Close Menu
TechTost
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Crypto
  • Fintech
  • Hardware
  • Media & Entertainment
  • Security
  • Startups
  • Transportation
  • Venture
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

OpenAI discussed calling the police about the conversations of the suspected Canadian shooter

Move over, Apple: Learn about alternative app stores available in the EU and elsewhere

Wikipedia blacklists Archive.today after alleged DDoS attack

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechTost
Subscribe Now
  • AI

    OpenAI discussed calling the police about the conversations of the suspected Canadian shooter

    22 February 2026

    Sam Altman would like to remind you that people use a lot of energy too

    22 February 2026

    ‘Toy Story 5’ takes aim at creepy AI toys: ‘I’m always listening’

    21 February 2026

    Great news for xAI: Grok is now very good at answering questions about Baldur’s Gate

    21 February 2026

    UAE’s G42 partners with Cerebra to deploy 8 exaflops of computers in India

    20 February 2026
  • Apps

    Move over, Apple: Learn about alternative app stores available in the EU and elsewhere

    22 February 2026

    Apple’s iOS 26.4 arrives in public beta with AI music playlists, video podcasts and more

    22 February 2026

    India’s Sarvam launches Indus AI chat app as competition heats up

    21 February 2026

    Remember HQ? “Quiz Daddy” Scott Rogowsky is back with TextSavvy, a daily mobile game show

    21 February 2026

    As the browser war heats up, Chrome is adding new productivity features

    20 February 2026
  • Crypto

    Hackers stole over $2.7 billion in crypto in 2025, data shows

    23 December 2025

    New report examines how David Sachs may benefit from Trump administration role

    1 December 2025

    Why Benchmark Made a Rare Crypto Bet on Trading App Fomo, with $17M Series A

    6 November 2025

    Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko is a big fan of agentic coding

    30 October 2025

    MoviePass opens Mogul fantasy league game to the public

    29 October 2025
  • Fintech

    InScope raises $14.5M to solve financial reporting pain

    20 February 2026

    OpenAI deepens India push with Pine Labs fintech partnership

    19 February 2026

    Cash app adds payment links so you can get paid in DMs

    11 February 2026

    MrBeast’s company buys Gen Z fintech app Step

    9 February 2026

    Stripe Alumni Raise €30M Series A for Duna, Backed by Stripe and Adyen Executives

    5 February 2026
  • Hardware

    Joseph C Belden: Last Chance for Innovators to Earn Scaling Privileges

    20 February 2026

    At a critical time, Snap is losing a top spec executive

    20 February 2026

    Freeform Raises $67M Series B to Scale Laser AI Production

    19 February 2026

    India’s Sarvam wants to bring its AI models to phones, cars and smart glasses

    19 February 2026

    Google debuts $499 Pixel 10a

    18 February 2026
  • Media & Entertainment

    Google adds music-making capabilities to its Gemini app

    21 February 2026

    Disrupt 2026 Super Early Bird pricing expires in 1 week

    20 February 2026

    YouTube’s latest experiment brings its AI chat tool to TVs

    20 February 2026

    OpenAI, Reliance partner to add AI search to JioHotstar

    19 February 2026

    SeatGeek and Spotify are teaming up to offer concert ticket discounts within the music platform

    19 February 2026
  • Security

    Wikipedia blacklists Archive.today after alleged DDoS attack

    22 February 2026

    Error on student admissions website exposed children’s personal details

    21 February 2026

    Ukrainian man jailed for identity theft that helped North Koreans get jobs at US companies

    21 February 2026

    Cellebrite cut off Serbia citing misuse of its phone unlocking tools. Why not others?

