Oxford Talks

Oxford Talks

We share “ideas worth doing”.

  1. Why Mining More Could Save The Planet  | Edward Burtynsky

    6d ago

    Why Mining More Could Save The Planet | Edward Burtynsky

    When Edward Burtynsky began photographing open-pit mines and the largest dam ever built, he was not setting out to lecture anyone. After more than forty years documenting the biggest things humanity has ever made, he still refuses to tell you what to feel about them. In this episode of the Oxford Talks Podcast, the world-renowned photographer explains why he treats his work as a collaboration with the viewer rather than a verdict, and why every reading of an image is legitimate to him. He makes the counterintuitive case that reaching net zero will demand more mining, not less, and lays out the raw materials and timelines hiding behind a green economy. He names the single environmental threat he believes we have no tool to reverse. And he turns to AI, an invention he ranks alongside electricity, and what its uneven arrival could do to the gap between those who have and those who do not. It is a conversation about extraction, art, truth and survival, from a man who has spent his life bearing witness to the scale of what we build. 🔍 Inside the Episode: 0:00 – Introduction 2:00 – From a GM factory floor to the world's biggest landscapes 5:30 – The $20 room that ended his life as a painter 13:00 – Why your taste is trying to tell you something 24:00 – The Rorschach test hidden inside every photograph 28:40 – The line between an artist and an advertiser 35:50 – The two threats he ranks above all others 40:00 – Why reaching net zero means mining more, not less 42:00 – The damage he says we can never undo 48:57 – AI, electricity, and the gap that could break society 53:28 – The world he walked into that he didn't believe existed 1:01:44 – How to actually take a great picture

    1h 10m
  2. What Gen Z Knows That You Don't | Courtney Lukitsch

    Jun 4

    What Gen Z Knows That You Don't | Courtney Lukitsch

    Going viral can make you visible for a week. It rarely makes you matter for a decade. In this episode of the Oxford Talks Podcast, a communications strategist, Courtney Lukitsch who has built businesses across thirty countries makes the case that the loudest voice in the room is almost never the one that lasts. We talk about why public relations has quietly stopped being about press and become something much closer to strategy and business development. Why a generation raised entirely online is the one bringing print and in-person back into fashion. And why, as AI compresses time and floods every channel, human discernment and a trusted network in a single room might be the most valuable assets you have left. There is a warning here too, about a widening gap between those fluent in AI and those locked out of it, and about what happens when executives get pushed in front of a camera long before they are ready. It is a conversation about influence, taste, and building something with staying power while everyone else chases the next quick hit. If you have ever wondered whether being everywhere online is actually working for you, this one is worth your time. Have a listen, and let us know where you land. 🔍 Inside the Episode: 0:00 – Introduction 2:55 – Why designers want a business mind, not just press 6:26 – The 100X AI shift coming this year 9:20 – Why Gen Z is quietly going back to print1 4:46 – The AI divide that could split society 18:16 – The real reason your days feel shorter 20:42 – When press becomes the least of it 27:35 – The boutique that makes legacy firms nervous 29:25 – Twenty five years, not one client solicited 41:00 – What the Timothée Chalamet moment really taught us 44:36 – Why a massive following won't win an election 59:44 – The simple reason people say yes

    1 hr

About

We share “ideas worth doing”.

You Might Also Like