The Drafts

Diya Dadlani

The Drafts is a space for thoughtful reflection, creative exploration, and real-world insights. Each episode is a behind-the-scenes look at ideas in progress—covering design, UX, entrepreneurship, and the everyday moments that shape the way we think and work. Host Diya shares reflections, experiments, and lessons learned while navigating projects, life, and the messy middle of creation. Whether you’re building products, shaping experiences, or just curious about how ideas evolve, The Drafts offers clarity, perspective, and a little company along the way.

  1. 2 avr.

    Nothing on the Internet Lasts (And That's a Decision)

    Nothing on the Internet Lasts (And That's a Decision) Have you ever said "my Instagram" or "my Twitter" without thinking twice? In Episode 11 of The Drafts, Diya breaks down the uncomfortable truth about every social platform you have ever built your life inside: you were never the owner. You were always the tenant. And the landlord can redecorate, sell, or demolish the whole thing on a Tuesday with zero obligation to you. From Vine's archive being quietly deleted, to TikTok refugees fleeing to a censored Mandarin app because the algorithm was worth more than data sovereignty, to one company owning every register of how you express yourself online. The platforms we used to call home were never ours. And the question of who was reading our mail all along has a much more complicated answer than we were told. In this episode, we cover: The Vine Demolition: What actually killed Vine, why the archive disappeared, and what it means that virality decided what was worth saving.The TikTok Migration: Why 700,000 Americans fled to a heavily censored Chinese app, and what that choice reveals about who was reading the mail on both sides.The Neighbourhood Problem: How X was bought and redecorated overnight, and what it means that one company now owns the buildings where you connect personally, visually, and publicly.The Co-op That Took VC Money: Bluesky promised a different architecture. Then it raised 100 million dollars, replaced its founder, and forgot to tell anyone for a year.All music in the show has been made and produced by Madhumita Prasad. Support the show: If you enjoyed Episode 11, please take 10 seconds to leave a rating and review on Spotify or Apple Podcasts. It genuinely helps the show grow. 3

    20 min
  2. 12 mars

    You Are Not the User. You Are the Afterthought

    Have you ever stood in the dark because your "smart" lights lost WiFi? In Episode 10 of The Drafts, Diya breaks down the invisible, frustrating shift in modern technology: You are no longer the user. You are the afterthought. From vacuums that hold your home hostage with forced apps, to TikTok trends that hollow out physical products, to AI chatbots quietly monetizing the loneliness epidemic. The market has optimized for speed, scale, and data collection. The actual human being has been completely engineered out of the design process. As a UX designer, Diya explains exactly why your devices are getting worse, why "has an app" is a massive red flag, and how to start pushing back against the tech creep you never consented to. In this episode, we cover: The Smart Home Trap: Why tech companies force you to use an app for physical hardware (and why it ruins your WiFi). The Flattening of Culture: How TikTok virality and hyper-trends (like Dubai Chocolate and Labubus) destroy the actual value of a product. The Loneliness Economy: Why every AI product defaults to a chatbot, the massive data grab behind it, and what happens to the secrets you tell it at 3 AM. The UX Pushback: The three questions you need to ask yourself before downloading an app, buying a trend, or handing over your data. Read the full essay & references:Head over to thedraftspodcast.substack.com for all the links, sources, and extended notes from today's episode. Make sure to subscribe so you never miss a drop. All music in the show has been made and produced by Madhumita Prasad. Support the show:If you enjoyed Episode 10, please take 10 seconds to leave a rating and review on Spotify or Apple Podcasts. It genuinely helps the show grow. 3

    20 min
  3. 5 mars

    Becoming Someone You Haven't Met: The Identity Lag & The Exhaustion of Growth

    We celebrate growth like it's a movie makeover montage, but nobody talks about how exhausting it actually is. In this episode, we sit in the "identity lag". That strange, heavy space where you’ve outgrown your old life, your old habits, and your old rooms, but your new reality is still catching up. We are breaking down why transformation feels like grief, how to distinguish between quitting the goal vs. quitting the discomfort, and what the absolute best managers do differently to pull greatness out of you. If you've ever looked up mid-transformation and thought, "I thought this was supposed to feel better by now," this episode is for you. In this episode, we cover: The Identity Lag: Why operating in contexts you've outgrown is physically draining. The Reframe on Quitting: The difference between a project that is hard and a project that is wrong. Productive Delusion: Borrowing confidence, the Timothée Chalamet approach to greatness, and knowing when your self-belief needs a reality check from your support system. The Manager Question: The single best question a manager can ask in your first week, and the difference between leading for compliance vs. leading for excellence. Quote of the Week:"You worry too much for someone who figures it out every time." Credits: All music used in The Drafts is by Madhumita PrasadLinks & Resources: Read the full show notes and deep dives on our Substack: thedraftspodcast.substack.com If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a rating and review on Spotify or Apple Podcasts—it genuinely helps the show grow. New episodes drop every Thursday!

    19 min

À propos

The Drafts is a space for thoughtful reflection, creative exploration, and real-world insights. Each episode is a behind-the-scenes look at ideas in progress—covering design, UX, entrepreneurship, and the everyday moments that shape the way we think and work. Host Diya shares reflections, experiments, and lessons learned while navigating projects, life, and the messy middle of creation. Whether you’re building products, shaping experiences, or just curious about how ideas evolve, The Drafts offers clarity, perspective, and a little company along the way.