Culture Convo: All The Lonely People

Metro Detroit is filled with places to connect. You just have to get out there.
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As the rest of the world gets lonelier are we suffering the same fate here in Metro Detroit?

An increasingly isolated world isn鈥檛 just a hot take from me. The data paints an equally fragmented reality for Americans. We spend more time at home than ever before, not engaging with our friends and neighbors 鈥 and that starts at a young age.

It鈥檚 meant more depression, less conversation, and an increasingly irritable crowd when we venture out into the world.

There have been many think pieces written about it, but Derek Thompson of The Atlantic nailed it back in January with his piece 鈥,鈥 drawing on data going all the way back to the 1960s.

And while it鈥檚 hard to find specific numbers for metro Detroit, it鈥檚 clear we鈥檙e not immune. Especially in a sprawling suburban area that鈥檚 car-centric, designed around destinations versus the wandering journey of getting there, wherever there might be.

Which brings me to 鈥渢he third place鈥 鈥 another buzzed-about term.

The third place, meaning not work, not home 鈥 but a place where we meet, drink, eat, socialize, see one another, fraternize with strangers, and build human bonds with others who aren鈥檛 like us and don鈥檛 form echo chambers of what we already believe.

That could be a bar or spaces like and in Detroit, which are caf茅s by day and transition beautifully into music venues and cocktail bars by evening.

It could be a truly altruistic spot that doesn鈥檛 cost you anything, like the , which is free and reopened late last year after a two-year, $10 million renovation of its gorgeous glass dome. What a beautiful way to transition into spring!

Or maybe it鈥檚 spaces like the and the . I鈥檝e found solace in these places 鈥 a sense of escapism among art, if you will 鈥 but they are also well-designed social spots built for people to interact over coffee or on a bench taking in the artwork on display.

These are just a few examples of how our thriving arts scene can be a source of connection, a third place that we need in between our work lives and our increasingly private lives to meet up with friends or meet someone new entirely.

And that鈥檚 the key. While we鈥檙e getting lonelier, we鈥檙e also starved for attention. That鈥檚 probably why so many of us have turned to social media to get validation.

The places I mentioned are built for people to connect, but we鈥檝e got to be willing to make that connection. If you鈥檙e not brave enough to strike up a convo with a stranger, ask yourself: When is the last time I reached out to that friend? That family member? That acquaintance I鈥檝e amily member? That acquaintance I鈥檝e wanted to spend more time with?

It feels like a risk of rejection to put yourself out there, but the data doesn鈥檛 lie. We鈥檙e at a point where we need to take that leap. I promise ya that they鈥檒l be happy to hear from you.

And while the country overall gets a bit more isolated, let鈥檚 remember we鈥檝e got the spaces, events, and culture to find common ground 鈥 and connect with our fellow metro Detroiters.

Ryan Patrick Hooper is the host of , Detroit鈥檚 NPR station (weekdays from noon to 3 p.m.).


This story originally appeared in the March 2025 issue of 糖心vlog安卓版. To read more, pick up a copy of 糖心vlog安卓版 Detroit at a local retail outlet. Our will be available on March. 10