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On the cover
On the Cover Collage, Featured on "Of course you don't READ them - thoughts on music reviews"

The Sexual Politics of Drake

POW MAG revisits Drake's triple-album drop through the lens of America's current pedophilia panic — the Michael biopic, the Kendrick diss, the Epstein files — and finds an artist who can't outrun the cultural moment. The observation isn't that Drake is guilty of anything, but that shame has become optional for those selling what people want to buy. The glove fits either way.

Line Noise · Essay

Of course you don't READ them - thoughts on music reviews

Line Noise wrestles with the tension every critic knows but rarely says out loud: you're not evaluating the record before you, you're making a case for the one you wanted to hear. The piece doesn't resolve this so much as sit inside it — balancing what's reasonable against what's interesting, personal taste against relevance to others. The RHCP shots are deserved.

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Stat Significant · Essay

How Much of the Internet Is AI Slop?

Stat Significant traces "brain rot" from Thoreau's 1854 sneer at cheap literature to Oxford's 2024 Word of the Year, but the real hook is the data: nearly half of newly published digital content now shows AI fingerprints. If your feed has started feeling like it was written by a committee of eager interns who've never had an original thought, this piece explains why.

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01 Music & Scene

Robert Hood Is Detroit Techno

With Movement week arriving, First Floor makes the case that Robert Hood is Detroit techno's Platonic ideal — tracing his arc from Underground Resistance co-founder to the minimal blueprint of 1994's Minimal Nation and the gospel-inflected Floorplan project he now shares with his daughter Lyric.

Read on First Floor →

SS26

Charli xcx published new lyrics on her Substack — a sardonic fashion-week allegory where aesthetics substitute for accountability and 'heritage' becomes a PR play. The lines land as cultural criticism wearing pop clothes: if you look good in the clothes, maybe nothing else matters.

Read on charli xcx from charli's substack →

From the Griot to the Desert: The Sound of Mali

Bass Culture reframes Mali's music history by starting where it should: not with albums or genres, but with the griot tradition and the concept of nyama — music as living archive, not entertainment. Eight centuries of cultural memory before a note was ever recorded.

Read on Bass Culture →

Why Ageism is B.S.

Brad Mehldau discusses ageism in music, his relationship with social media platforms, and how he uses Substack versus Instagram and Facebook. He explains his practice of self-care regarding social media due to his predisposition to obsessive-compulsive behavior and hypomania, and contrasts the…

Read on Brad Mehldau Substack →

Beat It -- Chasing Drake's Ghosts

A review of Drake's triple album release examining how Drake's obsession with his feud with Kendrick Lamar plays out across Iceman, Habibti, and Maid of Honour, with analysis of Drake's approach to grief and victimization in the aftermath of their beef.

Read on POW MAG →

Laurence Pike - Possible Utopias for Jazz Quintet

A review of Laurence Pike's solo album "Possible Utopias for Jazz Quintet," released on Balmat. Despite its title, the album is not traditional jazz but rather an experimental instrumental work created largely through live playing and triggered software processes, reminiscent of artists like Burnt…

Read on Futurism Restated →
02 Music Industry Analysis
03 Music Recommendations

Hype Williams — "Find Out What Happens When People Stop Being Polite, and Start Gettin' Reel"

Zik Zak highlights this 2010 release from the enigmatic UK duo whose warped, lo-fi R&B deconstructions helped define the hypnagogic pop moment alongside peers like James Ferraro.

04 Voice & Culture

American Stain

An essay examining American exceptionalism and the rise of figures like Pete Hegseth, arguing that Americans must renounce the strain in their national character that produces such leaders and accept equality rather than special status.

Read on The New York Review of Books →
05 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

The scraper economy hiding in plain sight

The Media Copilot reports on a new finding: ~20 'data services' companies are quietly harvesting publisher content and reselling it to AI firms, creating a gray market worth billions. The useful twist — it may finally give media companies a dollar figure to attach to unchecked scraping.

Read on The Media Copilot →
06 AI Product News

Google gets ready for the tokenmaxxing hangover

Alex Heath's Google I/O dispatch argues that Gemini 2.5 Flash isn't a frontier push — it's a bet that companies are about to audit their token spend and want cheaper alternatives. The positioning is less about winning the benchmark race and more about being ready when the AI infrastructure bill…

Read on Sources →

BREAKING: Andrej Karpathy Joins Anthropic

The VC Corner flags a genuinely significant hire: Andrej Karpathy — OpenAI founding member, Tesla Autopilot architect — just joined Anthropic to work on pre-training. The recursive angle is the real story: he'll use Claude to accelerate the research that makes Claude better.

Read on The VC Corner →
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