My YouTube channel Afrodizjha is where I let myself think out loud.

It’s a space for long-form video essays, cultural analysis, and storytelling that sits at the intersection of pop culture, politics, race, gender, and media. I use familiar figures and moments as entry points, then pull the thread until we’re talking about power, identity, and why the internet reacts the way it does.

Some videos are deeply researched. Some are personal. Most are both.

I’m interested in how people, especially women and marginalised creators, are read, projected onto, and flattened by public narratives. I care about context. I care about nuance. I care about saying the thing that feels obvious once someone finally says it out loud.

The channel has grown quickly, but what matters more to me is the audience it’s attracted. People who want more than hot takes. People who are happy to sit with complexity. People who see pop culture as a serious text, not a guilty pleasure.

This channel isn’t about chasing trends. It’s about slowing down, zooming out, and asking better questions.