Saturday, March 14, 2026

The Rise and Fall of TED Talks

A new video explains:
What happened to TED? How did one of the most influential idea platforms in the world go from cultural authority to internet punchline?

This video explores The rise and fall of TED, from its founding in 1984 by Richard Saul Wurman as an elite intellectual gathering for technology, entertainment, and design, to its explosive global growth under Chris Anderson and the Sapling Foundation. After TED put its talks online for free in 2006, including Sir Ken Robinson’s legendary lecture on creativity, the brand crossed 1 billion views and became a defining force in internet culture.

But scale changed everything.

Through the launch of TEDx in 2009, more than 44,000 events and 233,000 talks flooded the internet. The tight curation that once made TED a trusted brand weakened. Pseudoscience slipped through. Elizabeth Holmes pitched Theranos on a TED stage. A comedian exposed the lack of oversight with a fake, absurd talk. Meanwhile, flagship conference tickets climbed to $12,500 and $25,000 donor tiers, shifting perception from ideas-first to elite networking.

This Company Name documentary-style business breakdown analyzes how format rigidity, over-scaling, brand dilution, changing attention spans, and political controversy reshaped TED’s reputation. As long-form podcasts and short-form TikTok content reshaped media consumption, TED’s 18-minute format became stuck in the middle.

For founders, operators, and entrepreneurs, this is a case study in platform strategy, brand trust, and the hidden risks of growth. The story of TED is not just about conferences — it’s about curation, scarcity, and what happens when distribution outpaces quality control.

That is all true, but there is another factor not mentioned. The Ted Talks are Leftist propaganda.

TED has a diversity of speakers, so you might expect a diversity of views. Nope. There has never been a right-wing speaker. No speaker is pro-Trump, pro-Brexit, pro-Christianity, or pro-MAGA. Many are non-political, but the political views are all globalist and leftist.

There are still a lot of good Ted Talks, freely available online. They always have very polished deliveries. Just remember that you are getting leftist propaganda.

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