Fri. 1/8 - What Folklore Can Teach Us About Conspiracy Theories

Share:

Listens: 0

Coronavirus Daily Briefing

Miscellaneous


What folklorists can teach us about the structure and resilience of conspiracy theories. The genome of the platypus has been sequenced, and it’s just as weird as you’d expect. And a Swedish film festival that’s sending one person to an abandoned lighthouse on a remote island for a weeklong stay without any human contact or outside communication.Sponsors:Magic Spoon, Save $5 at magicspoon.com/kottke and use code KOTTKENordVPN, Get 68% off plus an additional free month––at nordvpn.com/kottke or use coupon KOTTKELinks:Folklore structure reveals how conspiracy theories emerge, fall apart (Ars Technica)A TikTok Twist on 'PizzaGate' (NY Times)#166 Country of Liars (Reply All)Behind the Curve (Netflix)Rabbit Hole (NY Times)Now We Know Why Platypus Are So Weird - Their Genes Are Part Bird, Reptile, And Mammal (Science Alert) Film festival invites fans to watch movies alone on a Swedish island (CNN)Swedish film festival offers abandoned lighthouse screening (A/V Club)Kottke.OrgJackson Bird on Twitter