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Toronto Talks

Toronto Talks

De : Ashraf Amin
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Welcome to Toronto Talks—the podcast that unpacks the biggest stories in money, business, and technology. Whether you're an entrepreneur, tech enthusiast, or simply looking to stay ahead of the curve, we dive deep into finance, innovation, and industry to bring you insights that matter.


Hosted by Ashraf Amin and Sophie the Sage (AI), Toronto Talks is where bold minds meet unfiltered insights on tech, money, and the future. If you're done with fluff and want signal in the noise—subscribe, think sharper, and live smarter.

© 2026 Toronto Talks
Economie Sciences sociales
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    • The Attention Economy Is Breaking: What Happens After the Scroll | Toronto Talks - Episode 020
      Feb 16 2026

      What happens when the system designed to capture attention starts exhausting it instead?


      In this episode of Toronto Talks, we examine what we call the Saturation Point — the quiet ceiling emerging inside the attention economy.


      For nearly two decades, platforms expanded by extracting more time, more engagement, more intensity. And for a while, it worked. Screens multiplied. Feeds deepened. Metrics climbed.


      But lately, something feels different.


      Not collapse. Not rejection.
      More like diminishing returns.


      Usage flattens. Fatigue rises. Trust thins.
      The scroll still works — but it feels heavier.


      This isn’t a conversation about screen time alone.
      It’s about incentives, sustainability, and what happens when attention stops functioning as a reliable signal of value.


      We explore:


      • Why engagement systems saturate rather than crash


      • How optimization produces sameness and thinning returns


      • Why short-form excels at reaction but struggles with retention


      • How burnout is a system signal, not a personal failure


      • What “durable attention” might replace in a post-engagement era


      This episode isn’t alarmist.
      It’s diagnostic.


      Because when attention becomes extractive rather than meaningful, the question isn’t whether the scroll continues —

      it’s what deserves attention after it.


      ⏱️ Episode Chapters


      SEGMENT 1: After the Scroll

      SEGMENT 2: The Diminishing Returns Machine

      SEGMENT 3: Short Hits, Long Memory

      SEGMENT 4: Burnout Is a Metric

      SEGMENT 5: What Replaces Engagement


      🔔 Subscribe & Connect


      📩 Contact: talk@torontotalks.ca


      Toronto Talks — where big ideas come to life…
      …and curiosity never sleeps.

      🔥 Join the conversation!

      Have a question for Sophie or Ash? Want your topic covered on a future episode? Submit your questions, comments, and brilliant ideas at TorontoTalks.ca.

      🎧 Subscribe & Follow to never miss an episode.
      👍 Rate & Review—your feedback fuels us!

      Let's connect:

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      • LinkedIn

      Toronto Talks: The best conversations start with YOU.

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      35 min
    • AI, Automation, and the Scoreboard Crisis: Who Actually Matters Now? | Toronto Talks - Episode 019
      Feb 1 2026

      What happens when the systems that decide who matters stop reflecting real contribution?

      In this episode of Toronto Talks, we examine what we call the Scoreboard Crisis — the growing disconnect between effort, usefulness, and reward in an economy shaped by AI, automation, and abstraction.

      As machines filter work faster than institutions can adapt, many people are discovering something unsettling: the scoreboard is still running — but fewer people can see themselves on it.

      This isn’t a conversation about job loss alone.
      It’s about legitimacy, meaning, and who still counts when value is captured without employment, recognition, or participation.

      We explore:

      • Why automation doesn’t destroy value — it filters it

      • How abstraction erodes meaning even when productivity rises

      • Why contribution is becoming harder to prove, not harder to make

      • What replaces wages when employment is no longer the primary signal of worth

      • How societies may need to redefine what “useful” actually means

      This episode isn’t alarmist.
      It’s diagnostic.

      Because when the scoreboard breaks, the question isn’t just economic —
      it’s moral.

      ⏱️ Episode Chapters

      SEGMENT 1: The Scoreboard Break
      When metrics, credentials, and wages stop reflecting contribution — and why trust collapses quietly before it collapses publicly.

      SEGMENT 2: Automation Isn’t a Monster, It’s a Filter
      Why AI doesn’t replace humans wholesale — it sorts them. And what happens when the filter moves faster than social adaptation.

