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This is a much better way of reading AMAs than through Reddit, where the noise is overwhelming. Good job!
I can see myself actually using this site, which is a very rare reaction to these for me.
Third. Though the content discovery should improve. It's a bit overwhelming at the moment.
As the guy who started AMA, this looks really cool, good job!
https://cake.co has been quite good for AMA-style interviews lately (which they call "Panels"). Victoria Taylor (/u/chooter) who used to do a lot of the big AMAs on Reddit is working there now, and they're doing them in a more moderated way where people have to submit questions instead of just being a frantic free-for-all.

Here's a page listing the recent panels: https://www.cake.co/topics/GQQ9C1V/cake-panel

First page is confusing, looks like a twitter clone or something?

The second like is easier to understand, although I am not interested in reading a plain interview with self promotional Qs and As. They feel very unauthentic compared to AMAs (although IAMA definitely had a point where it because too self promotional to bear as well).

Newest, Top, Random. Did I miss the "organized" part? Is there a categorized hierarchical index somewhere?
Cool project! Does anyone know if there are any IP concerns with republishing content from a public forum like Reddit in this manner?