Category: Writing Samples

Welcome to my writing archive—a collection of stories, scripts, essays, and content crafted across newsrooms, industries, and creative projects. From breaking news to brand strategy, academic analysis to personal essays, these samples reflect my journey as a storyteller, communicator, and curious observer of the world.

  • The Bite Back: Five reasons you should limit your AI use

    The Bite Back: Five reasons you should limit your AI use

    We live in a world where people turn to AI for everything. Need a pithy headline? AI. Need to write a wedding toast? AI. Need to diagnose a health issue, design a logo, or make your child’s science project? AI again.

    But in our rush to automate life, many of us are ignoring the fact that this technology is silently reshaping how we think, create, work, and manage our well-being. And not always for the better. In fact, I’d even argue that it’s often for the worse

    Look, AI has its place. Especially traditional AI and Machine Learning (ML) technologies. It can sift through massive data sets to spot security threats. It can transcribe interviews flawlessly, identifying speaker names and pulling soundbites aligned to a specified theme. It can help people with disabilities communicate more easily. But handing over every last cognitive task to a machine comes with consequences that reach far beyond ‘enhanced productivity.’

    Here are five reasons we need to limit AI use. Not because we should hate and eradicate all AI technologies, but because we should still value what it means to be human.

    1. AI is biased just like humans are biased.

    AI is trained to act like a human, but humans are biased. We have always been biased. When that bias sinks into training data, AI learns it too. It replicates it, then reinforces it. And as humans who have been trained to rely heavily on technology for all information we consume, particularly via our smartphones in the last decade, we often view what comes up in our Google searches as the truth without much fact-checking (unless you’re a trained journalist or huge research nerd like me).

    That means AI is fully capable of validating harmful stereotypes, spreading misinformation, and amplifying racism, antisemitism, misogyny, and other hate. It does not understand the context behind the prompts and information we feed it. It does not understand morality or ethics. It understands probability. So, when AI is treated like an all-knowing authority instead of a tool, it becomes dangerous.

    When we say to our friends or coworkers ‘just use AI for that’ or we validate claims by saying ‘well, AI told me this,’ we’re introducing a mentality that AI is the end all be all–when in reality, it is only predicting the next most likely response that will satisfy the user by mirroring our collective noise and consciousness while lacking an understanding of logical facts or emotional intelligence, let alone a moral compass.

    Read the full blog on the Bite Back Substack.

  • The Bite Back: Buried leads: The soundbites you missed up to October 14, 2025

    The Bite Back: Buried leads: The soundbites you missed up to October 14, 2025

    A weekly summary highlighting stories that might have missed your newsfeed.

    The algorithm may show you the news, but that doesn’t mean you’re seeing every story. Compiled regularly by analyzing news coverage from multiple different outlets, this series highlights the headlines that you may have missed but shouldn’t overlook.

    For a regular update on top stories, check out the Stories behind the soundbites.

    WORLD

    1. Aid convoys surge toward Gaza as ceasefire sparks hope for relief after two years of war: “The population needs more than a temporary ceasefire. They need lasting safety, clean water, and medicine—not just to rest, but to rebuild.”–Jacob Granger, emergency coordinator in Gaza of Doctors without Borders
    • As a new ceasefire takes hold, preparations are underway to deliver large-scale humanitarian assistance to Gaza, where two years of war have left widespread destruction and famine conditions. Egypt and Israel have begun coordinating an influx of nearly 600 aid trucks per day carrying food, medicine, tents, and fuel. The United Nations says 170,000 metric tons of supplies are ready to enter once final inspections are cleared. While humanitarian groups welcome the truce, they warn that needs remain immense after months in which only 20% of required aid reached the enclave. The future of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which replaced the U.N. operation earlier this year, remains uncertain amid logistical breakdowns and public mistrust.
    1. Taliban-Pakistan border clashes kill dozens: “The situation on all official borders and de facto lines of Afghanistan is under complete control, and illegal activities have been largely prevented.”–Taliban government’s spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid
    • Afghanistan’s Taliban government said its forces killed 58 Pakistani soldiers and seized 25 army posts in retaliatory strikes on October 11, citing cross-border bombings, though few believe the situation on all borders is under control, as Mujahid claims. Pakistan has not confirmed the casualties but claims it issued a “befitting reply.” Saudi Arabia urged restraint as tensions escalated along the volatile Durand Line.
    1. Russian jets violate NATO airspace over Estonia: “If we are talking about Russian aggression, if it started, of course, it will be closed and controlled totally by NATO–our allies and us.”–Estonian Foreign Minister Margus Tshakna of the Gulf of Finland and the wider Baltic Sea.
    • Three Russian MiG-31s entered Estonian airspace for 12 minutes, triggering Article 4 consultations and a NATO show of force dubbed Operation Eastern Sentry. As Russia uses this corridor to export 60% of its oil and gas, the incursion underscores growing fears of hybrid warfare in the Baltic region.

    Read the full blog on the Bite Back Substack.

  • A look ahead: Advancing passwordless access at InfoSec World

    A look ahead: Advancing passwordless access at InfoSec World

    For decades, organizations have poured resources into securing systems with stronger and more complex passwords. Yet despite this investment, passwords remain one of the weakest links in cybersecurity and one of the biggest drains on workforce productivity. In critical industries where seconds matter, such as healthcare, manufacturing, and public safety, manual logins and inefficient multifactor authentication (MFA) workflows slow down staff, frustrate users, and lead to workarounds that create compliance and security risks.

    Read the full blog here.