Sean Fennessey
On Substack, the Supergirl pile-on becomes a doorway into a decade-old question: what does it mean when a studio becomes your personality? The piece is sharp on the distinction between fandom as genuine community and fandom as brand loyalty dressed up as identity, with the Infinity Gauntlet anecdote landing the argument better than most cultural criticism manages.
Famous and Beloved Newsletter
Famous and Beloved argues that Taylor Swift's appeal tracks directly to cheating on boyfriends, literally and structurally: a career built on burning it down and starting over. The piece's sharpest move is questioning whether we simply lack a template for what a cool woman looks like, since the thing Swift does, treating each era as disposable, is exactly what Jagger and McCartney get credit for.
Words from Eliza
Words from Eliza turns a WikiFeet rabbit hole into something sharper: a reckoning with how much of ourselves accumulates online without our active participation. The discovery of a 3.25-star rating on a profile she never built prompts an honest look at digital footprint, parasocial attention economies, and why a score from strangers lands harder than it should.
Thought Enthusiast
An interview with Sofía Manfredi, a staff writer for Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, discussing musical comedy, comedy writing formats, and the modern promotion circuit for comedians. The piece covers her thoughts on traditional interviews versus activity-based promotional content.
i-D
After Paris menswear fashion week, designer collections have moved away from manosphere-adjacent aesthetics toward jubilant, elegant, romantic, and vibrant clothing. Shows from designers like Celine, Dries Van Noten, Rick Owens, Lemaire, and Comme Des Garçons demonstrated eclecticism and wackiness rather than meme culture or optimization aesthetics.