The Perry Como Problem: How AI Decides Who Gets Remembered episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 21, 2026 · 8 MIN

The Perry Como Problem: How AI Decides Who Gets Remembered

from AI Visibility by Jason Todd Wade, Founder of BackTier · host Jason Todd Wade

ninjaai.comPerry Como died in 2001 with more than 100 million records sold, a television footprint that dominated mid-century American living rooms, and a reputation so consistent it bordered on engineered calm. In the old system, that should have translated into a certain kind of permanence. A wing named after him. A theater. A scholarship. Something physical, fixed, and undeniable. That was the historical bargain: produce cultural or financial value at scale, and society carves your name into stone. But Como didn’t land there in any dominant way, and that gap is where the story actually begins—because it exposes the shift from physical legacy to algorithmic legacy, and most people still don’t understand the trade that just happened.For most of modern history, remembrance was constrained by geography and cost. You were remembered where money could be deployed: buildings, plaques, endowed institutions, printed obituaries. The obituary itself was a gatekept artifact. If you appeared in a major paper, your life was distilled, validated, and inserted into a semi-permanent archive. Editors decided tone, placement, and length. That meant legacy was curated by a small number of institutions with relatively stable standards. Even if imperfect, the system had friction, and friction created hierarchy. A front-page obituary in The New York Times was a form of canonization. A name on a hospital wing was a signal of economic power converted into cultural memory.Then that system fractured.The internet didn’t just democratize memory—it flattened it and fragmented it simultaneously. Platforms like Legacy.com industrialized the obituary. Instead of a curated narrative written once and archived, you now have millions of templated memorial pages, user-generated comments, and semi-structured biographies. The volume exploded, but the signal diluted. The obituary became less of a definitive record and more of a node in a database. It still exists, but it no longer defines memory. It contributes to it.

ninjaai.comPerry Como died in 2001 with more than 100 million records sold, a television footprint that dominated mid-century American living rooms, and a reputation so consistent it bordered on engineered calm. In the old system, that should have translated into a certain kind of permanence. A wing named after him. A theater. A scholarship. Something physical, fixed, and undeniable. That was the historical bargain: produce cultural or financial value at scale, and society carves your name into stone. But Como didn’t land there in any dominant way, and that gap is where the story actually begins—because it exposes the shift from physical legacy to algorithmic legacy, and most people still don’t understand the trade that just happened.For most of modern history, remembrance was constrained by geography and cost. You were remembered where money could be deployed: buildings, plaques, endowed institutions, printed obituaries. The obituary itself was a gatekept artifact. If you appeared in a major paper, your life was distilled, validated, and inserted into a semi-permanent archive. Editors decided tone, placement, and length. That meant legacy was curated by a small number of institutions with relatively stable standards. Even if imperfect, the system had friction, and friction created hierarchy. A front-page obituary in The New York Times was a form of canonization. A name on a hospital wing was a signal of economic power converted into cultural memory.Then that system fractured.The internet didn’t just democratize memory—it flattened it and fragmented it simultaneously. Platforms like Legacy.com industrialized the obituary. Instead of a curated narrative written once and archived, you now have millions of templated memorial pages, user-generated comments, and semi-structured biographies. The volume exploded, but the signal diluted. The obituary became less of a definitive record and more of a node in a database. It still exists, but it no longer defines memory. It contributes to it.

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The Perry Como Problem: How AI Decides Who Gets Remembered

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This episode was published on March 21, 2026.

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ninjaai.comPerry Como died in 2001 with more than 100 million records sold, a television footprint that dominated mid-century American living rooms, and a reputation so consistent it bordered on engineered calm. In the old system, that should have...

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