Sarah Kendzior: How a Culture of Conspiracy Keeps America Simultaneously Complacent and Paranoid
Hosted by Andrew Keen, Keen On features conversations with some of the world’s leading thinkers and writers about the economic, political, and technological issues being discussed in the news, right now.
In this episode, Andrew is joined by Sarah Kendzior, author of They Knew: How a Culture of Conspiracy Keeps America Complacent.
Sarah Kendzior is the New York Times bestselling author of Hiding in Plain Sight and The View from Flyover Country. She has a PhD in anthropology from Washington University in St. Louis, where she researched propaganda and state crimes in authoritarian regimes. She is the co-host of the acclaimed podcast Gaslit Nation with Andrea Chalupa and was named by Foreign Policy as one of the “100 people you should be following on Twitter to make sense of global events.” Her reporting has been featured in many publications, including NBC News, The Guardian, The Atlantic, Fast Company, The Chicago Tribune, Teen Vogue, The Globe and Mail, and The New York Times. She lives in St. Louis.
Why Even Sam Altman Wants to be Gary Marcus: From Son of Sam to Son of Gary in a single ChatGPT Release
Dr Strangelove Returns: Palantir and the New Military-Industrial-Digital Complex
MAGA Voters Aren't Stupid: That's Why They Don't Care What Right-Wing Podcasters Think
Getting Queerer Quicker: No, The Literary Man Isn't Disappearing—He's Just Not Longer White or Straight
Who Owns The Front Door? The Multi-Trillion Dollar Battle to Assemble the AI Jigsaw
From Mean Streets to Wall Street: How Trump, Koch, and the other Gods of New York Remade America
Move Fast and Fix the World: Here Comes the Sun in the Nick of Time
The Redistricting Apocalypse: How Chief Justice Roberts Let All the Evil Spirits out of American Democracy
Back to the Digital Future: Why the Future of AI Healthcare Might be a Return to the Gig Economy
From Scrubbing Toilets to Talking around the Water Cooler: Why AI Won't Kill the Jobs of Those Who Clean Up Our Mess
Nostalgia vs. Progress: The Left's Dilemma in Post-Industrial America
When AI Breaks Your Heart: The Week Nothing Changed in Silicon Valley
From Brazilian Model to Nuclear Advocate: How one Woman's Radical Climate Anxiety is Generating a "Rad Future"