Programming

Programming at Metaviews begins with a simple conviction: dialogue is not a delivery mechanism, it is an emergent phenomenon.

When people think together in public—across difference, uncertainty, and incomplete information—new forms of knowledge appear that cannot be produced alone or in advance. Events, conversations, and gatherings are not containers for ideas; they are generators of insight. Programming is how we design the conditions for that emergence.

This work takes many forms: public speaking, moderation, facilitation, hosting, and event design. What distinguishes Metaviews is not format but intent. We do not script outcomes or manage consensus. We create spaces where intelligence can surface—where disagreement is productive, narratives are contested, and participants leave seeing the world differently than when they arrived.

Programming is also an act of storytelling. Not fiction, but framing: deciding which questions matter, which voices belong in the room, and how complex realities can be made legible without being simplified. Good programming provokes thought. Great programming inspires action by reshaping how people understand their own agency within a system.

We take seriously Douglas Rushkoff’s warning to program or be programmed, as well as the earlier call to hack the planet. Literacy, agency, and intelligence are not abstract values for us—they are the means of production. Programming is where those means are exercised in real time, in front of real audiences, under real conditions.

This is where method meets madness. Where research collides with lived experience. Where media stops being something you consume and becomes something you participate in.


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