Brittany Luce
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I'm glad we're kind of touching on sort of like the online political discourse of it all, because I think it's very key to how a lot of this is being like processed and perceived.
To kind of bring things back to the present, I mean, I feel like post-Mom Donnie's win, there's been a wave of memes and online discourse about, you know, woke being back, woke 2.0 hitting harder than woke 1.0.
Why do you think Mom Donnie's win, or even Mom Donnie as a political figure, has invigorated a new wave of this feeling for some people?
I see where each of you is coming from.
Tyler, you're like, Woke.1 never ended.
Maybe it's diminished, but it's not defeated.
And Constance, I think also that your read that Woke was basically murdered in 2020 is really sharp.
But regardless of how we feel about Woke.1.0, is it alive?
Is it like Tupac where some of us are seeing him and some of us aren't?
I still think it's compelling.
say or what does it mean that people, at least some people are clamoring for that time to return?
I appreciate this conversation with both of you so much.
Constance, Tyler, I've learned so much here.
That was senior correspondent for the culture team at Vox, Constance Grady, and Tyler Harper, staff writer at The Atlantic and co-host of the podcast, Time to Say Goodbye.
So you all know I love hearing from you.
And over the past few weeks, some of you have left the sweetest notes for me in the comments and reviews.