. Conference of Mayors who came to learn what their cities could learn from our city. (Photo by Robert Burnett)
    23 October 2018, 8:40 pm
  • 27 minutes
    Burning Man And AI Have Co-Evolved (Anselm Engle)
    It's often said that Burning Man and the internet grew up together: both started emerging at around the same time in the late 80s, went through a "wild wild west" phase in the 1990s, when they were seen as counter-cultures. Both started to get really big around the turn of the century, and both became massive cultural phenomenon after that (though, granted, it's a hell of a lot easier to find someone who's never heard of Burning Man than it is someone who's never heard of the internet.) Many of the people who made the internet what it is went to Burning Man - and both imply new forms of social organizing. Anselm Engle, a member of Burning Man's IT team, thinks the similarities go deeper. Both Burning Man and the internet were born out of the same social forces and cultural movements, and thus have been moving in parallel - one emphasizing pure information, the other grounding us firmly in the immediate physical moment, but both still riding the crest of the same wave. Which is why he thinks Burning Man can be described as an open=source, cloud based, culture — Burning Man and AI have co-evolved.
    1 August 2018, 6:08 pm
  • 45 minutes 13 seconds
    The Human Symphony (Michael Bess)
    Vanderbilt Professor of History Michael Bess is the author of the forthcoming book What makes us human? From neurons to the Sistine Chapel, and is studying the technologies that may destroy us, including artificial intelligence and genetic engineering. The risks of catastrophic failures, he says, are significant — basically our newest technologies are a car without a break, and if you drive one of those too fast, you're probably going to crash. Anyone interested in the survival of our species should be asking ourselves: how do we slow down enough to understand what the problems we're really facing are?
    22 May 2018, 4:35 pm
  • 26 minutes 21 seconds
    Paradox Is the Heart of Humanity (Kirk Schneider)
    In his previous work, leading Existential Psychologist Kirk Schneider has put the experience of "awe" at the center of human psychology. Without experiencing awe, life tends to become flat, mechanical, and unhealthy — a prison to be broken out of, rather than a possibility to grow into. In his new book, The Spirituality of Awe:  Challenges to the Robotic Revolution, Schneider points out that awe itself is paradoxical: it generates fear and hope, a sense of grandeur and insignificance, of strength and weakness, the imminent and the transcendent ... not one right after the other, but all at once. And it is our ability to have these simultaneous experiences, these experiential paradoxes that cannot be resolved rationally, and be present to them, and integrate them into our lives, that is the essence of our humanity.
    16 April 2018, 6:16 pm
  • 23 minutes 46 seconds
    Artificial Intelligence Is Just a Story, and We Can Tell a Better One (Jaron Lanier)
    Amazon has recently confirmed reports that its home operating system "Alexa," has been spontaneously laughing for no apparent reason, occasionally refusing to obey commands, and sometimes performing actions that were never asked for. No one has any idea why — is this a bug? A glitch? A hacker attack? — but internet pioneer and Microsoft researcher Jaron Lanier is probably not surprised. In his 2017 book Dawn of the New Everything, Lanier points out the startling degree to which these home operating systems — not just Amazon's but from every company on the market — visually resemble "HAL," the AI system in 2001: A Space Odyssey which cannot process conflicting missions and turns homicidal.
    9 March 2018, 6:01 pm
  • 23 minutes 26 seconds
    Empowering Robots Are Ethical Robots (Christoph Salge)
    The problem with the way we try to give AI ethics is that we design these ethics to work for the status quo, the way things are right now. But things never stay the same for long, the status quo is constantly changing, and so that sets our AI ethics up to fail. That's the insight of Dr. Christoph Salge, a professor of Computer Science at the University of Hertfordshire and New York University's Game Innovation Lab. Instead of giving Artificial Intelligence a set of rules to follow that will become obsolete as the world (and our needs) change, we should give AI principles to follow that can adapt to our own changing needs.
    20 February 2018, 6:57 pm
  • 44 minutes
    How To Practice Being Human (Dr. Sherry Turkle)
    Our problem isn't that Artificial Intelligence is getting better at being human, it's that human beings are getting worse at it. That's one of the conclusions that MIT psychologist Dr. Sherry Turkle, who has been studying the psychological impact of technology on its users since the dawn of the internet. One of the foremost researchers on the "soft side" of technology, her early work was optimistic about the power of the internet to enable healthy personal and cultural experimentation. Her recent work is still optimistic, though it comes with a very significant "but." We cannot be passively accepting of our new technologies: that way lies madness and ruin, or at least verifiable misery. Instead she says that the challenge of our new technology is not just to manage it better, but to practice being human the face of it.
    6 February 2018, 6:46 pm
  • 48 minutes 24 seconds
    Burning Love Ep. 1: Until the End of the Playa
    Meet Tony and Daniel Wichowski, also known as Mr. Pepperdine and Scratch. Tony and Daniel met on playa in 2014 and married there legally in 2015. They remain unmistakably in love today. But happily ever after endings don't write themselves. Sometimes, it takes a transcontinental sacrifice, commitment to the sport of extreme paperwork filing, and a Supreme Court case to pull one off. Swiss cigarettes help.
    21 August 2017, 4:45 pm
  • 27 minutes 42 seconds
    Awe, Ritual, and Risk (Kirk Schneider)
    We don't usually think of "Awe" as one of the essential human emotions, but licensed psychologist and American Psychological Association Fellow Dr. Kirk Schneider's research suggests that we should. Schneider, President Elect of the Existential-Humanistic Institute and past president of the APA's Society for Humanistic Psychology, says that awe is a contradictory emotion - one which makes us feel both elevated and fragile, elated and terrified — and that without it, life becomes rote, even mechanical, a process of just going through the motions. We need experiences of awe to live as deeply as we can.
    9 August 2017, 12:57 am
  • 3 minutes 19 seconds
    Dragonfly Mating Ritual
    A guide to the Honorarium art and artists at Burning Man 2017. A great way to get fired up about the amazing art that's going to be on playa! Listen while you're packing, driving to Black Rock City, or just stuck in D Lot!
    8 August 2017, 9:33 pm
  • 3 minutes 50 seconds
    Action Figure Family
    A guide to the Honorarium art and artists at Burning Man 2017. A great way to get fired up about the amazing art that's going to be on playa! Listen while you're packing, driving to Black Rock City, or just stuck in D Lot!
    8 August 2017, 9:33 pm
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