Everything Bad Is Good for You: How Today’s Popular Culture Is Actually Making Us Smarter

The $10 billion video gaming industry is now the second-largest segment of the entertainment industry in the United States, outstripping film and far surpassing books. Reality television shows featuring silicone-stuffed CEO wannabees and bug-eating adrenaline junkies dominate the ratings. The entertainment industry is regularly accused of pushing the envelope too far. And social commentators consistently assume a race-to-the bottom and a dumbing-down of pop culture. But prominent social and cultural critic Steven Johnson argues that our popular culture has never been more intelligent.

Instead of creating a society of cheap pleasures and short attention spans, he argues that mass entertainment has been growing steadily more cognitively challenging over the past thirty years: in the nuanced decision-making of videogames, the complex narrative threads of TV dramas, and the interactive riches of the online world. He calls this upward trend “The Sleeper Curve,” after the classic sequence from Woody Allen’s mock sci-fi film, Sleeper, where a team of scientists from 2029 are astounded that 20th century society failed to grasp the nutritional merits of cream pies and hot fudge. In a similar fashion, the most debased and frequently criticized forms of mass diversion today are in fact beneficial. Johnson illustrates how the Sleeper Curve is positively altering the mental development of young people today.

Speaker Details

Steven Johnson currently writes for The New York Times Magazine and the “Emerging Technology” column for Discover, and is a contributing editor to Wired. He was the co-founder of the online magazine Feed and currently runs the blog stevenberlinjohnson.com. His three previous books are the New York Times bestseller Mind Wide Open: Your Brain and the Neuroscience of Everyday Life (2004); Emergence: The Connected Lives of Ants, Cities and Software (2003), a finalist for the Helen Bernstein Award for Excellence in Journalism and New York Times Notable Book; and Interface Culture: How New Technology Transforms the Way we Create and Communicate (1997). He lives in Brooklyn with his wife and two children.

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Steven Johnson
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