Favourite new album: Kid A - and not just because Radiohead has banished corporate sponsorship from their tour, although I think its incredibly cool for a band to reclaim some unbranded cultural space for their fans. Favourite new band: Dead Prez, from Brooklyn.
Favourite television programme: The Daily Show - you don't get this brilliant news satire in the UK, tragically.
Favourite documentary (besides the one on Channel 4 tomorrow night): This Is What Democracy Looks Like, produced by the Independent Media Centre. It will be coming to Britain soon. This is the first work to capture the energy of the camcorder activists. It is the story of the anti-World Trade Organisation protests in Seattle cut together with footage from 100 video cameras.
Least favourite magazine:
The Economist. They are on a mission to misrepresent the anti-corporate protesters as greedy rich kids who want to take food out, the mouths of the world's hungry. Why is it so very difficult to imagine that political alliances can cross borders as easily as Nike trainers and foreign currency?
Scariest new website:
www.chrisandluke.com. This is a site built by two brothers who want to be "the first sponsored college students." They are looking for corporations to give them money in exchange for advertising on their bodies - sort of like racing car drivers and rock stars.
Favourite website:
www.openletters.net: "A daily magazine of first person writing in the form of personal correspondence." One letter is posted per day on topics ranging from being the most popular girl at school, to what it's like to interview for a job at Microsoft. All that unites the letters is the intimacy of the writing.
Best new media device:
I don't do product endorsements - at least not for free.
Naomi Klein is the author of No Logo. Her 24-minute film on brands and the anti-capitalist movement will be shown on Channel 4 News tomorrow night.