“The internet is a nuance destruction machine” | November Newsletter

The way climate conversations unfold in 2025 is changing—fast. To drive change and inspire agency you need to understand where influence happens and how to engage in culture.

At Conspirators, we have a PhD in swiping the internet and here’s what we can’t stop talking about this month: Must-See Content, Creator Real Talk, and Need-to-Reads.

Must-See-Content 📺

We can’t stop watching & sharing:

Is it better to stay silent or show up imperfectly?

Us when the plastic bear cup takes over the group chat:

Love or hate watch, hallmark season is back and bringing us this trend.

Creator Real Talk 🎤

Meet Taylr Anne Castro, who transforms everyday into elevated stories with texture and emotion. With her curated eye, she explores home, parenting, and health, with intention and aesthetic. We partnered with Taylr on Quilt’s LA launch and love her sustainable approach. 

Q: Why did you start creating content (and why are you still doing it)?

I started creating content as a way to document life and what felt meaningful— sharing wellness and the everyday rituals that made me feel good. Over time, it became a way to share a lifestyle centered on presence, intention, and connection to nature. I love connecting with others and if what I am sharing inspires them in any way, I know I’m doing the right thing in life.

Q: How do you see climate showing up in culture right now?

Culturally, there’s a growing awareness that our wellbeing is directly tied to the wellbeing of the planet, and I think people are beginning to integrate that into how they live. I see climate showing up in a lot of subtle but powerful ways: the rise of slow living, conscious consumption, and people reconnecting with nature. I think we’re collectively craving a pace and lifestyle that feels more sustainable.

Q: If you had to talk climate in your content, how would you do it?

I’d share climate in a way that feels real and lived-in, not performative. I would talk about climate through the lens of daily life and the subtle choices that support both personal wellness and the planet. For me, that looks like buying locally, choosing natural materials, consuming less but choosing better, spending more time outside, and grounding my routines in nature.

Need-to-Reads

1) Mamdani’s NYC win sets a new standard

With the recent Blue Wave in the US, what can climate take away from these winning campaigns? A killer brand, yes. Working with creators, yes. Having a core issue, yes. And exciting policies to back it up, yes, yes, yes.

2) Logging off is the new luxury

The craving for analog experiences has gone from a murmur to a roar. From a WashPo editor taking a month off her smartphone to Netflix popping up at the mall, it’s clear community now means both online and offline touchpoints.

3) Is nuance over? Did it ever exist online?

Jack Schlossberg, “silly goose” Kennedy, is running for office. His eccentric social posts earned him 1.7M followers, and he’s blunt about why: “The internet is a nuance destruction machine. There’s no room for qualifying anything, ever.”

Staying ahead means staying informed.

Let us know if you want to explore how these insights apply to your work (or if there’s anything on your radar that’s not on ours 👀).

Marilla + Louis

(your co-conspirators in shifting the climate narrative 🌱)

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