Factually! with Adam Conover - How to Do Nothing with Jenny Odell (Re-Broadcast)
Episode Date: August 3, 2022In honor of our move to Starburns Audio, we’re taking a week off and running a Factually classic. In this interview from 2019, Adam speaks with Jenny Odell, artist, writer, and author of th...e wonderful book "How To Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy.” Jenny’s message about how to reclaim your attention and the value of seemingly purposeless activity is exactly what we need in our all-too-frantic world. Enjoy, and we’ll be back with a new episode next week! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hello and welcome to Factually. I'm Adam Conover. Thank you for joining me on the show once again.
We have a couple big announcements to make about the show today, so I hope you'll bear with me just for a couple minutes
while I talk about some of the changes that are going to be coming to Factually.
First of all, we are switching podcast networks. We're moving on from Earwolf, which has been our network for many years,
and we are starting a new relationship with Starburns Audio, and we're incredibly excited about this. Starburns is one of the last
independent podcast companies. They love the show. We love them, and we're so excited for what we're
going to be able to do together. Not much is going to change for you folks, except for one thing I'm
very excited about, which is that I am going to be able to add a ton of content and
features to my Patreon page. Specifically, starting today, every episode of Factually will be available
ad-free on my Patreon. That's right. If you go to patreon.com slash adamconover, you can get every
episode of Factually from today on without ads for just five bucks a month. And of course, on top of that, you get bonus
podcast episodes, our live book club and exclusive standup. I don't post anywhere else. And one more
big announcement. We are adding a discord to the Patreon so that fans of the podcast can hang out,
chat about what books they're reading, chat about the book club book, and just generally,
you know, have fun online. So look, if you want all
of that, if you want to join our community, get ad free episodes of Factually, get bonus podcast
episodes, our live Patreon book club, and a whole lot more, head to patreon.com slash Adam Conover.
Plans start at just five bucks a month. And for this week only, if you start a new annual
subscription, you will get 15% off. That's right. Sign up for 12
months all at once. You'll get 15% off the Patreon membership, the whole shebang, and I'm only doing
that for a week. So if you're interested in supporting the show, and I really hope you are,
head to patreon.com slash Adam Conover. Now, let's get to this week's show. Because we are
moving our show over to Starburns this week, we are rerunning one of our very favorite episodes from the past couple years.
You know, it's kind of a tough time out there.
We're constantly being bombarded by terrible news, by social media, by people yelling at each other on Twitter.
It can, you know, kind of start a cacophony in your brain.
Well, today we are rerunning an episode that I think is the perfect antidote to all of that chaos.
It's my interview with Jenny O'Dell, who wrote the wonderful book, How to Do Nothing.
This book blew my mind and changed my life.
It's all about how we resist the attention economy, how we refocus on what really matters to us,
and how through just a simple act of noticing the world around us, we can change our entire way of being.
I know that sounds like some loosey-goosey stuff, but it really is incredibly compelling
work.
And you know, one of the things that I really appreciate about Jenny, especially in this
conversation, is that in addition to being a writer and a thinker, she's also a working
artist.
And so the point of view that she has is informed by her work as an artist.
And that's a perspective that we don't often get to hear, especially not on this show,
where we tend to interview a lot of journalists and scholars.
Frankly, listening back to it makes me want to interview a lot more artists.
And that's something I'm going to be looking to do in the coming months.
So if you have any suggestions of anyone you think I should talk to, reach out to factually
at adamconover.net.
I always love to hear from you.
But let's get to this interview.
This was one of the most heartwarming, like truly soulful conversations I think I've ever had. And I'm
so excited for you to be able to hear it once again. Without further ado, let's listen to my
interview from 2019 with Jenny O'Dell. Jenny, thank you so much for coming on the show.
Thanks for having me.
Thank you so much for coming on the show.
Thanks for having me.
I loved the book.
I read it, as I said in our intro, over a week in Alaska when I was on a boat with no internet, which was the perfect place to read it.
I love the title, How to Do Nothing.
Can you explain quickly how doing nothing can be an active resistance in the attention
economy?
Yeah, it's a little bit paradoxical, right? Like
the title is inherently a bit weird sounding. And the idea that doing nothing is somehow doing
something can be a little confusing. But I think, you know, like if you are in a situation in which
you are expected to be producing something all the time, and when I say producing, you know,
I mean,
work, but also things like expressions and representations of your life,
and representations of your identity. You know, if you're expected to do that all the time, then just not doing that, not only is an act of resistance, but is surprisingly difficult.
It's difficult enough that it does feel like you're doing something.
So really, you know, I think it's, you know, it's nothing within the context of kind of like something all the time, all day, every day. Right. Let's just expand on that idea, because
the book made me aware of this trend in our society that I realized in reading it, I've been subject to, but I've never really
thought distinctly about, which is the sort of productivity culture, both in the overt ways,
which are very noticeable, rise and grind, you know, kind of culture, go, go, go, that sort of ethos, but also the way in which you talk about how our social media,
our, you know, the rest of our economy is sort of structured so that we are incentivized to
constantly be producing something of value for someone else. That productivity culture isn't
just that rise and grind. It's also turning every aspect of your life into content or into some sort of economic unit. Right. Yeah. It's sort of like,
you know, ultimately you become the product or like every utterance you make as a product.
And the thing about products is that they are kind of static and optimizable and can be evaluated.
are kind of static and optimizable and can be evaluated.
I mean, I find something really troubling about this phenomenon of spending a really long time crafting some kind of phrase and then just throwing it out there and then just
constantly checking back and seeing how it's doing.
Right, right.
I mean, I say that.
I really love seeing things that other people write
on Twitter. So, you know, but I think like the overall kind of like structure of it feels kind
of gross sometimes. Yeah, there's this thing that we do now. I mean, as a comedian, I am used to
having funny thoughts. And I used to, you know, before Twitter, I would put those out on stage,
or I would, you know, find some sort of creative outlet for them. And then Twitter became a place that I put those thoughts. But now those
thoughts are sort of turned into this sort of unit that I'm constantly, oh, how did it do? How did it
do? Oh, that thought wasn't as good as that thought because it didn't get as many little
icon. There aren't as many numbers next to the little icons on it. And so it's somehow been
like quantified and monetized in this odd way.
Yeah, totally.
I think that's a really good example.
I mean, I think one of the times I was probably the least active on social media was when I was writing the book.
Because I'm not, you know, I guess sometimes I see people like sharing, you know, like a sentence here and there from what they're working on.
But it's just, I just felt like I needed this sort of incubation time. And I think that there's something very
different about spending the time and kind of collecting those thoughts, like, you know,
kind of what you're describing. And then having the time to work those into something larger,
like a performance or a book, and have that be the thing that's evaluated, not these kind of like small kind
of atomistic little, you know, pieces of it. Like imagine if someone were a musician and they were
like, I'm going to write an album and they put out one song at a time and wait to see how it does
and then like made the next song based on the last one. Like I bet the last song would be terrible.
on the last one, like I bet the last song would be terrible. Like it would just devolve into like total mush. So, you know, again, I recognize that, you know, different artists and writers
processes are different, but I do think that there is some kind of like removal from that
sphere of constant evaluation that's like really important for incubating something.
The fact that you say that you want to have that complete thought, you want
to not quantify those thoughts on the internet instead, you know, have them and work with them
in a deeper way, seems really connected to the book itself, because the book is so much a
connection of looking at these issues through different lenses, through different ways,
that collide in surprising senses. Like, so we're talking about, I think, the sort of clearest
takeaway from the book about doing nothing in the social media context. But how does that apply to
completely different parts of the economy or our lives on earth, that concept of doing nothing?
Yeah, I think it's something I was surprised by in writing the book was the ways in which these things, these arguments that I'm making that seem specific to social media have a really long history culturally.
You know, putting one's foot down, you know, in the context of like inhumane working conditions in which there is, you know, it's every man for himself and people are sort of pitted against each other.
