The Analog Hour

What Our Phones Stop Us From Doing

10 min · 1 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio What Our Phones Stop Us From Doing

Descripción

A parent trying imperfectly to look at his kids instead of his screen. Instagram eating into reading time. Everything seeming urgent when it's not. The simple act of listening to the world go by. This week, no expert interview - just real people answering four honest questions about their phones: * When did you get your first smartphone? * What daily phone habit would have shocked you 10 years ago? * Ever tried unplugging? * What does your phone stop you from doing? The average American checks their phone 205 times a day. Over 43% of us admit we're addicted. In these confessions, you'll hear what we're missing: presence, books, conversation, silence, the sounds of life. This Week's Analog Assignment: Push aside all that your phone offers and identify what it's taking away. Take it back. The Analog Hour: analoginadigitalworld.net [http://analoginadigitalworld.net]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Analog Hour!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

16 episodios

Portada del episodio Vitamin Friendship: Why Social Health Is the Missing Piece

Vitamin Friendship: Why Social Health Is the Missing Piece

Here's something nobody tells you about making friends as an adult: it's not that you've forgotten how. It's that nobody told you where to go. Maggie Arai spent years answering that question. As founder of happier - a Toronto community that hosted 60+ events and grew to 10,000+ members in 18 months, and Founders Who Give a F*ck, a membership community for ambitious women founders - she's learned firsthand about what people actually need when they walk into a room full of strangers. In this conversation, we talk about the difference between a network and a community, why consistency matters most when forming relationships, and a phrase that should be trending: social health. This Week's Analog Assignment: Let one small interaction be enough this week. Chat with a neighbor. Skip the self-checkout and say hello to the human cashier. You don't need it to become a friendship. You just need it to happen. Connect with Maggie: Founders Who Give a F*ck: fwgaf.com [http://fwgaf.com] Subscribe wherever you listen. analoginadigitalworld.net [http://analoginadigitalworld.net] | @analoginadigitalworld (IG)

Ayer19 min
Portada del episodio The Courage Crisis: Why Making Friends as an Adult Is So Hard

The Courage Crisis: Why Making Friends as an Adult Is So Hard

Was it always this hard to make friends? In school, connection felt effortless. Then we graduated - and suddenly it wasn't as straightforward as it used to be. Adele Bloch says our increasing sense of isolation can't simply be labeled as a loneliness crisis. Instead she calls it: a courage crisis. Adele is a community builder, coach, and founder of Dining with Strangers and The Board Walks SF - a weekly Saturday morning walk series she hosted for over 100 consecutive weeks in San Francisco, bringing strangers together for deep, meaningful conversation. After years of hosting 300+ events and coaching people through social and relationship blocks, Adele has developed a practical, warm framework for rebuilding connection as an adult - starting with one simple question: what type of connection are you actually missing? In this conversation: * "Ambient social connection" - what it is and why we've lost it * Why we're in a courage crisis, not just a loneliness crisis * The phone as social crutch - and how to get through "five seconds of courage" * The four friendship buckets: do stuff friends, comfort friends, deep talk friends, ambient connection * Connection as a muscle: it's not something you have or don't have This Week's Analog Assignment: Think about Adele's four friendship buckets. Which one are you missing most? This week, take one step toward filling it. Go to one event. Text someone you've been meaning to see. Say hello to your barista/neighbor/the person you lock eyes with on the subway and actually mean it. Just one rep. Connect with Adele: * Website: adelebloch.com [http://adelebloch.com] * Instagram: @adeleblochjourney * Twitter/X: @adele_bloch * The Board Walks: theboardwalks.com [http://theboardwalks.com]

22 de may de 202627 min
Portada del episodio $15 Trillion vs. You: the Fight to Reclaim our Humanity

$15 Trillion vs. You: the Fight to Reclaim our Humanity

How many times have you promised yourself you'd put your phone down more - only to find yourself doom-scrolling at midnight again? Peter Schmidt wants you to know it's not a personal failing, that our ever increasing levels of distraction is by design. He is co-founder of the Strother School of Radical Attention, a Brooklyn-based nonprofit dedicated to "attention activism" - pushing back against the exploitation of human attention by coercive digital technologies. The attention economy is now a $15 trillion industry with one goal: capturing, quantifying, and commodifying your attention. Every time you pick up your phone, you're facing the most sophisticated predictive technology ever built, designed by some of the smartest people in the world, with one purpose: keeping your eyes on that screen. In this conversation: * Why phone addiction is NOT a personal failing - it's a $15 trillion power asymmetry * Why social media isn't a town square - "it's a shopping mall where the staff are quietly mugging you" * Why attention isn't just your attention span, it's your ability to love * The one thing you can do this week to start reclaiming your attention This Week's Analog Assignment: Get together with your people. In person. Put your phone away. Every time we connect independently of these platforms, we carve out a space that big tech can't touch. Connect with Peter & the School: * Strother School of Radical Attention [https://www.schoolofattention.org/] * Seminars & enrollment: schoolofattention.org/enroll [http://schoolofattention.org/enroll] * The Empty Cup [http://schoolofattention.substack.com] (School of the Attention's Substack) * Friends of Attention book: Attensity! A Manifesto of the Attention Liberation Movement [https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/782387/attensity-by-the-friends-of-attention/] (Crown, 2026) * Peter's website: petercschmidt.com [http://petercschmidt.com]

15 de may de 202625 min
Portada del episodio The Arby's Test: Why America Feels Divided But Isn't (Quite)

The Arby's Test: Why America Feels Divided But Isn't (Quite)

If you want to figure out someone votes Republican or Democrat, one of the best questions you can ask is: Do you eat at Arby's? Many of us feel as if America is fracturing - liberals and conservatives living in completely different worlds. But economist Emir Kamenica's research reveals something counterintuitive: we're not actually drifting apart culturally. We may feel divided and often, we are - but not in the ways we think. This episode covers: * Why Arby's predicts voting * Baby names: Kurt vs. Liam * Grey Poupon, iPhones, and consumer markers of identity * Income inequality is up, but cultural distance between rich and poor is stable * Can we rebuild? Reasons for hope About Professor Emir Kamenica: Emir Kamenica is the Douglas G. Baird Distinguished Service Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. His research with Marianne Bertrand on cultural distance and political polarization uses decades of consumer behavior data to measure how American culture has - and hasn't - fractured along political lines. Find us: analoginadigitalworld.net [http://analoginadigitalworld.net] | @analoginadigitalworld (IG)

8 de may de 202619 min
Portada del episodio What Our Phones Stop Us From Doing

What Our Phones Stop Us From Doing

A parent trying imperfectly to look at his kids instead of his screen. Instagram eating into reading time. Everything seeming urgent when it's not. The simple act of listening to the world go by. This week, no expert interview - just real people answering four honest questions about their phones: * When did you get your first smartphone? * What daily phone habit would have shocked you 10 years ago? * Ever tried unplugging? * What does your phone stop you from doing? The average American checks their phone 205 times a day. Over 43% of us admit we're addicted. In these confessions, you'll hear what we're missing: presence, books, conversation, silence, the sounds of life. This Week's Analog Assignment: Push aside all that your phone offers and identify what it's taking away. Take it back. The Analog Hour: analoginadigitalworld.net [http://analoginadigitalworld.net]

1 de may de 202610 min