Fixed: Aubrey Peeple

In an era of engagement bait and rage algorithms, Aubrey refuses to play the game. She doesn't have a podcast. She sends handwritten letters to the editor. She doesn't debate in comment sections; she brings casseroles to neighbors she disagrees with.

And that is precisely why we need to listen to her. I first met Aubrey at a community zoning board meeting (the true battleground of democracy). While everyone else was shouting past each other about parking ratios, Aubrey sat in the back row, knitting a scarf that looked suspiciously like the color of a sunset over a cornfield. aubrey peeple

Gen Z has started ironically stanning her. Millennials are unironically crying over her tweets (which she posts once a month, always about birds). Boomers think she’s “just nice.” In an era of engagement bait and rage

Aubrey doesn't want to change your mind. She wants to hand you a cup of coffee and ask how your mother is doing. She doesn't debate in comment sections; she brings

And when it does, they’ll remind us that we were neighbors all along.

In a digital world dominated by the loudest voices, the fastest hot takes, and the most polished influencers, there is something almost revolutionary about sitting down with Aubrey Peeple .