--- title: "Yale students killed the feed and hit 1M messages fast" type: "News" locale: "zh-CN" url: "https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/270515197.md" description: "Series, a social networking platform built within iMessage, has exchanged over 1 million messages and reached 10,000 daily active users. Founded by Yale students Nathaneo Johnson and Sean Hargrow, Series eliminates feeds and followers, focusing on intimate, personal interactions. The platform's success reflects a shift away from public posting towards private, meaningful connections. Series has raised $5.1 million and earned its founders spots on Forbes 30 under 30 list. The platform's growth suggests a broader transformation in social networking, prioritizing genuine human connection over engagement metrics." datetime: "2025-12-22T16:00:39.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/270515197.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/270515197.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/270515197.md) --- > 支持的语言: [English](https://longbridge.com/en/news/270515197.md) | [繁體中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/270515197.md) # Yale students killed the feed and hit 1M messages fast Series, a social networking platform built within iMessage, announced it has exchanged over 1 million messages while reaching 10,000 daily active users. The platform achieved this milestone without the features that have defined social media for decades: no feeds, no followers and none of the performance anxiety that has pushed an entire generation away from public posting. Nathaneo Johnson and Sean Hargrow founded Series during their junior year at Yale after observing how exhausted their peers had become with traditional social platforms. The duo recognized that people were increasingly hesitant to share authentic moments due to the pressure and stigma surrounding public posting on conventional networks. ### **Rethinking social media from the ground up** The platform operates entirely within iMessage, fundamentally changing how people share content online. Instead of posting to a public feed where anyone can view and judge their content, Series users send customizable messages to carefully curated lists of recipients. The name reflects the sequential approach the platform uses to ensure each message reaches the right people at the right time. This method creates intimate, personal interactions that feel more like genuine communication than performative broadcasting. Users have reported meaningful outcomes from their Series messages, including hiring videographers for projects, arranging dates in Amsterdam and even co-founding businesses with new connections. Johnson explains the philosophy behind their creation. The limitations of existing social platforms inspired Series, as traditional feeds encourage users to present only their best selves. This rarely allows authentic communication about current feelings or experiences, primarily because of the stigma attached to online posting. Series addresses this by making each interaction between content and audience feel intimate and personal in ways previous platforms couldn’t achieve. Photo courtesy of nathaneo.johnson ### **Embracing the shift away from public posting** The milestone comes at a pivotal moment for social media. Instagram head Adam Mosseri recently commented on a paradigm shift occurring across platforms, with users increasingly retreating from public posting to direct messages and closed groups. For people who aren’t content creators, the pressure to curate perfect posts has transformed sharing from a joyful activity into an exhausting obligation. Series embraces this shift rather than resisting it. By operating within iMessage and emphasizing private, one-to-one introductions instead of public broadcasting, the platform delivers what people actually want from social networking: meaningful connections in comfortable settings without the performance pressure. ### **Measuring success differently** The approach represents a fundamental reimagining of social networking’s purpose. While traditional platforms optimize for engagement metrics, time spent scrolling and content consumption, Series optimizes for helping users meet the right person at the right time. The 1 million message milestone isn’t about how much content people consumed but rather the conversations initiated, introductions facilitated and relationships explored. This philosophy challenges the attention economy that has dominated social media for years. Instead of keeping users endlessly scrolling through feeds, Series facilitates specific interactions and then gets out of the way, allowing real connections to develop organically. ### **From college experiment to national movement** Johnson and Hargrow have raised $5.1 million to date for their venture, impressive funding for students still attending Yale University. Their work earned them spots on this year’s Forbes 30 under 30 list, recognizing their impact on reimagining social connection for younger generations. What began as a college-first platform is now scaling into a broader movement. The founders watched their generation grow increasingly exhausted by platforms designed for engagement over genuine connection, and they built Series as an alternative that prioritizes human relationships over metrics. ### **The future of authentic connection** For a generation raised on social media but worn down by its demands, Series offers a different path forward. The platform provides connection without performance requirements, community without constant curation, and social networking that doesn’t demand perfection from its users. The success of Series suggests that many people are ready for a fundamental change in how social networks operate. Rather than competing for attention through increasingly polished content, users can simply be themselves and connect with others who appreciate authenticity over aesthetic perfection. As Series continues growing beyond its college origins, it may signal a broader transformation in social networking. The 1 million message milestone demonstrates that when platforms prioritize genuine human connection over engagement metrics, users respond enthusiastically. In an era where social media fatigue has become the norm, Series proves that sometimes the best innovation isn’t adding more features but rather removing the elements that made sharing feel like a burden in the first place. ## 相关资讯与研究 - [Trump Expands US Iran Threats In Social Media Post](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/281149391.md) - [Should You Buy, Sell, or Hold Snap Stock Amid New EU Social Media Investigation?](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/281038221.md) - [13:39 ETDealerFire Helps Dealerships Turn Social Media Engagement into Website Traffic with Proven Strategies](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/281225538.md) - [S’pore studying restrictions on direct messaging, auto-play on social media to protect kids](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/281124529.md) - [Ty Cobb: Late-night Trump posts prove he’s ‘gone’](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/281403822.md)