Review: Sympathy for the Devil
Cage match.
The assault on Mount Carmel was meant to bolster the ATF's reputation. It failed.
What happens when a "wife guy" divorces his wife?
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook at 1 p.m. Eastern this Thursday for a discussion with director Alex Winter about his new documentary The YouTube Effect.
Between A.I. and TikTok, the actors and writers will be returning to a changed industry.
A supposedly sacred duty devolves into much ado about ordering lunch.
The author, whose libertarian leanings are evident, makes readers consider the impact of the choices they make in the voting booth.
The glitter-filled movie got involved in authoritarian geopolitics by allegedly displaying Chinese propaganda.
"If he goes down, so will journalism," Assange's father John Shipton says in the documentary.
The Apple TV+ film tells the story of an entrepreneur who helped bring a Soviet designer's game to the world.
It should be obvious that drag performances are protected by the First Amendment, but that hasn't kept government officials from trying to ban them.
A listless, cynical wrap-up to a decade of chaotic superhero storytelling.
Futuristically thrilling but aesthetically limited
In the Pokemon universe, there's no central government and vital social services are provided by informal clubs.
Plus: A listener question considers the pros and cons of the libertarian focus on political processes rather than political results.
The Little Mermaid was a dull exercise in box-checking. Spider-Verse uses its diverse cast as an opportunity for narrative delights.
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is more Rob Reiner than J.R.R. Tolkien.
Asset forfeiture isn't funny—but what if it involves tripping bunnies and psychedelic mushrooms?
Too few remember the pope's opposition to Polish building regulation.
Author Kaitlyn Tiffany offers a history of fandoms.
Author Alex Cody Foster went deep with McAfee for months in an ill-fated attempt to ghostwrite his memoir.
Author Leigh Goodmark's end goals of abolishing prisons and defunding police are hard to swallow.
Politicians in the last century accused pinball of being mob activity.
Knives Out director Rian Johnson offers a twisted vision of the American economy as one populated by makers and moochers.
Their last strike previewed the struggles of the streaming era. This one might be giving us an early taste of the age of artificial intelligence.
Human bonds transcend ideology in the HBO series.
The HBO movie muddies important distinctions.
Predictably, the machine-learning robot starts killing.
In one sequence, the Jerry Seinfeld stand-in stood onstage at a comedy club for minutes without saying a word.
Companies make decisions all the time, some of them regrettable and unfortunate, that shouldn't be any of the government's business.
In this film, it's mean and funny enough to work.
By forcing mixed-race characters to choose one or the other, the game is arguably doing something more problematic.
Why are so many filmgoers and politicians eager to prop up baseball's boondoggles?
The HBO series features what Ayn Rand would call "second-handers."
A new novel by Reason contributor Kat Rosenfield
Copyright law is just one area that must adapt to account for revolutionary A.I. technology.
Reason's Austin and Meredith Bragg on satire in an insane world and the man who ended New York's ridiculous, decadeslong ban on pinball.
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