

Never Post
Charts & Leisure
A podcast about and for the internet, hosted by Mike Rugnetta
Episodes
Mentioned books

Apr 7, 2026 • 1h 3min
Mailbag #12: We're Not Built For This
We respond to your questions and comments!–Become a Never Post member at https://www.neverpo.st/ for an ad-free version of the show and bonus content--☎️ Call us at 651 615 5007 to leave a voice mail🗣️ Drop us a voice note via airtable📧 Email us at theneverpost at gmail dot com🌐 Leave a comment at neverpo.st--Never Post's producers are Audrey Evans, Georgia Hampton and The Mysterious Dr. Firstname Lastname. Our contributing producer is Meghal Janardan. Our senior producer is Hans Buetow. Our executive producer is Jason Oberholtzer. The show's host is Mike Rugnetta. Never Post is a production of Charts & Leisure.

Apr 2, 2026 • 39min
News Post: A Primer on Torrenting
Aram Sinnreich, author and professor who studies digital piracy and file sharing, explains what torrenting really is. He discusses its use beyond piracy, corporate uses for large-file distribution, how industry PR turned it into a crime story, and ethical tradeoffs around access, surveillance, and decentralization.

Mar 26, 2026 • 38min
Lolcows and the Internet's "Digital Freakshow"
Dr. Jess Rauchberg, assistant professor and researcher of internet culture, studies lolcows and online spectacle. She traces how vulnerable creators are provoked and monetized in live-streams. She links these dynamics to medieval freakshows, platform design, text-to-speech instigation, algorithmic ableism, and the need for protections and creator labor rights.

Mar 19, 2026 • 19min
The Disappearance of Tween Fashion [Archive Pull]
Elizabeth Wissinger, a CUNY professor who studies fashion, technology and bodies, discusses how the social internet transformed tween style. She traces the collapse of tween retail, explains how platforms democratized tastemaking, and explores how algorithms and broad marketing flattened distinct age-based fashions. Short, sharp reflections on trends, influence, and who gets to set style.

Mar 12, 2026 • 37min
When The Taliban Turned the Internet Off in Afghanistan
Ali Latifi, Kabul-based freelance journalist and contributing producer, narrates his first-person account of Afghanistan's 48-hour internet blackout. He describes the sudden notice, the complete disconnection, and the scramble to keep communication alive. Stories cover disrupted banking and trade, journalists cut off from sources, social strain and a surprising burst of in-person conversation before the online rush when service returned.

Mar 5, 2026 • 1h 8min
Not What You Know, but How You Know: Science Communicators Roundtable
Joe Hanson, biologist and creator of Be Smart, Trace Dominguez, Emmy-nominated science host, and Alex Dainis, geneticist turned communicator, discuss science communication today. They talk about misinformation, prebunking versus debunking, emotional versus logical persuasion, community and identity’s role in belief, conversational outreach techniques, and the value of admitting uncertainty to build trust.

Feb 25, 2026 • 42min
News Post: On the Impending Silicon Goods Shortage
Rory Carroll, publisher at AlloyMag who covers car industry trends, and Jeffrey Parkin, founder of Rogue.site who writes on games industry news, dig into the looming chip shortage. They trace why AI data center demand squeezes supply. They explain how concentrated fabs, automotive and console production cycles, and hyperscaler buying power create fragility. Practical consumer timing and industry tensions come up.

Feb 19, 2026 • 29min
What Kind of Place is the Internet?
Charles Soukop, a communication professor who studied virtual third places, and Katherine Dee, an internet culture writer known for essays on the internet’s placeness, discuss how to picture the web. They trace tactile early computer rooms to always-on connectivity. They debate whether online spaces feel like community third places, standardized non-places, or an otherworld accessed through portals.

10 snips
Feb 12, 2026 • 53min
Pornhub Goes SFW
Mike Stabile, a 20+ year industry researcher; MelRose Michaels, performer-turned-entrepreneur; and Hans Buetow, data-driven producer, probe why Pornhub shows a spike in safe-for-work content. They explore SFW formats like ASMR, unboxing, and wellness chats. Conversation touches on creators selling access, platform search limits, friction-maxxing, and how creator economies reshape audience connection.

Feb 5, 2026 • 21min
Posting Disease, with Bijan Stephen [Archive Pull]
Bijan Stephen, writer and narrative designer known for reporting at Vice, Vox, and The Verge, explores the phenomenon of 'posting disease.' He explains seeing life as potential posts and how algorithmic rewards amplify provocative behavior. They compare different types of overposting, name public archetypes, and offer a pre-post checklist to pause before posting.


