Topic Guide
What Is Mogging?
Mogging is a subject covered in depth across 1 podcast episode in our database. Below you'll find key concepts, expert insights, and the top episodes to listen to β all distilled from hours of conversation by leading experts.
Key Concepts in Mogging
Ruthless garden
Matt McCusker's personal gardening philosophy where plants are not 'babied' but must be resilient and productive. He describes it as a "stern father" approach, requiring plants to adapt to elements or be removed, reflecting a totalitarian system focused on output.
Supernormal stimuli
A psychological concept where an exaggerated version of a stimulus is preferred by an animal (or human) over the naturally occurring stimulus. In the episode, it's used to explain how artificial enhancements in human appearance (e.g., extreme lip injections, cosmetic surgery) create an aesthetic that isn't natural or attainable, potentially leading people to 'chase an aesthetic that's not natural and it's not attainable.'
Looksmaxing / bone smashing / mogging
An internet subculture focused on maximizing physical attractiveness, often through extreme and dangerous methods. "Bone smashing" involves intentionally inflicting blunt force trauma on facial bones in a false belief it will reshape them for a more chiseled look. "Mogging" is a term used to describe out-competing someone in terms of physical appearance or stature, leading to feelings of inferiority if one is 'mogged' in a photo or social interaction.
Universal basic income (ubi)
A proposed system where all citizens of a country regularly receive an unconditional income from the government. The episode discusses UBI as a potential solution to widespread job displacement and economic disruption caused by advanced AI, suggesting it could lead to a future with 'kings' and 'surfs' but also offer individuals time for personal pursuits like gardening.
What Experts Say About Mogging
- 1.Matt McCusker employs a "ruthless garden" philosophy, akin to a "stern father," where plants must adapt to elements or perish, focusing solely on producers.
- 2.Professional exterminators utilize extreme methods, such as rat poison containing fiberglass that cuts lungs, ensuring pests die away from the colony.
- 3.Social media platforms like X (formerly Twitter) are criticized for their algorithms, which can lead users into echo chambers of "race war propaganda" and other extreme content.
- 4.A recent jury ordered Meta and Google to pay $3 million to a 20-year-old woman, finding the companies liable for product design features that harmed her mental health and contributed to social media addiction, anxiety, depression, and body dysmorphia.
- 5.Many social media features, like the pull-down-to-refresh motion, are designed using "slot machine technology" to create dopamine bursts and maximize addictiveness.
- 6.The internet has fostered concerning subcultures like "looksmaxing," which includes dangerous practices such as "bone smashing" (intentionally inflicting blunt force trauma on facial bones) and "mogging" (comparing physical traits to assert dominance or status).