We live in a time when the old media are losing their significance more and more. What was once considered an important source of information is today for many just an endless noise of headlines, opinions, advertising messages, and ready-made truths.
The classical media have become consumer media.
One watches, one listens, one reads – but one does not participate. The person becomes a spectator instead of a participant.
But deep within us grows a feeling:
This cannot be all.
Many people are beginning to feel that information is not the same as truth. That opinion is not the same as insight. And that media, which only broadcast but do not listen, will eventually lose their value.
A new awareness is emerging
More and more people desire spaces where real conversations can take place. Places where thinking, questioning, feeling, and discussing is allowed – without filters, without scripts, without expectations.
These people are beginning to recognize media anew:
Not just as devices, channels, or platforms,
but as relational spaces.
Spaces where consciousness can grow.
Spaces that do not manipulate but connect.
Spaces where the person is once again at the center – not the ratings.
New media need new people
And this is exactly where something great begins:
People are developing a new perception.
They feel that there are alternatives.
That they do not have to consume –
but can co-create.
With this, they can even recognize the new media.
For new media are not simply modern technology.
New media are media of consciousness.
They thrive on people looking, listening, participating – and not remaining passive.
OKiTALK as the voice of the new time
OKiTALK is a part of this change.
Not loud, not instructive, not dogmatic –
but open, lively, human.
Here a space is created where every voice counts.
A space that does not pretend to dictate how the world should be seen,
but asks:
How do you see the world?
OKiTALK is not consumption,
OKiTALK is participation.
No program,
but a shared process.
No show,
but a field of exchange, perspectives, and the courage to think differently.
Why this is important
Because we live in a time,
where people need consciousness again.
Clarity. Togetherness. Authenticity.
And media that support these values instead of stifling them.
The new media lead us back to the essential:
To the person.
To the conversation.
To the truth that is not predetermined,
but arises in exchange.