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Aleks Krotoski explores the basic human impulse of people watching. We are aware how we perform when we know we are being looked at online but hear little about those watching.

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30 minutes

Last on

Mon 4 May 2015 16:30

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Agust铆n Fuentes

Agust铆n Fuentes
Agust铆n Fuentes is Professor & Chair of the Department of Anthropology at the University of Notre Dame. He explains how primates observe one another, and that they, like we,听are conscious of that observation.

Linda Wisdom

Linda Wisdom
Linda is an award winning Street Photographer based in London. She took Aleks round Soho to explain how to be successful in听capturing moments of beauty in everyday life,听you must be听a keen people watcher.

Christine Hine

Christine Hine
Christine Hine is a pioneer of virtual ethnography, and studies scientific culture, information technology and the Internet. She explains how she goes about observing people online, and how people act differently when their observers are online and anonymous.

Justin Nobel

Justin  Nobel
Justin is the author of 'Standing Still in a Concrete Jungle', which tells the story of some of his marathon people watching sessions in New York City, including 14 hours straight spend on the subway. He explains why watching people can be so fascinating, and what things he sees that others may miss.

Michael Bible

Michael Bible

Michael Bible is the author of the novel听Sophia, forthcoming from Melville House Books and He is the editor-at-large at Nerve and lives in NYC.听 Last year, while battling a bout of writer's block, he found himself in a real life Rear Window. He tells us his story, and how his constructive narrative about the people he saw on the opposite roof began to seep into his own life.

Broadcast

  • Mon 4 May 2015 16:30

Podcast