And in my research into that, I was like, wow, this sounds really familiar.
This sounds like, you know, a bunch of abused freelance workers or something, right? something right like um it's like really familiar um and uh and just kind of like tracing this longer um this longer history of um these these kind of depressingly almost like small islands
in which people um were pursuing something like that um in a longer story of this like
continued crush of just like total determinism and like productivity at all costs
and like extreme bottom line mentality at the expense of like human health and just like
survival like psychological survival um and then i also talk a lot about art um in the book because
i teach art and i make art but that's another thing where if you kind of look back through
history you see that um things like art and contemplation um and anything that's another thing where if you kind of look back through history, you see that things like art and contemplation and anything that's not sort of productive in a really super obvious, narrow way has always been threatened in culture in different ways. makes this current moment not necessarily less dystopian, but like an unprecedented dystopia
is way scarier than one that has precedent that you can kind of like look back and see
a little bit more about like how we got here. Right. And that's one of my favorite lenses to
look at any kind of issue through as well, because everyone is always saying about every issue facing
us that this is the first time we've ever faced this, that, you know, we've, we've never seen an election like this one before. We've never faced a problem of
this magnitude. And the fact is we usually have, and it makes them, it makes them seem less
frightening, but it also gives you a different approach to facing those issues when you are
looking at them through the lens of how other folks have faced them through history. And one of the things I'm really interested in is that that broader view that you take
means that you make a much larger critique of social media or the productivity ethos
in our economy than most commentators do.
You don't just say, hey, we should all be quitting these sites, or even that these sites
should be reforming their algorithms or et cetera. You're saying something a lot more complex than
that. I just pulled a line from the book where you say, I'm less interested in a mass exodus
from Facebook and Twitter than I am in a mass movement of attention. What happens when people regain control over their attention
and begin to direct it again together?
I'm really fascinated by that thesis statement.
Can you expand on that at all?
Yeah.
And I should say, you know,
in terms of like the writing that's been done
and the work that's been done on things like
persuasive design and social media
and trying to, you know,
perhaps regulate that. I am kind of all for that. I feel like my argument isn't necessarily like
contrary to that, but it's kind of maybe just from a different perspective or it's like zoomed out a
little bit or something. Because like my problem is really with the idea of productivity overall.
One of the things that I ask in the very beginning of the book is like,
when you say productivity, it's like productive of what and for whom and why.
I mean, I think we can all think of examples, right?
Like individually or culturally where like, you know,
something was supposedly made more efficient in the service of some larger
structure that was totally inefficient.
And so I think there are just oftentimes when you kind of like zoom out and you're like,
okay, yeah, like you're being, you're producing something, but like, is that even worth producing?
Or like, is that actually like horribly destructive?
Right.
You can do the TPS reports faster, but why not ask, do the TPS reports need to be done?
Why are we spending our lives doing these reports?
Right. Or it's like building a really efficient coal plant. It's like, that's the least efficient,
you know, possible thing to do, but it's like, oh, but it's like really high tech inside.
So that's kind of how I feel about the whole thing. So I think that's why my, my argument
sounds a little bit different where it's not like, you know, quit social media, but like get control of your time. Because usually that rhetoric is still taking for granted this
kind of take control of your time so you can produce more. Like that's left kind of unquestioned.
And the other thing that it really leaves unquestioned is the idea that time and
attention are currency. And like any other currency, like that, it's sort of just interchangeable and
distinguishable units of value. Whereas I think, you know, in everyday life, we all know that
different time feels differently, and that there are many different forms of attention.
Even though one very shallow type is encouraged by, you know, social media, there are other forms
of attention. So, you know, those are assumptions
that like, I'm kind of interested in pushing on. And that's why the sort of like, just quit
Facebook once and for all. It's just, I think I described it in the book as fighting the battle
on the wrong plane. Yeah, let's keep talking about that in terms of attention, because
yeah, you discuss in the book how uh social media sites or
even the way advertisers divide up our you know they're trying to grab our attention and and uh
you know television networks sell our attention to advertisers right for them to uh put commercials
in front of right um but that's all taking our attention as one you know sort of infinitely
divisible unit right it's just people have attention as one, you know, sort of infinitely divisible unit,
right? It's just people have attention and we are gathering it, we're selling it. In the case of
something like Facebook or Twitter, they even resurface that to the users in terms of seeing
how, you know, you'll see how many times your video was viewed or your post was liked to see
how much attention it got. But you point out that, yeah, there's different types of attention. You
can be half paying attention to something. You can be thinking about something thoughtfully. You can be engaging
with something critically. And you talk a lot about deepening attention. Can you tell me what
you mean by that? Yeah, I think a lot of it just comes down to kind of like pacing and patience,
right? Like really shallow attention is which is like the type of
attention that advertisers would like to think that they are getting from you is like uncritical
and shallow like i saw it therefore i consumed the message like end of story like right there
were there were no obstacles in that right um and there were no maybe like questions about the
circumstances around that ad and you know maybe like like who owns this company or like why is this ad being served to me?
Like these are not questions that are part of that really shallow attention.
And so I think, you know, the kind of deeper attention that I'm talking about is really just a form of seeking or even like inviting the possibility of context, as well as kind of like looking at
something from a slightly different perspective. So like, this is kind of a depressing example. But
yesterday, my boyfriend, Joe Vikes, who's also a writer, and comedian, he and I were talking about
Instagram ads and how, you know, it's possible that maybe we're talking about how like, we don't
feel good when we look at Instagram, you know, even though I like all these people, they're my
friends. But, but it's just kind of, you know, you don't feel good. And then in that moment of
feeling not good, you're served an ad, which is when you're pretty, you're vulnerable, right?
Yeah.
And so we just kind of got curious about these ads. And so we were like, one at a time,
we like each went through our Instagram stories and just like flipped through that.
Like we weren't actually looking at them.
We just wanted to see which ads we were being served because I had never seen which ads he gets and he had never seen which ones I got.
And it was super interesting.
Like his were all snack foods and mine were mine was I felt very insulting.
It was like very like yoga, like goop. I was like, excuse me.
Like there's nothing wrong with with yoga particularly, but you didn't feel that that actually was a was a correct reduction of your personality, I suppose.
personality, I suppose. Well, I mean, okay. I like yoga, but I guess, I mean, it was the more sort of like, like the, the whole, the overall image I was getting of like, you know, yoga amidst like
all of the other sort of like, um, organic, whatever facial products, I don't know. Um,
it was just like, Oh, like it's so gross. Um, but you know, I realized that, uh, it's,
that's a very different way of looking at ads, right? Like I, I realized that it's that's a very different way of looking at ads.
Right.
Like I I realized that I'd never actually looked at the ads like I'd I'd looked through them maybe or like and I think that's what you're that's what's supposed to happen.
Right.
Like you're in the middle of doing something and then you see an ad and it just sort of like goes into your head and you're like, OK, next.
Right.
But like, you know, actually like holding your finger down and being like, what is in this ad? And why am I getting this ad? And like, what is the overall picture when I look
at all of these ads? And like, don't get me wrong, I don't like looking at ads either way.
But if you have to look at ads, like there is, you know, there are different ways to look at it.
And I think that extends to a lot of other things where, you know, you can take like a slightly weird perspective on a lot of media and social media and ads and see, you know, some get some information that's kind of like interesting and maybe useful.
Well, it's really interesting.
It connects to something I'm doing in my in my own work in the live show and touring right now.
in my own work in the live show and touring right now,
I talk about how ads,
it's been shown work better on you the less attention you pay to them
because the images,
the connection with the image and the brand
just sort of leech into your mind
without you fighting back.
But if you're actually,
if you actually watch the ad very closely,
like I feel like I used to more often when I was younger,
when I would see an ad come on,
I'd be like, what's the fucking deal with this ad?
That's like a way to,
I mean, you know, you're maybe not going to escape, you know, say Apple's luxury halo, right?
