Rawdoggin' Reality
Rawdoggin' Reality recounts an actual evening drinking with Anthony Bourdain — and uses it as a way into his philosophy: that a shared meal across difference is the simplest antidote to racism. The piece is personal and unhurried, grounding Bourdain's famous restlessness in something specific: his conviction that plans tie you down and curiosity is the point.
Gary's Journey Through Hell
This piece has no meaningful connection to music, culture, or any territory Sound Signal covers — it's a personal essay about preferring summer months, prompted by a TV writers' room poll. No argument worth surfacing, no angle worth flagging. Not a fit for the briefing.
Ottessa Moshfegh's Substack
Ottessa Moshfegh's Substack advice column takes on the anxiety of the unread writer — someone who's kept poems private for fifteen years and wonders if that privacy is self-protection or self-knowledge. Her answer sidesteps the question of quality entirely: good writing, in any form, is irreducibly specific to its author. Ineffable, uncopiable, fingerprinted.
i-D
i-D uses the box office run of Backrooms — shot by a 19-year-old — to ask what we actually mean when we call a young artist prodigious. The piece traces the lineage from Welles to Akerman to argue that early creative output isn't anomaly; it's a recurring pattern. The real question is whether youth is ingredient or coincidence.