Introducing Yellow Canary Land š¤
A Substack newsletter about global media and technology futures
Iām pleased to introduce Yellow Canary Land š¤ (yes, the emoji is part of the title), a Substack newsletter about global media and technology futures. Like the proverbial canary in a coal mine, a yellow canary event is like a flashing warning sign for more danger ahead. It is a signal that is itself insightful, but to an expert is doubly so because of the conditions it reveals.
Why subscribe? Iāve spent the better part of a decade with my ears to the ground on whatās coming for technology, and much of what I wrote about early on continues to resonate today in new contexts. I started writing about political memes in 2011, about the fractured nature of our global internet in 2015, reality television cultureās influence on politics in 2018, the forces of the ātechnology cold warā that would shape China-US relations two years before the attempted TikTok and WeChat bans, and I helped coin the word misinfodemics nearly two years before COVID-19.
This newsletter is a look at societal trends, with a focus on the future of media and technology from a global perspective. Itās ostensibly about some distant tomorrow, but really, itās about how the forces of our yesterdays and todays are likely to shape the times to come. I get some things right, many things wrong, and I learn a lot along the way.
The disciplines I bring to the table are media studies, art, technology, design, management and justice thinking, and the disciplines I dabble in are historical analogy, science fiction, human rights, policy, sinology, economics and linguistics. I practice Buddhism, I identify as queer and use the pronouns she or they, and Iām working on a kids book about emoji and the Chinese language. At Meedan, I spend my time looking toward the future of global technology.
Iāve added a paid subscription option, in case youāre moved to contribute, but my intention is to keep this newsletter free. Your money helps, but your reading helps more. If I see traction on paid subscriptions, Iāll publish monthly; high traction, Iāll go weekly. In both cases, Iāll add some paid-subscriber-only pieces and open up the comments for discussion. Otherwise, Iāll aim to publish quarterly with general updates and thoughts.
Yellow Canary Land š¤ is an exercise in slow journalism, which British journalist Susan Greenberg compares to the slow food movement. So donāt expect a lot of emails, but do expect a lot of thought put into each one. Thanks for following.