Or something like that.
Like those deep image associations might still work on you, but at least you're thinking critically about it, which is better than not in terms of erecting your own defenses, I suppose.
Right.
And it feels different, right? Like I think like I find
myself using this phrase a lot of like it like this. It matters where like the center of gravity
is. And I think like in that passive moment in which like, yeah, the ad is just sort of like
leeching this brand into your mind, like the center of gravity is not really in you. It's like
you're just a sort of like empty vessel and you're like,
all of these things are scrolling past you and some of them are making it in and some of them
aren't. Versus like, if you sit down and make a decision to like, look at ads, like study these
ads, you know, then that's coming from some, it's an intentionality that's coming from like a
decision that you individually made. And I think that's one of the things that I just worry about in general
with the attention economy is this like faculty
for intentional decision-making about information.
As someone who really loves to spend time researching weird things
and like my favorite place to be other than outside is the library.
And I like to just, you know, pick like some, you know, choose a topic on purpose and then physically go to that place and see not only, you know, the book I was looking for, but all of the related books about that, regardless of what time in which they were written.
You know, they could be really old or really new and just decide to kind of spend the time getting that information.
It's so different.
Like I was just telling someone the other day, like imagine if you when you went into the library and someone threw a bunch of books at you.
Yeah, that's the experience of going on the Internet is being confronted by that chaos.
I mean, you know, I described in the intro the feeling of, you know, being confronted
with all of these articles from my Twitter feed or my RSS feed. You know, I try to use an RSS
reader as a healthier choice on the internet. And even that results in me queuing up tab after tab
of unrelated decontextualized pieces that I am maybe interested in, but, you know, I'm maybe
not prepared to take in right at that particular moment.
I find this interesting,
but I don't want to read it right now.
But if I close the tab,
I'll never find it again.
So what do I do?
And yeah, that's exactly what that would feel like
if you went to the library
and they were like,
ah, here's a bunch of books, right?
And you're like, I don't know.
Should I read this now?
They're like, it's good.
Okay.
All right.
But there's no time.
I don't know.
What do I do?
Yeah.
And it wouldn't even be like subjects
that you wanted to know about in a lot of cases.
I mean, you know, like that you feel,
it seems like you're being very like sort of
comparatively responsible about it.
And like, I just started using Twitter lists more
to like try to kind of combat this,
but that's just like changing,
like which books are thrown at you in the library,
not the fact that they're being thrown at you.
Yeah.
Well, I want to get
back to that point about, you said about the way that Instagram had, you know, boxed you in with
the yoga and goopy stuff, because you write about how that sort of compartmentalization of our
identities into these little boxes is really almost a violence done against ourselves,
that ourselves are so much more, our identities are so much more fluid and dynamic and,
you know, nuanced than that. Can you talk about that at all?
Yeah. I think I call it like an algorithmic honing in, which is like, if you imagine
an algorithmic honing in, which is like, if you imagine accepting or following all of the recommendations given to you algorithmically, so, you know, there could be like things that
you should listen to or watch or read or whatever. And you did that very diligently.
You would almost kind of start to reach this like very stable state of like a like a hyper uh like a person with like very
identifiable characteristics that like incidentally would be very easy to advertise to right um and
so you kind of become like a really easy target right like an easier and easier target the more
you participate in that targeting and that's the person that they want you to become if that's
their ideal is that you
become that person so that you'll be so easily marketed to. Right. And I mean, I think you can
see it like, you know, just culturally, right? Like, I feel like I see aesthetically a lot of
people congealing into the same thing. I'm sure that's all, you know, happened to some degree,
like even, you know, in the past, but, but, you know, the counter example that I give in the book
is like, when you hear something, I listen to the radio a lot because I don't have an aux input in my car.
And so, when I hear something on the radio that is a song, it's like not an unfamiliar genre,
it's just, it's in a genre that I wouldn't think that I like. And I really like the song. And not
only do I not like it, I can't explain why. And like, that's a really
interesting kind of feeling to dwell on where you're like, okay, well, if I don't know why
I like something, then who is doing the liking? You know, like on top of like, why do I like it?
Who likes it? And why is that surprising to me? And like, who's the me that's being surprised?
Like it gets really complicated very quickly. And I think there are many other actually, you know, instances in which
if you try to draw a hard line around yourself as an identity, you just can't do it. Even though
all of these forces are kind of joining together to try to make you feel more like an identifiable
thing, like a personal brand that will ultimately unsuccessful, because that is just, I don't think that's how identity
works. It's certainly not how I feel my own identity. And I think that's something to be
celebrated. Because if you, if you were to become this sort of reverse engineered thing by your
recommendations, I would argue that you're sort of like, you're kind of like done, right? Like you're done changing. And there isn't like, for me, there wouldn't really be a reason
to like keep like living another day to like see if something different happens, you know?
It's kind of like this fantasy of like seeing all of time and experience stretched out in front of
you. And you kind of like think that, you know, in this moment, like everything that you'll ever be interested in.
Yeah. But that's so, that's so reductive and, and limiting. It's like shaving off all the
interesting edges of ourselves and turning everything into straight lines. And I mean,
this, yeah, this connects to, man, this book touches on so many issues, but like a passage
I underlined you, you wrote,
as physical beings, we're literally open to the world, suffused every second with air from
somewhere else. I think that's so beautiful. And then as social, sorry, that was my editorializing
in the middle there. And you didn't write that about your own sentence. And you read,
as social beings, we're equally determined by our context. And I thought that was very wonderfully put that ourselves are permeable in the actual world.
We are influenced by each other and by the world around us as with every breath that we take, but also in the context that we're in.
And yeah, what you're describing there that social media and that the attention economy does
to us is really, you know, and the idea of personal branding and the idea of individualism,
right, is sort of shaving off that context and trying to divorce us from the context that we
naturally share with other people. But then that's a betrayal of what our actual self is made of,
in a way. Does that make sense?
Yeah, it does.
And I think, you know, beyond that, it also makes it a lot harder to change your mind.
You know, if I mentioned in the book that I worked at a really big clothing brand for a while.
So I know all about, you know, just kind of like branding 101 or whatever.
You know, the brand is supposed to be timeless. It's not supposed to change. It's supposed to be highly identifiable. Um,
people are supposed to be able to kind of count on this brand, right. Uh, to not have changed.
And so there's obvious problems for something like a personal brand where, um, you know, it,
it's your, your heavily scrutinized and all of your kind of past expressions are available to everyone.
And so it makes it a lot scarier, I think, to admit that you're wrong.
That's something you almost, I feel like you almost never see online.
Admit that you're wrong and be forgiven and change your mind and learn something.
Like these are all things like that, you know, happen very frequently within, you know, groups
of friends or families or
just normal human context. But, but, uh, you know, something like Twitter is pretty hostile
to something like that. Yeah. But I mean, if we like, I remember you're right about brands. Like
I got so mad when the Slack logo changed the, uh, the, the, for those who don't know the,
the work instant messaging act, this
is how sucked I sucked in. I am to productivity cultures that my favorite social media app is the
work chat app I use, but they changed the logo. And I was so angry. I was like, this logo is so
the new logo is so bad. I will defend that it is bad, but, uh, still I was, I don't like it either.
I'm still waiting around for them to change it. I'm, I'm still, Oh, this is bad. But still, I was, I don't like it either. I'm still waiting around for them to change it.
I'm still, oh, this is bad. And imagine if I treated my friends that way, right? If that was
the way we treated each other, like, I can't believe you changed your clothes. What are you
doing? Why'd you take off the hat? Oh, you ruined your brand, you know? It's not know it's not it's not uh that's not how humans are or should be
yeah no i agree and i think you know you can see this happen a lot in like relationships right like
where um you know you you start dating someone right and it's like i think for some people
they're like like the person they're dating changes and they're like i didn't sign on for this you know like they were like when you
when you started dating someone it's like i expected you to just like stay like the same
version of the person that i liked forever and then you're also imagining that like you would
also say the same therefore you would always like this like same person yeah um and and i find it
just like so lovely and endearing when you see like one partner in a
relationship, like suddenly take up some like weird hobby. And like the other person is just
like, that's great. I support that. You know, like, like acknowledging that like this person
is going to like change and like learn different things and just become a different person and that you're like on board for that. Yeah. I want to talk about there's so much nature in the book.
