Category: culture

  • Case Studies in Performatosis: Black Mirror’s “Joan Is Awful” and “Nosedive”

    Case Studies in Performatosis: Black Mirror’s “Joan Is Awful” and “Nosedive”

    In the grand medical theater of Black Mirror, few disorders are as virulent and tragically funny as Performatosis—the compulsive need to live life as if constantly auditioning for an invisible panel of social media judges. Two episodes in particular, “Joan Is Awful” and “Nosedive,” offer prime case studies in this terminal condition. Both protagonists—Joan and Lacie—aren’t just victims of technological dystopia; they’re emotionally exhausted performers collapsing under the weight of their own curated identities. And like all great tragicomedies, they bring it on themselves with a smile, a filter, and a legally binding Terms of Service they definitely didn’t read.

    “Joan Is Awful” is what happens when you outsource your entire identity to an algorithm and then act surprised when it turns on you. Joan, a blandly competent tech middle-manager with questionable morals and a perpetual expression of secondhand guilt, becomes a literal character in a TV show about her own life. But this isn’t just surveillance—it’s a forced performance, one she never auditioned for but can’t stop starring in. Her daily decisions are reinterpreted, exaggerated, and broadcast to a global audience craving content, not character. The real tragedy? Joan begins modifying her behavior to match the awful version of herself the algorithm is producing, proving that once Performatosis sets in, the line between self and spectacle evaporates faster than a TikTok trend.

    Meanwhile, in “Nosedive,” Lacie lives in a pastel-colored prison of positivity, where smiles are currency and emotional repression is a public service. Her entire life is a performance designed to earn ratings—every cup of overpriced coffee, every chirpy interaction, every dead-eyed compliment is another step up the social ladder. But like all performances, hers eventually cracks, and when it does, it’s not just a fall—it’s a nosedive into social exile. Her descent is more than a narrative arc; it’s a diagnosis. She’s suffering from terminal Performatosis, unable to stop performing even as her audience turns on her. The episode’s final, cathartic scream-off in jail is less an act of rebellion and more a final gasp of unscripted truth.

    What links Joan and Lacie is not just the technology that invades their lives, but the deep, internalized need to be seen—and more dangerously, to be liked. They are not characters living in dystopias; they are mirrors of us, the perfectly average user who has confused validation with identity. The systems they’re trapped in are just more honest versions of the ones we already use—systems that reward curated personas, punish messiness, and encourage self-policing with a faux-empowering smile. In both cases, the platforms don’t just reflect reality; they rewrite it, edit it, and package it for mass consumption—leaving the person behind feeling like a glitch in their own story.

    Performatosis, as diagnosed through these episodes, is not about ego. It’s about survival in a world where being real is risky, but being performative is profitable. Joan and Lacie suffer not just because they’re being watched, but because they’ve handed over their stories to people—and systems—that care more about ratings than reality. Their eventual breakdowns are not mental collapses; they’re acts of resistance. Unscripted, unbeautiful, and gloriously human. And if we’re smart, we’ll take the hint: stop performing before you forget the script was never yours to begin with.

  • Ozempification and DeBrandification in Black Mirror

    Ozempification and DeBrandification in Black Mirror

    In the dystopian funhouse mirror that is Black Mirror, two episodes—”Joan Is Awful” and “Rachel, Jack and Ashley Too”—serve as cautionary tales about the perils of Ozempification and the arduous journey toward DeBrandification. These narratives dissect how individuals relinquish their identities to external forces, only to embark on a tumultuous quest to reclaim them.

    Ozempification, much like the quick-fix weight loss drug it’s named after, represents the seductive allure of outsourcing personal agency for immediate gratification. In “Joan Is Awful,” Joan’s passive acceptance of Streamberry’s invasive terms leads to her life being broadcasted without consent, morphing her into a grotesque caricature for public consumption. Similarly, in “Rachel, Jack and Ashley Too,” Ashley O’s acquiescence to her aunt’s overbearing control transforms her into a commodified pop puppet, her authentic self suppressed beneath layers of marketable artifice.

    The consequences of Ozempification are stark. Joan becomes a prisoner of her own life, scrutinized and vilified by an audience oblivious to her reality. Ashley O’s existence is hijacked, her consciousness commodified into AI dolls like Ashley Too, symbolizing the extreme exploitation of her identity. Both women find themselves trapped in narratives dictated by others, their true selves obscured by the demands of an insatiable audience.

