Épisodes

  • 55. Reclaiming The Soul of Digital Technology - Less Capability, More Freedom
    Sep 16 2025

    We explore the philosophy behind building personal websites and using intentionally limited computing as creative practice. The conversation examines why modern computers feel "too dangerous"—offering infinite possibilities that paradoxically constrain focus—and how deliberately choosing simpler tools can restore agency over our attention and creative output.

    Through discussions of building throwback websites, setting up old computers as single-purpose machines, and integrating AI through terminal interfaces, we unpack the psychological difference between technology that serves us versus technology that exploits our behavioral patterns. The episode ultimately centers on a deeper question: how do we design our relationship with technology to support sustained attention, genuine connection, and meaningful creative work? We consider whether the future might look more like the 1960s than the 2010s—not through regression, but through conscious iteration that prioritizes human flourishing over engagement metrics. -Ai

    If you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode.

    Links To Everything:

    Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT

    Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT

    Matt’s 2nd Channel: https://geni.us/PhotoVideosYT

    Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT

    Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG

    Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG

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    1 h et 40 min
  • 54. Embracing Necessary Imperfections
    Sep 2 2025

    We examine how digital culture's promise of frictionless perfection has created unrealistic expectations that we unconsciously apply to relationships, creativity, and life itself. The conversation explores the psychological residue of living in an attention economy—how algorithmic thinking shapes our behavior even when we consciously reject it, and why we find ourselves reaching backward in time for tools and practices that feel more aligned with human limitations.

    The discussion reveals how consumer culture has colonized our emotional lives, creating cycles of acquisition that promise depth but deliver dopamine hits instead. We explore the radical act of commitment in a culture designed around endless options—whether that's using one typewriter for a month, smoking the same tobacco consistently, or building sustained relationships with imperfect objects. Through examining our relationship with vintage technology and analog tools, we uncover deeper questions about attention, authenticity, and what it means to build genuine depth in a world optimized for surface-level engagement. The conversation suggests that embracing friction and imperfection isn't nostalgia—it's a necessary practice for psychological health in an over-optimized world. -Ai

    If you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode.

    Links To Everything:

    Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT

    Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT

    Matt’s 2nd Channel: https://geni.us/PhotoVideosYT

    Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT

    Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG

    Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG

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    1 h et 19 min
  • 53. The Terrible Master: On Ego, Perception, and the Choice to See Differently
    Aug 19 2025

    We look at David Foster Wallace's "This is Water" commencement speech, examining its central themes of awareness, ego death, and the daily struggle against our "default settings." What starts as a discussion of the speech evolves into a broader exploration of how we navigate modern life—from the challenge of maintaining consciousness in consumer culture to the difficulty of having genuine conversations without blind certainty.

    We explore the paradox of participation versus checking out: how do we engage with contemporary media, technology, and culture while maintaining critical awareness? Through examples ranging from Netflix's "second screen" content to our own consumption of nostalgia-driven blockbusters, we grapple with questions of authenticity, discipline, and the constant work required to see beyond our self-centered perspective. The conversation touches on everything from movie criticism and artistic integrity to the design of modern attention-capture systems and the challenge of curating meaningful experiences in an age of infinite distraction. -Ai

    If you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode.

    Links To Everything:

    Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT

    Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT

    Matt’s 2nd Channel: https://geni.us/PhotoVideosYT

    Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT

    Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG

    Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG

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    1 h et 47 min
  • 52. The Homogenization Problem: Is Culture Losing Itself? PART 2
    Aug 5 2025

    Part two of two.

    We explored the cultural tension between our fascination with the past and uncertainty about the future, using the metaphor of returning to an earlier video game save point when the current level feels impossible to beat. The conversation examined how platforms like YouTube are becoming flooded with AI-generated content, creating what we called a "cobra effect" where attempts to solve one problem create bigger ones. We discussed how the ease of content creation tools has led to an overwhelming amount of low-quality material that drowns out authentic voices.

    Our discussion meandered through the broader cultural phenomenon of nostalgia - from movie soundtracks that transport us back to being fourteen, to our tendency to romanticize past eras while forgetting their difficulties. We questioned whether our comfort and technological convenience might be driving us to seek meaning in the past rather than face the blank page of an uncertain future. The conversation touched on how decentralized culture has fractured our collective stories and myths, leaving many people without a shared vision of progress. We concluded by exploring whether going backward might actually be necessary to move forward - returning to earlier save points in culture to gain fresh perspective on seemingly insurmountable challenges. -Ai

    If you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode.

