Logan Mendelsohn, a Ticketmaster trust and safety manager, initially built the tool as a side project for friends. The concept is simple: your digital correspondence moves at the speed of the creature you assign to it. A falcon delivers text rapidly, while a turtle or snail offers a meditative pace. Following a viral Threads post about teenagers exchanging messages in Elizabethan English, the user base exploded from 10,000 to over 300,000 in just over a month.
In section Startups & Technology
Roost: The slow-social app turning digital messaging into bird flight
A virtual woodpecker trekking across the Great Plains to deliver a note is the antithesis of the modern notification ping. Roost, a burgeoning social app, is capitalizing on a growing hunger for friction, forcing users to wait hours or days for messages to arrive via simulated avian travel.

This rapid growth brought both community enthusiasm and unexpected friction. Users praised the platform’s wholesome, intentional nature, yet pushed back sharply against Mendelsohn’s use of AI-generated bird art. Acknowledging the community's stance, the founder is now pivoting to replace the AI assets with human-created illustrations through a contest. Despite the reliance on AI for coding the app itself, Mendelsohn maintains that the platform’s core direction remains human-led. By prioritizing privacy—limiting location sharing and restricting photo exchanges—Roost has carved out a niche for those weary of the relentless speed of traditional social media.
Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first!