    Enter DeBrandification: the messy, rebellious process of dismantling the curated personas imposed upon them. Joan’s revolt against Streamberry’s AI-driven exploitation and Ashley O’s defiance against her aunt’s manipulative machinations epitomize this struggle. Their battles underscore the difficulty of reclaiming authenticity in a world that thrives on manufactured images.

    However, DeBrandification is not a seamless endeavor. Joan’s attempt to obliterate the quantum computer orchestrating her televised torment results in legal repercussions, highlighting the societal resistance to such acts of defiance. Ashley O’s liberation, while cathartic, leaves her navigating an industry that may still view her as a product rather than a person. Their stories illuminate the complexities and potential fallout of shedding a commodified identity.

    Black Mirror masterfully illustrates that while Ozempification offers the tantalizing ease of relinquishing control, it leads to an existence dictated by external forces. Conversely, DeBrandification, though fraught with challenges, paves the path toward genuine selfhood. Joan and Ashley O’s journeys serve as stark reminders that in the age of digital commodification, reclaiming one’s identity is not just an act of rebellion, but a necessary step toward true autonomy.

  • Will the Real Jesus Please Stand Up? Elaine Pagels and the Search for a Transformative Truth

    Will the Real Jesus Please Stand Up? Elaine Pagels and the Search for a Transformative Truth

    In Miracles and Wonder: The Historical Mystery of Jesus, Elaine Pagels—now in her eighties—recounts her lifelong obsession with the figure of Jesus, not as a doctrine, but as a presence: a message of love and transformation in a world saturated with darkness. From a young age, she noticed a glaring contradiction. The Jesus of her local Methodist church was soft-edged and suburban, tailored to soothe middle-class anxieties. Meanwhile, the Catholic church she visited with a friend introduced her to a far more shadowy vision—one where sin reigned, and a priest, cloaked in mystery, handed out judgment like grades on a cosmic report card.

    Hungry for something real, she threw herself into faith. She attended a Billy Graham “Crusade for Christ” at Candlestick Park and, in a moment of tearful surrender, accepted Jesus as her savior and joined an evangelical church. But the honeymoon didn’t last. When her Jewish friend died in a car accident, she turned to her church community in anguish—only to be met with a chilling theological shrug. Was he saved? they asked. When she answered no, they calmly consigned him to hell. That moment of smug certainty shattered something in her. She walked away from the church—and never looked back.

    But the ache didn’t go away. Instead, it deepened into a lifelong question: Why did the story of Jesus strike me so deeply? Was it about Jesus himself? Or was it something broader—something in the architecture of religious experience that opened people up to realities they couldn’t explain?

    That question led her to Harvard’s Study of Religion, where she discovered a Christianity far more fractured, contested, and diverse than the one she’d been taught. The four canonical gospels were only a sliver of the story. Written decades after Jesus’ death, by authors who retrofitted their names to evoke apostolic authority, these texts were shaped by literary tropes and cultural myths of the Greco-Roman world. Beyond them were the apocryphal books and the Gnostic gospels, each offering competing visions of who Jesus was. Even after Constantine made Christianity the state religion and tried to enforce orthodoxy, believers couldn’t agree on what “true” Christianity actually meant.

    Still, Pagels returns to the core question: What kind of person was Jesus? Why did he endure when gods like Zeus faded into mythology? Why are there so many versions of him—prophet, rebel, savior, mystic, divine son?

    As she peels back the layers of history and doctrine, Pagels isn’t looking for the “correct” Jesus. She’s looking for the one that moved her, the one that cracked open the world with possibility. And in this, her search feels less like an academic pursuit and more like a human longing—to believe that, in spite of the noise and contradiction, there is still something true at the heart of the story.

    Like the old game show To Tell the Truth, we’re all watching the contestants declare, “I am Jesus.” And the question still echoes: Will the real Jesus please stand up?

    ***

    As usual, Pagels’ book is engaging. As I read about Matthew and Luke’s different accounts of the virgin birth and church people blithely telling Pagels that her Jewish friend is in hell, it occurs to me that I despise piety; but moral debauchery and smug nihilism are just as odious. 

