ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Renny Gleeson - Skeptimist
Renny Gleeson helps navigate brands through fresh concepts, such as viral marketing and social media, to find the pulse of the modern consumer.

Why you should listen

Renny Gleeson is a skeptical/optimist. He leads interactive strategy for ad agency Wieden+Kennedy who started his career as a game developer. He has been wondering what we can learn about ourselves through the millions of deaths taking place inside video games. He serves on the board of directors of Rhizome.org and is the co-founder of the PIE tech accelerator in Portland, Oregon. A mentor for tech accelerators and startups worldwide, he believes stories -- from cave paintings to interfaces to video games -- shape worlds.

More profile about the speaker
Renny Gleeson | Speaker | TED.com
TED2009

Renny Gleeson: Our antisocial phone tricks

Filmed:
1,365,298 views

In this funny (and actually poignant) 3-minute talk, social strategist Renny Gleeson breaks down our always-on social world -- where the experience we're having right now is less interesting than what we'll tweet about it later.
- Skeptimist
Renny Gleeson helps navigate brands through fresh concepts, such as viral marketing and social media, to find the pulse of the modern consumer. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
What I wanted to talk to you about today is two things:
0
0
3000
00:15
one, the rise of a culture of availability;
1
3000
3000
00:18
and two, a request.
2
6000
3000
00:21
So we're seeing a rise of this availability
3
9000
2000
00:23
being driven by mobile device proliferation,
4
11000
3000
00:26
globally, across all social strata.
5
14000
2000
00:28
We're seeing, along with that proliferation of mobile devices,
6
16000
3000
00:31
an expectation of availability.
7
19000
2000
00:33
And, with that, comes the third point,
8
21000
2000
00:35
which is obligation -- and an obligation to that availability.
9
23000
3000
00:38
And the problem is, we're still working through,
10
26000
3000
00:41
from a societal standpoint,
11
29000
2000
00:43
how we allow people to be available.
12
31000
3000
00:46
There's a significant delta, in fact,
13
34000
2000
00:48
between what we're willing to accept.
14
36000
2000
00:50
Apologies to Hans Rosling --
15
38000
1000
00:51
he said anything that's not using real stats is a lie --
16
39000
3000
00:54
but the big delta there
17
42000
2000
00:56
is how we deal with this from a public standpoint.
18
44000
3000
00:59
So we've developed certain tactics and strategies
19
47000
3000
01:02
to cover up.
20
50000
2000
01:04
This first one's called "the lean."
21
52000
2000
01:06
And if you've ever been in a meeting where you play sort of meeting "chicken,"
22
54000
3000
01:09
you're sitting there, looking at the person, waiting for them to look away,
23
57000
3000
01:12
and then quickly checking the device.
24
60000
2000
01:14
Although you can see the gentleman up on the right is busting him.
25
62000
3000
01:17
"The stretch."
26
65000
1000
01:18
OK, the gentleman on the left is saying, "Screw you,
27
66000
3000
01:21
I'm going to check my device."
28
69000
2000
01:23
But the guy, here, on the right,
29
71000
2000
01:25
he's doing the stretch.
30
73000
2000
01:27
It's that reeeee-e-e-each out, the physical contortion
31
75000
2000
01:29
to get that device just below the tabletop.
32
77000
2000
01:31
Or, my favorite, the "Love you; mean it."
33
79000
3000
01:34
(Laughter)
34
82000
2000
01:36
Nothing says "I love you"
35
84000
2000
01:38
like "Let me find somebody else I give a damn about."
36
86000
2000
01:40
Or, this one, coming to us from India.
37
88000
2000
01:42
You can find this on YouTube,
38
90000
2000
01:44
the gentleman who's recumbent on a motorcycle
39
92000
2000
01:46
while text messaging.
40
94000
1000
01:47
Or what we call the "sweet gravy, stop me before I kill again!"
41
95000
4000
01:51
That is actually the device.
42
99000
3000
01:54
What this is doing is, we find a --
43
102000
2000
01:56
(Laughter)
44
104000
2000
01:58
a direct collision --
45
106000
2000
02:02
we find a direct collision between availability --
46
110000
3000
02:05
and what's possible through availability --
47
113000
3000
02:08
and a fundamental human need -- which we've been hearing about a lot, actually --
48
116000
3000
02:11
the need to create shared narratives.
49
119000
4000
02:15
We're very good at creating personal narratives,
50
123000
3000
02:18
but it's the shared narratives that make us a culture.
51
126000
3000
02:21
And when you're standing with someone,
52
129000
3000
02:24
and you're on your mobile device,
53
132000
2000
02:26
effectively what you're saying to them is,
54
134000
2000
02:28
"You are not as important as, literally,
55
136000
3000
02:31
almost anything that could come to me through this device."
56
139000
3000
02:34
Look around you.
57
142000
3000
02:37
There might be somebody on one right now,
58
145000
2000
02:39
participating in multi-dimensional engagement.
59
147000
2000
02:42
(Laughter)
60
150000
2000
02:44
Our reality right now is less interesting
61
152000
3000
02:47
than the story we're going to tell about it later.
62
155000
3000
02:50
This one I love.
63
158000
2000
02:52
This poor kid, clearly a prop --
64
160000
2000
02:54
don't get me wrong, a willing prop --
65
162000
2000
02:56
but the kiss that's being documented kind of looks like it sucks.
66
164000
3000
02:59
This is the sound of one hand clapping.
67
167000
3000
03:02
So, as we lose the context of our identity,
68
170000
4000
03:06
it becomes incredibly important
69
174000
3000
03:09
that what you share becomes the context of shared narrative,
70
177000
3000
03:12
becomes the context in which we live.
71
180000
2000
03:14
The stories that we tell -- what we push out --
72
182000
3000
03:17
becomes who we are.
73
185000
2000
03:19
People aren't simply projecting identity,
74
187000
2000
03:21
they're creating it.
75
189000
2000
03:23
And so that's the request I have for everybody in this room.
76
191000
2000
03:25
We are creating the technology
77
193000
1000
03:26
that is going to create the new shared experience,
78
194000
2000
03:28
which will create the new world.
79
196000
2000
03:30
And so my request is,
80
198000
2000
03:32
please, let's make technologies
81
200000
2000
03:34
that make people more human,
82
202000
2000
03:36
and not less.
83
204000
2000
03:38
Thank you.
84
206000
2000

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Renny Gleeson - Skeptimist
Renny Gleeson helps navigate brands through fresh concepts, such as viral marketing and social media, to find the pulse of the modern consumer.

Why you should listen

Renny Gleeson is a skeptical/optimist. He leads interactive strategy for ad agency Wieden+Kennedy who started his career as a game developer. He has been wondering what we can learn about ourselves through the millions of deaths taking place inside video games. He serves on the board of directors of Rhizome.org and is the co-founder of the PIE tech accelerator in Portland, Oregon. A mentor for tech accelerators and startups worldwide, he believes stories -- from cave paintings to interfaces to video games -- shape worlds.

More profile about the speaker
Renny Gleeson | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee