A Conversation with Amanda McCarty, Host of the Clotheshorse Podcast, Part One
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PROMPT ALERT: Our next hotline prompt is about people pleasing. Do you have a history of people pleasing? If so, when did you realize it? What have you done to remedy it? What does people pleasing bring up for you? There are no wrong answers here. Record a voice memo of your answer and email it to: hi@creativityinthetimeofcapitalism.com [hi@creativityinthetimeofcapitalism.com] and it will be included in our next hotline episode [https://podcasts.apple.com/az/podcast/special-preview-episode-citc-hotline-audience-mistakes/id1794027758?i=1000769631305]at the end of this cycle.
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Calling all sustainable fashion fans! This week on Creativity in the Time of Capitalism [https://creativityinthetimeofcapitalism.substack.com/]we are joined by fast fashion buyer turned activist, consultant, and podcast host, Amanda McCarty [https://clotheshorsepodcast.com/about/]. Their podcast, Closehorse [https://clotheshorsepodcast.com/], is a masterclass on what actually goes on in the opaque underbelly of the fashion industry. Amanda is also especially gifted at reminding us all that with every purchase, we shop with our dollars, and in this way,
We have the means to deploy ethical consumption under capitalism. Amanda spent close to two decades inside the fast fashion machine, working as a buyer for major brands and startups alike, helping companies like Urban Outfitters decide what clothes we'd obsess over for a few wares and then quietly discard. Behind the glossy campaigns, they witnessed the burnout, the cutting of corners, the sad desk salads, and the emotional dysregulation that set the tone for far too many workplaces. For Amanda, as their awareness grew that so much of what they were helping to bring into the world would ultimately end up in landfills, so did their disillusionment with the fashion industry as a whole. When the pandemic hit, they were laid off from their role as the original buyer at the recently launched apparel rental company, Nuuly.
What had felt like a crisis at the time ultimately cracked open the possibility of a very different way of working, one that would disrupt Amanda's entire career trajectory up to that point. In this episode, Amanda shares how losing that job forced them to reckon with a lifetime of scarcity thinking, the belief that work was only about survival, and their deep disillusionment with an industry that had never felt like home.
To go behind the episode and to learn more about this project, visit the Creativity in the Time of Capitalism newsletter [https://creativityinthetimeofcapitalism.substack.com/] for bonus content and more