You talk about how to resist the attention economy.
One of your answers to that is that you started learning to recognize bird songs,
which I thought is the most interesting right turn of an answer to that question.
Can you talk about how those things go together? Why paying attention to the natural world around you is a way of resisting
the attention economy? Yeah, I think that there's kind of maybe two different ways. And one,
like more generally, is just that if you, you know, if you've lived in the same place for a long time,
which I have, and you have heard bird song, like, you know, generally for your entire life,
it's very humbling to learn that, you know, you're not just hearing like three different
songs or five different songs, you're hearing like 20 different songs.
And that those are all from individual birds that you sort of learn to recognize.
And it's just, you know, not too hard to extrapolate outward from that to like, you know, what are all of the other things that I'm lumping into one thing that are actually 10 things?
And I think that, again, that's something that like is so different from, you know,
being online and needing to look like you, everything already, which is just absurd.
This is kind of like the opposite where it's like, oh, I actually the more I learn about this, the less I realize I know.
And that continues. I mean, I got into birdwatching years ago and I still, you know, to this day, I will hear a bird that I thought I knew make some
weird sound and it, you know, like, and it means some strange thing, or it's like some part of the
year, you know, and I, it just, it's very clear to me that I'll kind of never get to the bottom
of that. And I think that that feeling of, of curiosity and investment in learning something,
but also acknowledging that I'm going to have to continue to pay very
close attention probably for the rest of my life to really learn about that. It's just like,
it's so refreshingly different from how I think judgment is exercised online.
And then the second more, you know, like I could definitely be accused of like the California
hippie element. But I really, you. But I really strongly believe this is that as I've gotten to know individual birds like the crows that visit my balcony every morning.
And crows can recognize human faces and are very intelligent animals.
It's just, you know, I spend a lot of time looking at them looking at me.
And they also will like stop me on the street
like if i'm within like a couple blocks of my apartment like it actually happened yesterday
and i was like i don't have a peanut and i was like so worried um but uh but yeah you know the
fact that uh this non-human um but social and like intelligent animal is looking at me who is also a social animal.
Um, you know, it's like this really, um, helpful, like perspective that is not only, um, you know, outside of the very myopic kind of personal branding perspective.
It's outside of even the human like ego perspective. And I just, you know, I can't totally explain it. But
if I am in some like deep funk, or like I am, you know, convinced that I live in this like
apocalyptic dystopia or something like, you know, I could be having the worst day and just spending time around just
non-human forms of intelligence and sentience. It just so reliably breaks me out of that.
And then, of course, it leads to this recognition that I exist in this kind of community,
like a human social community, but also a more than human social community,
that I am in a time
and in a place. And like that kind of grounding has really been a huge lifesaver for me.
Right. So that idea of context and of being a human who's physically incarnated in a time and
a place, right? In a world that's around you that isn't just bits and packets of data and isn't just even human-created concrete but is also a portion of the natural world that's on a particular spot of the globe that has a particular climate, particular flora and fauna.
That's a big, big part of the book.
as that's a big, big part of the book. And you have so many anecdotes in the book about how you return your attention to that over and over again, whether it's by birdwatching. By the way,
I love that you say in the book, you say birdwatching, we should really call it bird
noticing. That it's like, yeah, you're not really all you do is like, hey, there's a bird. Oh,
there's a blue jay. I know what that one is. It's a blue jay.
Maybe I'll write it down in my book.
I noticed it.
I see that it was there.
That's such a beautiful, simple action to do over and over again to simply notice something.
And you also talk about how you went to a creek that went to your, I don't want to tell the story for you, but through your childhood home and sort of followed where it went and where the watershed came from.
And bringing so so tell me about how bringing your attention to those things in the natural world, which are, you know, the realist of all physical objects, how that is a tonic for our attention economy.
is a tonic for our attention economy.
Yeah.
So that creek is like maybe a really good example where I think it has to do with kind of grabbing onto something that is not only like real, right.
But it, it wasn't put there.
I mean, that's the funny thing to say about a creek, right.
But it wasn't engineered.
It's not an amenity.
It's just there. It's a consequence of the fact that water has to go somewhere.
Yeah.
And so I...
Water just trickles down the hillsides like it rainfalls. The land is arranged in a particular way of peaks and valleys. So water flows in this particular pattern. And that's where a creek forms. And that's the only reason the creek is there.
this particular pattern. And that's where a creek forms. And that's the only reason the creek is there. Right. Yeah. And it's been there for a while. You know, it's been there from before
Cupertino was a city, which is Cupertino is where I grew up. Yeah. And, and so I think just
paying attention to that. And I should also say like, this creek is similar to a lot of urban
creeks in that it's not necessarily that it's hidden away.
And from the research that I've done, it sounds like, you know, especially like in the 70s, like it was just like really not taken care of.
And there was just like trash in there.
And like, so it's not it's not as bad as it could be, but it's certainly not something that's like very enthusiastically like offered up for observation.
When you're when you're like, you know, it's like the creek is like,
oh, there's that like one weird bridge
when I'm driving on, you know, Stevens Creek or something.
I mean, it sounds like the LA River here in Los Angeles.
It's there, people are aware it's there,
but nobody thinks about,
nobody even thinks I'm crossing the river when they do
because it's just this sort of channel
that we don't give a thought to.
Yeah, exactly.
It's very similar. It's actually really, really similar because the
second part of this creek I wrote about has a concrete bottom. So it's probably very similar.
Yes.
But yeah, it's like, you know, just standing there and kind of thinking like, okay, like,
A, this is here. B, this water came from somewhere. And then this now makes you have to think about like weather systems.
And like I write about the fact that, you know, sometimes we get atmospheric rivers in California where the water is coming from the Philippines, which is where half my family is from.
And so I suddenly became way more interested in rain and just thinking about where clouds are coming from. And just it kind of like very quickly opens up onto this whole level of reality that is pretty frequently unacknowledged.
I mean, I think it depends on where you are and how people feel about it there.
But for the most part, it is similar to this creek, which is this thing that it's sort of like you can see in urban planning.
They're like, well, this has to go somewhere.
And so they're kind of like routing it through things it literally goes through the apple campus which i find just to
be like a really funny detail um and so like in the midst of this this tech campus right which is
like this landscape of efficiency where all of these like very efficient products are coming out
of you ultra designed yeah yeah like you have this not really designed old thing kind of going through i mean
it's not totally accurate because you know there's always been kind of infrastructural
engineering that goes into like urban creeks but but the fact of its existence right is really old
and it's kind of um not not possible to really argue with it and i i find it um you know helpful
to think about just personally for some of the reasons I mentioned earlier, like just kind of getting outside of this human centric and very kind of endless present type of mindset.
But I think collectively it's only going to become more important to pay attention to things like that because like the I think a lot about the kind of like granular everyday felt effects of something like climate change.
And like a lot of it, it's going to be things like that, right?
Like flooding.
It's like, oh, right.
Like there's water and it has to go somewhere.
And that's non-negotiable.
You cannot engineer away water.
You know, like it's kind of, or the fact that like things normally happen at a certain time and now they're going to start happening at like weird times.
beneath and around us are important ways of being reminded of what we're ultimately beholden to,
like whether we want to think that or not. Yeah, we're living on, I mean, here in Los Angeles, I'm living on the San Andreas fault, whether or not, you know, no matter how high tech my life
gets, I'm still living on the intersection of two tectonic plates. And that's going to
determine something about my
life. And that's still a context that I need to be aware of. And that it, you know, I can
develop a deeper understanding of the place I live by becoming aware of it.
