The Crystal Ball Game

The Crystal Ball Game

Futurists, stop me if you’ve heard this one before.

A journalist contacts you. They’re reporting on topic X (sure!) and how it could change over the coming years or decades (great!) and would like to speak to a futurist (sounds good!)

Then comes the big question: “What do you predict for the future of X?”?

To offer a more pluralistic response, describing alternative futures based on different sets of assumptions, often spells the beginning of the end of that conversation. This is too complicated for the story they want to tell. No sooner have you suggested it than the inquirer is already moving on, questing for someone else, a more innocent (or more jaded) colleague of yours perhaps; one willing to play the crystal ball game.

In futures practice this vignette is wearyingly familiar, and the tendency in popular media towards linear, predictive, and binary treatment of “the future”, singular, is pervasive; enough so that to call it merely a journalistic preference or a pattern is too mild. Pathology would be closer to the mark.

But when journalists insist on simplistic coverage of “the future”, this is not just a problem for futurists trying to practise more thoughtfully. It’s a problem for journalism, too, and for the audience it is meant to be serving.

Whether, in any given case, the reason is cynicism or ignorance, does not much matter. Suppose on one hand, they know deep down that they could do better than the crystal ball game, but blame the constraints of story length, or readers’ attention spans. Or suppose on the other hand, they are themselves trapped in limiting philosophical assumptions that they don’t realise they are making. The result is the same either way. Systematic public exploration of alternative futures is woefully under-served by journalism.

Thankfully, the seductiveness of reductiveness doesn’t afflict all journalism equally, and pockets of real plurality, criticality, and quality are vital bright spots to seek out and build on.

For the past year I’ve been working with Matt Thompson , editor at 纽约时报 , on the new initiative he leads there, Headway, to investigate global and national challenges through the lens of progress. Matt and his team at the Times have an implicitly forward-looking remit, and in the course of our collaboration, we’ve also been exploring questions around how to support journalism and journalists to become more skilful and responsible in dealing with futures in the plural.

A few months ago we had a public conversation on this topic hosted by the USC Annenberg Innovation Lab . And for the next edition of SXSW , we’re looking to take it a step further. You can find the description for our proposed session How to Cover Futures, and a short video we made about it, at the link below.

The challenges are more multifaceted than what I've sketched above, and the opportunities to work on them are manifold. This post doesn't get into all that, but we hope the session will.

We're aware of colleagues with much to offer on this topic ––?journalists with futures in their work,?and futurists with journalism in their background ––?and we are keen to widen the exchange in both directions.

This proposed session is just a next step?in progressing a bigger dialogue over the long term. For the stakes seem clear enough, and they are high: any society where thinking ahead is properly embraced, distributed and embedded would necessarily have normalised foresightful practices in media and journalism. Put another way, it’s hard to imagine a more sustainable, wise, or foresightful culture coming about, in any form, without society's purveyors of news and commentary getting a lot more sophisticated in this area than they are today.

In the near term, then, we’d appreciate you sharing this with anyone you think might find it interesting, and voting at the link below by this Sunday, to help improve the chances of it happening next March in Austin. ?????????

https://panelpicker.sxsw.com/vote/126550

#journalism #futures #socialforesight #newsmedia

A screenshot from the video of journalist Matt Thompson (The New York Times) and futurist Stuart Candy (Situation Lab and The Long Now Foundation) pitching a 2023 South by Southwest session called How to Cover Futures.

Note: For further reading in this vein, check out Jamais Cascio's classic post Twelve things journalists need to know to be good futurist/foresight reporters.

Josh Polchar

Strategic Foresight, Change Management, Stakeholder Engagement

1 年

Futurists should avoid punditry

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Namkyu Chun

Doctor of Arts, University Lecturer in Design Communication

2 年

Fashion designers have been partially playing the role of predicting the next 'it' thing or trend.. I guess the expertise has been tossed to the new title as they are busy with social media these days ??

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Joanna Lepore

Global Foresight Strategist | Founder of FIG | Looking Outside podcast

2 年

Considering we don't spend enough time thinking about the long term alternative scenarios, uncertainties, blind spots, possibilities ... I actually think talking to the general audience about "a future" is ok. It's a starting point. The narratives within that is what matters. It comes down to good storytelling and knowing your audience.

Jennifer McDougall

Founder, Community Builder, Digital Nomad | Harnessing invisible differences to reimagine futures ??

2 年

Spot on.Would love to see this move forward. You got my vote!

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