What Works

Tara McMullin
What Works

Work is central to the human experience. It helps us shape our identities, care for those we love, and contribute to our communities. Work can be a source of power and a catalyst for change. Unfortunately, that's not how most of us experience work—even those who work for themselves. Our labor and creative spirit are used to enrich others and maintain the status quo. It's time for an intervention. What Works is a show about rethinking work, business, and leadership for the 21st-century economy. Host Tara McMullin covers money, management, culture, media, philosophy, and more to figure out what's working (and what's not) today. Tara offers a distinctly interdisciplinary approach to deep-dive analysis of how we work and how work shapes us.

  1. FEB 13

    EP 486: How Knowledge Really Does Become Power

    What does my new website, the TikTok "ban," and the ongoing purge of "woke" from government websites have in common? The power to decide what content counts and what doesn't—and use that power to shape the knowledge and experiences of others. In this episode, I continue to examine the state of The Website today. Amidst a backdrop of diffuse epistemic violence, the website is both an archive and a communication tool we can use to preserve the knowledge and ways of knowing we care about. In the second half of the episode, I share a piece I wrote last year on how artificial intelligence disrupts and deskills our critical thinking. Footnotes: "Broken Links" by Tara McMullin on What Works"Knowledge Is Power: A Brief History" on Mental FlossFull text of the House bill "banning" TikTok"Multiple Ways of Knowing: Expanding How We Know" by Elissa Sloane Perry and Aja Couchois Duncan on Nonprofit Quarterly"Black Box Thinking" by Tara McMullin on What Works"Scientists Increasingly Cannot Explain How AI Works" by Chloe Xiang on Vice"Google is redesigning its search engine: it's AI all the way down" on The Verge"Hostile Epistemology" by C. Thi Nguyen"Microsoft Finds Relying on AI Kills Your Critical Thinking Skills" by AJ Dellinger on GizmodoFind a written version of this audio essay, subscribe free to the What Works newsletter, and learn more about working with me to turn your meaningful ideas into remarkable content at whatworks.fyi. (00:00) - EP 486: How Knowledge Really Does Become Power (03:21) - 1. Knowledge is Power (06:41) - The Purge (14:05) - 2. Black Box Thinking (18:07) - Technological Conditioning (26:12) - Credits ★ Support this podcast ★

    27 min
  2. FEB 6

    EP 485: Broken Links

    I'm back! Maybe you noticed or maybe you didn't—but the show (and my newsletter) has been on its longest hiatus since its inception. In the final quarter of 2024, I decided I wanted to (re)consolidate my web presence, abandon most "platforms," and breathe some new life into my work. This episode reflects on both my own challenges with wrangling my online presence and the ways the state of the web has made it extra challenging. While there’s a lot to complain about when it comes to social media platforms and the billionaires wreaking havoc in online and offline spaces, this isn’t that kind of episode. It’s an effort to illuminate some less obvious issues that, in turn, can help us figure out what we want to do next. If you've been feeling a bit blah or displaced or just overwhelmed in your online work lately, I hope this episode gives you a fresh mental model for making sense of those feelings. And I hope that model gives you the inspiration it's given me. Footnotes: Check out the new (and hopefully improved) whatworks.fyi!"For the Love of God, Make Your Own Website" by Gita Jackson, Aftermath"Decoder guest host Hank Green makes Nilay Patel explain why websites have a future" on Decoder"Digital Homelessness" by Venkatesh Rao"The Web Renaissance takes off" by Anil Dash"The Creator Economy Is Eating Creative Acts" by Tara McMullin, featuring Kate Tyson & Charlie Gilkey"Wait, I Think You're Platform-Pilled" by Tara McMullin"Is it OK to say the word 'homeless?' Or should you say 'unhoused?'" on The GuardianAlienation by Rahel JaeggiPossessed: A Cultural History of Hoarding by Rebecca FalkoffAmerican Bulk by Emily MesterCreating Digital Exhibitions for Cultural Institutions by Emily MarshYou can check out the What Works archive at whatworks.fyi - where you’ll find a written essay version of this episode. Plus, you can find out more about working with me to turn your own meaningful ideas into remarkable content.  (00:00) - What even is a website today? (05:17) - 1. Website Metaphysicsp (11:32) - 2. Digital Homelessness (18:05) - 3. Google Hates Broken Links the Way NIMBYs Hate Tent Cities (22:37) - 4. Digital Hoarding (34:51) - 5. Rebuilding (40:59) - Credits ★ Support this podcast ★

    42 min
  3. 10/25/2024

    EP 481: Preservation in the Post-Information Age with Sari Azout

    Stop me if you've heard this before: we're overloaded and overwhelmed by information. There's more content than you could ever hope to consume. More scientific theories, philosophical concepts, and art forms than you could ever hope to engage with. Enter personal knowledge management (PKM). It's a modern term for an ancient practice—how one collects, preserves, and utilizes knowledge worth remembering. In this episode, I speak with Sari Azout, the founder of Sublime, an app for personal knowledge management (but that description truly doesn't do it justice). We talk about the philosophy behind the product and how that plays out in the product's design. Plus, I dive into how Sari's PKM philosophy is part of a long lineage of practices people have used to remember what's worth preserving. Footnotes: Check out Sublime or get started right away with an invite!Too Much to Know by Ann BlairMore about Sarah Mackenzie & Read-Aloud Revival"The Glassbox and the Commonplace" by Steven JohnsonMore on John Locke's commonplace book index systemWhat do you want to preserve?More on Corita Kent at the Corita Art CenterEvery new episode is published in essay form at WhatWorks.FYI! (00:00) - How I keep track of ideas and information (02:56) - Meet Sari Azout, founder of Sublime (04:30) - Information age versus post-information age (06:55) - Information overload is an ancient problem (08:05) - Commonplace books (11:20) - Commonplace books contain a central tension (12:12) - We shape our tools and then they shape us (16:24) - Where the cool stuff is really happening (17:40) - John Locke's commonplace system (19:52) - A tool for creativity rather than productivity (23:33) - Single-player mode versus multiplayer mode (27:05) - The promise of preservation ★ Support this podcast ★

    30 min
4.8
out of 5
234 Ratings

About

Work is central to the human experience. It helps us shape our identities, care for those we love, and contribute to our communities. Work can be a source of power and a catalyst for change. Unfortunately, that's not how most of us experience work—even those who work for themselves. Our labor and creative spirit are used to enrich others and maintain the status quo. It's time for an intervention. What Works is a show about rethinking work, business, and leadership for the 21st-century economy. Host Tara McMullin covers money, management, culture, media, philosophy, and more to figure out what's working (and what's not) today. Tara offers a distinctly interdisciplinary approach to deep-dive analysis of how we work and how work shapes us.

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