Axios Atlanta

May 18, 2026
Happy Monday! Today we bring you a special newsletter to help you clean your social media feeds — and your mind.
☀️ Today's weather: Sunny, with a high of 88 and a low of 67.
🎂 Happy birthday to our Axios Atlanta members Ann Vitale and Sameer Asher!
Today's newsletter is 904 words — a 3.5-minute read.
1 big thing: Dodge TikTok's powerful algorithm
Let's start with TikTok, which has one of the most formidable algorithms, powering one of the most addictive apps of our time.
- It learns what you linger on — not what you "like" — and feeds you more of it at scale.
There's no way to fully turn off TikTok's algorithm, but you can blunt its influence on your feed.
- 🔎 Ditch the "For You" feed: This is where TikTok flexes its algorithmic muscle, serving up videos it thinks will keep you on the app. Instead, explore the "Following" feed, which only shows you TikToks made by friends or creators you've intentionally chosen.
- 🛑 Prune your algorithm: If you can't escape it, train it. Be ruthless about flagging videos you don't want to see more of — whether that's incendiary personalities or buckets of content, like politics. Press on a video for a bit, and you'll see an option to tap "Not Interested." Use it!
- 🌱 Seek out the good stuff: Training works both ways. There's a lot of great content on TikTok. Use the search bar to actively look for the videos you do want to see. That could be "how Congress works," "plant care tips" or "guided meditation."
💭 Kristal's thought bubble: TikTok's algorithm and the kind of ads I see have changed so much now that it has new owners — and not for the better.
2. Refresh your Instagram diet
Instagram, the visual platform that once revolved around your friends' espresso drinks and vacation photos, now feels packed with influencers you've never met and recommendations you didn't ask for.
Why it matters: Cleaning up your Instagram account redirects you to content from people and posts you actually care about.
Some of your options:
- ➡️ Quick fix: Switch to the "Following" feed by clicking the Instagram logo at the top of your screen when you open the app. You'll have to toggle to it each time you open the app, but it'll only show you posts from those you follow — the closest you can get to an algorithm-free feed.
- 🗑️ Gradual cleanup: Start tapping the "…" and hitting "Not Interested" whenever you see a garbage post, whether it's fake news, rage bait or influencers.
- 👥 Check what you're engaging with: Go to your profile, tap "Following," then "Least Interacted With." You'll see accounts you haven't engaged with in a while, and you can quickly unfollow from there.
😒 Kristal's thought bubble: Instagram used to be fun because your friends would actually see and interact with your posts. But now we have to wade through ads and suggested posts by content creators we don't even follow. It's frustrating.
3. Reset your Facebook reality
Facebook has shaped political discourse, family dynamics and entire news cycles for years.
- Its algorithm reflects years of your clicks, relationships and habits, so your feed may be showing you a version of the world built from your past.
Why it matters: Facebook doesn't have to be a pit of despair and rage bait. You can reset it.
It's never too late to start — here's how:
- Snooze and unfollow: Facebook allows you to hide people you follow or "Snooze" their content. (Tap the "..." next to a post you don't enjoy and you'll find a number of options to hide that post, snooze the poster, hide all content from that user or unfollow them altogether.)
- 🚦 Adjust your preferences: Over the political content? You can dial it back. Go to "Settings & privacy," then "Content preferences," where you can reduce the amount of political and sensitive content in your feed.
🤬 Kristal's hot take: We shouldn't have to go through all these hoops just to keep up with the people we care about.
4. Rebuild your X
Your X feed is designed to make you emotional.
Why it matters: X's algorithm intentionally pushes posts that spark strong reactions, making your feed feel angrier and more chaotic. AI chatbot Grok makes this worse by frequently surfacing misleading content.
- Understanding that the platform's algorithm rewards posts that spark emotion and engagement can help you stay more vigilant in seeking accuracy or nuance.
💨 The quickest fix: Skip the "For You" page and stick to the "Following" tab.
- But be careful. A recent update made the "Following" tab default to the "most popular" tweets in that category. On a desktop, you can click the small arrow on the "Following" tab and toggle between "popular" and "recent" depending on your preference.
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5. Five-ish Points: The Waymo takeover
The man accused of fatally stabbing a 23-year-old woman on the Atlanta Beltline Northeast Trail entered a negotiated guilty plea three months ago related to an attack on a woman at MARTA station. (AJC)
Fulton County manager Dick Anderson is facing two ethics complaints, one of which involves loose dogs roaming his gated Roswell neighborhood. (AJC)
🤔 A northwest Atlanta neighborhood is puzzled by empty Waymos driving in circles through the residential community. (WSB-TV)
🎤 Facts Only, a popular hip-hop trivia night that offers up to $500 in prizes, is celebrating its 10th anniversary at Westside Motor Lounge. (Capital B)
Starbucks is closing the company's corporate office in Atlanta as part of a broader restructuring. (CBS News)
🥴 Kristal's "training" for the Peachtree Road Race is...going.
🔧 Thomas is recovering from taking apart and reassembling a clothes dryer this weekend.
This newsletter was edited by Crystal Hill.
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