Episodes

  • From Results to Responses: AI and the Evolution of Internet Search
    Jul 13 2026

    What happens when a search engine stops pointing us toward information and begins interpreting it for us? In this episode of AnthroIntelligence: Culture, Cognition, and Code, I explore the shift from search engines to answer engines—and the quiet transfer of judgment that comes with it.


    Traditional search required users to compare sources, resolve contradictions, and decide what to trust. AI-generated answers now perform much of that work before the response reaches the screen, producing clear and convenient summaries that can flatten uncertainty, obscure disagreement, and make contested claims appear settled.


    Answer engines may save time, but they also reduce the incentive to inspect sources and think through questions independently. The challenge is not to reject faster access to information, but to resist mistaking synthesis for certainty and convenience for understanding.


    📖 Read the full Author’s Cut ⁠here⁠.


    #AnthroIntelligence #AnswerEngines #AISearch #InformationLiteracy #CriticalThinking #DigitalCulture

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    7 mins
  • The Template Trap: AI and Content Abundance
    Jun 29 2026

    What happens when artificial intelligence can generate endless variations of the same successful idea? In this episode of AnthroIntelligence: Culture, Cognition, and Code, I explore how generative AI is replacing the old problem of content scarcity with a new challenge: abundance without significance.


    From talking cats with different names but identical emotional structures to personalized media created for individual viewers, AI can make every piece of content appear unique while quietly standardizing the ideas beneath it. Shared culture may no longer revolve around the same films, songs, or videos, but around endlessly repeated templates engineered to produce the same reaction.


    As recommendation systems evolve into generation systems, the future scarcity may not be content at all. It may be attention, trust, originality, shared experience, and meaning. The question will no longer be whether something can be made—but whether it was ever worth making.


    📖 Read the full Author’s Cut here.

    #AnthroIntelligence #ContentAbundance #GenerativeAI #AIContent #SharedCulture #AIandCreativity

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    7 mins
  • The One-Person Studio: Artificial Intelligence and Content Creation
    Jun 15 2026

    What happens when one creator can command the capabilities of an entire production team? In this episode of AnthroIntelligence: Culture, Cognition, and Code, I explore how artificial intelligence is transforming the individual creator into a one-person studio—able to research, write, illustrate, compose, narrate, edit, translate, and publish from a single workspace.


    This new creative power may democratize production, allowing more people to bring ideas to life without large budgets, specialist crews, or institutional permission. But it may also intensify labor, displace creative workers, concentrate cultural power, and flood our platforms with increasingly similar content.


    As execution becomes easier, direction, taste, judgment, and responsibility become more important. AI can generate possibilities, but only the human creator can decide what matters, what should remain unpublished, and what the finished work ultimately means.


    📖 Read the full Author's Cut ⁠here.


    #AnthroIntelligence #OnePersonStudio #AIContentCreation #CreativeAI #FutureOfCreativeWork #HumanCreativity

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    6 mins
  • My Story Could Be a Blockbuster: AI and the Future of Film
    Jun 1 2026

    What happens when your imagination becomes a production studio? In this episode of AnthroIntelligence: Culture, Cognition, and Code, I explore how generative AI may transform film from something we watch into something we personally create—prompt by prompt, scene by scene, dream by dream.


    From AI video tools and licensed fictional universes to synthetic actors and posthumous performances, the future of cinema is no longer just about cameras, studios, and screens. It is about taste, consent, storycraft, and the uneasy question of what happens when everyone can generate their own blockbuster.


    AI may not end cinema. It may multiply it beyond recognition. But if every story becomes personalized, frictionless, and perfectly tailored to us, will film still help us dream together—or teach us to dream alone?


    📖 Read the full Author's Cut ⁠here.


    #AnthroIntelligence #AIandFilm #GenerativeAI #FutureOfCinema #SyntheticActors #CultureAndTechnology

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    7 mins
  • Selfies Without Selves: AI and the Limits of Algorithms
    May 18 2026

    Why do algorithms keep misunderstanding us? In this episode of AnthroIntelligence: Culture, Cognition, and Code, I explore a simple but unsettling truth: algorithms do not encounter humans as evolving, contradictory beings—they encounter categories.


    Using an experience where a forensic podcast episode on Kurt Cobain was flagged despite its academic intent, this episode examines how systems built to classify reality inevitably flatten it. From Enlightenment taxonomies to modern recommendation engines, the urge to sort, label, and predict has always carried a cost: reducing fluid human lives into static boxes.


    Algorithms can capture snapshots. Humans exist as trajectories. The tension between those two realities may define one of the central limits of artificial intelligence—and one of the last spaces where being human still matters.


    📖 Read the full Author's Cut ⁠here.


    #AnthroIntelligence #Algorithms #HumanComplexity #AIandSociety #CultureAndTechnology #ArtificialIntelligence

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    7 mins
  • Words Without Worlds: Artificial Intelligence and the Limits of Language
    May 4 2026

    Why does AI feel like it understands us—even when it doesn’t? In this episode of AnthroIntelligence: Culture, Cognition, and Code, I explore the illusion at the heart of large language models: their ability to produce language that sounds intelligent without ever engaging the world it describes.

    Drawing on ideas from Yann LeCun and John Searle, this episode unpacks the difference between fluency and understanding, correlation and causation, symbols and experience. AI systems can map language with extraordinary precision—but they never touch the terrain of reality itself.

    The words may feel right. The meaning may feel real. But the understanding—always—remains human.

    📖 Read the full Author's Cut ⁠here.

    #AnthroIntelligence #LanguageAndAI #LimitsOfAI #ArtificialIntelligence #PhilosophyOfMind #CultureAndTechnology

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    7 mins
  • All the Small Things: Artificial Intelligence and Everyday Life
    Apr 20 2026

    We often imagine AI in extremes—utopia, dystopia, machines reshaping civilization. But what if the real story is much smaller? In this episode of AnthroIntelligence: Culture, Cognition, and Code, I explore the quiet, everyday ways artificial intelligence is already shaping how we think, feel, and decide.


    From drafting apologies to navigating relationships, AI is not replacing us—it is assisting the small acts of cognition that structure daily life. Drawing from Life 3.0: Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence and real-world usage studies, this episode examines the gap between imagined futures and lived reality—and how subtle patterns of reliance may gradually reshape culture itself.


    The future of AI is not arriving in dramatic form. It is being built, quietly, through the small things we choose to delegate.


    📖 Read the full Author's Cut ⁠here.


    #AnthroIntelligence #EverydayAI #HumanBehavior #CultureAndTechnology #AIEthics #ArtificialIntelligence

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    7 mins
  • Narratives in the New Battlespace: Artificial Intelligence at War
    Apr 6 2026

    War is no longer fought only on land, sea, air, and space—it is fought in the domain of perception. In this episode of AnthroIntelligence: Culture, Cognition, and Code, I examine how artificial intelligence is transforming warfare from physical confrontation to cognitive contestation.


    From AI-assisted targeting and autonomous systems to the industrial production of narratives, the battlefield is expanding into the human mind itself. As algorithms compress the kill chain and shape what people believe at scale, the question is no longer just who controls territory—but who controls reality.


    This episode explores a deeper shift: when machines mediate both decision-making and information, conflict is no longer just about force—it is about belief, ambiguity, and the fragmentation of shared truth.


    📖 Read the full Author's Cut ⁠here.⁠


    #AnthroIntelligence #AIWarfare #CognitiveWarfare #InformationWar #ArtificialIntelligence #FutureOfConflict

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    7 mins