The Golden Age of Social Media Outrage
Life tends to become repetitive. If you look carefully you can see the patterns. Here’s one: Star Wars actress Daisy Ridley offers compassion for victims of gun violence in Orlando on
Life tends to become repetitive. If you look carefully you can see the patterns. Here’s one: Star Wars actress Daisy Ridley offers compassion for victims of gun violence in Orlando on
(Original publish date: June 16, 2016) Less than a week ago my phone was on fire. A blog post I’d written on the Stanford rape case had gone fully viral that morning,
One morning last year I woke up and was told I was trending on Facebook. A day earlier I’d written a blog post response to the father of a college student
Social media is my home and my workplace. As with many people, I live a good portion of my waking moments here, engaging, writing, responding—virtually existing. As fruitful as it can
Life tends to become repetitive. If you look carefully you can see the patterns. Here’s one: Star Wars actress Daisy Ridley offers compassion for victims of gun violence in Orlando on
(Original publish date: June 16, 2016) Less than a week ago my phone was on fire. A blog post I’d written on the Stanford rape case had gone fully viral that morning,
One morning last year I woke up and was told I was trending on Facebook. A day earlier I’d written a blog post response to the father of a college student
Social media is my home and my workplace. As with many people, I live a good portion of my waking moments here, engaging, writing, responding—virtually existing. As fruitful as it can