Yeah. And, and as you know, I'm terrified of earthquakes, like, don't get me wrong. But I
think that there is something like, I don't really know what the word is for it. Certainly not reassuring, but there's just something very different about being like acknowledging that you're subject to forces like that, that, again, we're not kind of put here by any one person, that we're all kind of subject to that.
It provides this like really important limit.
Like I read a book recently that that
brought up this uh phrase inferno of the same um to describe it's by the author of um i'm forgetting
his name but he wrote the burnout society um but it's not the burnout society it's a different book
um but he talks about the inferno of the same it's like this kind of um this if you can if you can sort of have everything right like um and
everything sort of exists for you to consume or have or see um like that's actually a very
depressing situation because it never kind of throws you back upon yourself and you never
have an actual encounter with the truly other um like something that uh you don't understand or that you can't control.
And, and that he's basically, he was arguing that like, this is the, these are the conditions
for like actual like desire and aliveness is like, and it's similar to what I talk about
in the book was the Martin Buber, the I thou idea that there's like a difference between
an I it relationship, which is like everything exists for me or in relationship to me as something to be used.
Yeah, it's my food or it's my person to have sex with
or it's my opportunity to go retreat.
Everything is for my use.
Like things are in a video game in many cases.
It's like everything has some purpose
for me to make use of it.
Right, exactly.
Like it's not just there.
Yeah. And so I think, you know, things like, you know, acknowledging like watersheds and,
you know, tectonic plates and just these things that, you know, they predate us and they
condition our existence, again, whether we choose to acknowledge that or not.
Even though that's really scary at a time like this, I think it's also just a really, you know, it's important to feel that encounter with something that is not under your control.
Well, we have to take a quick break, but we'll be right back with more Jenny O'Dell.
I don't know anything So we were talking about finding context in the natural world
and how understanding these sort of forces outside of ourselves is so important.
But you also talk a lot about how that context exists between people,
that in face-to-face interactions, family interactions, friend interactions, there's so much irreducible detail in how we interact with each other that we are – when we're in face-to-face or in small groups, we're constantly negotiating.
And how – what a rich thing that is and how that is almost completely lost when we
take those conversations to social media, for example. Can you speak on that at all?
Yeah. I think that there's just a lot of ways of perceiving and knowing that are embodied,
right? Like we are humans and bodies, at least for the time being. And so, you know, it's like this idea that somehow you could fully capture all of that in a
purely verbal format, not to mention like 140 characters. You know,
it's kind of.
Well, 280 now and now it's 280.
Come on, they fixed everything. It's 280 now.
Yeah.
Yeah, I just, I think it's kind of part of the larger argument that I'm making about context,
which is that like so much of the meaning of any expression is the circumstances in which it was expressed
and kind of the context around that.
expressed and kind of the the context around that um and so uh you know i think that even for someone let's say like who um for whatever reason like can't um can't um often communicate with
other people in person like there's still something very different about let's say like
having a phone conversation with one person versus 280 characters communicated to like hundreds of thousands of people.
And not only hundreds of thousands of people,
but like people might show up
in this weird sort of nebulous audience
that you didn't even think were there.
Yeah.
Oh, that happens constantly to me on Twitter.
Yeah, you write something
and you think you have in mind
the person who's going to read it.
And then people who you did not intend at all, read it and bring a meaning to it
that you did not intend. And you find yourself in this weird position of, of having said something
that you didn't think you were saying it's it's we're, we're all familiar with that horrible
clusterfuck. Right. Yeah. And I think it, it has to do, you know or it's some of it's inevitable,
right. But, but like an interesting thing has been been, you know, I have now written this book.
The book is somewhat, you know, inevitably alienated from me.
It is out in the world.
People can, you know, have interpretations of it that I did not intend, like in good and bad ways.
And that's not, there's not necessarily anything wrong with that.
But like, it's a book. So it's kind of long and you have to sit through it. And like people who contact me about the book, you know, have spent the time. And, you know, it's it's not it's hard to imagine having a knee jerk reaction to a book that you read the entirety of.
reaction to a book that you read the entirety of. And so, but it's way easier to imagine having a knee-jerk reaction to a sentence or a headline or like a small snippet of a video, especially when
not only are you seeing it isolated, you're seeing it isolated and then followed by everyone else's
knee-jerk reactions. Yeah. So I think, I think a lot about the kind of context in which information is presented and, you know, obviously what that does for reactions to it, but also then over time, what that does for what is even getting expressed in the first place, because in a kind of horrible way, I feel like individuals are becoming their own marketing departments, doing their own kind of consumer research. And so over time, you kind
of start to see like these expressions being shaped by those contexts or made for them
specifically at the expense of forms of expression that require more context and time.
Oh, absolutely. I mean, the experience of being on Twitter, for instance, is the experience of trying to craft thoughts and ideas that are going to do well in that very specific environment where, you know, all context is removed and people are only reading that one sentence.
is the, you know, the internet was originally this wonderful force where we could all become publishers or broadcasters. And now we're seeing what that's actually like once everybody, once
literally everybody is a broadcaster. I mean, you know, for instance, you know, 15 years ago,
you know, Jon Stewart was complaining about Fox News, right? Now we live in a world where
everybody, you know, everybody in that group, the Fox News viewers, have all become Fox News themselves.
They're all making those posts.
They're all saying the same things that they would say if they were on the air.
And the same thing goes for any other group of folks.
When I tweet an article about urbanism or whatever,
I phrase it almost as though I'm writing a headline for Curbed.com or whatever it is.
I phrase it almost as though I'm writing a headline for curbed.com or whatever it is.
And I think the point that you make is that, correct me if I'm wrong, that the sort of movements that we need among people to actually make change in the world can't happen in that
space, right?
happen in that space, right? In that context-free, very surface level, very reactive space, we can't focus enough as a group and we don't have the context that we need to actually
make change in the world. Is that correct? Yeah. And I mean, I will say that I wouldn't
want to discount, you know, the potential for spreading awareness of something, you know, on social media.
I think, you know, like there are many like hashtag campaigns to point to where, you know, in terms of just like speed of getting the word out about something.
I mean, I think that's kind of amazing.
Of course, that can also be used for terrible things. But then, you know, beyond just kind of being aware of an issue, like the actual part of like learning, you know, the context and the history behind it and having like having discussions with other people in which you can kind of like work out your ideas, which is something I really believe in.
so many of the ideas in my books, I feel like they emerged, like literally within conversation with some other person that I know, like, or maybe like one or two other friends, like over drinks.
And so, I, and similarly, I was kind of looking back through the history of successful activism
and seeing this pattern over and over again of small, small-ish, like groups that are small enough where you have a kind of, you're recognized
in them as an individual and there's a context for what you say and what you have said
and what has been kind of like said and accomplished in that group. And then those
groups are kind of existing in this almost like federated structure where they are all in touch
with each other, let's say across the country. So that, you know, if one group kind of comes up with something interesting
and new, like they can share it with the others quickly. Um, but like that kind of, um, collection
of, of kind of like concentrated nodes is very different than just like a sea of under
undifferentiated, all completely, totally connected points.
And the way information spreads through that kind of network
is going to be really different.
And, you know, like I just, I even see it, right,
like in my own class, like I just see,
I've seen in my art classes,
like ideas kind of like forming within a 14- person group where people feel like proud of their accomplishments and feel like they're seen and heard by other people in the group.
And I feel like that's just so like that is so necessary for kind of coming up with with new ideas, which we definitely need a lot of right now.
And new and like nuanced and complex ideas, not soundbite ideas.
