Dylan Marron: Empathy is not endorsement
Dylan Marron takes complicated social issues and finds accessible ways to talk about them through interviews, short-form videos and satire. Full bio
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with the territory of my work.
for the internet.
a video series called "Every Single Word"
spoken by people of color,
talk about the issue of representation
around the United States,
with Trans People"
with those unboxing videos on YouTube
the latest electronic gadgets?
in a weekly series,
intangible ideologies
and the mistreatment of Native Americans.
a ton of great press
on the internet
and, of course, the ever-popular "cuck."
these terms down for you.
is rich-white-woman-running-errands,
for people who are sensitive
and an only child, so, duh!
favorite is "cuck."
cheated on by their wives.
encourage her to cheat on me.
of this negativity in action.
in a human being."
"gaywad fagggggg."
Donovan is not wrong, OK?
so credit where credit is due.
like Brian, who asked,
just learn to be one over time?"
his finger must have slipped
the thumbs-up emoji.
does not feel good to receive them.
their comments
and ultimately unhelpful.
an unexpected coping mechanism.
were through social media,
of the person who sent them
a human on the other side of the screen
that I was a moron,
was dividing itself,
that being gay was a sin.
for our first conversation.
like muting or blocking.
I could have hung up on him.
high school, right?
the H-E-double-hockey-stick word?
even though it's only two weeks left.
I don't like to use the word "fat,"
than a lot of my classmates
before they even got to know me.
to let you know, Josh,
of being bullied in high school
divided country
humanize us to each other
and posts ever could?
was from "my side."
a queer liberal artist like me
some of the worst aspects of liberalism,
didn't think that you would.
with a guy named Doug
a talentless propaganda hack.
we just had --
about how you write online?
when I said this to you,
with you in my life, really.
really about you.
sections really are,
your anger at the world out
of strangers, pretty much.
has made me rethink
with people online.
conversations and many others
with People Who Hate Me."
to bring about change
video essays and comments and posts,
those were only cheered on
thing you could do --
thing you could do
with the people you disagreed with,
to tell me about themselves.
that allows me to empathize with them.
these conversations off the ground,
you profoundly disagree with.
a helpful mantra for myself.
you profoundly disagree with
your own deeply held beliefs
believes that being gay is a sin
going to drop everything,
my one-way ticket to hell, right?
to think very differently from me.
about something.
some people don't feel safe
that they have any empathy to give.
well-suited to do.
to a lot of people for this podcast.
and ignored it,
when I sent the invitation
will appear on the internet.
comment sections,
inevitably comes hate.
whatever you'd like.
a "snowflake," a "cuck," a "beta,"
I may ask you to talk.
or block me automatically
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Dylan Marron - Writer, performerDylan Marron takes complicated social issues and finds accessible ways to talk about them through interviews, short-form videos and satire.
Why you should listen
Dylan Marron is the host and producer of the Webby-winning podcast Conversations with People Who Hate Me, where he calls up folks who wrote him negative or hateful messages on the internet. Previously, Marron created Every Single Word, a video series that edits down popular films to only the words spoken by people of color as a way to tackle Hollywood's representation problem empirically. To address the anti-trans bathroom bills, he created and hosted Sitting in Bathrooms with Trans People to broadcast a missing element: mundane, funny conversations with trans folks in the very spot their presence was debated.
As he tells it: "The 2016 presidential election inspired me to satirize the popular unboxing genre where YouTubers open the latest electronic gadgets by instead unboxing intangible 'products' like Islamophobia, police brutality and masculinity. And because this work gained popularity on the internet, I received many negative messages which inspired me to start Conversations with People Who Hate Me, a podcast where I call up some of the folks who sent me those messages. In the end, I'm trying to turn the internet into a place where we can connect and learn, not divide."
Dylan Marron | Speaker | TED.com