Jason Luis Silva Mishkin (born February 6, 1982)[not verified in body] is a Venezuelan-American television personality, short filmmaker, futurist, and public speaker. He is known for hosting the National Geographic documentaries Brain Games and Origins. He has stated that his goal is to use technology to excite people about philosophy and science.[1]The Atlantic describes Silva as "A Timothy Leary of the Viral Video Age".[2] Silva writes and produces short films, is a former presenter on Current TV, and lectures internationally on such topics as creativity, spirituality, technology, and humanity.[2]
He believes in transhumanism and that biology will eventually "become...an information technology".[3]
Silva was born on February 6, 1982[citation needed] in Caracas, Venezuela.[2][4] His mother, Linda Mishkin,[citation needed] an artist, is Ashkenazi Jewish. His father, Luis Manuel Silva,[citation needed]converted to Judaism, but, according to Silva, they were secular and lived in a household "more akin to a Woody Allen film" with "a lot of humor, a love of art... and theater".[5] He is also brother to Jordan Silva and Paulina Silva.[citation needed]
As described by Silva in interview, he was inspired by Charles Baudelaire's Hashish House to host "salons" at his house as a teenager to discuss ideas, and it was there that his obsession with filmmaking and documentation began. As he describes it, video rather than pen became his preferred way to memorialize what, in that time, he saw as "ecstatic moments". In response to criticism that he has received "for being overly expository... the equivalent of a voice-over narrator", it's Silva's expressed view that "it's not enough to feel the experience; it needs to be narrated in real time".[4]
Silva earned a degree in film and philosophy from the University of Miami.[when?][2] There, he and Max Lugavere produced and starred in a video documentary/performance piece entitled Textures of Selfhood.[6] The short film is "an experimental film about hedonism and spirituality"[6]—described as being based on Silva's and Lugavere's lives in Miami[according to whom?]—and it gained the attention of the Al Gore-Joel Hyatt station, Current TV, who, in Silva's words, were looking for "passionate storytellers".[7]
Silva is television personality, filmmaker, futurist, and public speaker; he uses television, online media, and lecture halls to share his perspectives.[2] For example, in the video The Mirroring Mind, Silva "explores human consciousness and the creation of that consciousness through self-reference."[8] He describes himself as a "wonder junkie"[1] and as a "performance philosopher",[9] a term he first heard on a website called Space Collective by Rene Daalder.[4]
At TEDGlobal in June 2012, Jason premiered a short video entitled "Radical Openness".[8][14] In September 2012, Silva presented his Radical Openness videos at the opening keynote at Microsoft TechEd Australia.[15] Radical Openness was also featured in his presentation at La Ciudad de las Ideas conference on November 10, 2012.[citation needed]
In September 2012, he presented "We Are the Gods Now" at the Festival of Dangerous Ideas.[16]
In 2013, Silva and Apollo Robbins became the hosts of Brain Games on the National Geographic Channel. The show explores the brain through interactive games that look at perception, decision-making, and patterning, as well as how easily the brain can be fooled.[18][19] Experts in psychology, cognitive science and neuroscience appear on the show, as Silva states, "to make sure we're doing the science right."[20] The show, which premiered in 2011, received 1.5 million viewers for episodes one and two and set a National Geographic record as the highest rated series launch in that channel's history.[9][21]
The experience of being tricked or fooled or made aware of a shortcoming makes you curious. It makes you kind of get up from your seat a little bit and be like 'How did that work?'
Released in 2017 as a part of the National Geographic Channel, Jason Silva hosted this short series. Origins explores the very beginning of mankind and rewinds all the way back to the beginning, tracing the innovations that made us modern. The series features 8 episodes of approximately 45 minutes running time each, and as of this date,[when?] only a commitment to one season of Origins has been reported.[citation needed][23]
In May 2013, Jason began "Shots of Awe", a YouTube channel on the Discovery Digital NetworksTestTube, presenting weekly "micro-documentaries" on creativity, innovation, exponential technology, futurism, metaphysics, existentialism and the human condition.[28]Zoltan Istvan, editor for the Huffington Post, wrote that Shots of Awe is a blend of philosophy and art and has been massively popular to the younger generation.[29]
In March 2014, he was a guest in an episode of SourceFed's Tabletalk.[31] In December 2017, he appeared as a guest host on the trivia app HQ Trivia.[citation needed]
His film Attention: The Immersive Power of Cinema[39] was part of the exhibition 'Kino und der kinamatografische Blick' ('Cinema and the cinematographic gaze'), 20 March - 2 June 2013, at MEWO Kunsthalle in Memmingen (Germany).[40]
In 2014, Silva served as advisor for National Geographic Channel's Expedition Granted competition in which finalists are chosen based on their project's originality, viability and potential impact on either the local or global community.[41]
^ abcdVolmers, Eric (August 26, 2013). "Brain Games show demands heady host; Illusions, tests reveal how the mind plays tricks". The Ottawa Citizen. Ottawa, Ontario. p. D.5.
^Donkin, Karissa (August 17, 2013). "Brain Games will send your mind off to work: National Geographic Canada's new show inspires as it exercises viewers' minds". Toronto Star. Toronto, Ontario. p. E.7.