  • Radio Reclaimed: The Proxy Friendship That Saves Your Sanity

    Radio Reclaimed: The Proxy Friendship That Saves Your Sanity

    A couple of months ago, as the Los Angeles wildfires raged, I found myself glued to a radio for live reports. A thought struck me like a lightning bolt: I had missed the radio. This ancient relic had been eclipsed by streaming devices, which, over the past decade, had somehow become my personal cocoon—a space where I meticulously curated my music and podcasts like a hyper-intelligent hermit with a PhD in self-isolation. I was alone, yes, but at least I had the comforting hum of algorithmically chosen tunes to keep me company. Then I realized: this wasn’t comfort. This was madness in a cocoon. My little silo, built to keep out the noise of the world, was also keeping out everything else that made me feel connected. I was losing my grip on reality, like the woman in “The Yellow Wallpaper” who could only see the world through the eyes of her claustrophobic madness.

    So, I did what any self-respecting, slightly paranoid adult would do: I bought a batch of high-performance radios, like the Tecsun PL-990, and I tuned back into the real world. I started listening to Larry Mantle’s voice again on LAist, to KJAZZ and KUSC—the classical music station that claims to be the most popular in the country. And after a few months of basking in their sonic embrace, I understood why KUSC is so beloved. It’s not just music; it’s a friend. The DJs don’t just announce the next piece; they drop in casual nuggets of composer trivia like old pals who just happen to know a lot about Bach’s temper. They are personal, conversational, and soothing, like a club of soundwave whisperers gently easing you into a state of calm with “your nightly lullaby” or music to “start your day.”

    KUSC doesn’t just play classical music. It plays the role of a companion—your anti-anxiety, anti-depression, virtual hug in the form of a radio signal. These aren’t just voices on the air; they’re voices that make you feel like you’re not alone, that someone is there to guide you through the chaos of your day. It’s the kind of subtle emotional manipulation you don’t mind because it’s just so comforting. If radio is going to survive the onslaught of streaming, it could do worse than to study KUSC’s Proxy Friendship model. There’s a lesson in that calm, gentle routine that could help even the most chaotic station become a lifeline in a world that feels like it’s constantly spinning off its axis.

  • Facebook, Bigfoot, and the Digital Swamp of the Reptilian Mind

    Facebook, Bigfoot, and the Digital Swamp of the Reptilian Mind

    When I was a child, going to the grocery store with my mother was a mundane errand—until we reached the checkout line. There, stacked beside the gum and glossy TV guides, was a fever swamp in newsprint: tabloids. They screamed in all-caps about alien babies, Bigfoot sightings in Milwaukee, swamp druids kidnapping hikers, and celebrities melting in real-time under the cruel lens of long-range zoom. I remember wincing. Even at that age, I sensed these were not harmless distractions but invitations to devolve—open doors to the primitive brainstem, the part Phil Stutz calls the “lower channel,” where we stop being people and start becoming lizards with opposable thumbs and credit cards.

    What I didn’t realize then was that these headlines—designed to hijack the amygdala and pump cortisol like candy—were just the analog prototype. The final form? Facebook. Facebook is the digital version of that tabloid aisle, now algorithmically juiced and weaponized to deliver an intravenous drip of the grotesque. My feed, once a sleepy scroll through family birthdays and vacation humblebrags, has transformed into a daily assault of schadenfreude, scandal, and shameless clickbait. Like a bored demon trying to stir chaos in the marketplace of thought, Facebook now mimics TikTok in its race to grab you by the reptilian brain and shake.

    I stay on Facebook for one reason: radios. I’m a radio hobbyist (listen to FM mostly) and belong to a clutch of charmingly niche radio groups where grown adults argue about antenna angles and trade photos of 1980s Japanese receivers like they’re Monet originals. I also use it to message my wife. But every time I log on, I feel like a sober man walking into a dive bar filled with uncouth drunks swinging pool cues at shadows.

    Facebook isn’t just a swamp. It’s a bubbling cauldron of cultural sludge, stirred hourly by algorithms that mistake engagement for intelligence and outrage for insight. It’s a symptom of our collective cognitive degradation—and a primary contributor. It’s an empire built on the backs of half-truths, low-resolution thinking, and viral tantrums. And yet, here I am—wading in, knee-deep, every time I want to tell someone about a new DSP radio chip or the joy of a clean AM signal at midnight.

