I thought it was interesting that in Will MacAskill's recent posts about decentralising EA, he said that he will avoid giving opening and closing speeches at EAG.
Currently, the process by which speakers are selected for EAG appears opaque to me, and most talks appear to be by 'senior EAs' and 'EA leaders' with high social status in the community.
To tackle the risk of certain individuals being selected based on social status in the community, I think attendees who are accepted should be able to submit blinded applications containing ideas for talks and workshops for EA conferences. The talks and workshops that the conference organisers believe will provide the most value should then be selected.
I think this could be a nice way to achieve greater value from EA conferences, increase the diversity of speakers / workshop hosts and reduce the impression of specific individuals being 'the face' of EA to spread out PR risks and reduce groupthink.
I'm torn on this, because on the one hand I love the accessibility and the de-biasing that comes with this kind of blinding. On the other hand, I think the quality of the talks would go down, if due to nothing else then a sort of regression to the mean scenario. I may be able to write a good proposal for a talk, but that doesn't mean that I am an engaging and charismatic public speaker.
I think I'd be happier with blinding if it is for a journal submission or something in writing, but it is REALLY hard to judge how good a presentation/talk/workshop will be based off of a piece of writing.
If I am very experienced in running workshops, then I'd want to refer to that in my proposal, but mentioning the previous workshops I've done would de-blind the process.
But I do think that there are decent options that the CEA events team could explore for adding more un-conference aspects to EAGs and EAGxs, such as a certain number of spaces and time slots set aside as "open," and then a whiteboard set up for anyone to sign up for a time slot and a space to offer a workshop.
EDIT: I just read other comments on this post and I realized that I am basically just repeating what Nick Laing has already written. I guess I should have just upvoted that comment rather than writing out my own. Haha.