Michael Chorost wrote the screenplay for this pilot
documentary, which aired on PBS in January 2007. He sits on external advisory
boards for neuroscience research at Northwestern and Brown.
Born with severe loss of hearing due to rubella, his
hearing was partially restored with a cochlear implant in 2001. He subsequently
wrote a memoir of the experience, titled Rebuilt: How Becoming Part Computer Made Me More Human (Houghton Mifflin, 2005). It also exists in a paperback
version with a different subtitle, Rebuilt: My Journey Back to the Hearing
World. In August 2006 Rebuilt won the PEN/USA Book Award for Creative
Nonfiction.
His second book, World Wide Mind: The Coming Integration of Humanity, Machines, and the Internet, was published by Free
Press on February 15, 2011.
22nd Century was
one of three pilots aired by PBS so that viewers can vote for one to be made
into a ten-week series; it was not chosen for that honour. In the premiere
episode, guests arrive from the future, past and present to guide you through a
quirky tour of the “World Wide Mind,” an intriguing theory that proposes that in
the future our brains will be wired up so that we can communicate with the
world effortlessly and instantly.
The series is
hosted by Robin Robinson, a Chicago-based journalist, who is joined by two
virtual co-hosts, each with insightful and often conflicting viewpoints about
the merits of this new technology.
One is an actor
playing Aldous Huxley, the late author of Brave New World, who worried about
the dehumanizing consequences of scientific discoveries. The other is Orlanda
Bell, a time-travelling visitor from the future, who represents the best-case
scenario of these technological advancements. (Source: PBS.org)
22nd Century: World Wide Mind
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