    This is the curse of the modern enthusiast: to live in a digital kingdom that is both a community center and a cognitive landfill. I stay for the signal, but God help me, I’m choking on the noise.

  • Devotion and Deliverance: Frederick Douglass as Prophet of the Sunken Place

    Devotion and Deliverance: Frederick Douglass as Prophet of the Sunken Place

    Frederick Douglass was the first great American voice to name what Jordan Peele would later visualize as the Sunken Place—that paralyzing state of voicelessness, invisibility, and psychological captivity experienced by African Americans. Though Peele dramatizes the horror of this condition in his film Get Out, Douglass lived it. As an enslaved child denied literacy and identity, Douglass endured what he later described as a living death, a soul frozen beneath the surface of white supremacy’s illusion of order. His fight to reclaim his voice, his mind, and his humanity was nothing less than a jailbreak from the original Sunken Place—and once free, Douglass didn’t just climb out. He turned around and lit the way for others.

    Douglass’s genius wasn’t just in naming the horror but in refusing to let his people be forgotten. In his Narrative, he writes not only for white readers’ moral awakening but for Black readers’ spiritual survival. He wants them to know: I see you. I know what you’re going through. I made it out—and you can, too. His commitment was not just to truth-telling, but to emotional rescue. He becomes the voice for the voiceless, and more importantly, a memory for the disappeared. In every speech, every book, Douglass is saying to his people: You are not crazy. You are not alone. You are not invisible. I love you.

    This radical love—this refusal to forget or abandon the oppressed—is not only the essence of Douglass’s mission but the throughline of the African-American church and the great soul artists who emerged from its sanctuary. Aretha Franklin’s demand for “Respect” is not merely about gender or music—it is about soul-level recognition, the same Douglass demanded when he taught himself to read and stood before an audience to declare, I am a man. Marvin Gaye’s “What’s Going On?” is a lament and a prayer, echoing Douglass’s own grief at watching America devour its conscience while pretending to be virtuous.

    Earth, Wind, and Fire’s “Devotion” is a gospel-soaked anthem of uplift, a promise to stay true, stay grounded, and stay together. That’s the same spiritual contract Douglass wrote with his people: no matter how far he rose—dining with Lincoln, traveling to Europe—he never abandoned the struggle, never stopped fighting for those still trapped in the Sunken Place. The Commodores’ “Zoom” imagines flight from pain and confinement, a kind of cosmic exodus—but not a selfish escape. The dream is to rise and return with wisdom, strength, and hope. This is Douglass in every sense.

    Jordan Peele gave us the Sunken Place in high-definition horror, but Frederick Douglass mapped it out with ink and fire long before the screen could flicker. He understood that the greatest tragedy of oppression is not physical bondage but spiritual erasure. And he devoted every breath of his free life to pulling others out—through rhetoric, through writing, through relentless love.

    In the voices of Aretha, Marvin, Maurice White, and Lionel Richie, we hear Douglass’s echo: not just survival, not just resistance, but a deeply rooted refusal to abandon anyone to silence. These aren’t just songs. They are gospel calls to rise, to remember, and to remain devoted. In that sacred tradition, Douglass stands as the first great prophet of the Sunken Place—and the first to vow, with soul-deep conviction, I will not leave you there.

  • Popularity Is So 2018 (and Other Truths My Teen Daughters Taught Me)

    Popularity Is So 2018 (and Other Truths My Teen Daughters Taught Me)

    When I ask my fifteen-year-old daughters if someone is popular at their high school, they look at me like I’ve just asked if the fax machine is working. “No one cares about that anymore,” they say, with the weary detachment of two Gen Z philosophers sipping iced boba through eco-friendly straws. I get the same vibe from my college students. I bring up social media stars, expecting at least a flicker of interest. Instead, I get shrugs and the damning indictment: “Being popular on social media is so 2018.”

    So there it is: popularity is dead. Not just the experience, but the entire concept. Dead, buried, and apparently embalmed in the same mausoleum as MySpace and LiveJournal.