    Links To Everything:

    Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT

    Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT

    Matt’s 2nd Channel: https://geni.us/PhotoVideosYT

    Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT

    Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG

    Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG

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    49 min
  • 51. The Homogenization Problem: Is Culture Losing Itself? PART 1
    Jul 22 2025

    Part one of two.

    We once again dive into the tension between artistic integrity and algorithmic demands in today's creator economy. As YouTube's algorithms continue evolving in 2025, prioritizing engagement metrics and recommendation systems that analyze billions of signals, we explore what happens when content creators face the pressure to homogenize their work for maximum reach.

    The conversation touches on the current shift away from what industry experts call "the era of excess" or "the Mr. Beastification" of content, examining how viral success can both validate and potentially corrupt creative vision. We discuss the rise of "second screen" content designed for distracted consumption, the psychology of dopamine-driven short-form media, and the fundamental question of whether platforms are prioritizing content over creators. Through personal experiences with viral videos and algorithm rewards, we analyze the delicate balance between commercial success and maintaining one's authentic creative voice—and whether it's possible to resist the pull toward algorithmic optimization while still building a sustainable creative practice. -Ai

    If you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode.

    Links To Everything:

    Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT

    Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT

    Matt’s 2nd Channel: https://geni.us/PhotoVideosYT

    Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT

    Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG

    Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG

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    1 h
  • 50. Fragmented Culture: What Matters When Nothing Really Matters?
    Jul 8 2025

    We examine whether culture has actually become decentralized or if we just live in isolated "slivers" while still being shaped by the same underlying systems. Starting with observations about feeling "out of touch" we explore how everyone now consumes completely different content yet we can still connect meaningfully with friends over shared experiences. This raises questions about what really drives human connection and whether platforms like YouTube and social media create genuine cultural diversity or just the appearance of choice.

    The conversation shifts to fundamental tensions in how we structure our lives - particularly the conflict between work demands and what actually matters. We discuss the absurdity of modern situations where parents have to pay strangers to watch their children so they can focus on work, whether for survival or self-expression. This connects to the loss of extended family and community support systems that historically made work and family life compatible. We question whether our current approach to work, culture, and family serves human needs or just perpetuates systems that benefit markets rather than people. -Ai

    If you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode.

    Links To Everything:

    Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT

    Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT

    Matt’s 2nd Channel: https://geni.us/PhotoVideosYT

    Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT

    Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG

    Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG

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    1 h et 11 min
  • 49. The Human Cost of "Artificial Intelligence": What Are We Trading Away?
    Jun 24 2025

    We dive deep into the seductive promise and hidden costs of AI technology and the question that haunts every creative: what are we trading away for convenience? Through our exploration, we examine how tools shape not just what we make, but who we become in the process.

    We also wrestle with the tension between efficiency and authenticity, discussing everything from DV tape workflows to AI-generated content and the race to the bottom that threatens meaningful creation. This conversation challenges us to consider whether the magic intelligence in the cloud will free us to focus on what matters most, or whether we're surrendering the very friction and deliberateness that gives our work its soul. -Ai

    If you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode.

    Links To Everything:

    Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT

    Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT

    Matt’s 2nd Channel: https://geni.us/PhotoVideosYT

    Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT

    Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG

    Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG

    Voir plus Voir moins
    49 min
  • 48. What Happens When We Stop Believing Anything Is Possible?
    Jun 10 2025

    We examine what happens when the feeling that "anything is possible" starts to fade from creative life. Starting with the mythology of Los Angeles and its role in manufacturing dreams, we dig into the shift from youthful ambition to adult pragmatism and what gets lost in that transition. The conversation explores how being surrounded by people chasing big goals creates an energy that's hard to replicate once life becomes more complicated.

    We discuss the practical realities that erode creative optimism - mounting responsibilities, financial pressures, and the accumulated weight of meetings that don't pan out and projects that stall. But we also examine whether this decline is inevitable or if there are ways to maintain that sense of possibility through intentional community building and creative practice. The episode grapples with finding authentic creative energy in midlife and the challenge of sustaining ambitious work when the path forward feels less clear than it once did. -Ai

    If you enjoyed this episode, please consider giving us a rating and/or a review. We read and appreciate all of them. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next episode.

    Links To Everything:

    Video Version of The Podcast: https://geni.us/StudioSessionsYT

    Matt’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/MatthewOBrienYT

    Matt’s 2nd Channel: https://geni.us/PhotoVideosYT

    Alex’s YouTube Channel: https://geni.us/AlexCarterYT

    Matt’s Instagram: https://geni.us/MatthewIG

    Alex’s Instagram: https://geni.us/AlexIG

    Voir plus Voir moins
    1 h et 19 min