EJ Dixon
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
But I think there are things about it that we should appreciate.
Everything I see about the way people talk about themselves on the Internet today is so...
intricately curated and branded, and there's so much thought put into it.
It's not like you can just go on LiveJournal and like, you know,
blog about your period anymore and just hit post.
There's just so much more work put into it.
You can't just go on main and be messy.
I can't even remember the last time I've seen a genuine crash out on TikTok or Instagram.
And if there is, everybody just makes fun of that person.
And I, yeah, I just wish that there was more space on the internet for like genuine earnestness and vulnerability.
Like even if it is cringe, even if it is messy, like we should be making room for that.
We should be celebrating that.
You're like, yes, absolutely.
I mean, I know that's not like the right answer.
I know that's not like what I should say, but I know I should say like, no, I would like to preserve it in amber and like, cause it's, it's imperfect, but it's beautiful.
But no, there are like a million things I wish I could delete.
My name is EJ Dixon, and I am a senior writer at New York Magazine's The Cut. Tell me about Evie Magazine. Evie Magazine is a magazine that was started by a model named Brittany Martinez that was sort of branded as like the Gen Z right-wing version of Cosmo. And the mission was basically stemming from her frustration with the fact that most women's magazines are left-leaning.
My name is EJ Dixon, and I am a senior writer at New York Magazine's The Cut. Tell me about Evie Magazine. Evie Magazine is a magazine that was started by a model named Brittany Martinez that was sort of branded as like the Gen Z right-wing version of Cosmo. And the mission was basically stemming from her frustration with the fact that most women's magazines are left-leaning.
My name is EJ Dixon, and I am a senior writer at New York Magazine's The Cut. Tell me about Evie Magazine. Evie Magazine is a magazine that was started by a model named Brittany Martinez that was sort of branded as like the Gen Z right-wing version of Cosmo. And the mission was basically stemming from her frustration with the fact that most women's magazines are left-leaning.