Omslagafbeelding van de show Pray for Rain

Pray for Rain

Podcast door Jack Willis

Engels

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Over Pray for Rain

Thoughts on culture for people without a team. A drought of sanity. Praying for rain.

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13 afleveringen

aflevering I Won't Say Anything Because Someone Might Film It artwork

I Won't Say Anything Because Someone Might Film It

Civility is not just good manners. It’s one of the social technologies that makes civilization possible.Today I talk about why that feels like it’s disappearing: politicians who no longer see each other as human, internet incentives that reward dunking over compromise, cameras that turn every minor disagreement into a possible public trial, and the way all of this bleeds into everyday life.Also featured: a Brooklyn Chipotle, a tamarin raised on internet conflict, Edmund Burke, and a small moment in Prospect Park that reminded me there may still be hope for us yet.Chapters0:00 Preview0:18 Intro0:35 McCain, Obama, and the loss of civility1:25 Civility is more than politeness2:11 Why civilization requires self-restraint3:34 Why Congress stopped seeing each other as human4:52 The internet rewards dunking, not compromise5:52 Why America’s experiment depends on disagreement6:44 Did politics rot us, or did we rot politics?7:34 How the internet became our behavior school8:05 The tamarin thought experiment10:13 The rude Chipotle in Brooklyn11:31 Cameras, virality, and the death of low-stakes conflict12:53 Burke, reciprocity, and why civility matters14:11 The invisible miracle of the market14:31 Prospect Park and a small apology17:06 There is hope for us yet

16 mei 2026 - 17 min
aflevering Episode 12. The Country That Turns People Into Americans artwork

Episode 12. The Country That Turns People Into Americans

In this episode, I talk about brain drain, wasted human potential, and all the genius the world never gets to see because of bad governments, instability, corruption, poverty, or sheer bad luck. From Isaac Asimov and Sergey Brin to the idea that the next great innovator might be stuck driving a van or a taxi somewhere, this is about what stable societies make possible — and why America is basically the Dodgers.Also: the Manhattan Project, the “city on a hill,” Ryan Gosling, Project Hail Mary, and why movie theater decorum is collapsing before our eyes.Chapters: 00:00 - America is a Talent Agency The Dodgers metaphor: Why the United States is essentially the greatest scouting network in the history of the world.00:23 - Asimov, Brin, and the Refugee AdvantageHow the chaos of the Russian Revolution and anti-Semitism accidentally gave us the Foundation series and Google.02:32 - The Tragedy of Wasted Global PotentialRoughly 80% of the human species lives in developing nations. What happens to the world's greatest innovators when they are forced by necessity to just survive?05:07 - The Paradox of Infinite ChoiceWhy being dropped in a stable society with endless opportunities is actually a massive psychological burden.06:50 - "Turning People into Americans"From the Manhattan Project to the modern tech sector: the unique superpower of importing talent and exporting freedom.09:08 - The Brain Drain & How to Fix a CountryIt’s demoralizing for developing nations to lose their best people, but how do you actually build state formation, property rights, and institutional trust from scratch?13:25 - Ryan Gosling, Project Hail Mary, & Social DecorumA hard pivot to the movies. Reviewing Project Hail Mary, Ryan Gosling's physical comedy, and the agonizing death of baseline civility in modern movie theaters.

3 mei 2026 - 16 min
aflevering Episode 11. Doordashing Our Way To Bethlehem artwork

Episode 11. Doordashing Our Way To Bethlehem

We’ve built a world that is unbelievably convenient, unbelievably optimized, and, in a strange way, a little deadening. Food appears at the door. Every song, movie, and opinion is instantly available. You can get almost anywhere without knowing where you are. And yet a lot of modern life feels flatter, less satisfying, less alive.In this episode, I talk about what happens when friction disappears, anticipation dies, and convenience starts to rob life of texture. This is about technology, comfort, appetite, boredom, and the strange sadness of getting exactly what you want all the time.Chapters:0:00 - The "Look Down" Preview0:32 - The Whataburger Tragedy02:20 - The Siren Song of the Screen03:30 - The Renaissance vs. Infinite Choice04:45 - The Trust-Fund Kid & The End of History07:15 - The Dopamine Grift08:00 - The Tahoe Pizza Hunt10:10 - Getting Our Time Back (And Wasting It)11:45 - Grandpa's Cutting Board12:55 - Perfect Days & Choosing Friction

29 apr 2026 - 15 min
aflevering Episode 10. Is Democracy Science Fiction? artwork

Episode 10. Is Democracy Science Fiction?

I thought I had a gas leak in my Brooklyn apartment. I didn’t. But the speed and seriousness of the response made me think about all the invisible systems quietly preventing disaster around us.That led me to a stranger realization: Star Wars is older than democracy in Spain.In this episode, I talk about why representative government is younger and more fragile than we like to think, why we only notice functioning systems when they break, and why civilization needs custodians more than trolls. Chapters:0:00 Coming up0:36 The gas leak that wasn’t1:49 Invisible systems and daily maintenance2:17 Star Wars is older than democracy in Spain3:40 Democracy is fragile, not inevitable5:03 We keep what we maintain6:46 Civics, inheritance, and socialization7:14 When dysfunction starts to feel normal8:25 History, memory, and the fear of forgetting9:46 We need custodians, not trolls

20 apr 2026 - 10 min
aflevering Episode 9. The Internet Is Already Dead And We're The Ones Who Killed It artwork

Episode 9. The Internet Is Already Dead And We're The Ones Who Killed It

The internet used to be a massive, weird frontier. Now it is a consolidated feed trough run by five companies, designed to eviscerate your dopamine baseline and keep you catatonic. We talk a lot about the "Dead Internet Theory" and bots taking over, but the reality is much darker: we are the dead internet.In this episode, we are diagnosing the death of cyberspace, the absurdity of algorithmic slop, and how to actually escape the digital animal farm.Chapters:00:00 - Intro & The Peter Thiel Origin Story00:57 - The 5 Apps Controlling Human Attention01:57 - The Real Dead Internet Theory03:52 - RIP StumbleUpon & The Lost Cyberspace05:25 - The Clockwork Orange Dopamine Machine08:23 - The Surviving Ruins of the Old Web11:57 - Why Algorithms Don't Understand Humans13:39 - Marshall McLuhan & The Shrinking Window15:20 - How to Actually Escape the Feed TroughLinks Mentioned:Luke Smith’s Website: https://lukesmith.xyz/Project Kamp: https://projectkamp.com/Low-Tech Magazine (Solar-powered server): https://solar.lowtechmagazine.com/If you know of any other weird, brilliant, or brutalist corners of the internet that haven't been swallowed by the algorithm, send them my way!

19 apr 2026 - 18 min
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