With a relaunch of “Keep the Meter Running,” on YouTube, the new-media host is trying to turn TikTok-clip fodder into full-blown TV.
With a relaunch of “Keep the Meter Running,” on YouTube, the new-media host is trying to turn TikTok-clip fodder into full-blown TV.
I recently moved away from Washington, but there’s no way to escape propagandistic imagery of the President’s urban vanity projects.
The retailer once embodied a hope that clothes could be mass-manufactured and high-quality. Now it’s owned by the fast-fashion giant Shein.
As OpenAI’s and Anthropic’s valuations soar, Silicon Valley outsiders are rushing to secure a small slice however they can.
Local newsletters from “The Boerum Bulletin” in Brooklyn to “The Eastside Rag” in L.A. are providing a sense of community that’s missing from our algorithmic feeds.
As slick, machine-generated visuals become ubiquitous, artists and designers are embracing a style of handmade imperfection.
The culture has transitioned from memeing one man’s death to delighting in the memeing of wars in real time.
A new book by an online Kardashian theorist argues that Kim and clan are the keys to understanding media in the new millennium.
OpenAI’s Sam Altman wants to “de-escalate” the rhetoric around A.I. But if you tell people that your product will upend their way of life, take their jobs, and possibly threaten humanity, they might believe you.
The new book “Techno-Negative” reminds us that resistance to new inventions has existed in some form across millennia.
Explosive News’ A.I.-generated videos have been shared by Iranian-government accounts and co-opted by No Kings protesters. A spokesperson for the group says, “Let’s face it—if truth isn’t flashy, it’s kinda lonely.”
As the weather becomes less predictable, we need forecasts that are better at telling us what we don’t know.
In the age of A.I., the term has become as much of a Silicon Valley cliché as “disruption” was in the twenty-tens.
Memes such as “monitoring the situation” reflect a deluded belief that we can be more than just passive, confused bystanders to a spray of digital shrapnel.
With releases like “Iron Lung” and “Backrooms,” Hollywood is looking to the platform for the next generation of horror auteurs.