And so, this is what I love about the book, because I love the connection between
the contexts that we find in nature when you're, you know, going for a walk in the woods,
and there's so many different levels on which everything's operating. You know, there's the
context of geology, there's the context of, you know, the watersh's, there's the context of geology. There's the context of,
you know, the watersheds, there's the context of, you know, which species are able to survive in
the soil type and et cetera, that, that makes it a rich place. And that gives us, you know,
gives that place a lot of possibilities and power. And then when we're seeing it, when we're coming
together in those small groups as individuals, we have a similar amount of rich context that, okay, you come from this place, you have this identity, you have this background,
you have these abilities, and I'm going to take you as a full real person, right? And not try to
reduce that. And we've got these connections between us. And there's so much richness there
that we can understand and that we need to understand in order to create a lot of possibility and power.
And what the attention economy does is it strips all of that away.
And we just have these where we each become these little boxes.
Does that does that sound I'm really paraphrasing your work a lot.
But no, no, no. Yeah, that's absolutely right. And, and I think, you know, alongside the, the algorithmic honing in that I, that I mentioned, I think there's also, you know, this risk of only being, only being in contact with people you 100% agree with, which I don't think, and not even like, because, because of where it's happening, it's like agree with in a sort of in a soundbite way like um not even in a sort of complex way uh it's like you have boxes that you're checking and
you all check the same boxes or something like that um i think like a for me like a really ideal
group right that if i were to be in one of these groups right that i'm describing like
an ideal group would be one in which um you know, there's enough, there's agreement
about around, like, why you're there and what you're trying to achieve. But there's different
viewpoints. And, like, a little bit of tension, right? Like, I think that you should be, you know,
you should examine your own beliefs. And I'm friends with, you know, not as many as I would,
I would like to, you know, say, but, you know, a few people that I really strongly disagree with about a lot of things, especially around technology.
And I really value our conversations because there are ideas that I have come up with or they have come up with or we have come up with that I don't think either one would come across alone.
think either one would would come across alone like if i'm just if i'm just by myself or i'm with people who exactly agree with me i'm just gonna keep plotting along and doing the same
exact thing um and i think if i'm if i'm with others who you know either directly or indirectly
kind of cause me to question you know some of some of the ways that i think about things um without
you know like uh necessarily like questioning the underlying like, you know, political cause or whatnot.
I think that that would be a really other, you can have those debates and those
discussions without it getting completely shut down or getting canceled on Twitter or something.
Right. And those are the sort of conversations that become more and more difficult on Twitter
for everyone to bring. That sort of principled disagreement is it seems only possible in that
really close interpersonal context. Yeah. Yeah. And I think it has to do with the fact that you
aren't, you're not anonymous, like in that context either, right? Like, you know, if I'm in that
group, I'm Jenny, not, you know, a tiny circle avatar, you know,
that like, that no one knows anything else about except for the thing that I just said.
I think if you're in a group with context, it's like, it's known that like, I have the sort of
Jenny perspective and things that I say are going to come out of that. And then, you know,
likewise for everyone else. Yeah. I want to return to the topic of attention. In the book you talk, you call for a discipline deepening of attention and you write that what passes for sustained attention is actually a that there's a connection with contemporary mindfulness culture,
with meditation practices, which are, you know, I think one of the more, I think that's one of the
more interesting movements of the decade that so many people are becoming interested in meditation
and mindfulness and these sorts of topics that there's a, you know, almost a form of secularized
Buddhism that's taking hold in a lot of places in America.
And I noticed a lot of resonances between your work
and that trend, but you never use any of that language.
And I was a little bit curious
if you felt that there was an intersection there
or if there's a reason that you shy away from it.
There is not really any particular,
I didn't feel like I was shying away from it? Um, there is not really any particular, I didn't feel like I was shying
away from it. Um, in retrospect, you know, I probably should have talked about it at least
a little bit just to kind of make that acknowledgement. Maybe I think in my head,
it was like so obvious I didn't need to say it, but you know, um, but I think, you know,
a couple of people have sort of mentioned the same thing. Um, I think I might've also been sort of subconsciously influenced by, um, not wanting to play into a certain type of
mindfulness culture that there's a lot of in the Bay area, which I would describe as mindfulness
as life hack. Um, so, you know, I, uh, and that, I think that's very, that's a very specific and
kind of like narrow, um kind of narrow subset of this.
But this is the sort of mindfulness in order to be more productive.
Oh, yeah.
Like the enlightened meditation teacher is going to show up at the Microsoft campus and lead everybody in 10 minutes of mindfulness training.
So they're all 20% better at coding.
Right.
Exactly.
Exactly.
20% better at coding. Right. Exactly. Exactly. And I have the same problem with that as I do with, you know, the idea of like digital detox retreats and, and, you know, this, uh, what I
was saying earlier about, you know, productive of what, and kind of really questioning the,
the idea of productivity altogether. So I think maybe I was trying to not kind of fall into that
bucket, um, because some of the book is about technology and i think you see
a lot of that kind of in tech um and so um and and i also um i so i don't have i've been asked
a lot kind of because of this connection like whether i have like a mindfulness practice and
i don't um i well because it depends on how you define that. Right. So, um,
I, I think that like probably really like in a general sense I do, but like from the point of
view of like the kind of tradition of, of mindfulness, like I don't, um, so I don't,
you know, like sit and meditate and, uh, I, I go for a walk, you know, and like, I, and I think that I maybe make an effort to,
to look differently or notice differently. But I think it probably achieves something
really similar. And that's why the book like has those resonances. But it's not something that I
ever, I think I sort of like came around to it from like a weird angle, maybe personally,
through like birdwatching instead of, you know, going to like a Buddhist retreat or something.
But it's definitely true that the goal is, I mean, there is no goal, right?
The goal is to have no goal.
But that is definitely similar where it's kind of like a pause and a reflection and kind of looking with curiosity, not only at the outside world, but at one's own thoughts.
Kind of, you know, connected to what I was saying earlier about the self, where if you really examine yourself, it very quickly kind of dissolves.
And I think that's a very kind of mindfulness type idea.
Oh, absolutely. I mean, that's a huge part of, you know, those Buddhist traditions that led to, you know, that sort of evolved into contemporary American mindfulness culture.
And that's and the fact that, you know, that's a big part of the book as well as is what put me in mind of it.
But, yeah, I mean, I relate to that. I'm also the sort of person who, you know, I'll listen to a lecture by, you know, a speaker, you know, by a meditation teacher while I'm going for a walk.
But then when I actually sit and try to do the exercise, I'm like, ah, this is not doing it for
me. Um, and, but it sounds like the practice of it, the way you talk about it, it makes it sound
like the practice of birdwatching or bird noticing is very similar that you're simply returning your
attention, not to your breath, but to the sound of a bird song over and over again in order to notice it. I certainly noticed that resonance there.
But do you have any fear of, because what happened with mindfulness culture is, you know,
capitalism did what it does, right? Which is it co-opted it and brought it in and it became
something that could be packaged and sold as it did with, you know, Che Guevara on the t-shirt, right. Uh, that the, the sort of form
of resistance became, uh, a part of capitalism itself. Do you have any fear of that happening
with your, with your own work? Yeah, definitely. Uh, I mean, I sort of, uh, assume that it's a
little bit inevitable. The other day, actually, I tweeted this GIF that Joe sent me of, I don't know if you've
seen it, but it's like magnetic.
It's like this puddle of magnetic putty.
And then they put like some kind of metal cube in it.
Oh, yeah.
And then the putty is just like, blah.
And it like just like eats the cube.
Yeah.
And it's like really creepy.
And I was like, this is an image of capitalism appropriating literally everything.
Like, it's amazing what it can do. Like you could have like, it can even appropriate
anti-capitalism. It's, I mean, kind of amazing. So, yeah, I'm very aware of that with this book,
but I think I've always been aware of it because, you know, I've been an artist and I make things
and then kind of the minute you put them out into the world, it's like, you're going to watch that happen usually. Um, so, uh, yeah, I mean, what, like there are things
that I've sort of, I did, you know, preemptively to try to address that. And one of them is just,
I think the book is really kind of weirdly shaped. Like it's, I mean, you've read it,
it's like all over the place. Um, and it's not very easy to summarize. Um, maybe it's, I mean, you've read it. It's like all over the place. And it's not very easy to summarize.
