Like Me cover art

Like Me

Like Me

By: Jordan Berkow
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About this listen

Like Me is a podcast about visibility: Who gets it, what it costs, and what happens when it goes away. Hosted by writer and creator Jordan Reid, Like Me explores the rise of influencer culture from the inside out: the early days of blogging and social media, the performance of “authenticity,” and the strange emotional aftermath of building a public self before anyone knew the rules. Through candid conversations with creators, writers, and internet originals—and deeply personal reflection—Like Me looks at how visibility reshaped identity, ambition, money, motherhood, mental health, and power.Copyright 2026 Jordan Berkow Hygiene & Healthy Living Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Social Sciences
Episodes
  • The Blog That Broke The Magazine Industry (Nadine Jolie Courtney)
    Feb 11 2026

    Find full episodes of content, show notes and more here, and remember to follow @likemepod on IG for behind-the-scenes info and clips.

    In the early 2000s, Nadine Jolie Courtney — who you might remember from her earliest incarnation as Jolie in the City — was a magazine beauty editor who started an anonymous blog revealing the behind-the-scenes excess, hierarchies, and absurdities of the beauty industry. The blog exploded. She was outed by the New York Post, she was fired from Conde Nast, and she suddenly found herself on morning shows explaining what a “weblog” even was — at a moment when legacy media had no vocabulary for what was was about to hit them.

    What followed was a career that looks, in retrospect, like a roadmap of the modern visibility economy: book deals in her twenties, the rise and fall of sponsored blogging, getting dropped by management when follower counts became currency, a stint on Bravo that came with both opportunity and collateral damage, and ultimately a pivot back to what she always was at heart — a writer.

    In this conversation, Nadine and host Jordan Reid talk candidly about what it was like to be early without necessarily being strategic. They get into the grief of stepping away from platforms that once defined them, the weird betrayal of being “fired” from an industry they helped build, and what it means to reclaim visibility on your own terms in midlife.

    This episode is about what happens when the thing you love becomes the thing you do — and it loves you, and supports you, and makes your wildest dreams possible…until, one day, it doesn’t.

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    58 mins
  • When Virality Turns Terrifying (Joanna Schroeder)
    Feb 5 2026

    Watch full episodes and get show notes on the Like Me substack. Follow @likemepod on IG for clips and BTS.

    In 2019, journalist Joanna Schroeder spoke a truth that the public was very much not ready to hear. She tweeted about how the alt-right was radicalizing our boys, and the fallout changed her career and her life forever.

    Now the author of the acclaimed Talk To Your Boys, Joanna discusses death threats, how to navigate the fine line between loving women and hating men, the extremely weird moment that made her consider leaving the internet altogether, and this guy called "Clavicular."

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    53 mins
  • We Need To Talk About 40 (Jamie Stone)
    Jan 29 2026

    Find full episodes of content, show notes and more here, and remember to follow @likemepod on IG for behind-the-scenes info and clips.

    In this episode of Like Me, Jordan Reid sits down with Jamie Stone, a beauty blogger who’s been online since 2006—back when blogging was still a side project, brand deals were paid in lip gloss, and no one quite knew what they were building.

    The conversation moves beyond platforms and into the emotional realities of long-term visibility: aging in an industry obsessed with newness, deciding what parts of your life are still yours, and how grief, fertility struggles, and personal loss reshape what it means to show up online. Jamie speaks candidly about writing through grief, sharing her IVF journey with intention and boundaries, and why micro-influence can still carry real impact.

    This episode is about growing up alongside the internet—and choosing not to contort yourself to keep up with it.

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    40 mins
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