Aspen Ideas Festival
Music, Health, and Well-Being: Jon Batiste in Conversation w
Show title: Aspen Ideas Festival
Video title: Music, Health, and Well-Being: Jon Batiste in Conversation w
Video duration: 66m 52sVideo description: Music can lift the spirits and help heal the body. No musician demonstrates that better than Jon Batiste, a “crowd-thrilling rebel bandleader,” according to Rolling Stone magazine. Viewers of "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert" viewers know him best for the exuberant music he conducts with Stay Human.
Watch Episode
How AI Will Shake Up Business — and Society
S2 E147 / 58m 37s
As the prospect of mass implementation of artificial intelligence begins to alter realistic expectations of its impacts (large and small, positive and negative), the consequences for the business community are only just beginning to be imagined. Unlike the internet, AI is not a new industry — yet its application will radically alter industry.
Watch Episode
America’s Online Enemies
S2 E145 / 1h 5m
From election meddling and economic espionage to financial fraud and personal identity theft, it’s becoming clear that cybersecurity is increasingly central to every aspect of the way we live. Both state-sponsored cyber-spies and transnational organized crime groups pose urgent threats online to our nation’s critical infrastructure, our security, and our fundamental values in a democratic society.
Watch Episode
A Democrat, a Republican, a Rental Car — and a Road Map to B
S2 E144 / 59m 52s
With their flights to DC snowed out and votes imminent on the House floor, these two Texas congressmen took to the road to travel the 1,600 miles to the nation’s capital in a rented Chevy Impala. They invited America to join them via Facebook live, and through their spontaneous town hall on wheels, they learned a lot about the issues Americans are dealing with, each other’s core values
Watch Episode
We constantly strive to engage and surprise each other, our
S2 E139 / 48m 26s
Suddenly, machines are learning from gigantic expanding data sets at rapid rates. Almost overnight, machines have acquired abilities that computer scientists have been spending decades to develop. How did a small group of brainy pioneers crack the machine-learning code? By designing machines that work like brains, of course.
Watch Episode
Tuning In: Classical Music and the Creative Mind (includes l
S2 E138 / 46m 40s
Our social nature is a major driver of our creativity: We constantly strive to engage and surprise each other, our inventiveness giving us reasons to tune in. Drawing on The Runaway Species: How Human Creativity Remakes the World, the book he co-authored with neuroscientist David Eagleman
Watch Episode
The Second Mountain: The Next Big Challenge in Your Life
S2 E135 / 50m 52s
The Second Mountain: The Next Big Challenge in Your Life
Watch Episode
Are We Sure We Want to Let Robots Kill?
S2 E133 / 53m 31s
Just because robots can do jobs that humans otherwise do, does that mean that they should? This question becomes especially difficult when we task a robot with applying lethal force. At an alarming rate, militaries from around the globe are employing AI to optimize operations and build weapons systems (i.e. robots!) to take on more and more roles and tasks previously undertaken by human warfighter
Watch Episode
Protecting Earth’s Last Conservation Frontier: The High Seas
S2 E132 / 1h 3m
The high seas comprise 40 percent of the surface of our planet, 64 percent of the ocean surface, and nearly 95 percent of its volume, yet they are largely ungoverned and unprotected.
Watch Episode
Inventing Plan B: How to Move Forward without a Template
S2 E130 / 1h 8m
Most of us face the desire to be creative within busy, scheduled lives. Therefore, creativity involves carving out and holding space in the midst of complex personal and professional demands and very real performance goals. This workshop frames creativity as a process of “art thinking.”
Watch Episode
Hacking, Disinformation, and a New Cold War with Russia
S2 E129 / 1h 28m
Hacking, Disinformation, and a New Cold War with Russia
Watch Episode
Climate Under Conservatives
S2 E127 / 55m 38s
Can a transformative solution built on the conservative principles of free markets and limited government save the planet? Now that the United States is backing out of the Paris climate accord, many believe that any significant reduction to greenhouse gas emissions must be led by the business community. Can such a business-led effort toa promote carbon dividends —
Watch Episode
Will the Rise of Populism Destroy Liberal Democracy?
S2 E125 / 53m 1s
This is not a moment to take democracy for granted. The 2016 emergence of Donald Trump and his populist counterparts in Europe didn’t signal the start of something new. Rather, they announced a long simmering, troubling trend away from liberal democracy in the United States and elsewhere. How did we get here? How are Western values shifting? What might the future hold?
Watch Episode
The Inside Story of How Presidents Prepare for Armageddon
S2 E124 / 59m 43s
For 60 years, the US government has been laying secret doomsday plans to save itself in the event of nuclear war — even while the rest of us die. Today, a third generation of doomsday planners are settling into life inside a network of bunkers that are staffed 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, ready to house top government officials in the event of catastrophe.
Watch Episode
Markets Can Solve the Global Energy and Climate Challenge, i
S2 E123 / 59m 37s
Markets Can Solve the Global Energy and Climate Challenge, if We Let Them
Watch Episode
Hate on the Rise — And What We Can Do to Stop It ?
S2 E121 / 58m 51s
Hate groups and hate-fueled incidents are spiking in America. What is the evidence of this rising tide, and what does it look like in our communities? What groups are most frequently targeted today? What theories might explain this rise, and what can Americans who value tolerance do to fight back?
Watch Episode
Going Rogue: What Happens When States and the Federal Govern
S2 E98 / 57m 58s
Are we a union, or are we 50 states? States are finding themselves at odds with federal policy on a wide range of issues: immigration enforcement, marijuana legalization, environmental regulation, health issues including reproductive services and Medicaid, and social issues from gay marriage to who can use what bathroom. What are the constitutional roots of these conflicts?
Pagination
- Page 1
- Next page Next ›
Supported by