Greg Lindsay's Blog

November 18, 2012  |  permalink

Empires: A film about networks

In May 2011, I was asked to participate in Empires, a documentary bringing “together international philosophers, scientists, artists and business leaders to give description and analysis to the contemporary moment as defined by computational tools and networks. It states that networks are not new and have been forever with us in the evolution of our cities, trade, communications and sciences, in our relations as businesses and nation states, in the circulation of money, food, arms and our shared ecology. Yet something has deeply changed in our experience of time, work, community, the global. Empires looks deeply to unravel how we speak to the realities of the individual and the notion of the public and public ‘good’ in this new world at the confluence of money, cities, computation, politics and science.”

Director Marc Lafia and producer Johanna Schiller have gamely tossed the rough cut of the film online (above); I was fortunate enough to be included. Not that I’ve watched my performance – Marc shot me in a Chinatown park, stoking me into mania. I’m too scared to watch.

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Greg Lindsay is a generalist, urbanist, futurist, and speaker. He is a non-resident senior fellow of the Arizona State University Threatcasting Lab, a non-resident senior fellow of MIT’s Future Urban Collectives Lab, and a non-resident senior fellow of the Atlantic Council’s Scowcroft Strategy Initiative. He was the founding chief communications officer of Climate Alpha and remains a senior advisor. Previously, he was an urban tech fellow at Cornell Tech’s Jacobs Institute, where he explored the implications of AI and augmented reality at urban scale.

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