People & Blogs
What I Learned from Cooking My Way Across a Continent | Dieuveil Malonga | TED
Chef and TED Fellow Dieuveil Malonga traveled to nearly every country in Africa, tasting flavors straight from farms and local kitchens, to learn about the traditions that transform a dish. Today, he runs a center to train the next generation of top chefs from across the continent, collaboratively crafting food that shares each country’s culinary…
People & Blogs
What happens when you invite @MarkRober to give a TED Talk? He blows something up, of course! #TED
Mark Rober spent years trying to land a rover on Mars. Now, the former NASA engineer turned science YouTuber with millions of subscribers is launching a new mission: to teach the next generation of big problem solvers. That’s why he’s spending 60 million dollars to build a STEM curriculum kids actually want. With squirrel obstacle…
People & Blogs
The Fleeting Euphoria of Success | Debbie Millman | TED
Over two decades of interviewing countless creative people, Debbie Millman (host of the iconic “Design Matters” podcast) had a realization: the pride and joy of accomplishing something often evaporates almost instantly. She explains how to stop chasing external validation for your achievements and instead live for the act of creation itself. (Recorded at TEDNext 2025…
People & Blogs
The Simple Habit for a Happier Social Life | Nicholas Epley | TED
We are wired for connection, and yet many of us spend most of our lives avoiding it, says behavioral scientist Nicholas Epley. Drawing on decades of research into happiness, loneliness and well-being, he reveals why we consistently underestimate how receptive others are to connecting — and invites us to seize the small moments that lead…
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@My-SeriesHitz
January 23, 2026 at 11:07 am
A Many of them coincide with indian cuisine…!? 🤨🧐
@elonsmuskk5396
January 23, 2026 at 11:42 am
😅 I’m good
@thepews1511
January 23, 2026 at 11:44 am
I thought Micheal Blackson got a new haircut lmao.
Heavy respect to bro tho
@CoC-D8
January 23, 2026 at 12:51 pm
48 country 😮 ! This is amazing and so cool ✨
@AdnanMaruf-g4b
January 23, 2026 at 6:10 pm
In the complex labyrinth of the modern free-market economy, the theories of Sigmund Freud, Herbert Marcuse, and Robert Kiyosaki provide a profound psychological and structural map of our current consumerist and institutional crises.
1. The Psychological Trap: From Freud to Marcuse
In Freudian theory, the human ‘Id’—the seat of primitive instincts—constantly seeks instant gratification. Modern capitalism weaponizes this instinct to create “false needs,” transforming individuals into “shopaholics” or uncontrolled consumers.
According to Herbert Marcuse, this process molds humans into a specific cast, destroying their creative essence—a phenomenon he termed “One-Dimensional Man.” These individuals become mere data points for the market; while they find fleeting joy in shopping, they carry a vast internal void. As Daniel Pink demonstrates in his book Drive, these external artificial rewards and consumerist desires eventually stifle a person’s intrinsic creative drive.
2. The Institutional Crisis: The Legacy of Macaulay
At the root of this crisis lies the British education system introduced by Lord Macaulay, which was designed in the subcontinent to produce a class of obedient “clerks.”
* The Artificial Superego: In Freudian terms, this system imposes an artificial “Superego” upon us, teaching us that success is defined solely by meeting Western standards and enslaving ourselves to conventional rules.
* The Fear of Failure: Robert Kiyosaki highlights how this system produces “A” students who are deathly afraid of making mistakes. The core sentiment of books like The Education of Millionaires or Dumbing Us Down is that academic success and real-life skills are entirely different.
The result is a negative “Meritocracy” in the subcontinent, where the talented view “Brain Drain” or “White-Collar Slavery” abroad as the pinnacle of achievement. In contrast, Malcolm Gladwell’s philosophy in David and Goliath suggests that institutional weaknesses or a “C-grade” background can often make individuals more resilient and innovative.
3. The Path to Liberation: Minimalism and Circular Economy
The effective remedy for breaking the chains of this “one-dimensional” life and mental slavery is Minimalism and the Circular Economy.
* Minimalism: Teaches us to discard unnecessary objects and the blind imitation of Western lifestyles to awaken our “Ego” (the rational self). It transforms us from being mere “consumers” back into “creative beings.”
* Circular Economy: This is the structural counterpart where Kiyosaki’s philosophy of building “assets” meets environmental sustainability. Here, a product is not a “liability” to be discarded after a single use; instead, it is a circular asset that returns to the economy through repair and recycling.
Conclusion: A New Paradigm
When viewed collectively, these theories and texts reveal a new sustainable path. Sustainable development is not just an economic goal; it is a psychological and intellectual liberation.
True independence is achieved when we:
* Control the Freudian dopamine loop.
* Recognize systemic slavery through the lens of Macaulay and Marcuse.
* Use Kiyosaki’s financial intelligence to prioritize building local sustainable assets over expensive “modern slavery” abroad.
Only then can modern capitalism evolve from its destructive form toward a humane, creative, and circular economy—where personal success and the protection of the planet complement each other.
@mmdeguti2509
January 24, 2026 at 5:48 am
Amazing! Would like to know more about and taste this food.
@user-mb3ov5yb4h
January 24, 2026 at 10:34 am
amazing
@toki-w2g
January 24, 2026 at 6:54 pm
It looks really cool! I’m curious about the flavors and ingredients used in traditional African dishes. But we can’t say, “this is African food” because each country has its own culture.
@dhruboshahriar-sv7pr
January 25, 2026 at 5:31 am
Perseverance
@lifemotivation6789
January 25, 2026 at 8:18 am
Every dish carries a story. This is food with purpose
@venepskeuten
January 25, 2026 at 8:41 am
Very interesting.
I am not an expert on food, but clearly there is a lot of value in the things you have learnt and hopefully this will bring its own micro-revolution to cooking.