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Reason Roundup

Social Media Is Not Tobacco

Plus: Hollywood is over, the war in Iran is not, Democrats are fighting about affordability, and more...

Peter Suderman | 3.31.2026 9:30 AM

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A judge's gavel, Meta app icons, and Mark Zuckerburg | Photo: Dreamstime
(Photo: Dreamstime)

Social media addiction? One of the refrains you hear from social media critics is that it's effectively a kind of digital tobacco—unsafe, addictive, and intentionally marketed to children, despite executives knowing the harms.

In broad strokes, that was the idea behind the $375 million verdict against Meta, the parent company of Instagram and Facebook, in New Mexico last week. 

The Reason Roundup Newsletter by Liz Wolfe Liz and Reason help you make sense of the day's news every morning.

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On the new episode of The Reason Roundtable, Nick Gillespie, Katherine Mangu-Ward, Matt Welch, and I talk about why this metaphor fails, why these judgments are worrying for free speech, and why we seem to be entering a new era of social media prohibition. 

Tobacco is a chemical that is ingested into the body with specific, measurable, physical effects.

Social media is a delivery system for speech—speech that will be different for every user, and speech that is protected by the First Amendment because, well, it's speech. 

The lawyers arguing the case against Meta have said they are not attacking speech. Instead, they are arguing that it's a defective product with dangerous design features, like autoplay video and infinite scroll.

But those features wouldn't be compelling without the content—which is to say without the speech—they push to users. An infinite scroll of grass growing probably wouldn't be very engaging. 

So much of this argument reminds me of the debates about Hollywood and media from my youth. In the 1980s, the political class was obsessed with profane rock and rap lyrics, which were coarsening the culture and harming youths. In the 1990s, there were congressional hearings about the dangers posed to children by violent video games like Mortal Kombat and edgy movies like Reservoir Dogs. Today, these political campaigns seem transparently ridiculous; the Mortal Kombat series is still around, but it's practically camp, with "Friendship" kills along with the old gory fatalities. And Reservoir Dogs director Quentin Tarantino is one of the most lauded and successful directors of the last 35 years; many of his movies are about how elaborate cinematic violence is a righteous salve for real-world historical wrongs. 

Speaking of movies… 


Is Hollywood over? In 2020, the pandemic shut down large numbers of movie theaters across the country (and the world) for the better part of a year. Then in 2023, just as the movie business was starting to come back to life with hits like Barbie and Oppenheimer, strikes by the writers and actors unions shut down production for months.

In the years since, it's become clear that Hollywood as we know it is over. 

Yes, there will still be video-based entertainment—more of it than ever, most likely, thanks to cheap digital distribution and production. 

But Hollywood—the place, the idea, the industry, the dream factory as it has existed for decades—is on the decline. 

Los Angeles–based studios are making fewer movies and television shows, reports The Wall Street Journal, and those they are making are often being shot in other states or overseas to capitalize on tax credits. The Journal crunched the numbers on entertainment industry jobs and "the result [is] a 30% drop in employment from a late-2022 peak for actors, carpenters, costumers and the hundreds of other professions that make movies and TV shows, according to Labor Department data."

To some extent, this is a story about film tax credits. States like Louisiana, Michigan, and Georgia lured production out of Hollywood with generous taxpayer-backed subsidies and credits for film production. Georgia, in particular, came close to becoming a sort of "Hollywood East," with a huge production infrastructure and many of the Marvel Cinematic Universe movies and TV shows shot in the state, as well as countless other productions. But even Georgia's lavish tax credits couldn't save the state's business. In the past few years, much of Marvel's production has moved to London, where costs are lower and the tax environment is more favorable. 

That brings us to the other part of the story: labor.

Hollywood unions staged big strikes that shut down filmmaking for much of 2023, just as the industry was finding its post-pandemic footing. The extended pause in production meant that theatrical releases slowed to a trickle. Audiences, already acclimated to watching things at home because of streaming and the pandemic, lost the habit of going to the movies. And there wasn't enough product to lure them back. 

Notably, the Journal report suggests that Los Angeles might end up looking like Detroit, a once-thriving industrial town that was hollowed out as the city's flagship business dried up. Union-driven costs that couldn't be shed when the business changed helped sink Detroit. Labor isn't the only factor, but it's looking increasingly like something similar is happening in Hollywood. 

Yes, people still drive cars. And some movies can still score big at the box office. The excellent Project Hail Mary looks like this year's first big blockbuster, and the new Super Mario Bros. film will almost certainly make well over $1 billion globally. But there are fewer big hits. And even more importantly, there are fewer of the sort of medium-sized successes that keep butts in seats and theaters in business between those hits. Add in competition from streamers like Netflix and social video platforms like YouTube, and it's a perfect storm for the industry. 

I dearly love the movies. But I fear they are going to become a niche cultural form instead of the dominant popular art form that they were for much of the 20th century. They'll be more like jazz or ballet, as actor Timothée Chalamet warned. And at least some of the industry's many wounds appear self-inflicted. 


Ground troops? The war in Iran is either over or about to begin a new, escalated phase with ground troops. 

One of the biggest points of contention in the war so far is the Strait of Hormuz, a key shipping portal for the region's energy. The Strait has been largely closed since the war began, and now The Wall Street Journal reports that President Donald Trump might be willing to end the war and let the Strait stay closed. 

Alternatively, he might start a ground war, or at least some sort of limited troop operations. Thousands of American troops have been moved into the region, and The New York Times reports that Trump is weighing whether to send them in.  The aim, reportedly, would be to use ground forces to achieve narrow, tactical goals like securing nuclear material, safeguarding energy production, or perhaps reopening the Strait of Hormuz. 

Even with clearly defined goals and targets, ground forces would represent a major escalation in the war. And these sorts of nominally narrow actions have a tendency to spin out of control. 

In the meantime, the war is starting to have an effect on energy prices at home, with gasoline hitting $4 a gallon. Supply shocks from the war also might threaten the AI boom that is helping prop up the U.S. economy. Markets are already reeling because of the war.

Even if the war somehow ends tomorrow, there will be lingering, likely destabilizing effects on energy, the economy, and global trade for a long time to come. 


Scenes from Washington, D.C.: Trump's new White House ballroom design is raising alarms. Architects who have reviewed the plans say it has stairs that lead nowhere, columns that block views, and oddly placed windows and bathrooms. 

On the one hand, some of the complaints about Trump's ballroom are obviously just griping that the design and review process should have, well, more process. On the other hand, it does sound like some of the design features could have used a bit more thought. 

In the meantime, between construction and security, there's currently no way to get a good view of the White House. 


QUICK HITS

  • I would not describe myself as a big fan of New York Gov. Kathy Hochul. But she is separating herself from the fiscally unserious progressives in the Democratic Party—including New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani—by saying that maybe, if they're going to run on affordability, they should regulate energy and land use a teensy-tiny bit less. It's a start! 
  • Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) will position agents outside of Marine graduation events in South Carolina, "to identify whether any of their family members are undocumented," according to NBC News.
  • Costco is getting into fertility treatments. Now you can get a baby AND a $1.50 hot dog? 
  • Science fiction author Andy Weir, who penned The Martian and Project Hail Mary, apparently pitched a Star Trek show but was rejected. He said recently that the current slate of Star Trek shows are "shit," which is…OK, technically that is an opinion. But it's also just the truth. Anyway, now he says that was a joke and has apologized. Andy, you were right the first time! 
  • There were apparently Apache helicopters operating near Kid Rock's home? And they were caught on video? And the military is investigating? Um. Ummmm. OK!  
  • Wired has a report on the King of Hammers, a summer road race in California. I feel obligated to link to it just because of the headline: "Guns, beer, titties, freedom." That sound you hear is me checking to see if Katherine Mangu-Ward will sign off on a new slogan for Reason. 

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NEXT: We Could Have Flying Cars by 2028

Peter Suderman is features editor at Reason.

Reason RoundupSocial MediaFree SpeechInternetMoviesIranZohran Mamdani
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  1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 months ago

    Is Hollywood over?

    It can’t happen soon enough.

    1. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

      Zero mention of Hollywood's woke problem, of destroying valuable franchises with expensive movies that tank at the box office because woke doesn't sell. Suderman, why are you afraid to tell the truth, that woke doesn't sell movies?

    2. Dillinger   2 months ago

      Tilly Norwood's career was just getting off the ground

  2. Ajsloss   2 months ago

    "Guns, beer, titties, freedom." That sound you hear is me checking to see if Katherine Mangu-Ward will sign off on a new slogan for Reason.

    "Weed, ass sex, food trucks and Orange Man Bad" hasn't exactly run its course yet.

  3. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 months ago

    Trump's new White House ballroom design is raising alarms.

    They said the same things about Frank Lloyd Wright’s buildings.

    1. TrickyVic (old school)   2 months ago

      Trump could eat Taco Bell and it would raise alarms.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic (smarter than The Average Dude)   2 months ago

        Oddly, those alarms might be justified. It is Taco Bell after all.

    2. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

      I'm sure the NYT did some completely unbiased reporting on the topic.

    3. Square = Circle   2 months ago

      They said the same things about Frank Lloyd Wright’s buildings.

      And they were right - Wright's buildings are famously garbage that look good in photos.

    4. mad.casual   2 months ago

      And by "raising alarms" we mean the guys installing the smoke alarms are carrying them up the ladders to install them.

  4. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

    Daniel Kishi
    @DanielMKishi
    The New York Times recently published a column about a dairy farmer who deployed robots after immigration authorities arrested one of his workers. The farm now produces three times more milk per worker, while employees earn more, work shorter hours, and do less grueling work.

    https://x.com/DanielMKishi/status/2038641194033418579

    1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

      But can robots clean AWFL's toilets?

      1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   2 months ago

        https://robotinstructions.com/intelligent-toilet-cleaning-robots/

      2. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4daltr3zRQ8

    2. Idaho-Bob   2 months ago

      C'mon Jesse, we both know that robots can't vote.

      Yet, anyway. Dems will need to replace the illegal voters.

      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

        Yet. Who says they cant learn to check a box on a form?

        1. HorseConch   2 months ago

          Just wait until they get phone voting going. The same bot farms automatically giving D politicians like Mamdani and Newsom 20k likes on X will be a great source of harvestable ballots.

      2. Ska   2 months ago

        Fallout 4 takes place in 2277 and synths not only can't vote but are demonized across the Commonwealth.

      3. See.More   2 months ago

        C'mon Jesse, we both know that robots can't vote.

        And aren't counted in the census.

  5. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Not such a big-tent party?

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/dems-turn-on-senate-candidate-after-learning-he-voted-for-trump/ar-AA1ZMKtM

    The Nebraska Democratic Party has denounced William Forbes, 79, a pastor running for Senate as a Democrat, calling him a "Republican Party plant."

    Forbes has voted for President Donald Trump in multiple elections, attended a GOP-backed leadership summit in January, and opposed abortion access. The party chair provided screenshots from Forbes's deleted Facebook page showing attendance at anti-abortion events.

    The Nebraska Democratic Party backs independent candidate Dan Osborn, concerned that Forbes could siphon votes and hand Republicans victory.

    1. NealAppeal   2 months ago

      Republicans have to give someone in trade for Fetterman.

      1. Dillinger   2 months ago

        good. that Omaha electoral vote nonsense is nonsense

    2. InsaneTrollLogic (smarter than The Average Dude)   2 months ago

      Laughable after all the Democrat plants we’ve had in Illinois running as “Republicans”. Fuck then and I hope they choke on a sample of their own shit.

    3. Zeb   2 months ago

      I don't get it. Wouldn't he siphon votes from Republicans?

  6. Minadin   2 months ago

    Architects who have reviewed the plans say it has stairs that lead nowhere, columns that block views, and oddly placed windows and bathrooms.

    No. The team that is responsible for that article consisted of someone who 'studied the fine arts', a person who has 'written about urban planning', and a 'trained architect'.

    One ''trained' architect' which is a really very curious term to me. At our firm, we have licensed architects, and architects who aren't licensed yet are called 'design professionals'. At other places they've been called 'intern architect', though that term is becoming more and more obsolete. I've never heard of 'trained architect'. Is that someone who went to architecture school and was then never employed in the field? Did they even graduate? If they were working in the field, wouldn't you use a term like 'practicing architect'? 'Architecture professional'?

    When I tried to google to figure out where he might be working, all I got were pages about some K-Pop star.

    1. Quicktown Brix   2 months ago

      "stairs that lead nowhere"

      ♫ Monorail Monorail Monorail ♫

      1. Dillinger   2 months ago

        I call the big one Bitey.

    2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

      Trained architect = has used Legos and played Minecraft.

    3. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   2 months ago

      Hey, it cam from trumps team. When it comes to putting up buildings what the hell does Trump and his group know?
      Can you name 1 building Trump ever had constructed?

    4. Square = Circle   2 months ago

      Yeah - this seems like pretty thin gruel. "This intern who took an intro to architecture class thought they saw a column in front of a window! Trump is such a bad designer!"

      It's painfully clear no one involved in this analysis has ever been anywhere near an actual building project and has no idea how designs come to be.

    5. mad.casual   2 months ago

      columns that block views

      Fucking Trump administration didn't invent transparent aluminum before remodeling the WH.

  7. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Jeffries: we've failed as a party

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/booker-democratic-party-has-failed-this-moment/ar-AA1ZJI3O

    Asked by NBC anchor Kristen Welker whether Democrats are making a mistake of shrinking their coalition with purity tests, Booker responded that his party “has failed this moment.”

    “I’m proud of so many things that my Democratic colleagues are doing. But as a whole, our party has failed this moment. It’s why I’ve called for new leadership in America,” he said, going on to argue that party leaders have gotten too mired in partisan fighting.

    “I’ve called for generational renewal because this left/right divide is killing our country. And our adversaries know it. They come onto our social media and try to whip up hate in America. That is one of our biggest crises,” he said.

    Booker said the country needs “new leadership” and “new moral imagination to pull our country together.”

    He went on to suggest that Democrats have become too focused on battling Trump, a phenomenon that some Republicans call “Trump Derangement Syndrome.”

    1. HorseConch   2 months ago

      What is the limit for the number of years served in congress or senate to qualify as the leadership that needs replaced? The same people that swore Joe Biden was the sharpest SOB alive 2 years ago are now telling us we need new leadership. The problem is that they have created all of this. You don't get to just say I'm new while already being an elected official.

  8. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

    When the students met with the hilarious AWFL president of the college, she so enthusiastically agreed to their ideological premises that they figured out there was no need to occupy anything, and they gave it up. The targets of their protest were almost more enthused by the thing than the protesters were.

    Liberal authority credentials itself by its performative oppositionalism. To borrow from the gonzo journalist Tom Wolfe, liberal authority is self-mau-mauing. It theatrically attacks itself, play-posturing against the bases of its own power. It sustains its authority by protesting against authority, giving in to demands that it grow its authority to curb the authoritarianism of the authorities, who are opposed by the authorities. If you sit in against a progressive administration, they show up with pajamas and happy faces and treat it as a sleepover. They’re against themselves too, you guys, can we send over some pizzas?

    Living as anti-authority authorities who protest against authority to protect their authority, leftists embedded in institutions become gelatin. You can’t attack them, because your fist squishes into the blob.

    1.) I hate these authorities!

    2.) “Yes, yes, we do too.” – The Authorities

    https://thefederalist.com/2026/03/30/the-latest-no-kings-protest-is-the-sound-of-a-tired-old-thing-trying-to-not-die/

  9. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Is anyone shocked, shocked!?

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/top-sf-official-who-led-dream-keeper-equity-program-arrested-on-felony-charges/ar-AA1ZLgrx

    Sheryl Davis, once San Francisco's most powerful civil rights watchdog, continued her spectacular fall on Monday when she was booked on suspicion of a raft of felony charges including misappropriation of public funds and perjury, the Chronicle has learned.

    Davis, who oversaw the San Francisco Human Rights Commission under former Mayor London Breed, was booked on the same morning as James Spingola, the former CEO of Collective Impact, a nonprofit Davis funded, according to jail records. Her bail was set at $50,000. Spingola is also being held on unspecified charges.

    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

      I'll only be shocked if they get jail time.

  10. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

    This is just hilarious.

    A political conference for Canada's New Democratic Party descended into chaos after progressive activists got into heated arguments over 'equity cards.'

    One delegate was outraged that she was allegedly skipped in the speaker queue despite having been standing at the podium with her gender equity card.

    A transgender woman who argued her 'rights are under attack' claimed it was 'frustrating' that a 'cis gender woman had spoken over me.'

    Similarly, a black woman argued that equity cards for women like her 'have no value outside of this space.'

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15691203/canada-ndp-conference-equity-cards-chaos.html?ns_mchannel=rss&ns_campaign=1490&ito=social-twitter_mailonline

    1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 months ago

      Similarly, a black woman argued that equity cards for women like her 'have no value outside of this space.'

      She was almost correct. They actually have no value at all.

      1. mad.casual   2 months ago

        I'll give you 3/5ths of the value of an equity card. Best I can do. Final offer.

    2. Idaho-Bob   2 months ago

      I watched this several times before realizing it wasn't a spoof. It is so cartoonish/caricature I just assumed it was The Bee.

      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

        Firs extremely well after the lawyer video from yesterday.

    3. TrickyVic (old school)   2 months ago

      ""that a 'cis gender woman had spoken over me.'""

      Somewhere someone said, the rights of the many, outweigh the rights of the few.

    4. Super Scary   2 months ago

      "so-called equity cards, colored coded cards that identified a party member as being part of a marginalized group that granted them special privileges. "

      You know who else used... ah nevermind, you get the idea.

  11. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 months ago

    Social media addiction?

    A bad habit is not an addiction.

  12. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Can't have anything nice...

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/woke-mayor-demands-tribute-to-murdered-ukrainian-refugee-be-torn-down-because-it-s-divisive/ar-AA1ZMbOm

    A Democratic mayor in the US has demanded the removal of an unfinished mural paying tribute to Iryna Zarutska, a Ukrainian refugee who was murdered last year.

    Brett Smiley, the Mayor of Providence, Rhode Island, has claimed the artwork is divisive and misguided - and says it should be pulled down.

    The tribute is found on the exterior of The Dark Lady, a gay bar in central Providence - and is said to have recieved the backing of Elon Musk.

    "The murder of the individual depicted in this mural was a devastating tragedy, but the misguided, isolating intent of those funding murals like the one across the county is divisive and does not represent Providence," the Mayor said.

    "I continue to encourage our community to support local artists whose work brings us closer together rather than divide us," Mr Smiley added.

    The owners of The Dark Lady also appeared to cave into outrage - and announced the half-finished tribute would be removed.

    1. Michael Ejercito   2 months ago

      School.shootongs are the only murders these people care about

      1. NealAppeal   2 months ago

        Not so much anymore...unless they can effectively obscure the shooter's transition.

    2. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

      “When we win, do not forget that these people want you broke, dead, your kids raped and brainwashed, and they think it's funny.”
      ― Sam Hyde

    3. TrickyVic (old school)   2 months ago

      """I continue to encourage our community to support local artists whose work brings us closer together rather than divide us," Mr Smiley added.""

      Mr Smiley is full of shit. His actions are divisive. Totally ignores how his actions affect people other than the angry mob.

      1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

        Mr. Smiley is very aware that the actions of elected officials like him influence the prosecutors and judges who set this animal loose 14 fucking times, many of them violent assaults. For equity.

        Of course he finds reminders of this murder “divisive”. He’s a self serving piece of shit.

    4. mad.casual   2 months ago

      The tribute is found on the exterior of The Dark Lady, a gay bar in central Providence - and is said to have recieved the backing of Elon Musk.

      So little Ukraine flags on social media profiles are out (again)?

  13. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

    the pandemic Governments, in a panicked response to Covid, shut down large numbers of movie theaters...

    Ftfy

  14. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

    Yesterday had a weird X trend of Japan and US coming together. Filled with memes of samurai cowboys.

    captain S.O
    @sow413

    Commentary account
    To my American friends,

    I want to speak from the heart, because this moment truly moved me as a Japanese citizen.

    When President Trump made that Pearl Harbor joke, it wasn’t just humor to us. It felt like a weight I’d carried my whole life was suddenly lifted. My chest tightened, and honestly, tears came close.

    For 80 long years, we Japanese have lived under a heavy shadow — the constant expectation to apologize, to reflect, to stay in “guilt mode.” Even though we’re the closest of allies, that old wound never fully healed. We felt bound by the past, by the Constitution America helped write for us, always a little smaller, always needing to prove we were sorry enough.

    But in that single joke, Trump did something powerful. He turned a painful history into a shared laugh between equals. It was like he was saying:
    “Hey, it was a long time ago. We’re good. Let’s move forward — as brothers.”

