Keurig Dr Pepper to Buy JDE Peet’s in $18 Billion Deal
Once acquired, the mega company will be split into two independent, separate companies focusing on coffee and soft drinks.Read More
Once acquired, the mega company will be split into two independent, separate companies focusing on coffee and soft drinks.Read More
DoorDash has named Zaria Parvez as its new director of social media, the brand confirmed to ADWEEK. She started last Monday (Aug. 18). She announced her new role in a […]Read More
Both networks recorded their top hours outside the primetime window.Read More
She originally sued both the station’s news director Scott Diener as well as KMOV’s then-parent company, Meredith Corporation.Read More
Terry Murray comes from WSPA in Greenville, S.C. where she anchored the 4, 5, 7, 10, and 11 p.m. newscasts.Read More
The downward trend parallels a decrease in young people employed in the industry overall.Read More
ESPN Bet wagers on football fans and a new streaming app as new ads show off features ahead of the 2025 NFL and college seasonsRead More
Gables went on leave in July.Read More
Since I was born, humans have created 6 billion jobs.
All while technology relentlessly disrupts existing industries.
The pin making machine replaced the hand-crafted pin.
The ox-pulled plow replaced millions of hours of backbreaking work.
The amplification and electronic distribution of music upended the work of the live musician, and the camera replaced countless portrait artists.
The internet destroyed the travel agent industry, and Grammarly and Photoshop turned fine editing jobs into low-paid gig work.
[Claude adds: Skilled typesetters, trained in working by hand, were angry at desktop publishing, and the digital distribution of music and books ended the future of many traditional retailers. It’s easy to go on… The assembly line replaced skilled craftsmen who built entire products by hand. The printing press eliminated armies of scribes who copied books and documents manually. The calculator made human computers – people hired to perform mathematical calculations – obsolete overnight. The washing machine destroyed the livelihoods of professional laundresses and washerwomen. The automobile industry wiped out blacksmiths, stable hands, and carriage makers. Email and word processors replaced secretaries who specialized in dictation and typing. The mechanized loom put countless hand-weavers out of work during the Industrial Revolution. GPS navigation systems eliminated the need for most mapmakers and drastically reduced demand for physical atlases. Digital photography destroyed the film development industry and put countless photo lab technicians out of work. Self-checkout machines have steadily replaced cashiers across retail stores, and ATMs transformed many bank teller positions.]
When the web arrived, many of the projects I had built as a book packager–some at great cost–became obsolete. It didn’t seem to me that I could do much about this, though. Arguing that I was entitled to have people buy the Information Please Business Almanac instead of looking stuff up online wasn’t going to work.
It’s entirely possible that a magical AI will replace every single human job and then destroy the Earth. But it’s far more likely that the pattern of the last five hundred years will continue.
If this transformation was an opportunity, what would you do with it?
VaynerMedia has been named H&R Block’s social and media agency of record, expanding a relationship that began with organic social in 2024.Read More