#Addiction
4 episodes-
New Year New Possibilities
Kris Tyte and Sean Snodgrass venture into the world of resolutions in today’s deep and reflective episode. They tackle questions like: Why is it so hard? Why do we fail so often? The answer may come as a surprise to most but could it be that failure is the point? Some may find new years resolutions as corny or pointless but when it comes down to habits, addiction, personal agency, and a regain of control …it might have more impact then you think.
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Useful Satire, Memes & Humans as Pets
If you have a love for satire and unfiltered banter, you are in the right place. In this comedic yet thought-provoking episode, our hosts, Kris Tyte and Sean Snodgrass, delve into the world of satirical comedy. They also explore the unsettling idea of AI-personalized content pumping you full of dopamine and living in a world where humans are pets for AI systems. Each part is hilarious yet insightful; this episode will leave you laughing… and thinking deeply about the world around you.
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Bathwater Capitalism & Alluring Memes
This episode explores the absurdities of modern culture, from bathwater buyers to broken earbuds. The hosts delve into topics such as social media fame, how memes have replaced mixtapes, and the curious phenomenon of ASMR. We are joined by the wonderful Megan Tyte, who helps unpack everything from monkeypox symptoms to Reddit culture. Blending satire with sincerity, this episode is both honest and hilariously chaotic.
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Tiers of Wealth, Justice & Subjective Reality
In this episode of Positively Pedestrian, we discuss, an arc of topics from the Pope as an apologist, for fraud waste and abuse to the Sackler family profiting from much the same, and offering the same sort of tacit, and weak apology. From there we look at history and access to information. Visualizing wealth distribution, alongside a world of unparalleled productivity, speed and scale. We talk about the lives of the independently wealthy, those who own the means of production. Proffering a tiered model of wealth and justice. We conclude by offering up a list of tools that can shift the balance of power and a proposal for a Community College class to disseminate it.