Chapter

Tim Ferriss on Managing Social Media and the Importance of Being Selectively Ignorant
In this podcast episode, Tim Ferriss shares his strategies for managing social media and explains why being selectively ignorant is important in this digital age. He also emphasizes the toxic nature of some social media networks and encourages listeners to focus on their own growth rather than tearing others down.
Clips
Bestselling author Tim Ferriss explains how different social media networks represent different types of neighborhoods, with Twitter being the most poisonous and Instagram being a much friendlier environment.
07:35 - 10:11 (02:36)
Summary
Bestselling author Tim Ferriss explains how different social media networks represent different types of neighborhoods, with Twitter being the most poisonous and Instagram being a much friendlier environment.
ChapterTim Ferriss on Managing Social Media and the Importance of Being Selectively Ignorant
Episode#289: How to Handle Information Overwhelm (and Social Media)
PodcastThe Tim Ferriss Show
This podcast suggests that managing social media can be accomplished by cultivating selective ignorance and managing by neglect.
10:11 - 13:49 (03:37)
Summary
This podcast suggests that managing social media can be accomplished by cultivating selective ignorance and managing by neglect. It explains that social media companies use anger as a tool to distract people from their work, and individuals should spend more time working on their weaknesses and strengths, rather than tearing others down on social media.
ChapterTim Ferriss on Managing Social Media and the Importance of Being Selectively Ignorant
Episode#289: How to Handle Information Overwhelm (and Social Media)
PodcastThe Tim Ferriss Show
Tim Ferriss outlines two strategies for retaining the most important information from podcasts: "the good shit sticks" and evaluating opportunities based on whether they are a "hell yes."
13:49 - 16:32 (02:43)
Summary
Tim Ferriss outlines two strategies for retaining the most important information from podcasts: "the good shit sticks" and evaluating opportunities based on whether they are a "hell yes."