Hi, I'm Becky.
I make a podcast called One Sentence — I go around asking people one question: "What is AI doing to your job?" And then I ask them to answer in one sentence. That's the whole show.
I'm not a tech person. I'm not an economist. I'm just someone who started noticing that a lot of people around me were quietly figuring out what their work meant now that a computer could do a version of it. I got curious. I bought a small recorder and started asking people.
So far I've talked to a paralegal, two truck drivers, a high school English teacher, a graphic designer who now describes her job as "supervising a robot," and a guy who tests software for a living and is genuinely unsure whether his job will exist in five years. They're all saying wildly different things. That's why I'm still going.
The one-sentence rule is real and it matters — I'll explain why on the about page. Short version: people edit themselves less when they have to be brief, and the editing is usually where the interesting part goes.
Recent notes
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What I heard from a paralegal
She had been doing legal research for eleven years. She said the AI doesn't replace her — it just means she now has to explain why she still matters.
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A truck driver's one sentence
I expected something defensive. What I got was more interesting — and more honest — than I anticipated.
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Why one sentence is enough
The rule started as a constraint. It turned into the whole point.