"The second we see somebody on the street or meet someone, we make snap judgments about them, about who they are and why we wouldn't necessarily sit with them or why we would or what's cool or not cool"
About this Quote
Max Cannon’s line reads like an offhand confession, but it’s really a quiet indictment of how fast we turn strangers into stories. The phrasing does the work: “the second we see somebody” collapses the timeline to an instant, making judgment feel less like a choice than a reflex. That’s the uncomfortable point. He doesn’t locate bias in villains or extremists; he locates it in the baseline operating system of everyday social life.
Notice how quickly the quote shifts from “snap judgments” to seating arrangements: “why we wouldn’t necessarily sit with them.” It’s a small, mundane image with big moral weight. Cannon is talking about segregation in its most contemporary form, not enforced by law but by micro-decisions and social scripts. Who gets proximity, attention, safety, conversation. Who doesn’t. The street becomes a sorting machine.
Then he smuggles in the real accelerant: “what’s cool or not cool.” Cool is the most slippery, powerful cultural category we have because it pretends to be aesthetic while acting like a gatekeeping tool. Saying someone isn’t “cool” can disguise class anxiety, racialized fear, ableism, queerness, age, fashion codes, even simple unfamiliarity. It’s prejudice with a better publicist.
As an artist, Cannon’s context likely includes looking at people as surfaces and signals - clothes, posture, vibe - and admitting how easily “seeing” becomes labeling. The intent isn’t to shame the listener into silence; it’s to make the invisible moment of categorization visible, so it can be resisted rather than merely performed.
Notice how quickly the quote shifts from “snap judgments” to seating arrangements: “why we wouldn’t necessarily sit with them.” It’s a small, mundane image with big moral weight. Cannon is talking about segregation in its most contemporary form, not enforced by law but by micro-decisions and social scripts. Who gets proximity, attention, safety, conversation. Who doesn’t. The street becomes a sorting machine.
Then he smuggles in the real accelerant: “what’s cool or not cool.” Cool is the most slippery, powerful cultural category we have because it pretends to be aesthetic while acting like a gatekeeping tool. Saying someone isn’t “cool” can disguise class anxiety, racialized fear, ableism, queerness, age, fashion codes, even simple unfamiliarity. It’s prejudice with a better publicist.
As an artist, Cannon’s context likely includes looking at people as surfaces and signals - clothes, posture, vibe - and admitting how easily “seeing” becomes labeling. The intent isn’t to shame the listener into silence; it’s to make the invisible moment of categorization visible, so it can be resisted rather than merely performed.
Quote Details
| Topic | Equality |
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