    No more endless atonement. No more living in the shadow of being the “former enemy.” The curse broke. Japan feels free to stand tall again.

    https://x.com/sow413/status/2038139119730327865

    1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 months ago

      Japan feels free to stand tall again.

      Odd choice of words from a country where the average adult is 5’-5”.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic (smarter than The Average Dude)   2 months ago

        Standing tall isn’t about stature. Burton Cummings told us that back in 1976.

  15. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/dhs-slams-california-sanctuary-county-after-mom-allegedly-murdered-by-2-honduran-nationals/ar-AA1ZM0Q9

    The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) slammed a California county for not honoring U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detainer requests for two illegal aliens accused of murdering a 24-year-old mother earlier this month.

    Franquin Inestroza-Martinez, a Honduran national, and Gerzon Jose Chirinos-Munguia, also of Honduras, were arrested in Santa Clara County for allegedly killing Kembery Chirinos-Flores with a shotgun in early January.

    Chirinos-Munguia is the father of Chirinos-Flores’ 5-year-old son, and was previously arrested in 2018 for battery and false imprisonment, and subsequently in 2019 for domestic battery and threatening crime with the intent of terrorizing, DHS said.

  16. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

    Apache helicopters operating near Kid Rock's home

    Bud Light's back and seeking vengeance.

  17. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

    Wired has a report on the King of Hammers, a summer road race in California. I feel obligated to link to it just because of the headline: "Guns, beer, titties, freedom." That sound you hear is me checking to see if Katherine Mangu-Ward will sign off on a new slogan for Reason.

    You guys had more tariff articles in one week than you do on guns in a year.

    1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 months ago

      Should have more titties articles as well.

      1. Quicktown Brix   2 months ago

        Articles? Eh, OK.

        1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 months ago

          By articles I mean pictures.

          1. Quicktown Brix   2 months ago

            OK. Now we're talkin'.

          2. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 months ago

            Of trans sex worker titties? Old cat ladies? No thanks

      2. Rick James   2 months ago

        ENB overrode Lobster Girl because it was exploitive. Change my mind.

    2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

      Where's the link?? You had one job!

  18. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   2 months ago

    Who said social media is like tobacco? Can I get 1 reference? Or is your source a dude on reddit?

  19. JFree   2 months ago

    Tobacco is a chemical that is ingested into the body with specific, measurable, physical effects. Social media is a delivery system for speech—speech that will be different for every user, and speech that is protected by the First Amendment because, well, it's speech.

    Oh God. So now the 'problem' is trying to parse the word 'addiction'. And to pretend that 'speech' (and basically the entire brain) is completely free of attempts to coerce/manipulate. Even though 'addiction' also crosses that brain barrier and somehow becomes 'dependency inducing' because it requires something physically ingested.

    I guess it's never a surprise that 'libertarians' will never add anything intelligent to any discussion.

    1. Rick James   2 months ago

      Reason can't define a woman, and now they think they've got a bright-line definition on addiction.

      1. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 months ago

        She never mentions the word addiction in certain company

  20. Yuno Hoo   2 months ago

    An infinite scroll of grass growing probably wouldn't be very engaging.

    Hey, what about all those 10-hour loops on YT? Talk about addictive!

  21. Marshal   2 months ago

    And at least some of the industry's many wounds appear self-inflicted.

    It's revealing in a long piece (for a roundup) on Hollywood's decline Suderman manages this oblique reference to it' political obsessions which render the overwhelming majority of its output as garbage. I compare this to Reason's coverage of Porkbusters, a group of spending focused cons/Reps and therefore natural allies to libertarians. In that case Reason's primary focus was noting that other cons/reps held views they oppose, maximizing differences and pushing away allies. But in the case of Hollywood they bury or minimize any element they oppose , as they do the woke politics, so as to not offend their allies.

    So when they claim to not be a part of either side it's pretty obvious that not only are they lying, they also know they are lying, which in turn makes it amusing when they whine about partisan team dynamics.

    1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

      Was it Suderman that admitted to wearing a mask so his neighbors wouldn't think he was a republican?

      1. Marshal   2 months ago

        I don't remember that but it does seem in character. Compare that to actual libertarians who revel in the opportunity to set themselves apart from the sheeple.