Maybe it's hard for me to even summarize it.
It's kind of like this collection of things that almost like barely holds together.
And then maybe after reading it, like something emerges from that.
And I think that that format is a little bit harder to appropriate because it's harder to pinpoint
like anything about it. You know, like I have like, it's hard to put it on a t-shirt. What
is the t-shirt going to be? Yeah, exactly. And like, you know, it's like, I've almost,
at first I was like horrified, but then kind of interested in like watching those forces, like
kind of around the book, be like, i want it to be a book about technology
or like i want it to be a book about the environment it's like no it's both it's like
it's not one or the other you know um and and so i think i the way i kind of uh set the book up or
like the structure was kind of intended to forestall that a little bit but i mean believe
me i've gotten like you know like the idea of doing nothing,
like it can very easily be turned
into some kind of caricature,
like someplace being like,
oh, we want to do a photo shoot of you,
like doing nothing, like in the field.
And I'm like, oh my God, I would never do that.
Like, I don't know.
It sounds like, it sounds like a pretty good spread,
but yeah, yeah, it's, I mean that that's what it's
honestly one of the things I enjoyed about the book was I was talking to our researcher Sam you
know to prep for this interview and we were talking about the book and I was like all right
the book is you know about resisting the attention economy resisting capitalism and what is her
answer for what doing nothing means for what that that refusal is, for what resisting is,
he asked me. And I was like, well, having read the book, it seems like the answer is paying
attention to bird songs, but also that activist meetings should happen face-to-face in small
groups and that it's an important component of organizing. And those two conclusions seem so
disparate, but having read the book, I feel like I see how they come from the same ethos and how they're connected thematically.
And the only thing is it would take me the length of this interview to explain why.
Yeah, exactly.
And that's what I've been sort of struggling to do in a pleasurable way over the course of it is finding these connections.
in a pleasurable way over the course of it is finding these connections.
And that, I don't know, that irreducibility of the book's conclusions neatly echoes the irreducibility of the context of nature and the context between us that you talk about.
So I think that's very cool.
The last sort of area I want to ask you about is about your process for writing it, because I was really taken by the diversity of references that you use to make your points.
You know, I mean, as in my own work, you know, when I am trying to make a bit of cultural commentary, I'll go to a study or to, you know, a journalist or to a piece of history to sort of support that point.
Right. Here's the claim I want to make. And in 1950, XYZ happened. What I really found fascinating
about the book is, is your, your references that you use to support your points are,
are so diverse. You, you know, refer to everyone from the, you know, the philosopher, William James
to, you know, the ancient philosopher Diogenes to conceptual artists to even Tom
Green, the Canadian comedian, you reference a bit on his public access show as a, you
know, in the way of a point you're making about our social organization.
How do you go about, what does your research process look like?
And how do you, how did you go about pulling those references together and why?
Some of it was maybe so some of it was intentional and some of it was unintentional.
It's a lot like the do nothing farming kind of model that I describe at the end of the book where you are you are still farming, but it's like you're really really just, um, almost like trying to mimic a natural
ecosystem and, and just nudging it a little bit to produce like, you know, rice or something.
Um, but it's very different than kind of industrial farming where you're like, I'm going to plot out
this thing and it's going to produce this over here and this over here at this particular time.
So my process has always been kind of, uh, very, um, you know, like creating a structure,
been kind of very, you know, like creating a structure, but leaving it really open, like really open. And so there are a lot of things in the book that I actually encountered while
writing it. So things that I encountered last summer that I would never have expected to be
in the book. And then there are a lot of things that I just kind of happened to have encountered
for different reasons over the years and kind of like stored them away. I think that my process could probably pretty well be described to
what a bowerbird does, which I don't know if you've ever seen a video of a bowerbird.
No, I never have.
So the, these are birds that they create, the male bird creates this, like, it's, it,
it's not a nest, but it's almost like a nest-like structure.
But it's like a little, it almost looks like a little house type thing.
But it's really just his like stage for dancing.
And then he goes around and collects everything blue and puts all the blue stuff around.
And then when the female comes along, he like does a little dance and is like, look at all my blue stuff.
And I actually highly recommend watching the David Attenborough.
Like I think it's some like bird documentary series where where he shows this whole process and then the bird does the dance. And apparently he does it like a little bit too enthusiastically.
And then the females like, never mind.
I've been there. I have definitely been.
That is my 20s in a nutshell, doing the dance too enthusiastically.
Yeah, yeah.
But so, you know, the only criteria for the bird is like it's blue.
So, you know, now you'll see, you know, one of these bowers will have, you know, blue, like blue, let's say like butterfly wings or flowers or things like that but then
also be like plastic um and just like trash like anything that's blue of course like the overall
effect is like really beautiful but um they come from all different kinds of places and the only
thing they have in common is that they're blue and so i've found that my research process is often
like i have some really weird question and even though probably wouldn't be able to be phrased as a very specific question, I know what it is in my head.
And then everything I experience, whether and it's kind of horrible because sometimes I feel like I'm always working for this reason.
It's also kind of amazing because it, I don't know, gives some sort of like impetus and like curiosity to my everyday experience.
But, you know, everything goes through the filter of my experience. And if it's blue, right, I kind of like impetus and like curiosity to my everyday experience. But, you know, everything
goes through the filter of my experience. And if it's blue, right, I kind of like set it aside.
Right. And so I just have like folders and folders of just like notes on my computer. Every single
book I read, I type up all of the quotes that I think I might ever use ever. Wow. Which takes
forever. Yeah. But then down the road is, you know, really helpful. So, you know, every movie I see, every conversation I have, it's like usually there's like something in there that is sort of related to whatever question I'm currently obsessed with.
And there always seems to be one, whether or not I'm working on anything.
And so I just, it's this like long process of kind of like collecting these little bits and storing them away.
That's wonderful.
So I want to ask you as an artist,
you use art extensively through the book.
You refer to different artists, different artworks
as examples for a point that you're trying to make
in various parts about how our society is organized.
It's strange to ask an artist this, but, uh, why do that?
And what power do you think art has to sort of teach us about the world around us in that way?
Uh, that's a great question.
I, um, I think part of it is just the practical experience of having taught art to non-art
majors for five years. So, you know, I am trying to argue for the value of art in, for instance, learning to
see things in the world differently.
And so through that teaching practice, like I have collected these examples.
And oftentimes they're, you know, examples like the ones in the book where I can personally
attest to a piece of art, you know,
like a John Cage piece, for instance, like totally changing how I hear everything after that, not in
some sort of abstract conceptual way, but like actually changing how I listen. So it's just
something that I have thought about for a long time. And of course, I make art and usually that's
kind of my yardstick for myself is like, is the work that I'm making, helping someone see
something different. I mean, I almost compare it to like a set of binoculars or a microscope,
right? Like there are tools and culture that help you see things that you wouldn't be able to see
either with the unaided eye or with your own perceptual bias. I think they're kind of the
same thing, right? So if there is some way to sort of
bridge that gap and give some new area of experience to someone through like renewed
perception or redirected perception, like I think that's one of the most generous things you could
possibly do. And I think that artists in particular, you know, have spent a lot of time thinking about attention and how um how to bring something to
someone else's attention that they themselves have noticed um and not just that but i mean
speaking from my own experience like i when i make work i want someone to have the same experience
of excitement and discovery that i had like i don't want to just kind of like put the information in front of them,
be like, here, I found this, you know, like, you know,
as an example, when I was an artist in residence at the dump in San Francisco,
like that is so, it's so amazing there.
I mean, I could go on, but I'm really nostalgic for the dump.
And there's this public disposal area that we had access to, the three artists in residence.
And you'd go in and it's like loud.
And there's these like U-Hauls, you know, backing up and like just throwing this debris and like objects into this giant pile.
