Ole Reissmann

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THEFUTURE

The GenZ Reality Check Media Needs to Hear

Newsletter sent 24.6.2025 by oler

In this issue: Announcing the first German-speaking who’s who for AI and journalism. ChatGPT is (probably) not making us dumber. Using Dia, the AI-first web browser. And media innovator Sara Inkeri Vardar wants friction and failures for meaningful change.

GenZ speaking: We’re witnessing a change in media consumption. Media strategist Ezra Eeman calls it the “double flip”: 18-24 year olds prefer videos or podcasts over text, and more and more, they’re getting news from personalities instead of, you know, actual news organizations. Two shifts that feed into each other.

What to do about it? Let’s ask GenZ. And yes, it’s the longest interview this newsletter has ever run. Sara Inkeri Vardar is not only young, but helps bring together the Nordic AI in Media Summit and has a front-row seat to everything AI and journalism.

Four Questions with Sara Inkeri Vardar

Who to follow: You suggested names, I went through my feeds, and now we have a list of the 25 leading German-speaking experts in AI and journalism.

I’m kidding. There are more than 60 people on the list. But I checked how active they are, looked for LinkedIn posts, newsletters, podcasts, and came up with a two-tier system.

Tier one: the people who are sharing their knowledge, posting regularly. These are our go-to voices—the ones who’ll help us understand why everyone’s freaking out about the latest model drop or why that viral AI journalism story is missing some crucial context.

Tier two: the people who absolutely belong on this list but maybe don’t have time to post three LinkedIn updates a day about prompt engineering. They’re doing the actual work—running newsrooms, building tools, figuring out how to fact-check AI-generated content without losing their minds.

Anyway, I’m probably overthinking this. The list exists, it’s longer than I planned, and I’m sure I missed someone important. (Please tell me it’s not you—that would be awkward.)

What I’ve been reading:

AI & Journalism Links

Yes to deals, payments, and control: Meredith Levien, CEO of The New York Times, talks about the Amazon-deal. She likes to think of Times journalism as “IP”, not “data”. (Mixed Signals podcast, Semafor)

So… is ChatGPT making us dumb? A viral MIT study, what it actually found, and the delicious irony of how we consume research. (Steffi Kieffer, Substack)

What was “reading”? Humans turn to AI, viewing text as fungible and blurring the line between primary and secondary sources (Joshua Rothman, New Yorker)

Another fun one: Cloudflare CEO warns of AI-driven “existential threat” to publishers as search traffic dwindles amid bot-fueled content skimming. (Christine Wang, Axios)

Against chatbots: Why we need human-centric tools, not user-hostile interfaces. (tante)

Time launches AI audio briefing featuring four-minute podcasts based on its flagship newsletter, with voices from OpenAI called Henry and Lucy.

“A.I. Is Poised to Rewrite History. Literally.” is a love letter to NotebookLM and how historians are using it to analyze data and structure books. (Bill Wasik, New York Times Magazine)

My tool of the week: For the last ten days, I’ve been using Dia, a new AI-enhanced web browser. Dia turns the address bar into a chatbot, lets you chat with tabs, helps write emails, summarizes content, and finds moments in YouTube videos. It’s designed to be an AI-powered layer over your digital life.

I’d even call it a window into the future, as Google is building AI features into Chrome (but maybe has to get rid of Chrome for antitrust reasons?), Perplexity has announced Comet, an “AI-powered” browser, and Apple promised (but didn’t ship) an all-knowing Siri.

How did it go? Let’s just say, I’m not quite ready to make the switch. Read it all here.

See you next week, see you in THEFUTURE!

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The previous issue is The End of the Web As We Know It, the next issue is When AI Meets Amateur Hour.