The late cultural critic Neil Postman, in his book ‘Amusing Ourselves to Death’ (1985), warned of a society losing its capacity for rational discourse, succumbing to a culture dominated by television’s relentless pursuit of entertainment.
Postman argued that the “typographic mind” – one moulded by print culture, reading, analysis, and sustained attention – was yielding to the “televisual mind”, driven by images and short snippets of uncontextualised information.
Today, the problem has gone beyond television’s passive consumption. With devices in hand, we encounter entertainment that is relentlessly measured and optimised to hold attention. Instead of exploring topics with patience, the information diet now consists of quick fixes: a meme here, a viral clip there, creating a false sense of being ‘informed’.
Content in the form of short clips, introduced by platforms like TikTok and imitated across other social media applications, exemplifies this shift. The simple reason for this shift is that such content requires minimal attention while offering maximum gratification
Why have we collectively decided to sacrifice depth for gratification, reflection for reaction, and understanding for amusement? These are not just questions of taste or trend; they are cultural signposts reflecting a deep shift in how we process information and engage with the world. The ephemeral nature of these clips caters to ever-diminishing attention spans, where the audience is often restless, scrolling mindlessly until something grabs their eye.
This raises an existential question: if we continue down this path, what kind of society do we become? Without the habit of reading deeply, without the patience to understand context, nuance, or historical perspective, we risk turning into passive consumers of packaged meaning. Originality, once nurtured by a long apprenticeship with the written word and the contested realm of ideas, may die a quiet death in this sea of easily digestible content.
Yet, to throw up our hands and lament this state of affairs as inevitable would be a grave mistake. It is still possible to restore balance. Educational institutes, for one, have a crucial role to play: they can arrange more in-person sessions that encourage dialogue, debate, and sustained engagement with complex texts, helping students rediscover the pleasure and power of active learning. Classroom discussions where students must defend their ideas with evidence and reasoning may stand as a barricade against the erosion of deep thinking.
Outside of academia, parents and communities could become more deliberate about screen time. Perhaps a cultural shift encouraging family reading hours, local book clubs, and literary festivals can help. If we want to save ourselves from an unthinking future, we must cultivate environments that reward focus, inquiry, and meaningful conversation.
Public policy can also nudge us in this direction: more libraries can be established, and existing ones can be better funded, critical media literacy courses introduced from early school years, and creative writing workshops supported as a form of community development.
None of this is simple, and none of it is guaranteed to succeed. We are grappling with powerful technologies and profit-driven platforms that have mastered the art of catching our eye and holding it just long enough to move on to the next instant distraction.
But the stakes are high. Our capacity for independent thought, our ability to reflect, and our understanding of complexity are all at risk. If we value these attributes – and we should – we must resist the lure of amusement for its own sake. Instead, we must strive to preserve and foster a culture where genuine engagement, intellectual depth, and originality are not only possible but prized. In doing so, we might yet avoid amusing ourselves to death.
The writer is a Lahore-based lawyer.
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