Thu, Oct 10, 2013
Director Tiffany Shlain shares how living in today's over-connected world has led her family to unplug for one full day every week. They call them their "Technology Shabbats," they've done it every week for over three years, and it's completely changed their lives.
Thu, Oct 10, 2013
Director Tiffany Shlain explores being a mother in the past, present, and future --and how the Internet, flexible schedules, and shifts in gender roles have revolutionized what it means to be a parent in today's world.
Thu, Oct 10, 2013
In this episode, Tiffany Shlain, award-winning filmmaker, speaker, and founder of The Webby Awards, calls us all out with a hilarious portrayal of the technology pet peeves that we're both guilty of and that drive us crazy, and offers suggestions for a more civilized tech gadget filled world.
Thu, Oct 10, 2013
Director Tiffany Shlain introduces us to her husband, Ken Goldberg, a professor of robotics, to dive into the past, present and future of robots and why it is that humans are so fascinated with the most "human" of our technologies.
Thu, Oct 10, 2013
Director Tiffany Shlain, goes behind-the-scenes into her current project, a collaborative filmmaking experiment she calls "Cloud Filmmaking," to explore why this era in human history, "the participatory revolution," will change art and creativity forever.
Thu, Oct 10, 2013
Failing big is part of the creative process for Tiffany Shlain, award-winning filmmaker, speaker, and founder of The Webby Awards. Through behind-the-scenes footage of her acclaimed feature documentary "Connected," Tiffany shares the creative process she has developed over the years -- the hunch, the darkness, the breakthroughs, and everything in between.
Thu, Oct 10, 2013
In this episode, Director Tiffany Shlain is invited on a transatlantic flight with 100 other thinkers, by the UN and British Airways, with the goal of solving a world problem through collective thinking. Find out what happens on this adventure.
Thu, Oct 10, 2013
Director Tiffany Shlain looks through history to the present to amplify the notion that the world is actually getting better, and why opticism - optimism with a healthy dose of skepticism - can help push our future where we want it to go.