    20 February 2026

    FBI says ATM ‘jackpot’ attacks on the rise, hackers net millions in stolen cash

    20 February 2026
  • Startups

    Google VP warns two types of AI startups may not survive

    22 February 2026

    Co-founders behind Reface and Prisma join hands to improve on-device model inference with Mirai

    21 February 2026

    Nominations for the Startup Battlefield 200 are now open

    21 February 2026

    The OpenAI mafia: 18 startups founded by graduates

    20 February 2026

    Nvidia deepens early-stage push into India’s AI startup ecosystem

    20 February 2026
  • Transportation

    These former Big Tech engineers are using artificial intelligence to navigate Trump’s trade mess

    22 February 2026

    Rivian owners will soon be able to access vehicle controls using their Apple Watch

    21 February 2026

    Lucid Motors is cutting 12% of its workforce as it pursues profitability

    21 February 2026

    New York puts the brakes on robotaxi expansion plan

    20 February 2026

    AI data center boom fuels Redwood’s energy storage business

    20 February 2026
  • Venture

    Ali Partovi’s Neo appears to upgrade the throttle model in low dilution terms

    21 February 2026

    Peak XV Raises $1.3B, Doubles In AI As Global India VC Competition Heats Up

    21 February 2026

    General Catalyst commits $5 billion to India over five years

    20 February 2026

    Reload wants to give your AI agents a shared memory

    20 February 2026

    This VC’s best advice for building a founding team

    19 February 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»AI»“A Brief History of the Future” offers a hopeful antidote to cynical tech shots
AI

“A Brief History of the Future” offers a hopeful antidote to cynical tech shots

techtost.comBy techtost.com3 April 202406 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
"a Brief History Of The Future" Offers A Hopeful Antidote
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Cynicism is a quality almost taken for granted in tech journalism, and we’re certainly as guilty as the next publication. But both the risk and the promise of the technology exist, and a new documentary series tries to highlight the latter without discounting the former. “A Brief History of the Future”, hosted by Ari Wallach, also has the exciting quality, as a PBS production, of being completely free.

The show’s position is simply that while the risks and frustrations of technology (often due to its subversion by business interests) are worth examining and documenting, the other side of the coin should also be highlighted not out of naivety but because it’s really important and imperative.

I spoke with Wallach, who embraces the moniker “futurist” unapologetically from the get-go, suggesting that we’re in danger of blinding ourselves to the transformative potential of technology, startups and innovation. (Full disclosure: I met Ari many, many years ago when he was going to Berklee with my brother, though that’s completely coincidental.)

“The theory behind this is that when you ask 10 Americans ‘what do you think about the future?’ 9 out of 10 will say, I’m afraid, or they’ll say it’s all about technology. Those are two things that this show is kind of an intervention for,” Wallach explained.

The future, he said, isn’t just what a Silicon Valley journalist tells you, or what “Big Dystopia” warns you about, or even what a TechCrunch writer predicts.

In the six-episode series, he talks to dozens of individuals, companies and communities about how they are working to improve and secure a future they may never see. From mushroom skin to ocean cleanup to deaths, Wallach finds people who see the same terrifying future as us, but choose to do something about it, even if that something seems hopelessly small or naive.

“We wanted to bring the future into the living rooms of people who don’t usually think about it with a critical, open mind, in terms of the future you’re creating,” he said. “People are just not exposed to it. Because right now, there are a lot of reasons that, culturally, to be critical and cynical is to think of them as smart and self-aware. But now we’re at a point where if we keep doing this, we’re going to lose the thread. We will lose the narrative of the entire greatest human work.”

The point, in other words, is not to pretend the problems don’t exist, but rather that there are already enough people talking about the problems. Shouldn’t one focus on what people actually do to solve them?

Of course the expected topics of artificial intelligence, automation and climate are there, but so are food, art and architecture and more philosophical concerns like governance and value.

The most common objection my cynical mind made as I watched was the classic “how’s that scale?” And Wallach was quick to admit that many of them don’t.