And the pile is different every hour.
pile um and the pile is different every hour um like the other one of the other artists and i apparently set a record for like the amount of time we were in the pile because we were just
like addicted to it we're like because what's in the pile now who's standing there timing how long
the artists are in the pile with a stopwatch oh they've been in there a long time i mean i like
to give you some idea like the day of our exhibition like we were like you know nicely
dressed like this other artist like it was like 15 minutes before the opening. He's like,
I'm just going to go, I'm gonna go check in the pile. I'm just gonna see if there's anything in
there. Like, I'm like, the show is already up. Like, um, no, it's fascinating. Like what is
going to be, it's, it's a different treasure box every time I imagine. Yeah, it really is. So,
so like that's, that in itself is exciting. Right. And then my whole project was going and getting these objects, which I didn't really have any particular criteria. I was just trying to get like a good overall picture of like human stuff of all different ages and taking it back to my studio, like the bower bird.
And then like researching every single object almost, you know, to the level of absurdity.
Like what year was it made?
What is the address of the place where it was made?
What is it made out of? Like, why does this thing exist?
Are there YouTube videos of it?
Like on and on forever.
I mean, it kind of drove me crazy.
Yeah.
And I did that for three months.
And then there was this question at the end of like, okay, I have all this information
and I had been sort of posting it online as I was going. But for the exhibition, it's like, how can I make someone else have the same experience that I had without having to go into the pile?
shows there, which typically, you know, they have like a lot of sculptors or like people who like make objects or installations. Mine was just like white shelves with these 200 objects on them with
tags that you could scan with your phone and get all of this information and watch the YouTube
video and see street view of the factory. And just like all of the just crazy stuff that I found out
about that object, like you could just stand in front of it and like find that out.
That's,
um,
that's wonderful.
I,
I,
you're making me want to learn so much about these because the,
the feeling of going deep on something sort of trivial right in front of you
is one that I really relate to,
you know,
it's that feeling of like,
I don't know when you're walking down the street and you see like a really
weird,
I don't know,
fixture or like, it's not like it like transfixed by a manhole cover that has like
an engraving on it made by such and such a company. And I'm like, what is that company?
When did they make this manhole? Like, where did this thing come from? You start like having all
these questions in your mind and the idea of going down and answering those is so fascinating.
Yeah. And, and like talking to other people who are excited about the same thing. Like, I find it so interesting that the human response to like finding something cool or like unexpected is like you immediately want to show someone else.
Right.
Like, which, you know, like I've had this experience before where I've been hiking alone and I saw like some like really unexpected bird and there wasn't anyone around. And I'm just like, ah, I need to like show someone this thing. And there's like no one here.
Yeah. I experience that all the time. But it's really funny because it also feels like it mimics
my process in comedy, because for me, comedy is so much about seeing something or noticing
something or something happening to me that struck me as funny, and then me trying to reproduce why that's funny for someone else, uh, so that we can experience
it as funny together. Uh, that's like entirely what standup comedy is. Exactly. Right. And it's
like, I mean, I talked to Joe about this a lot where it's like, it's so much about observation
and attention and like, you know, most things, if you slightly change the perspective, um, with
what you're looking at them,
are really funny. Or they're at least like deeply weird. Like, you know, at first when I was at the dump, I feel like I was kind of trying to maybe subconsciously like picking like interesting or
like weird things, like things that already appeared interesting and weird. And then by
the end, it was like, no, I'm going to research this like My Little Pony toy from like 2011.
Because like, you know, like that experience of like finding out the story behind that is like going to have a higher kind of ratio in terms of like me thinking that this is a really like boring and sort of given object and then finding out that it's like deeply, deeply weird.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So let's, we do need to wrap up sadly, but I just want to ask, what do you hope that people will take away from the book just in terms of their day-to-day behavior, right?
In terms of the way they interact with the attention economy or with capitalism at large, what sort of experience or change are you hoping for for them? I think there's a couple of things.
And I've been really pleased by a couple of people who have mentioned that after they
finished the book, they felt like they were on hallucinogens, which you can maybe see
why, right?
Like, and that's the experience of those drugs is one of noticing that you start noticing things very intensely and attending to things that normally you gloss over.
Right. And often kind of like looking at things without judgment, which will let a lot of things into things will flood your perception that were not part of it before. Right. And so, yes, a few people have mentioned
that, especially people who started using the app iNaturalist after reading the book. That's
the app that I mentioned that you can take pictures of plants and it'll give you a good
guess of what they are. Yeah. And then it'll be confirmed by a person usually within a couple
days. So, it's like this like feeling of like, oh my God, there's all this stuff around me. And
then like, and then like finding out what it is. And it's just kind of this like feeling of like oh my god there's all this stuff around me and then like and then like finding out what it is and it's just kind of this like really uh sort of like dizzying experience
um i think that's just like amazing and i'm so flattered that anyone would have that
that reaction and so i would hope yeah that someone might have something like that like
the kind of experience of like the maybe um uh opening up more of experience, particularly things that have
always been around you. I mean, that is the experience that I had, you know, again,
reading this book on a boat in Alaska, right, where on a daily basis, we were I was reading
about your experience noticing these things around you. But then on a daily basis, we were also,
you know, going ashore and looking
in the intertidal zone at all the different creatures that were there and had guides who
were explaining, oh, this is this plant. This is this interaction. This is why this type of tree
grows on this slope and not on that slope. And it made me resolve both those experiences together.
Like,
I just need to do this stuff at my home. I need to learn about the plants that grow in my nearby park and get this goddamn app. It was, yeah, very much of that experience.
Yeah, that's amazing. That's, and I, it's so great that you were there because you all,
it's also just this demonstration of like life is, I mean, life, like, you know, living,
like living beings and
systems is just so weird and just like amazing. And I could think about it all day. So that's
like, you know, one thing that I sort of hope for, but maybe more importantly, I, I really hope that
it restores a sense of agency to someone who reads it. I, i was just in this okay it's gonna sound really morbid but i
was in the cemetery the other day um and it's like a very beautiful cemetery that you'll have
to take my word for it is not uncommon for lots of people to go for walks in the cemetery and
it's kind of up sort of in the hills and um and has all these branching kind of pathways like
there's my point is that there's like no obvious way to walk through the cemetery.
Like none at all.
It's completely just like branching and random.
And I was walking through it and I was just reflecting on the fact that because it's designed that way and because it's so big and because there's nothing really like to do in a cemetery unless you're like visiting a grave
my movement through that space is I would imagine maybe the closest thing that I typically
experience to like free will I mean that sounds sort of weird but like you know like I am not
being impelled by anything I'm not like I'm not doing something that I think I'm
supposed to be doing. I'm not working. I'm not looking for anything. I mean, I might be noticing
some birds, but, um, I, I, if I take a right turn somewhere, that's just because I felt like taking
a right turn. You know what I mean? Like, or there's like something, Oh, I see something over
there. I'm curious. I'm going to go look at that, you know? And especially doing that alone, right? Where you're not even asking anyone else like
what you should do. Like you're just following your own sort of like instinct. And that to me
is like the polar opposite of doing everything and behaving exactly the way that things are
designed to make you behave. Like having the reactions that social media would like
you to have or framing your experiences in the way that you've learned is the right way to frame
them. I think it's so important for me to step outside of that because I need these reminders
that there are all these options around that that I haven't considered and that I can just make the
decision to do those things instead. And it sounds sounds
sort of like silly and like simple. But I have talked to like a few people who read the book
were like, Oh, yeah, it was just this kind of reminder that like, I don't, there are a lot of
things that I think I have to do that I don't, and I can make that decision.
Oh, well, thank you so much for coming on the show to talk to us about it.
Thank you.
Well, thank you once again to Jenny for coming on the show a couple years ago
for that wonderful conversation.
I hope you loved it as much as I did.
Of course, if you want to pick up How to Do Nothing,
you can get it at factuallypod.com slash books,
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