Saturday, June 1, 2024

How big is Taylor Swift?

Here's what the data says.
From The Times

June 1, 2024

No question: Taylor Swift is big. But is she as big as the Beatles? How does she stack up next to Michael Jackson? We crunched the numbers, taking stock of her career alongside other heavy hitters.

A photograph of the head Taylor Swift, surrounded by the heads of Michael Jackson, Beyoncé, Bruce Springsteen, Britney Spears, Madonna, Paul McCartney, Elton John and Drake.

Cassidy Araiza for The New York Times; Getty Images; Associated Press

Here's what we found.

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Opinion Today: Your mind isn’t scattered. It’s being fracked.

D. Graham Burnett talks to Ezra Klein about the exploitation of our attention and how to resist it.
Opinion Today

June 1, 2024

A portrait of a man (D. Graham Burnett) wearing glasses, a beard and an earring.
Francesca & Leo Inc.

By Kristin Lin

Producer, Opinion Audio

"How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives."

I often think of this line from the writer Annie Dillard. And these days, I'm afraid to admit how much of my time is spent online, my mind jostling around in a sea of infinite scroll. There's little about what I encounter online that I actively choose — and I suspect the same goes for you. That may seem trivial, moment to moment. But what are we losing over a lifetime of stolen attention?

That question is at the core of the latest episode of "The Ezra Klein Show," with D. Graham Burnett. A professor of the history of science at Princeton University, he's working on a book about the laboratory study of attention. He argues that social media platforms and advertisers are "fracking" our attention — extracting increasingly marginal amounts of it by pumping increasingly shrill content into our information environments. And he thinks what's at stake is something far beyond our productivity or even our mental health.

"This is creating conditions that are at odds with human flourishing," he says. "We know this. And we need to mount new forms of resistance."

Thankfully, Burnett is also exploring what this resistance might look like. He's a co-founder of the Strother School of Attention, a grass-roots collective creating a curriculum for studying the matter. And he shares many of the insights he's gained, both as a scholar of attention and as an organizer at the Strother School, in this conversation. It's beautiful, eclectic and meandering in the best way — much like an afternoon walk in which time falls away, much like the pleasure of paying good attention. I hope you'll give it a listen.

LISTEN TO THE EPISODE HERE

The Ezra Klein Show

Your Mind Is Being Fracked

The historian of science D. Graham Burnett on what's at stake in the rise of an extractive attention economy and how we can reclaim our attention.

play button

1 HR 12 MIN LISTEN

THE WEEK IN BIG IDEAS

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