PERSON
Melissa Gregg
The cultural theorist who named presence bleed—the seepage of work
consciousness into domestic life through digital connectivity—and whose framework for the intimacy of work becomes, in the AI era, the most precise diagnosis of what it costs to build everything, everywhere, all the time.
Melissa Gregg is the scholar who gave millions of people their first precise vocabulary for what was happening to their evenings and weekends. Her 2011 ethnographic study of Australian knowledge workers introduced the concept of
presence bleed—the seepage of work consciousness into domestic life through digital connectivity, the condition in which the worker's body occupied one register while her mind occupied another. The insight was diagnostic where the existing vocabulary of “work-life balance” was merely aspirational. Her subsequent book
Counterproductive (2018) deepened this into a genealogy of productivity culture, tracing the ideology from domestic science through Getting Things Done to show how each iteration promised liberation and delivered more work.
[YOU] on AI extends Gregg's framework into the era of AI-assisted creation, where the dynamic she documented undergoes a qualitative shift:
presence bleed driven by the arrival of communication becomes
production bleed driven by the builder's own generative impulse,