Sunday Digest

9

Hello and Happy Sunday!

In addition to the usual roundup of our articles, and a glance at what’s been happening on Twitter we added a few new things we think you’ll love.

For one, we summarized the new Matthew Ball essay for your reading pleasure. For another, we found a piece of sci-fi for you to read dig in to with your morning.

There’s a lot to get to, so let’s get into it!


Not yet an Everything bundle subscriber?


Everything Index - Week of 10/25

  • Articles we published — 5
  • Podcasts we released — 3
  • Live Conversations we hosted — 2
  • Amazing Average — 45%
    (Average number of readers who thought our articles were “Amazing” this week)
  • Tesla Stock Price — –1.2%
    (Change since last week)
  • Chamath’s Number — 0
    (Number of articles on Google News for “Chamath SPAC” from this week)
  • People Who Are Wrong — 0 (big week for Zero…)
    (Number of times Rabois tweeted the word “wrong” this week)
  • Days Until the Election — 10, somehow

Getting too many emails from us?

Manage your settings here.


This Week’s Top Posts

Ranked by the % of people who rated the post “amazing” in our feedback forms.

  1. ⚡️Action Item #1: Playing Offense, The 10-10-10 Test, and Blending 🔒 by Dan Shipper in Superorganizers (620 words) 
  2. 💝Taylor Lorenz on the creator economy, online entrepreneurship, the changing media landscape, & more 🎥 on Means of Creation (53 min)
  3. 🗣Episode One: The Instruction of Influence 🎧 in The Long Conversation (33 min)
  4. ⚡️What’s Going on When Hard Work Seems Impossible? 🔒by Jonathan Shi in Superorganizers (1,637 words)
  5. 🔮Who Gets to Solve Death? by Taylor Majewski in Divinations (2,256 words)
  6. 🔮What I got wrong about Quibi 🔒 by Nathan Baschez in Divinations (1,157 words)
  7. 💝Passion Economy News #5: The Prop 22 Debate, Substack’s Mentorship Program, OnZoom’s Event Discovery Push, Business Insider’s potential Morning Brew Acquisition, and More 🔒 in Means of Creation (2,077 words)
  8. 💞#37 - Better Business Writing 🎧 by Dan Shipper & Nathan Baschez in Talk Therapy (13 min)
  9. 🗣Episode Two: The Function of Form 🎥 on The Long Conversation (1 hr)
  10. 💞#38 - RIP Quibi 🎧 by Dan Shipper & Nathan Baschez in Talk Therapy (15 min)

COMING UP: TLC #3: MY FATHER THE SPY, WITH JOHN H. RICHARDSON

Join us this Friday on The Long Conversation for a discussion with award-winning journalist and author John H. Richardson. We’ll cover his career as a feature writer for Esquire and other major magazines, his research and writing processes, and how he turned the story of his father’s life and death into the 1999 feature, My Father The Spy, and later a book by the same name. (Here’s Richardson speaking with Jon Stewart about the book on The Daily Show.)

Want to participate? Update your subscription settings to be notified about the show, and RSVP for the event below:

If you missed last week’s episode of TLC on In The Dream House, be sure to look for the podcast version of the conversation on Monday!


👓SURVEY TIME👓

We need your help making the Bundle better! Fill out this quick survey on your experience reading Everything, and you’ll be entered to win any three books of your choosing! It’s like a raffle, but with a prize you actually want.


Noted

Tidbits from our little corners of the world.


NEWS


SMART ARTICLES FROM GOOD PEOPLE

Audio’s Opportunity and Who Will Capture It by Matthew Ball

“We tend to forget that media is a technology,” begins Ball. Music, film, and games have been around long enough for us to forget that they are the concrete results of advances in tech. Because tech drives media this way, the form with the best chance of growth is the one with the most potential for technological innovation. And for Ball, that field is Audio.

  • In Video, form follows tech

    • Advances from cable TV to digital streaming, and arcade/console gaming to online platforms, have drastically increased the amount of available content, democratized production of that content, and affected the content itself
    • Shows are longer, since they are not structured around ad breaks
    • By owning all of a current show’s previous episodes, streamers keep users watching, rather than leaving the service because they can’t catch up in time for the newest episodes
  • Audio is different...

    • Since iTunes “unbundled the physical album,” most innovation in audio has changed access to music, not the actual way it’s consumed.
  • ...But that’s changing

    • Industry leaders are investing in audio storytelling formats like podcasts and audiobooks. In response, platforms are building accessible creator platforms. Take Spotify’s Anchor – which grants users access to any song in the streamer’s library. Because of this new tech, anyone can make a professional-sounding podcast with a few clicks.
    • Remote live music is seeing a massive uptick in this pandemic era, presenting opportunities to rethink the once-exclusive concert experience. Live streams are now a medium of their own, with distinct visual identities and fresh tech supporting new modes of audience participation
  • Audio goes remote – and moves forward

    • Audio consumption is going fully remote for the first time since the invention of recording devices. The field is diversifying and unbundling itself faster than ever before. And with audiences discovering new music and stories using brand-new platforms and features, it’s the first time the field has seen real growth off the back of new tech. And the best part? This is only the beginning – the biggest disruptions and creations haven’t even happened yet.
MORE GOOD WRITING
READ A LITTLE SCI-FI

What would happen if social media platforms were literally embedded in the criminal justice system? Read "River Rising", a science fiction story by James Yu for a glimpse into a world where the River's judgement is inescapable


WILD TIKTOK SKILL OF THE WEEK

https://twitter.com/kushaanshah/status/1317486927763795969?s=12


TWEETS OF THE WEEK

Burn of the week:

https://twitter.com/aquariusacquah/status/1318712270407565315?s=12

Obligatory Quibi take we dig:

https://twitter.com/lessin/status/1319008201082195969

The (non-bundle) newsletter you should be reading:

https://twitter.com/thisisneer/status/1319254536003923969


COMMUNITY FEEDBACK

Some of the best feedback we received in our forms this week:

  • Haha I love that you’re copping to your bad takes, not just cheering your good ones. Keep it up <3” (on What I got wrong about Quibi)
  • “Nice job guys, most people don't do a very good (or nuanced) job reporting on complex neuroscience research, and making the right connections with real-world examples. This was really well done, in a relatively short article. Definitely do more with Jonathan!” (on What’s Going on When Hard Work Seems Impossible?)
  • “I had been wondering how Rachel fits in to your business writing model - after listening to this I now understand.” Note: Just you wait… (on #37 - Better Business Writing)

Keep ‘em coming!


An invitation to Everything

Not a subscriber? Are you intrigued by the bundle? Now would be a good time to subscribe — it’s just $20 a month to get subscribed to Everything we offer.


How did you feel about this week’s digest?

Amazing • Good • Meh • Bad


This post was written by Babe Howard and edited by Dan Shipper.

Find Out What
Comes Next in Tech.

Start your free trial.

New ideas to help you build the future—in your inbox, every day. Trusted by over 75,000 readers.

Subscribe

Already have an account? Sign in

What's included?

  • Unlimited access to our daily essays by Dan Shipper, Evan Armstrong, and a roster of the best tech writers on the internet
  • Full access to an archive of hundreds of in-depth articles
  • Unlimited software access to Spiral, Sparkle, and Lex

  • Priority access and subscriber-only discounts to courses, events, and more
  • Ad-free experience
  • Access to our Discord community

Related Essays

Comments

You need to login before you can comment.
Don't have an account? Sign up!
Every

What Comes Next in Tech

Subscribe to get new ideas about the future of business, technology, and the self—every day