Loop Theory is a cultural analysis project exploring how pop culture, media, and memory shape girlhood, desire, and adulthood.
Through film, television, magazines, music, and forgotten storylines, Loop Theory examines the narratives we once accepted as “normal”—and how they quietly informed our values, fears, and longings. The work centers curiosity over outrage, interpretation over hot takes, and reflection over reaction.
Rather than chasing trends or viral controversy, Loop Theory treats pop culture as an archive: something to revisit, question, and understand in context.
WHAT I DO
I offer talks, workshops, and conversations that use popular media as a lens for deeper social inquiry.
My work often explores:
Media literacy and moral panics
Girlhood, nostalgia, and cultural memory
Desire, sexuality, and censorship in film and television
Adolescence as a cultural construction
How entertainment shapes social values
Pop culture as historical text
These conversations are reflective, accessible, and designed to invite audiences into critical thinking without shame or sensationalism.
SPEAKING & WORKSHOPS
I’m available for:
Keynote talks
Moderated conversations
Panel discussions
University and classroom lectures
Writing and media literacy workshops
Cultural analysis seminars
Talks and workshops are tailored to the audience and institution.
RECENT THEMES
Recent topics include:
Media portrayals of teenage pregnancy and moral panic
The disappearance of erotic yearning in contemporary film and television
Grooming tropes and power dynamics in 90s cinema
Nostalgia as a site of meaning-making for millennial women
ABOUT
Loop Theory began as a space to think freely—outside of editorial constraints, breaking news cycles, or prescribed “beats.” It is a project rooted in observation, memory, and the belief that pop culture deserves to be taken seriously without being flattened into think pieces or outrage.