When a pandemic book report becomes a four-year creative practice, it reveals how making something "pointless" by hand might be the most radical act of resistance in our optimized world.
Christie George never meant to become an artist. But when she started scribbling quotes from Jenny Odell's "How to Do Nothing" during lockdown, something unexpected happened: a simple reading practice transformed into 200 handmade pages, an exhibition, and a movement helping others memorialize their pandemic experiences.
In this conversation, Christie reveals why she ships her books one by one to people she knows, refuses to optimize for scale, and receives weekly Google Docs from strangers sharing their own creative journeys. Igor and Johannes explore how her deliberately inefficient approach challenges everything we think we know about creativity, success, and authentic connection in the digital age.
From the politics of pandemic memory to why "practice" deserves to lose its pretentious air quotes, this episode unpacks how individual acts of creative resistance can model new ways of being human. Christie's comparison of her art practice to a golf hobby brilliantly reframes what it means to spend time on something with "no point"—and why that might be exactly the point.
Whether you're seeking permission to start your own creative practice, wondering how to maintain authenticity in an algorithmic world, or simply curious about alternative models for sharing work, this conversation offers both inspiration and practical insights. Sometimes the most powerful response to a world demanding optimization is to handwrite 500 addresses.
Chapters:
00:01 - Introduction & The Power of Long Emails
02:19 - Who Is Christie George?
03:28 - From Quotes to 200 Pages: The Illustrated Book Report
08:56 - Reclaiming “Practice” Without Pretension
11:04 - What Does the Practice Actually Look Like?
15:08 - The Politics of Pandemic Memory
18:22 - Book Reports as Cultural Exchange
21:34 - Everyone's Experience Deserves Memorialization
25:02 - Beyond Reviewing: The Rashomon Effect
29:13 - Curating Your Own Taste vs. The Anointed Books
30:50 - The Great Unlearning Project
34:59 - Why It's Not Just a Hobby (Or Why That's OK)
39:36 - Suspended Disbelief and Continual Wondering
41:07 - Circumstances, Privilege, and Pandemic Timing
42:42 - How to Love Something New
45:34 - Authenticity in the Age of Performance
49:29 - Resisting the Fetishization of Scale
51:22 - The Art of Resistance to Commercialization
54:33 - The T-Shirt Question and Staying True
56:32 - Closing Thoughts & Future Conversations
Links:
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Follow the Rabbit on Spotify
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Follow the Rabbit on Youtube
Follow the Rabbit is a Known Unknowns production
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Follow the Rabbit is hosted by Igor Schwarzmann & Johannes Kleske
Find out more about Igor Schwarzmann
Find out moire about Johannes Kleske