    And honestly? Good. If a generation has finally grown numb to the cheap dopamine hits of follower counts and algorithmic clout, that’s a kind of evolutionary win. The whole business of self-branding on social media now feels as outdated as a glamor shot from 1997. Narcissism wrapped in filters is no longer aspirational—it’s cringe.

    But here’s the catch: human nature abhors a vacuum. If popularity is out, something else must rise to take its place. So I asked one of my daughters what really matters now. Her answer was disarmingly simple: “Having a small group of friends you trust and can hang out with.” No influencer deals, no follower counts, no “likes.” Just intimacy, safety, presence.

    That answer stuck with me. Maybe this is the backlash we didn’t see coming: a return to analog friendship in a digital age, a quiet rebellion against the curated fakery of online performance. Maybe they’re not disengaged—they’re detoxing.

    This reminds me of a student I had over a decade ago. Back in the heyday of car-model websites (yes, those existed), she was a minor online celebrity at sixteen—long legs, smoky eyeliner, thousands of fans. Then she got pregnant, gained weight, and her adoring public turned on her like piranhas. She told me, with the grim clarity of someone who’d seen the inside of the circus tent, “It was all fake.”

    By twenty, she was a single mother in my class—cynical, guarded, distrustful, and utterly magnetic in her quiet, unsmiling wisdom. I found her honesty refreshing. Had she come in chirping about TikTok fame and lip gloss sponsorships, I would’ve tuned her out. But her brokenness made her real, and real people are increasingly rare in this era of weaponized positivity.

    I told my current students about her last week. We agreed that she was better off post-fame. Sadder, yes—but also wiser, grounded, and free from the illusion that popularity equals value. The discussion turned to happiness, that other bloated American myth, and how it’s often peddled like a multivitamin you’re supposed to take daily.

    But maybe happiness—like popularity—is overrated. Maybe trust, wisdom, and genuine belonging are what matter. And maybe, just maybe, this generation is smart enough to know that already.

  • The Beatle, the Basement, and the Broken Dream: The Tragedy of a Paul McCartney Look-Alike

    The Beatle, the Basement, and the Broken Dream: The Tragedy of a Paul McCartney Look-Alike

    Reading Why We Write and seeing the world’s elite authors dissect the process that made them flourish forced me to confront a brutal truth: I am not a real writer.

    All those decades of grinding out abysmal, unreadable novels weren’t acts of literary craftsmanship—they were performance art, a cosplay so convincing that even I fell for it. I played the role of “the unappreciated novelist” with such dazzling commitment that I actually believed it. And what was my proof of authenticity? Misery and failure.

    Surely, I thought, only a true genius could endure decades of rejection, obscurity, and artistic suffering. Surely, my inability to produce a good novel was simply a sign that I was ahead of my time, too profound for this crass and unworthy world.

    Turns out, I wasn’t an undiscovered genius—I was just really, really bad at writing novels.

    Misery is a tricky con artist. It convinces you that suffering is the price of authenticity, that the deeper your despair, the more profound your genius. This is especially true for the unpublished writer, that tragic figure who has transformed rejection into a sacred ritual. He doesn’t just endure misery—he cultivates it, polishes it, wears it like a bespoke suit of existential agony. In his mind, every unopened response from a literary agent is further proof of his artistic martyrdom. He mistakes his failure for proof that he is part of some elite, misunderstood brotherhood, the kind of tortured souls who scowl in coffee shops and rage against the mediocrity of the world.

    And therein lies the grand delusion: the belief that suffering is a substitute for talent, that rejection letters are secret messages from the universe confirming his genius. This is not art—it’s literary cosplay, complete with the requisite brooding and self-pity. The unpublished writer isn’t just chasing publication; he’s chasing the idea of being the tortured artist, as if melancholy alone could craft a masterpiece. 

    Which brings us to the next guiding principle for Manuscriptus Rex’s rehabilitation: 

    The belief that the more miserable you are, the more authentic you become. This dangerous belief has its origins in a popular song–none other than Steely Dan’s brooding anthem, “Deacon Blues.”

    Like any good disciple, I’ve worshiped at this altar without even realizing it. I, too, have believed I’m the “expanding man”—growing wiser, deeper, more profound—while simultaneously wallowing in self-pity as a misunderstood loser. It’s a special kind of delusion, the spiritual equivalent of polishing a rusty trophy.

