Analog-ish: Seeking low-tech ideas in a high-tech world
In this episode, you'll hear from Mikki Kendall, author of Hood Feminism, about what happens when being online stops being casual and starts being work. Mikki shares how public visibility changed her relationship with social media—from casual check-ins with friends to weighing every word for potential backlash, death threats, and AI companies stealing her work. You'll hear about the real costs of parasocial relationships, why she had to stop playing a phone game she loved, and how her kids' lives changed when strangers started showing up at their school. This is a raw, urgent conversation about the collapse of privacy, the weaponization of AI, and why slowing down—and sometimes logging off—is an act of self-preservation. Topics Covered: * How becoming a public figure transforms your relationship with social media—from personal expression to calculated risk assessment * The hidden labor of managing parasocial relationships: when strangers think they know you well enough to comment on your food, your health, and your body * Why Mikki stopped playing the location-based game Ingress after a stranger tracked her to her child's school playground * How AI companies like Grammarly and Anthropic used Mikki's name and work without consent—and what it's like to sue over plagiarism by machine * The emotional and practical toll of death threats, online harassment, and having to renegotiate friendships around safety protocols * Why Mikki believes we'll see the death of social media before we see it fixed—and what that means for how we engage now * The dangerous mythology of "tech bros know best" and why AI is replicating—not solving—systemic racism and misogyny * How speculative fiction and Afrofuturism (Octavia Butler, N.K. Jemisin) help us see the futures we're building—and the ones we can still refuse * Why white women (and all people with privilege) need to stop trusting the right, the center, and even the left without accountability * The apocalypse has already happened—to Indigenous people, to survivors of the Transatlantic slave trade—and what that teaches us about collapse, resistance, and survival Resources Mentioned: * Hood Feminism by Mikki Kendall [https://amzn.to/4sTM8I9] * Positive Obsession by Susanna Morris [https://amzn.to/3QXAlLm] Connect with Mikki Kendall: * Website [https://mikkikendall.com/] * Threads [https://www.threads.com/@karnythia] 🎤 JOIN US IN THE FEMINIST PODCASTERS COLLECTIVE [http://feministpodcastcollective.com/]
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