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Latham Turner's avatar

I get the impression much of what you're mourning has moved underground, probably into invite only spaces and private "communities." Which is hard when a lot of the places I'd want to spend time tossing ideas around are pay to enter, and the best ones are rarely cheap.

I'm still waiting with bated breath to see what Substack becomes. There are some great people on here, but there's also an overwhelming discussion about "making it" that gets exhausting. Plus, I think many of us want to hang out in person, discuss ideas with real people rather than battling AI and bots, and feel physical objects in our hands again.

I'm not really sure where that leaves the future.

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Alex Michael's avatar

One of the things I really liked about Good Work was how memoir-forward and personal it was. Maybe I'm just projecting, but I think that's a microcosm of a broader shift that is platform-agnostic. There's a sort of information fatigue, probably a function of AI, that has permeated the internet. A lot of cognitive labor is involved in parsing out whether ideas and information are even human-generated, let alone if they're coming from a place of genuine curiosity or are transactional/outcome-oriented. Most of what I've felt compelled to read lately has been like Good Work - personal, story-focused, emotionally resonant. I'm bullish on memoir and memoir adjacent-stuff, whether long- or short-form, because it brings ideas to life in a meaningful and impactful way that can't be faked (or at least not convincingly so).

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