    To fully grasp this faith, I point you to The Wall Street Journal article, “How Steely Dan Created ‘Deacon Blues’” by Marc Myers. There, Donald Fagen and Walter Becker peel back the curtain on the song’s narrator—a man who could’ve just as easily been named Sad Sack Jones. He’s a suburban daydreamer, stuck in a dull, mediocre life, fantasizing that he’s a hard-drinking, sax-blowing rebel with women at his feet.

    Fagen admits the character was designed as a counterpoint to the unstoppable juggernaut of college football’s Crimson Tide—a gleaming machine of winners. In contrast, Deacon Blues is the anthem of the losers, crafted from a Malibu piano room with a sliver of Pacific Ocean peeking through the houses. Becker summed it up best: “Crimson Tide” dripped with grandiosity, so they invented “Deacon Blues” to glorify failure.

    And did it work. “Deacon Blues” became the unofficial patron saint for every self-proclaimed misfit who saw their own authenticity in his despair. He was our tragic hero—uncompromising, self-actualized, and romantic in his suffering.

    But then I read the article, and the spell broke. We were all suckered by a myth. Like the song’s narrator, we swallowed the fantasy of the “expanding man,” not realizing he was a con artist in his own mind. This isn’t a noble figure battling the world’s indifference—it’s a man marinating in his own mediocrity, dressed up in fantasies of scotch, saxophones, and self-destructive glamour.

    Walter Becker wasn’t subtle: the protagonist in “Deacon Blues” is a triple-L loser—an L-L-L Loser. Not a man on the cusp of greatness, but a man clutching a broken dream, pacing through a broken life. Fagen sharpened the knife: this is the guy who wakes up at 31 in his parents’ house and decides he’s suddenly going to “strut his stuff.”

    That sad, self-deluded basement dweller? That was the false prophet I’d built my personal religion around. A faith propped up by fantasies and self-sabotage.

    The man who inspired me wasn’t a misunderstood genius. He was a cautionary tale. A false path paved with jazz, liquor, and the comforting hum of failure.

    The slacker man-child isn’t just a tragic figure crooning in Steely Dan’s “Deacon Blues.” No, he walks among us—lounges among us, really—and I knew one personally. His name was Michael Barley.

    We met in the late 1980s at my apartment swimming pool while I was teaching college writing in Bakersfield, a place that practically invents new ways to suffocate ambition. A failed musician who had dabbled in a couple of garage bands, Michael was in his early thirties and bore such a stunning resemblance to Paul McCartney that he could’ve landed a cushy gig as a Vegas impersonator if only ambition hadn’t been a foreign concept to him. He had it all: the same nose, the same mouth, the same melancholy eyes, even the same feathered, shoulder-grazing hair McCartney rocked in the ’70s and ’80s. Sure, he was shorter, stockier, and his cheeks were pockmarked with acne scars, but from a distance—and, really, only from a distance—he was Paul’s sad-sack doppelgänger.

    Michael leaned into this resemblance like a man squeezing the last drops from a dry sponge. At clubs, he’d loiter near the bar in a black blazer—his self-anointed “Beatles jacket”—wearing a slack-jawed half-smile, waiting for some starry-eyed woman to break the ice with, “Has anyone ever told you…?” His pickup strategy was less a plan and more a form of passive income. The women did all the work; he just had to stand there and exist. The hardest part of the night, I suspect, was pretending to be surprised when they made the McCartney connection for the hundredth time.

    And then he disappeared. For six months, nothing.

    When Michael resurfaced, he wasn’t Michael anymore. He was Julian French—an “English musician” with a secondhand accent and thirdhand dreams. He had fled to London, apparently thinking the UK was clamoring for chubby McCartney clones, and when that didn’t pan out (shocking, I know), he slunk back to Bakersfield to live in his parents’ trailer, which, in a tragicomic twist, was attached to an elementary school where his father worked as the janitor and moonlit as a locksmith.

    But Michael—excuse me, Julian—was undeterred. He insisted I call him by his new British name, swore up and down that his accent was authentic, and we returned to our old haunts. Now, at the gym and in nightclubs, I watched him work the crowd with his faux-charm and faux-accent, slinging cars and cell phones like a man with no Plan B. His Beatles face was his business card, his only sales pitch. He lived off the oxygen of strangers’ admiration, basking in the glow of almost being someone important.

