[Music]
MICHAEL STEVENS: YouTube gives you immediate
feedback.
I don't have to make something, release it,
and then kind of wait for a very small number
of people to write reviews about it.
I get a lot of feedback immediately in realtime.
I can even respond to their feedback and then
get feedback on my responses to their feedback.
And because I make a new episode every week
and it's not all done all at once and then
slowly released, I can respond to their suggestions
by making content that they've asked for or
changing the way I do things.
Sometimes it's really logistical.
Music is too loud.
So the next video that comes out, I keep the
music levels a little bit lower.
Online, we learn together because if I make
an episode, it doesn't just go out into this
empty room where the viewers aren't talking
back to me.
And I might talk about everyone on Earth jumping
at the same time to cause an earthquake, is
that possible?
And then someone else says, hm, well what
if we all yelled at the same time?
[Yelling]
MICHAEL: And you're like, that's a great question
and it also relates to something discussed
in the episode that all the humans on Earth,
compared to the mass of the Earth, we're like
nothing.
So whether we're jumping or yelling or farting,
it's not just about let's check each others
work, it's also about let's all have a conversation.
[Music]
MICHAEL: Does the Internet make us more separated?
It's a good question, right?
Ironically, because we're still talking to
more people just not in person.
So to that, I would say look at the telephone.
When the telephone was introduced, you could
speak to more people in a day than you ever
could before except you mainly did it alone.
I think it is definitely—we're going back
and reading all the papers that have been
written about the telephone, the television,
the radio and seeing just how similar they
are to the Internet.
I also think that although the Internet allows
us to discover new and different viewpoints,
it also allows us to find people who think
exactly the same way we do.
Back before the Internet, I had to hang out
who I lived with.
[Depressing sound effect]
MICHAEL: And we might not agree on stuff.
But now I can go to websites and forums just
for people who think like I do.
So we need to be mindful to keep exposing
ourselves to weird ideas that we don't like.
Because otherwise it's not fun.
One of my favorite places lately is the flat
Earth society.
They argue that the Earth is flat and it's—it's
flat regardless of what NASA's showing us.
Those are all lies.
What's cool is that they have explanations
for every argument.
So if I say, well if it was flat, then how
come gravity is the same everywhere?
And they say, well, we're a disc accelerating
at 9.8 meters per second.
Einstein said it would feel the same way.
MICHAEL: And you read all these things and
you're like, wait, am I sure the Earth's not
flat?
And it's beautiful because in reading their
forums and arguing with their users, I've
learned a lot more about relativity and Lorenz
contractions and all this stuff that didn't
have a reason before.
It was just information and now it's useful
and kind of shocking because I'm sitting here
trying to prove that the Earth is round which
I shouldn't be working so hard to do.
MICHAEL: Hey, it's Michael from Vsauce and
you are watching THNKR.
