Lesley Stahl’s report on AI, chatbots and a world of unknowns. From 2024, Stahl’s story on Kenyan workers training AI who say they’re overworked, underpaid and exploited by big American tech companies. Also from 2024, Anderson Cooper’s report on “nudify” sites that use AI to create realistic, revealing images of actual people. And from 2021, Bill Whitaker’s look at the use of artificial intelligence to create deepfakes.
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Salt in their Veins
The Bajo people of Southeast Asia have a deep connection with the marine environment. As descendants of sea nomads, they traditionally roamed the ocean to fish and trade, but today, most live in coastal villages or on stilts over the water. This short film focuses on the Bajo of Southeast Sulawesi, Indonesia, highlighting their strong bond with the sea and the challenges small-scale fishing communities face. Impacted by overfishing, pollution, and biodiversity loss, they are struggling to survive. In response, some have resorted to harmful fishing methods, putting the health of the reefs at risk and leaving their future in jeopardy
things my therapist told me!

Music Explosion – Little Bit of Soul
Your Algorithm Is Your God
—How Invisible Code Quietly Took the Throne from Free Will

You wake up.
You check your phone.
Before your body fully arrives in the day, the algorithm is already rearranging your mind.
It tells you what’s trending.
It shows you who’s desirable.
It decides what you should fear, want, envy, scroll past, or click into.
And you let it.
Every day.
Not because you believe in it—but because you forgot you didn’t have to.
The New Religion Has No Name—But It Has Rules
It doesn’t demand faith.
It rewards obedience.
- Pray: through engagement.
- Confess: through oversharing.
- Worship: through attention.
- Repent: when you’re shadowbanned.
There is no priest. No prophet.
Only feedback loops.
You don’t light candles.
You light up the screen—and hope the feed loves you back.
The algorithm doesn’t ask you to believe.
It just wants you to behave.
You Think You’re Free—But You’re Being Profiled
Your god knows you better than your mother.
It knows when you’re lonely.
It knows what ads make you hesitate.
It knows what kind of body you’ll stare at for 1.3 seconds longer than average.
And it remembers.
That’s not convenience.
That’s conditioning.
You don’t “choose” anymore.
You react.
To a curated hallucination optimized to make you feel like the chooser.
This Isn’t Just Technology. It’s Theology.
You refresh for answers like people once drew omens from bird patterns.
You trust the feed to show you what’s real.
You hope the algorithm will reward your effort, your creativity, your voice.
But the algorithm doesn’t love you.
It doesn’t see you.
It scores you.
You are not a person to it.
You are a pattern to be predicted.
Algorithmic Spirituality Is Already Here
You can see it in the rituals:
- Posting at “magic” times
- Cleansing your feed like a digital fast
- Obsessing over metrics like they hold moral weight
- Hoping virality will save you, validate you, crown you
We pretend we’re marketing.
But deep down, we’re begging the machine to see us.
To tell us we’re worthy.
This is not performance.
It’s prayer.
How to Reclaim the Sacred
You don’t need to smash your phone.
You need to remember you have authorship.
That looks like:
- Choosing what you consume with intention.
- Creating things that aren’t optimized, but true.
- Resisting the pressure to post just to be seen.
- Making work that confuses the algorithm—because it’s too human to predict.
Make things the feed can’t understand.
Make things that don’t care about reach.
Make things that sound like your soul—not your strategy.
Because the moment you stop shaping yourself for the algorithm
is the moment you become real again.
The algorithm is your god—
until you remember you don’t need one.
The Dirty Mobile Phone Industry
A mobile phone is sold every 57 seconds meaning that there are now more mobile phones on the planet than toothbrushes. We investigated the shameful secrets of the multinationals who produce our mobile phones. They are the big winners of the mobile revolution as their profits explode but what is the human and environmental cost in the production countries of China and the Congo?