Pitch Engine
The Times


.

Playing on good feelings: when 'eudaimonic' social media goes bad

  • Written by Renee Barnes, Senior Lecturer, Journalism, University of the Sunshine Coast
Playing on good feelings: when 'eudaimonic' social media goes badShutterstock

Twenty-something Melburnian Harrison Pawluck could be doing worse things than building a TikTok audience through “random acts of kindness”.

He’s not out on the streets pulling risky pranks or provoking angry confrontations. He doesn’t promote bogus cryptocurrency schemes, cancer cures or conspiracy theories....

Read more: Playing on good feelings: when 'eudaimonic' social media goes bad

More Articles ...

  1. International expert to review Reserve Bank as deputy governor says households in 'fairly good position' on rate rises
  2. 'Wellbeing'. It's why Labor's first budget will have more rigour than any before it
  3. Inflation is 2022’s boogeyman. How can we address rising living costs, while helping bring it down?
  4. A heated steering wheel for $20 a month? What's driving the subscriptions economy
  5. The downside of digital transformation: why organisations must allow for those who can’t or won’t move online
  6. 3.5% unemployment: Australia's jobless rate at its lowest since 1974
  7. Paws for thought: the pros and cons of a pet-friendly office
  8. Australia is getting a wellbeing budget: what we can – and can't – learn from New Zealand
  9. NZ has reached 'full employment' – but not all workers will benefit from a tighter labour market
  10. Do Australians pay too much income tax? 6 charts on how we rank against the rest of the world
  11. 5 big trends in Australians getting scammed
  12. Rates rise to 1.35% – and there's no stopping now the RBA's on a mission to whip inflation
  13. How Australia's gig workers may remain contractors under Labor's reforms
  14. Regional towns are at risk of being wiped out by the move to net-zero. Here's their best chance for survival
  15. Cryptocurrencies are great for gambling – but lousy at liberating our money from big central banks
  16. Sky-high mortgages, 7.1% inflation, and a 20% chance of recession. How the Conversation's panel sees the year ahead
  17. 1970s-style stagflation now playing on central bankers' minds
  18. The 2021 Australian census in 8 charts
  19. Australians are more millennial, multilingual and less religious: what the census reveals
  20. Beyond GDP: Jim Chalmers' historic moment to build a well-being economy for Australia
  21. Why capping food prices won't work – and will actually make things worse
  22. World Trade Organization steps back from the brink of irrelevance – but it's not fixed yet
  23. Matariki falls during a quiet retail season – but businesses should be wary of cashing in
  24. The RBA's pre-COVID failure to cut interest rates faster may have cost as much as 270,000 jobs
  25. Timber shortages look set to delay home building into 2023. These 4 graphs show why
  26. Swapping stamp duty for land tax would push down house prices but push up apartment prices, new modelling finds
  27. NSW's biggest coal mine to close in 2030. Now what about the workers?
  28. Australia isn't experiencing the great resignation yet, but there has been an uptick
  29. An extra 60,600 Australians found work in May. Here's why wages aren't moving much
  30. How we invented 'unemployment' – and why we're outgrowing it
  31. This 5.2% decision on the minimum wage could shift the trajectory for all workers
  32. Australia already has a UK-style windfall profits tax on gas – but we'll give away tens of billions of dollars unless we fix it soon
  33. Does paying for tax advice save money? Only if you’re wealthy
  34. Australia's Reserve Bank has got a lot right, but there's still a case for an inquiry
  35. Women’s probability of being in poverty more than doubles after separation
  36. The housing game has changed – interest rate hikes hurt more than before
  37. Expect the RBA to go easy on interest rate hikes from now on – we can't afford rates to climb as steeply as the market expects
  38. Beyond boats, beef and Bali: Albanese's unfinished business with Indonesia
  39. Memo RBA: we ought to live with inflation, more of it
  40. Why is lettuce so expensive? Costs have shot up, and won't return to where they were
  41. A century-old double standard: like Labor leaders before him, Albanese is being told he can't manage money
  42. Our business schools have a blindspot that's hindering a more co-operative culture
  43. 4 reasons our gas and electricity prices are suddenly sky-high
  44. Here's a scheme Labor should ditch in its bid to boost productivity. It's the 'patent box'
  45. National income is climbing, but the share going to wages is shrinking: 6 graphs that explain the economy
  46. There's one big reason wages are stagnating: the enterprise bargaining system is broken, and in terminal decline
  47. Australia's biggest economic threat isn't home-grown. It's a recession, originating in the United States
  48. China's population is about to shrink for the first time since the great famine struck 60 years ago. Here's what it means for the world
  49. Expect more power price hikes – a 1970s-style energy shock is on the cards
  50. Military history is repeating for Russia under Putin's regime of thieves
hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink z lib.idDeneme bonusu veren siteler 2026Grandpashabetmarsbahis girişmarsbahisbetparkaresbetmarsbahismarsbahismarsbahisjojobetjojobetcasino siteleriGrandpashabetjojobetjojobetjojobetholiganbetcasibomgrandpashabetmeritking