They Tried to Warn Us

Ray Welling

What if the people who predicted the future… could see what we’ve done with it? They wrote books. They issued warnings. They mapped out our technological Faustian bargains before we signed the dotted line. Now they’re back… sort of. They Tried to Warn Us is the podcast that resurrects dead thinkers—writers, theorists, prophets, poets—and asks them what they make of the world we’ve built. Why does it feel like we’re hurtling toward dystopia wearing VR goggles? Because they told us. We just didn’t listen.

Episodes

  1. 08/03/2025

    Marshall McLuhan: The Medium is Still Screwing the Message

    Before memes, before iPhones, before your mom started texting in all caps—there was Marshall McLuhan. The Canadian media theorist, cultural provocateur, and surprise cameo star in Annie Hall makes his ghostly return to decode the 21st-century media swamp he predicted decades ago. In this episode, Ray sits down with the OG of media studies, a man who once said, “We shape our tools, and thereafter our tools shape us”, then smiled smugly while the rest of us scrambled to keep up. McLuhan takes a long look at the digital age, tries to make sense of TikTok, and assesses whether we’ve finally become the “discarnate beings” he once foretold. Together, they explore: Why McLuhan thinks Twitter is the logical extension of tribal drumming What the “global village” actually feels like when everyone’s shouting How electric media rewired us into reactive, fragmented minds Whether he regrets coining phrases people use but never understand The real meaning behind “the medium is the message”—and why your Kindle isn’t fooling anyone Why he might take MarshallGPT personally And yes, how it felt to be more famous for one line in a Woody Allen movie than for reshaping the way we think about media If you’ve ever wondered why Instagram makes you feel overstimulated and underinformed, or why you read McLuhan quotes on Twitter without knowing who he was, this one’s for you. More information: They Tried to Warn Us, the book: More info on each podcast interview subject, along with 15 more interviews. They Tried to Warn Us, the newsletter: Follow the action on Ray's Substack.

    13 min
  2. 07/29/2025

    Neil Postman – From Television to TikTok: How We Really Are Amusing Ourselves to Death

    “What happens when the man who saw it all coming returns to tell us… we misunderstood the punchline?” In this premiere episode of They Tried to Warn Us, we resurrect the voice and mind of media theorist Neil Postman—the man who warned us that entertainment would devour public discourse, and that we might laugh ourselves into tyranny. Recorded from beyond the grave (don’t worry, it’s not creepy—just uncanny), Postman joins our host Ray Welling for a conversation that feels more relevant now than when Amusing Ourselves to Death first hit shelves in 1985. In fact, it may be more relevant today. We ask Postman what he thinks of: TikTok, Trump, and 24-hour news Whether Orwell or Huxley got it right (spoiler: Postman was Team Huxley) Why he thought the printing press created reason, and TV dismantled it The meaning of his infamous phrase: “Now… this.” What schools have forgotten—and why tech won’t save them How algorithms shape belief And what he thinks of our podcast dragging him back from the dead… Postman responds with the clarity, wit, and dry dismay that made him one of the most prescient cultural critics of the 20th century. This isn’t nostalgia. It’s a warning we’re finally ready to hear. More information: ⁠They Tried to Warn Us⁠⁠, ⁠the book: More info on each podcast interview subject, along with 15 more interviews. ⁠They Tried to Warn Us⁠, the newsletter: Follow the action on Ray's Substack.

    32 min

About

What if the people who predicted the future… could see what we’ve done with it? They wrote books. They issued warnings. They mapped out our technological Faustian bargains before we signed the dotted line. Now they’re back… sort of. They Tried to Warn Us is the podcast that resurrects dead thinkers—writers, theorists, prophets, poets—and asks them what they make of the world we’ve built. Why does it feel like we’re hurtling toward dystopia wearing VR goggles? Because they told us. We just didn’t listen.