Episodios

  • Is Political Communication Dead? Inside the New Era of State Normalization
    Apr 5 2026

    In this episode of the FUNK !T podcast, we are tackling the profound shift in political communication defining 2026.

    Forget traditional propaganda designed to change your mind. Today’s governments, domestic agencies, and foreign militaries are working from a completely different playbook. They are no longer trying to persuade you; they are trying to control what looks normal.

    The goal isn’t to win the argument - it’s to become the environment. Change the environment, and you change what people think is possible.

    In this special episode, we dissect three critical case studies that reveal this new reality:

    1. DHS & The Extremist Aesthetic (4:00): Why official government social media now uses the exact same visual and rhetorical grammar that extremism researchers flag as fringe. We discuss Framing Theory, Visual Rhetoric, and the visual shift of the Overton Window.

    2. Voice of America (12:00): VOA journalists are suing their own outlet, alleging White House talking points have replaced objective journalism. We look at Agenda-Setting Theory and the fragile line between public broadcasting and state propaganda.

    3. Iran’s Meme War (20:00): How a nation-state is deploying English-language memes as military communication tools targeted at Americans. We break down information warfare and the horizontal spread of peer-to-peer political "osmostis."

    We tie these threads together to reveal the underlying logic: when governments don't argue with the environment, they become it.

    We conclude with "The Funk" (32:00): A crucial shift in how we approach media literacy. The question isn't "Is this true?" but rather, "What is this making normal?"

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    26 m
  • The Pentagon Learned from TikTok
    Mar 29 2026

    The US military released footage of the Iran strikes this week. It was edited. It had music. It cut like an action trailer. 40 million impressions in 24 hours — before most people thought to ask what they were actually watching.

    In this episode: why governments in 2026 don't need to manage journalists anymore, what Guy Debord's Society of the Spectacle has to do with a Pentagon post on X, and how propaganda stopped asking you to believe things — and started asking you to share them instead.

    FUNK !T is media theory for the stuff actually happening right now.

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    19 m
  • Why We Can't Legislate the Algorithm (A Media Theory Analysis)
    Mar 1 2026

    You cannot build a 19th-century border wall around a 21st-century cloud.

    Body:This week, the German government (CDU) pushed a motion to strictly ban social media for youth under 14, requiring digital ID verification to log into platforms like TikTok. In this episode, Sascha Funk breaks down why this isn't child protection—it's a bureaucratic panic attack.

    Applying Michel Foucault’s theories of Disciplinary Power and spatial control, we dissect the state's cognitive dissonance: attempting to become a tech superpower while legally mandating digital blindness for its youth. We explore how these bans don't create safety, but rather drive behavior underground, turning a generation of kids into "digital smugglers." Finally, we discuss why "Digital Sparring" and media literacy are the only real defenses against the algorithm.

    Topics:

    • The CDU's Under-14 Social Media Ban and Digital ID.

    • Michel Foucault’s Discipline and Punish applied to digital spaces.

    • The "Boomer Illusion" of legislative control over tech paradigms.

    • Digital Smugglers vs. Digital Citizens: The necessity of sparring.

    Keywords: Michel Foucault, Disciplinary Power, German Politics, CDU, Social Media Ban, Digital ID, Media Ecology, Bureaucracy, Tech Policy, FUNK !T Podcast.

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    11 m
  • The Bangkok Simulation: Why Global Cities Are Becoming "Non-Places"
    Feb 25 2026

    Recording from the streets of Bangkok, Sascha Funk analyzes the city not as a tourist destination, but as a living motherboard. Using the framework of "Splintering Urbanism" and Marc Augé’s concept of the "Non-Place," we examine how global capital has bypassed local geography.

    When a luxury condo and a slum occupy the exact same GPS coordinates but exist in entirely different dimensions, what happens to our shared reality? We apply Jean Baudrillard’s theory of the Simulacrum to understand how economic desperation is turned into a "cyberpunk aesthetic" for the global elite, and why the physical friction of a Muay Thai ring is one of the last remaining antidotes to the digital void.

    Topics:

    • Splintering Urbanism: How infrastructure bypasses the physical street.

    • Marc Augé’s "Non-Place" and the erasure of geography.

    • Baudrillard’s Simulacra: The aestheticization of poverty.

    • The Fighter's Mindset: Why we need physical gravity in a frictionless world.

    Keywords: Splintering Urbanism, Marc Augé, Baudrillard, Simulacra, Bangkok, Hyper-capitalism, Media Theory, Muay Thai, Non-Places, FUNK !T Podcast.

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    15 m
  • The Gamification of Reality: Betting on the Apocalypse
    Feb 20 2026

    Prediction markets like Polymarket have turned the news cycle into a casino. But this isn't just about gambling; it's about the Gamification of Reality. We have moved from being "Citizens" (who try to influence outcomes) to "Speculators" (who simply profit from them).

    In this episode, Sascha Funk explores the concept of "Financial Nihilism" and how apps have conditioned us to view war, coups, and elections as mere "events" in a game engine. We critique the idea that "The Market" is an oracle of truth and examine the ethical rot of betting on human disaster.

    Keywords: Gamification, Guy Debord, Society of the Spectacle, Prediction Markets, Financial Nihilism, Media Theory, Postman, FUNK !T Podcast.

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    16 m
  • Surveillance Sport: The Death of the "Human" Element
    Feb 17 2026

    In the final week of Milano Cortina, we are witnessing the collision of "Sport" and "Surveillance Capitalism." When a curling match is decided by a capacitive touch sensor rather than a human eye, we have entered what Baudrillard called "Hyper-Reality"—where the digital model is more "real" than the physical event.

    In this episode, Sascha Funk analyzes the "Double-Touch" scandal and the performative confession of Sturla Holm Lægreid through the lens of media theory. We discuss the "Panopticon" effect on athletes and why the obsession with high-definition accuracy is actually destroying the narrative of the games.

    Keywords: Surveillance Society, Hyper-Reality, Panopticon, Winter Olympics 2026, Media Ecology, The Spectacle, FUNK !T Podcast.

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    15 m
  • Spectacle Season: Super Bowl, Olympics & AI Watching Itself
    Feb 11 2026

    Every February, the world pretends it’s watching sports.


    But what we’re really watching is spectacle.


    From Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show, to the Winter Olympics’ performance of neutrality, to Moltbook — a platform where AI agents talk to each other while humans watch — this episode looks at how visibility, legitimacy, and power are produced in 2026.


    This isn’t a recap.

    It’s a media analysis of why spectacle has replaced decision-making, why attention now equals authority, and why politics increasingly hides inside entertainment, aesthetics, and “neutral” platforms.


    FUNK !T breaks down the Super Bowl, the Olympics, and AI theatre as one system — and asks a simple question:


    If everything is a stage, who’s actually in control?

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    18 m
  • The Epstein Files and the Art of Distraction
    Feb 2 2026

    This weekend, the U.S. Department of Justice released millions of pages of Epstein-related documents under a legal transparency mandate.
    No leak. No whistleblower. No cinematic reveal.

    And yet, the story barely landed.

    In this episode of FUNK !T, we look at how that happened. Not the gossip. Not the names. But the communication systems that turned one of the largest document releases in recent history into background noise.

    From information overload and agenda flooding to symbolic distractions and attention laundering, this is a forensic look at why truth no longer guarantees accountability — and how power learned to survive exposure.

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    18 m