Toby Bennett
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tgpb.bsky.social
Toby Bennett
@tgpb.bsky.social
Senior Lecturer in Media, Culture & Organisation at University of Westminster

Wrote a book on the mundane work that makes Big Music work; do editorial bits at Journal of Cultural Economy; some other stuff...
https://tgpbennett.wordpress.com
Pinned
A page collecting stuff about my book so far - an extract from ch.1, other people's reactions, podcast appearances, a playlist of tracks to "listen along" with, etc.

Reviews welcome! If you'd like a review copy, let me know...
tgpbennett.wordpress.com/corporate-li...
Corporate Life in the Digital Music Industry: Remaking the Major Record Label from the Inside Out
Toby Bennett This is my first book, published by Bloomsbury in late 2024. This page contains some information, extracts, reviews, further listening and so on. From the Back Cover Drawing on a deep …
tgpbennett.wordpress.com
Reposted by Toby Bennett
Join us for an online seminar to celebrate the end of our project, Redistributive Imaginaries, and the launch of our report.

18.03.26
12.00-13.30 CET

With @mrtzg.bsky.social, Mercè Oliva, Milana Čergić, John Clarke, @hannakuu.bsky.social & Eva Frade

ema.uzh.ch/RXNMK
February 13, 2026 at 7:27 PM
Reposted by Toby Bennett
MF DOOM: Long Island to Leeds
Music Commentary Podcast · A tribute to the enduring legacy of
podcasts.apple.com
February 11, 2026 at 8:36 PM
Reposted by Toby Bennett
Our substack is now (also) a @leaflet.pub publication, which you can subscribe to via bluesky or rss.

So far, I've only ported the intro post, but will get around to the rest after finishing the severely overdue second BlackRock post.
February 11, 2026 at 11:38 AM
Peak television. All went downhill from here.
Which affords me the opportunity to once again share this clip of Morgan Khan and the Jesuit priests who used to teach him, dancing to Junkyard Band at The WAG on an episode of South Of Watford presented by Hugh Laurie in 1986
February 11, 2026 at 8:37 AM
Reposted by Toby Bennett
Basic interdisciplinarity question: I have a small project with a computer scientist. I'm coming from critical media studies. Both of us are working and communicating in good faith - but struggling a bit.

Practical tips and strategies very welcome!
February 10, 2026 at 8:10 PM
Turning (back) to this, which I recall being as much of a "five easy steps to cross-disciplinary success" recipe as you'll find anywhere.

(Thanks @felicitycallard.bsky.social & @desfitzgerald.bsky.social )
February 10, 2026 at 9:07 PM
Basic interdisciplinarity question: I have a small project with a computer scientist. I'm coming from critical media studies. Both of us are working and communicating in good faith - but struggling a bit.

Practical tips and strategies very welcome!
February 10, 2026 at 8:10 PM
Reposted by Toby Bennett
New OA article just out on "assetizing academic content" led by @jkom.bsky.social with me, @keanbirch.bsky.social & Klaus Beiter, exploring how academic materials are turned into value-generating digital assets by HE institutions, edtech platforms, and AI companies link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Assetizing academic content and the emergence of the ‘assetizen’: education platforms, publisher databases, and AI model training - Higher Education
Higher Education - Academic content, such as teaching materials and academic publications, has become an economic resource. This has occurred through assetization as the key economic regime in...
link.springer.com
February 10, 2026 at 9:13 AM
Reposted by Toby Bennett
The podcast accompanies their Digital Eating Special Issue www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjce20/1... also feat @joedeville.bsky.social @evahaifa.bsky.social @christianfuentes.bsky.social among many untaggable others
February 9, 2026 at 11:09 AM
Reposted by Toby Bennett
Cultural Trends is looking for new Editorial Board members. Interested in joining us? Apply by 2 March 2026.
📢 Cultural Trends | Editorial Board

Seeking new Editorial Board members from March 2026.
Welcoming scholars from under-represented regions and working on AI & culture, sustainability, CCIs, and cultural policy.

⏰ Deadline: 2 March 2026
🔗 www.tandfonline.com/journals/ccu...
Cultural Trends
Publishes timely investigations on issues in the arts, culture and creative sectors, and critically engages with policy debates from international perspectives.
www.tandfonline.com
February 9, 2026 at 11:20 AM
Reposted by Toby Bennett
Ah, geez. This is sad:

"First Monday will cease publication, after 30 years, with the May 2026 issue, volume 31, number 6, scheduled for release around the first Monday of May, 4 May 2026."

firstmonday.org/ojs/index.ph...
First Monday @ 30 | First Monday
firstmonday.org
February 7, 2026 at 1:04 PM
Reposted by Toby Bennett
Great overview (& essential reading) on the new science policy landscape in the U.K.
The biggest upheaval in UK science policy since the 1980s is currently underway, with the creation of a much more direct & explicit link between UK government priorities & £9bn/ yr of R&D funded by the agency UKRI