        I think it comes from considering themselves a part of the "public policy" world. I can't think of a concept more inimical to freedom since its core interest in discovering behavior they feel justified in using government to coerce.

      2. Rick James   2 months ago

        It absolutely was.

  22. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>the new episode of The Reason Roundtable, Nick Gillespie, Katherine Mangu-Ward, Matt Welch, and I

    discuss addictions to purple hair, jackets, nerd glasses, and obtuse idealism ...

  23. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>"Guns, beer, titties, freedom."

    lol not one author here who believes in any of this.

  24. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>There were apparently Apache helicopters operating near Kid Rock's home?

    I wouldn't bat an eye if you told me Kid Rock has a couple Apaches out back

  25. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>Architects who have reviewed the plans say it has stairs that lead nowhere, columns that block views, and oddly placed windows and bathrooms.

    one of the Architects is today's guest on Tucker don't miss it.

    1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

      Why are you guys criticizing this guy cited by Reason but not attacking him on Tucker!

      - Lying Jeffy

  26. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>In the years since, it's become clear that Hollywood as we know it is over.

    Hollywood died because The Addams Family movie was a hit.

  27. NoVaNick   2 months ago

    Is social media tobacco? Nope, tobacco is much more enjoyable.

  28. NoVaNick   2 months ago

    Just think of all the influencers who will be out of a job if there’s suddenly a crackdown on social media! And where would trans and nonbinary teens be without it? Most may have remained cis-gender. The horror!

  29. Rick James   2 months ago

    This is the most Canadian thing you'll ever see... ever.

  30. See.More   2 months ago

    Tobacco is a chemical . . .

    Oh, FFS! Tobacco is a fucking plant, not a chemical.

    1. mad.casual   2 months ago

      Reason Magazine: where "I just have to look good. I don't have to be clear." meets "You've got a face for written-word media."

  31. mad.casual   2 months ago

    Costco is getting into fertility treatments. Now you can get a baby AND a $1.50 hot dog?

    Not without a membership card you SAVE Act-retarded, "BORDURZ IZ KONSTRUKTZ!" motherfuckers.

    1. Dillinger   2 months ago

      the married women who want hot dogs and babies will be disenfranchised.

  32. See.More   2 months ago

    LGBT - Liberty, Guns, Booze, & Titties!

  33. Its_Not_Inevitable   2 months ago

    No Fist today? Must be why there are only 83 comments (2:15 pm Eastern)

    1. Dillinger   2 months ago

      not even Fist provides the missing usual 328 more comments

    2. Square = Circle   2 months ago

      The number of comments dropped precipitously when sarc vanished. Prior to that, 65-95% of any given thread was sarc and his enemies pissing at each other. It was starting to give me repetitive motion issues in my scrolling finger.

      1. Rick James   2 months ago

        It was starting to give me repetitive motion issues in my scrolling finger.

        Are all those models on your computer at least 18?

    3. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

      It's another official Day Without Fist of Etiquette. Can't speak to the other cut-and-runners not commenting.

  34. TJJ2000   2 months ago

    Of course it's tobacco.
    The most successful purely BS propaganda agenda to ever hit the USA.
    The whole world literally sucked up the pure BS campaign without question and destroyed Individual Liberty like no other BS propaganda ever has.

    Sorry fools; All the smokers didn't get lung cancer and die like all you sheeple believed.

  35. BYODB   2 months ago


    Science fiction author Andy Weir, who penned The Martian and Project Hail Mary, apparently pitched a Star Trek show but was rejected. He said recently that the current slate of Star Trek shows are "shit," which is…OK, technically that is an opinion. But it's also just the truth. Anyway, now he says that was a joke and has apologized. Andy, you were right the first time!

    No need to apologize, even the much denigrated 'modern audiences' aren't watching even though they've pretty much been catering exclusively to the trans-rainbow cult and young teens for years. Who is Weir even apologizing to when nobody watches the show?

    Given that they already cancelled Starfleet Academy, if someone had any lingering doubts that Star Trek was watched by nobody outside of those paid to review things this show should convince them after watching less than a full episode.

    I think the lesson here is that if you hire idiot hack writers with rancid political opinions and give them hundreds of millions of dollars, it doesn't transform their gibbering into watchable product no matter how much expensive CGI you throw at the screen.

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