Writer and lesser known Anglo-Dutch conglomerate. Creator of The Daddy Issue, a queer parenthood podcast.
🇳🇱 Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
| Linktree | https://www.linktr.ee/connor_james |
| Podcast | https://www.thedaddyissue.org |
Writer and lesser known Anglo-Dutch conglomerate. Creator of The Daddy Issue, a queer parenthood podcast.
🇳🇱 Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
| Linktree | https://www.linktr.ee/connor_james |
| Podcast | https://www.thedaddyissue.org |
Used my old UK bank account to briefly swap back to the UK app store to download threads.
I've been playing Pokemon Go with social media since Musk bought Twitter, and let me tell you, I'm never gonna be the very best.
Yesterday it was too warm, and too humid so to keep cool and kill time, I went to see The Little Mermaid.
It feels like a movie where the GCI just got in the way, and the design of Sebastian and Flounder was unsettling. I wish they re-animated it, with the same level of diversity and less beady fish eyes staring into your soul.
I just hope Disney cast Lizzo as a muse in the live action Hercules.
For the 2nd season of my #LGBT Parenthood #podcast @[email protected], I am looking for experts in international reproductive rights and international adoption.
These interviews are part of an episode on adoption, which will also look into the correlation of women's reproductive rights with the amount of children put up for adoption, and the impact being adopted by parents of a different culture and country can have on a child.
If you know any experts in that field, let me know!
Finally emailing contacts for S2 of @thedaddyissue - I'm planning a shorter season, of shorter episodes, but with a lot more interlaced stories.
I'll actually have some help this season too, like a sound engineer to make sure I don't connect microphones up wrong.
I only use my phone for sending messages, email and Spotify. Sometimes I do something crazy, like using maps, checking the train times, or reading the news.
Here we are, making computers that sit on our faces to shield us from reality, while I still use my iPhone like it's 2007.
I'd like to think I was too good at writing software to ever be any good at actually using it.
The Apple Vision Pro does have impressive features and tech that'll no doubt slowly trickle down into the devices we use every day, but with its price tag, it's not the VR revolution some people have been waiting for.
If you genuinely want to own inspector gadget-style glasses, you have about a decade to go and a little longer for your matrix pod. Along with the new Quest, it's nice to see these headsets finally start to slim down.
Imagine a world where we invested resources in physical town squares instead of digital ones, and conversation and connection are the rewards, not tokens of validation and virality.
Wouldn’t that be cool?