My attempt to explain & set in historical context
softmachines.org?p=3252
UK science policy in transition – Soft Machines, by Richard Jones
softmachines.org
February 7, 2026 at 10:11 AM
I think I ended up in the same place. I agree "AI" is mostly playing the role of a utopian technosocial imaginary (a la flying cars or space travel), and demands a different political valence, but I think he is positing it as a material means of actualising cybernetic socialism (as well)?
February 7, 2026 at 10:07 AM
Reposted by Toby Bennett
I'll let this graph sit with me for a while, I especially think the distinction between Playful Productivism and Worldmaking is not something I had really thought through before, and it seems worth contemplating
February 7, 2026 at 12:34 AM
Reposted by Toby Bennett
I actually agree with a lot of stuff in @evgenymorozov.bsky.social's follow-up essay (which, despite the snark, I liked a lot more than the first one)! And yet, I vehemently disagree on the role of AI as sketched in the essay.
The Socialist Charcuterie Board - The Ideas Letter
Taking issue with Benanav’s institutional vision of a democratic political economy of technology, Morozov argues that generative AI exposes a deeper problem that socialism has yet to solve: how to…
www.theideasletter.org
February 7, 2026 at 12:34 AM
Reposted by Toby Bennett
“no one who has witnessed over two years of genocide in Gaza is likely to disagree with either Hammad or Said that the intellectual class has utterly failed to fulfill its social function”
"What is the task of the intellectual at a time when, at the heart of liberal democracies, genocide is normalized and protest suppressed?"

Rebecca Ruth Gould revisits Edward Said: https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/edward-said-representations-intellectual-gaza-crisis-israel-fitzcarraldo/
February 7, 2026 at 8:12 AM
🤔
February 6, 2026 at 6:10 PM
Reposted by Toby Bennett
if you're not following this stuff private credit sounds like its private investors' risk but in all sorts of ways through pensions mortgages and life insurance this is not private risk but public risk. what's happening is even less transparent than the run up to 2008 imvho
February 6, 2026 at 5:33 PM
Friday evening food for thought maybe...
What's the future of AI? Who's the most attractive virtual boyfriend? Why is the venerable historian Quentin Skinner concerned about the gig economy? How do you study a database? What did I come away from a Beijing record store with?

Answers to all this and more here!
Some things I read, listened to and thought about in January: AI's Economy of Scale; Chinese masculinity, music and Maoist discourse; and a few bits and pieces of intellectual history and so on.

Part one of an effort to develop a reflective writing habit.
tgpbennett.wordpress.com/2026/02/03/h...
February 6, 2026 at 5:42 PM
Reposted by Toby Bennett
This is remarkably Stuart Hall-esque argumentation:

"many pages of intricate design [...] with a striking silence about political strategy. How does any of this become plausible? Contestable? Lovable? Winnable? [...] It cedes the terrain of technological imagination to the Thiels and the Musks"
February 5, 2026 at 10:19 PM
Reposted by Toby Bennett
What might we be able to build in the future that we can't build today? For the @TheIdeasLetter, I wrote about the political economy of technology and technological change in a world beyond capitalism.
www.theideasletter.org/essay/a-real...
A Real Political Economy of Technology - The Ideas Letter
Two technological futures are competing for political and material priority: generative AI and the green transition. Benanav argues that while AI is marketed as a world-reordering breakthrough, its pr...
www.theideasletter.org
February 6, 2026 at 3:33 AM
This is remarkably Stuart Hall-esque argumentation:

"many pages of intricate design [...] with a striking silence about political strategy. How does any of this become plausible? Contestable? Lovable? Winnable? [...] It cedes the terrain of technological imagination to the Thiels and the Musks"
February 5, 2026 at 10:19 PM
Finished. If this academia thing falls through, think a future career in set design awaits me. As long as it's exclusively for Where's Wally immersive experiences.
February 5, 2026 at 9:34 PM
Reposted by Toby Bennett
What's the future of AI? Who's the most attractive virtual boyfriend? Why is the venerable historian Quentin Skinner concerned about the gig economy? How do you study a database? What did I come away from a Beijing record store with?

Answers to all this and more here!
Some things I read, listened to and thought about in January: AI's Economy of Scale; Chinese masculinity, music and Maoist discourse; and a few bits and pieces of intellectual history and so on.

Part one of an effort to develop a reflective writing habit.
tgpbennett.wordpress.com/2026/02/03/h...
Hypomnemata: January 2026
Hypomnemata: “a material record of things read, heard, or thought […] a kind of accumulated treasure for subsequent rereading and meditation […] a regular and deliberate prac…
tgpbennett.wordpress.com
February 4, 2026 at 6:04 PM
When I used to hang around music people, and music questions were how you said hi, I'd ask not "what music are you into" but "what music do you hate". They'd look at me like the deliberately contrarian nob I definitely was but it really was a good way of quickly finding out what makes people tick.
Fuck your favourite song. Tell me your least favourite song. The one that makes you die inside the moment you hear the first 3 seconds.
February 4, 2026 at 10:00 PM