Episode 2
Outrage sells. Oliver Burkeman finds out how media outlets spread anger online, and how it spills over into the real world, changing the way we see the world and each other.
It鈥檚 possible that we are more angry now than ever, but it鈥檚 also possible that we just perceive higher levels of rage because we are all plugged into an environment that can turn a profit on our outrage. In the digital age media outlets have to keep our attention to make money, and the best way to do that? Get us angry.
But how is this constant rage stream affecting us? Oliver explores how the infrastructure of the digital age has been built to keep anger on a rolling boil, why our brains can鈥檛 help but be drawn to the things that outrage us most, and if it鈥檚 possible to redesign our the lucrative attention economy to tone down the anger, or if we鈥檝e reached the point of no return where the rage we vent behind the screen is now spilling over into how we see one another in the real world.
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From road rage to social media tirades, it often seems like we're in a state of fury.
Charlie Beckett
is a former journalist, now a professor in the Department of Media and Communications at the LSE. He is director of Polis, the LSE's journalism think-tank and is leading the LSE's Truth, Trust and Technology Commission. 听He researches the future of news and the role of emotions in journalism and social media.
He tells us about how journalism has always reflected the mood of contemporary society, and how personal identity has become so important in the present day press.
Molly Crockett
is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Yale University and a Distinguished Research Fellow at the Oxford Centre for Neuroethics.
She explains why Moral Outrage in particular is prone to going viral.
Ryan Martin
is the chair of the at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay and host of the His work focuses on healthy and unhealthy expressions of anger.听听
He explains that anger is the most viral emotion online, but that things may be changing for the anger economy.
Tobias Rose-Stockwell
is a writer, designer, and technologist living in New York City who is both fascinated with and troubled by the way our digital tools are being used today, and believes they are fundamentally altering our perception of each other.
听
He tells us what it was like to be on the inside as the media began to tilt towards more fear and anger, and how the design of social media could help to curb online rage.
Broadcasts
- Wed 24 Oct 2018 09:30麻豆社 Radio 4
- Tue 19 Mar 2019 13:45麻豆社 Radio 4