This past year has been a challenge for us all. Work has become remote for many and this has pushed our dependency on technology to the forefront once again.

The speed at which all aspects of our day to day have been altered – has been – at the very least – disruptive – and for many – the changes may have an overwhelming toll on their day to day.

  • How we spend our downtime.
  • The structure of social relationships.
  • Family dynamics.
  • The blurred division between work life, school life and home life.

All of us are participants in an accelerated disruption that we have not experienced collectively until now.

The common thread in all of this disruption – technology. Good or bad – our technology driven lives have allowed us to push forward and at the very least maintain an odd, unusual normalcy.

So what does the future of our connected, networked world look like? Here on FORECAST we will delve into that question – large questions – about the future. We will try to understand and get ahead of the disruption.


This is Forecast.
Future forward conversation – providing context and perspective on the future of our connected world.

From I of T to artificial intelligence, crypto currency to big data, cybersecurity, machine learning, blockchain technology, media, streaming and everything in between.


Subversive w/Alex Kaschuta

Subversive is a podcast by Alex Kaschuta about ideas that may not fit neatly into the Overton window and could use a nudge, or a sledgehammer. Alex chats to thinkers across the spectrum from iconoclast philosophers, rogue scientists, *real* journalists, and our true intellectual elite, Twitter anons.


Orange Pill Podcast

Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert with a weekly trippy look at a post red-pilled world. As an old fiat regime fades away and a new hard money system brings a new renaissance, they speak to guests from the world of bitcoin, macroeconomics, space travel, artificial intelligence and also finance, markets and monetary policy.


Internet History Podcast

A history of the Internet Era from Netscape to the iPad. Oral histories from the people that made the technology happen. “Chapter” episodes providing background on the history of the companies. Great podcast – no longer publishing.

David Hillman Curtis (February 24, 1961 – April 18, 2012) was an American new media designer, author, musician and filmmaker. Curtis was the Principal and Chief Creative Officer of hillmancurtis.com, inc., a digital design and film production firm in New York City.

Curtis rose to notoriety as a Flash motion designer – revolutionizing the limits of user interface and online design. Later in his short career Curtis became an acclaimed film maker with his ‘Artist Series’ short films. Wonderful, wonderful work.

An influential artist, graphic designer, poster designer and record cover designer – Chantry crafts his work with an on the fly, punk rock attitude that makes for a one of a kind, unique aesthetic often emulated. You Should Know Who Art Chantry Is!

Chantry advocates a low-tech approach to design that is informed by the history of the field. His work has been exhibited at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Museum of Modern Art, Seattle Art Museum, the Smithsonian, and the Louvre. Chantry builds his record, poster, and magazine designs by hand, eschewing the now-ubiquitous computer and laser printer for X-Acto knives, Xerox machines, and photoset type. His bright, eye-popping creations can be seen frequently in the mom-and-pop record store as in the pages of establishment design magazines like Print or Communication Arts.

In the final episode of 2019, Broadcast Dialogue – The Podcast features the team behind Broadcast Dialogue – editor Connie Thiessen, Momentum Media Marketing digital strategy director James Wallace, and BD creative director Christian Lind – discussing some of the big broadcast and digital stories from the past year, including the rise of podcasting and esports, the increasingly crowded OTT landscape, and radio syndication.