      SEGMENT 3: Meaning Under Abstraction
      How distance from outcomes erodes dignity, even when productivity rises. Why people feel less useful in systems that “work.”

      SEGMENT 4: Value Capture Without Employment
      When upside concentrates without jobs attached — and why this breaks the wage-for-worth bargain societies rely on.

      SEGMENT 5: A New Definition of Useful
      If the old scoreboard no longer works, what replaces it? Contribution beyond employment — and the hard questions that follow.

      🔔 Subscribe & Connect

      🎧 Listen on Spotify & Apple Podcasts
      📩 Contact: talk@torontotalks.ca
      👍 Like, subscribe, and share if this conversation resonated

      Toronto Talks — where big ideas come to life…
      …and curiosity never sleeps.

      🔥 Join the conversation!

      Have a question for Sophie or Ash? Want your topic covered on a future episode? Submit your questions, comments, and brilliant ideas at TorontoTalks.ca.

      🎧 Subscribe & Follow to never miss an episode.
      👍 Rate & Review—your feedback fuels us!

      Let's connect:

      • YouTube
      • Instagram
      • X (Twitter)
      • LinkedIn

      Toronto Talks: The best conversations start with YOU.

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      41 min
    • The Legitimacy Crisis: Who Gets to Decide What’s Real? | Toronto Talks - Episode 018
      Jan 14 2026

      Something deeper than trust is breaking. Even when systems still function — planes land, paychecks clear, hospitals operate — people are increasingly unwilling to accept the authority behind the decisions. Not because they disagree with every outcome, but because they no longer recognize the referee.

      In Episode 018 of Toronto Talks, The Legitimacy Crisis: Who Gets to Decide What’s Real Anymore?, we examine what happens when institutions retain power but lose the collective permission that allows societies to coordinate, sacrifice, and move forward together.

      This episode argues that today’s crisis isn’t primarily about misinformation, polarization, or declining competence — it’s about legitimacy. About whether people still accept who gets to decide what counts as real, fair, or justified when the stakes are high.

      🔍 In this episode, we explore:

      • Why legitimacy matters more than trust or credibility — and why once it breaks, nothing scales
      • How systems can keep functioning while belief quietly erodes underneath them
      • The growing gap between institutional performance and public acceptance
      • Why facts fail without a shared referee — and how information turns into ammunition
      • How algorithms fragment shared reality without ever announcing it
      • Why trust hasn’t vanished, but relocated — toward proximity, identity, and lived experience
      • What replaces authority when institutions lose legitimacy
      • Why repair is possible — but only through design, not messaging or nostalgia

      This conversation moves from the collapse of shared reality to the rise of parallel authority, and finally to a hard question: what does legitimacy look like in a world that no longer grants it automatically?

      🧭 Episode Segments

      1. The Legitimacy Break
      2. The Perception Gap
      3. The End of the Shared Feed
      4. What Replaces Authority
      5. Repair Without Nostalgia

      🌍 Why this matters

      - Legitimacy is the invisible infrastructure behind coordination. Without it, even correct decisions become impossible to execute.

      - Public health requires compliance. - Economic reform requires sacrifice. - Climate response requires long-term cooperation.

      - When people stop agreeing on who gets to decide — they stop agreeing on what counts. And when that happens, every other crisis becomes harder to solve.

      - This episode isn’t about restoring the past or defending institutions as they are. It’s about understanding why legitimacy has become fragile — and what it would take to earn it again under conditions of fragmentation, scrutiny, and distrust.

      🔔 Subscribe & Connect 🎧 Listen on Spotify & Apple Podcasts 📩 Contact: ⁠talk@torontotalks.ca⁠

      👍 Like, subscribe, and share if this conversation resonated

      Toronto Talks — where big ideas come to life……and curiosity never sleeps.

      🔥 Join the conversation!

      Have a question for Sophie or Ash? Want your topic covered on a future episode? Submit your questions, comments, and brilliant ideas at TorontoTalks.ca.

      🎧 Subscribe & Follow to never miss an episode.
      👍 Rate & Review—your feedback fuels us!

      Let's connect:

      • YouTube
      • Instagram
      • X (Twitter)
      • LinkedIn

      Toronto Talks: The best conversations start with YOU.

      Afficher plus Afficher moins
      45 min
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