Like Me

Jordan Berkow

Like Me is a podcast about visibility: Who gets it, what it costs, and what happens when it goes away. Hosted by writer and creator Jordan Reid, Like Me explores the rise of influencer culture from the inside out: the early days of blogging and social media, the performance of “authenticity,” and the strange emotional aftermath of building a public self before anyone knew the rules. Through candid conversations with creators, writers, and internet originals—and deeply personal reflection—Like Me looks at how visibility reshaped identity, ambition, money, motherhood, mental health, and power.

  1. 4D AGO

    Maybe It'll Actually Be Okay (with Virginia Heffernan)

    What if the internet didn’t ruin culture—or us? In this episode, host Jordan Reid sits down with Magic and Loss author Virginia Heffernan to talk about the idea that might give us all hope: Maybe the internet isn’t a fall from grace. It’s just…what happened next. They talk about what it actually felt like to be part of the first wave of influencer culture—doing every job at once (photographer, editor, talent, brand), often unpaid—and how that model borrowed heavily from reality TV, where people were expected to perform their lives in exchange for “exposure.” They also get into why the early internet felt so electric—and why we might be confusing that feeling with youth, not technology. They unpack why we’re drawn to vulnerability online (and why content featuring scared or hurt kids performs so well), and what that says about our need for catharsis versus our appetite for real-life suffering. And then the big one: aging. What happens when the women who built a culture centered on visibility, youth, and self-presentation start to age inside it? What does it mean to look like yourself on camera, instead of chasing “Instagram face”? And how do you let go of the version of yourself that once worked? Virginia reframes all of it not as loss, but as continuation. This episode is about: Why nostalgia for the “old internet” might actually be nostalgia for who you once wereThe hidden labor and emotional cost of early influencer cultureThe blurred line between performance, fiction, and truth onlineWhy discomfort is the default—not the exceptionAnd how to stop treating change like a catastrophe If you’ve ever felt like the version of you that mattered existed in another era—this conversation will hit. Hard.

    1h 1m
  2. APR 24

    When the Internet Stops Giving a Sh*t About You (with Caroline McCarthy)

    For more episodes of Like Me click here, and remember to follow @likemepod on Instagram for behind-the-scenes and clips. Today’s guest is Caroline McCarthy — one of the first mainstream journalists assigned to cover social media full-time, back when Facebook looked temporary, Twitter looked unserious, and being “very online” was still considered a little embarrassing. At 22 years old, she was handed what many editors saw as a novelty beat. Instead, she ended up with a front-row seat to one of the biggest cultural and economic shifts of the century. But what makes Caroline especially compelling is that she wasn’t just reporting on the new attention economy — she was also being shaped by it. As journalism began rewarding personality, visibility, and personal brand, Caroline herself became a recognizable internet figure during the exact years she was documenting that phenomenon. And then, like so many people from that era, she experienced the less-flashy aftermath: what happens when public attention moves elsewhere, and you realize how much of your identity has become entangled with being seen. This conversation is about the early internet, yes — those weird kids who built online culture before it was cool. But it’s also about something far more significant: status, friendship, aging, relevance, and the emotional consequences of losing a currency it feels shameful to admit you ever wanted.

    51 min
  3. APR 13

    The Day Instagram Died (Rachel Sobel, @whineandcheezits)

    For a certain generation of creators, there’s a shared experience that’s hard to explain to anyone who wasn’t there: one minute you’re building something that feels electric, collaborative, and weirdly important…and the next, you’re staring at your phone like, “Wait. Where did I go?” In this episode, I talk to Rachel Sobel — founder of @whineandcheezits — about that exact pipeline: the early days of Instagram when growth came from group chats and generosity (actual generosity), the moment everything changed (algorithm? burnout? capitalism? yes to all), and the disorienting comedown that followed. We get into what it felt like to go from this is the most fun I’ve ever had to this is somehow more stressful than my corporate job — and why so many of us walked away (whether logistically, financially, emotionally, or a mix) at almost exactly the same time. But this conversation isn’t just a postmortem. It’s also about what came after: writing through miscarriage, divorce, illness; building real communities out of what started as memes; and realizing that the whole chaotic, unregulated, occasionally humiliating experience actually did its job. Because the truth is that the thing we built didn’t last in the form we wanted. But it did get us somewhere. Not perfect, not polished — but real, sustainable, and (ugh) apparently exactly where we were trying to go all along. Also discussed: The lost art of meme credit enforcement squadsWhy no one is gaining followers anymore (??)The emotional journey from aspirational brand deals to MetamucilWhy your kids will never understand what MapQuest did to usAnd the deeply unsettling realization that we are now the “back in my day” people Find Rachel on Instagram at @whineandcheezits.

    47 min
5
out of 5
7 Ratings

About

Like Me is a podcast about visibility: Who gets it, what it costs, and what happens when it goes away. Hosted by writer and creator Jordan Reid, Like Me explores the rise of influencer culture from the inside out: the early days of blogging and social media, the performance of “authenticity,” and the strange emotional aftermath of building a public self before anyone knew the rules. Through candid conversations with creators, writers, and internet originals—and deeply personal reflection—Like Me looks at how visibility reshaped identity, ambition, money, motherhood, mental health, and power.

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