I was interviewed for The Psychologst magazine’s Media Page for their April edition for a column about the psychological impact of the Web, and the best practices for communicating research to the general public. The latter is a hot topic in academic circles; part of the application process for grant money is to describe how your work will be disseminated widely, and engage audiences who reside outside the academic Ivory Tower. And, of course, everyone’s keen to know the best way to use the Web.
bbcdigrev
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[The Psychologist] Media Page interview: the psychological impact of the Internet, plus how to be an academic broadcaster
Thursday April 29, 2010 @ 04:53 PM (UTC) -
[Virtual Revolution] We won an Emmy!
Wednesday April 21, 2010 @ 04:22 PM (UTC)Congratulations to the truly talented multiplatform team of the BBC 2 series The Virtual Revolution who have won the International Emmy for Digital Programme: Non-Fiction. A phenomenal achievement indeed. Don’t believe me? Check out all the behind-the-scenes hard work by the magnificent Dans, Biddle and Gluckman, including the series’ 3D documentary explorer and all of the interview rushes. Awesome work by all the people who contributed. Yay!
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[Virtual Revolution] Homo Interneticus radio adaptation on World Service today
Monday March 15, 2010 @ 12:08 PM (UTC)Homo Interneticus, the final episode of the BBC World Service radio adaptation of the BBC2 series The Virtual Revolution aired this morning at 10am. It’s available to listen via podcast in the BBC’s Documentaries strand and on the Monday Documentary website. You can listen to the other programmes too: The Great Levelling, Enemy of the State and The Cost of Free.
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[Virtual Revolution] The Cost of Free on World Service today
Monday March 08, 2010 @ 09:05 AM (UTC)The BBC World Service’s Monday Documentary series Virtual Revolution radio adaptation continues today at 1005 GMT, with The Cost of Free, a look at the exchange we make for free services like Google and Amazon.
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[Virtual Revolution] Enemy of the State on World Service today
Monday March 01, 2010 @ 09:28 AM (UTC)Episode 2 of Virtual Revolution‘s radio adaptation for the World Service airs today at 10:05am GMT as part of the BBC’s World Service Super Power season. This programme outlines the effect of the World Wide Web on global politics, ricochets around the Twitterverse, examines cyberbalkaniszation, prods the new digital propaganda, discusses confirmation biases and both grassroots and organised extremism and introduces the foundations of a new theatre of war.
Big stuff.
And thank heaven’s to Betsy, the programme is available to experience globally.
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[Virtual Revolution] World Service radio adaptation begins today!
Monday February 22, 2010 @ 08:56 AM (UTC)The first episode of the radio adaptation of The Virtual Revolution is broadcasting on the World Service this morning at 10am GMT. It’s the first time that people around the world can (legally) access the whole programme, The Great Levelling (although a short version in vision is available with the BBC’s innovative 3D Documentary explorer).
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[Virtual Revolution] Testing the Dunbar Number thesis on a sample of me
Friday February 19, 2010 @ 09:25 AM (UTC)When we were filming for Programme 4 of Virtual Revolution, director Molly Milton and I went through the approximately 5,000 followers I have on Twitter to test (admittedly, only with a sample of me) Professor Robin Dunbar‘s oft-cited Dunbar Number theory. Dunbar proposed that the ’ideal’ number of people in a human community is just under 150. This, he has argued, is the maximum number of people with whom individuals can maintain functional and stable social relationships. The theory is based upon his work with primates, extrapolating the specific number from the size of the animals’ neocortices to ours. More information on this theory is here.
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[Virtual Revolution] Homo Interneticus?
Friday February 19, 2010 @ 08:42 AM (UTC)The last programme in The Virtual Revolution series, Homo Interneticus, broadcasts this Saturday night, 20 February 2010, at 8:15pm.
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[Virtual Revolution] The Cost of Free
Friday February 12, 2010 @ 11:42 AM (UTC)Tomorrow night’s episode of The Virtual Revolution, The Cost of Free, airs on BBC2 at 9:15pm. The programme looks at the dark corporate underbelly of the Web, and how it’s transforming our notions of privacy and culture in the 21st century. It’s also the one that excites me the most; I am a dystopian from way back, and I’m both thrilled and terrified to see how we have been complicit in our own 1984. What does Google have on us? How is Amazon’s recommendation system contradicting the most powerful opportunity for new inforamtion that the web offers – serendipity – and manipulating us into homogenous proles for its own benefit?
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[Guardian] The challenges of filming The Virtual Revolution
Monday February 08, 2010 @ 08:49 AM (UTC)There was a moment on location last year while filming the BBC2 documentary series The Virtual Revolution when I realised we were actually creating two projects. I was uploading a photo I had taken on the shoot to my Flickr site, or dispatching another update to my Twitter followers, when the director of photography asked: “Why?”
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