We're still riding the high from last week's New York 333. The first and not the last. Our brilliant co-hosts Julienne DeVita and Lore Oxford welcomed over 50 futures thinkers to hear from some of the city's greats.
Keely Adler spoke about Life-Sized Politics: a shift from abstract crises and ideological battles to relatable, everyday stories, empowering people to engage personally and find hope in small, meaningful actions.
Quentin Humphrey surfaced an emerging trend about how people are embracing a "Relic Revival," preserving culture through digital nostalgia like USBS.
Pupul Bisht shared an interesting provocation on how the growing climate emergency is disrupting spiritual rituals
Elliott P. Montgomery returned to true primary research sharing three signals that he spotted with his ACTUAL eyes. A refreshing take on what it is to get out from behind the computer
Christina N. Harrington, PhD put forth the concept that to foster flourishing in design, we must move beyond traditional problem-framing and solutionism that often marginalizes communities, and instead focus on incorporating joy, desire, and pleasure into the process.
Alisha Bhagat touched on the return of the 1860s via the rise of trad wives, scratch cooking, and homeschooling - new all avenues that seek to create alternative spaces outside of what is seen as an undesirable mainstream culture.
Sarah Owen presented a methodological framework she's working on with an astrologist that fuses the predictive capabilities of astrology with strategic foresight.
Thank you to everyone involved in this magical morning including the forever helpful, Yuvan Kumar and Mar High