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Maybe Food, Maybe TechAuthor: Adam Yee and Kai Wang
A podcast where an entrepreneurial food scientist and a tech product manager explore the variety of ways our world affects the things we care about. Join Adam Yee and Kai-Hsin Wang on a chaotic, ENTP-coded hour interview where we share our thoughts on current events, dive into the companies in food and tech (or both) and share some personal insights on life in general. Language: en Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it |
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[End] Something Big Is Happening, The K-shape Fast Food Economy, Gen Z Needs All The Help They Can Get
Sunday, 15 February, 2026
In this final episode of Maybe Food Maybe Tech (for now), Adam Yee and Kai-Hsin Wang reflect on the end of the podcast while doing what they’ve always done best: making sense of a fast-changing world at the intersection of food, technology, and society. They unpack the tech-heavy Super Bowl ad landscape as a signal of an overheating AI race, debate surveillance and privacy in consumer tech, and explore why AI may be far more economically disruptive than past bubbles like crypto. The conversation digs into enterprise AI tools like Claude, ChatGPT, and Gemini, what exponential technological change actually means for workers, and why most people outside Silicon Valley are far less prepared for AI than insiders assume. Along the way, they wrestle with uncomfortable questions about layoffs, labor displacement, regulation, and whether society is sprinting blindly toward an uncertain future . The episode also zooms out to examine broader cultural and economic shifts: fast food’s split between value and premium in a K-shaped economy, Chipotle’s bet on higher-income consumers, McDonald’s return to price-sensitive meals, and the growing emphasis on “functional” food like protein-forward offerings. Adam and Kai close by discussing Gen Z’s struggles entering the workforce, including surprising data on parental involvement in job searches, risk aversion shaped by the pandemic, and generational differences in resilience. Equal parts reflective, skeptical, and candid, this farewell episode serves as both a send-off and a snapshot of a moment when technology, work, and everyday life are all being quietly—and rapidly—rewired.