“How you scale and how you monetize — that’s kind of creating Silicon Valley, the Sand Hill Road to look to the future. And there is a time and place for that! It may go ahead, it may not. That’s not the point. We’ve tried to inform and educate how to think differently about tomorrow, and here are examples of people doing it. It is a pattern of behavior and action to give people a sense of agency. Like, are we all going to live in 3D printed houses? Probably not. But if we think about the 2-3 billion homeless people on the planet and how we’re going to house them, that’s potentially going to be part of it,” he continued.

“It’s about solution centricity that isn’t purely VC solution centricity. It’s about how we solve the problems we have today through an opportunistic lens, as opposed to the ‘we’re all going to die’ lens, which is usually the headlines, right?”

Wallach’s thesis won his crew a golden ticket to travel around the world and talk to lots of interesting people and companies. Vertical farms, mushroom skin, coral propagation. Pete Buttigieg, Emmanuel Macron, Reid Hoffman, Grimes, footballer Kylian Mbappé. And everyone seems relieved to be able to talk about the promise of the future rather than its threat.

When I asked Wallach where or with whom he would like to spend a little more time, he gave three answers. One, a professor in northern Japan who has a theatrical, but apparently quite effective, way of asking old people to think about the future by having them pretend to be visited by it. Second, Lawrence Livermore National Lab, where the level of innovation and ambition was, he said, too high to express. And three, the “death doula” who helps people overcome the stress of their existence. (Although technology is often discussed, it is far from the only topic.)

Image Credits: PBS

In case you’re wondering what special interest money is trying to placate you with this benevolent presentation of a kinder, wiser future… don’t worry, I asked. And the shady company behind this extremely well-produced documentary is nothing short of nefarious Public Broadcasting. Which means, as noted above, that it’s not just free to stream PBS.organd on YouTube (I’ll add the first episode below once it goes live), but it will also be shown on regular, linear TV every Wednesday at 9 p.m. — “immediately after Nova.”

The general audience for a show like this, Wallach reminded me, isn’t into TikTok or often even streaming services. Millions, especially older people who are not yet bitter about the promise of the future, turn on the TV after dinner to watch the local news, a network show, and maybe a documentary like this one.

Wallach and his crew have also created a classroom version of the show that includes educational material to follow with students about the topics covered.

“This will be the first future curriculum nationwide, available to over 1.5 million educators on the PBS education platform. It’s like 20 million kids. It is nice. And it’s free.”

As a parting thought, Wallach noted the shows he grew up with and how it’s “cutting edge” to be able to emulate — though he was careful not to compare his own to — classic shows like Cosmos, The Power of Myth and Connections.

“Cosmos changed the way I think about the universe. The Power of Myth, how I think about faith, meaning, psychology. Hopefully, A Brief History of the Future changes the way people think about the future and tomorrow. This is the company we wanted to be in.”

antidote Cynical Future history hopeful Microsoft offers quantum computing shots tech
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleStoriaverse is launching a short-form storytelling app that combines video and written content
Next Article VC firm Maniv is growing in every direction, armed with a new capital of $140 million
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

OpenAI discussed calling the police about the conversations of the suspected Canadian shooter

22 February 2026

These former Big Tech engineers are using artificial intelligence to navigate Trump’s trade mess

22 February 2026

Sam Altman would like to remind you that people use a lot of energy too

22 February 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

OpenAI discussed calling the police about the conversations of the suspected Canadian shooter

22 February 2026

Move over, Apple: Learn about alternative app stores available in the EU and elsewhere

22 February 2026

Wikipedia blacklists Archive.today after alleged DDoS attack

22 February 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

InScope raises $14.5M to solve financial reporting pain

20 February 2026

OpenAI deepens India push with Pine Labs fintech partnership

19 February 2026

Cash app adds payment links so you can get paid in DMs

11 February 2026
Startups

Google VP warns two types of AI startups may not survive

Co-founders behind Reface and Prisma join hands to improve on-device model inference with Mirai

Nominations for the Startup Battlefield 200 are now open

© 2026 TechTost. All Rights Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.