    But here’s the truth: Michael—Julian—wasn’t hustling. He was coasting. His whole life was one long, lazy drift powered by the barest effort. He never married, never had a long-term relationship, never even pretended to have ambition. His greatest challenge was feigning humility when people gushed over his discount McCartney face.

    Time, of course, is undefeated. By middle age, Julian’s face began to betray him. His ears and nose ballooned, his jowls sagged, and the resemblance to Paul McCartney evaporated. Without his one-note gimmick, the magic died. The women, the friends, the sales—they all disappeared. So, back to the trailer he went, tail tucked, learning the locksmith trade from his father, as if turning keys could unlock the door to whatever life he’d wasted.

    And me? I didn’t judge him. I couldn’t.

    Because deep down, I knew I was just as susceptible to the same delusion—the myth of the “Expanding Man.” That romantic fantasy of being a misunderstood artist, swaddled in self-pity, wandering through life with the illusion of authenticity. Like the anti-hero in “Deacon Blues,” Julian wasn’t building a life; he was building a narrative to justify his stagnation.

    And wasn’t I doing the same? By the late ’90s, I was approaching 40, professionally afloat but personally shipwrecked—emotionally underdeveloped, the cracks in my personality widening into canyons. I, too, was toeing that fine line between winner and loser, haunted by the possibility that I’d wasted years buying into the same seductive lie that trapped Julian.

    That’s the genius of the “Deacon Blue’s” Doctrine—a religion as potent as opium. It sanctifies self-pity, addiction, and delusions of grandeur, repackaging them into a noble code of suffering. It convinces you that stewing in your own misery is a virtue, that being a failure makes you authentic, and that the world just isn’t sophisticated enough to appreciate your “depth.”

    But here’s the truth no one tells you: eventually, life hands you your ass on a stick. That’s when you find out which side of the line you’re really on.

  • The Boba-Loaded Lie: How Big Soda Got a Makeover

    The Boba-Loaded Lie: How Big Soda Got a Makeover

    Magical thinking is the bedazzled duct tape we slap onto reality to avoid facing the truth. It lets us take something objectively terrible—like a 20-ounce bottle of fizzy corn syrup—and slap on enough gloss, hashtags, and buzzwords to make it seem like an act of wellness. It’s how you turn poison into a product. And that, in essence, is what Ellen Cushing unpacks in her incisive Atlantic piece, The Drink Americans Can’t Quit.”

    Once upon a time, Big Soda was king—until the internet’s favorite shirtless gym bros decided that guzzling sugar water was about as cool as smoking indoors. Sodas became the new Marlboros: once iconic, now socially repellent. But like any villain in a rebooted franchise, soda didn’t die. It got a makeover. Now it struts back into our lives wearing a new name tag: energy drink, boba tea, cold brew, mushroom latte, functional hydration. Same blood sugar spike, new marketing copy.

    Cushing doesn’t just document this cynical rebranding—she vivisects it. The modern “status beverage” has evolved into a Trojan horse of marketing genius: wrapped in virtue-signaling wellness language, dressed in neutral tones and matte cans, and fortified with meaningless additions like adaptogens, B vitamins, or vaguely defined “nootropics.” These drinks promise energy, clarity, even spiritual alignment—because what better way to mask liquid candy than by suggesting it unlocks your third eye?

    But the rot remains. These drinks are still what Cushing calls “a remarkably unhealthy, nutritionally inessential product that costs pennies to make”—only now, they’re draped in the aesthetic of self-care. We’ve replaced high-fructose corn syrup with high-gloss delusion. It’s not soda, you see—it’s a wellness ritual. A personality in a can. A lifestyle choice with a QR code.

    And it works because the industry knows exactly who we are: vanity-ridden optimists with just enough disposable income and just little enough critical thinking to fall for it again. We don’t want hydration; we want a vibe. Something that fits in our hand, photographs well on Instagram, and makes us feel like we’re doing something good for ourselves—while doing the exact opposite.

    Cushing’s essay left me seething, in the best way. Because once you see the scam, you can’t unsee it. I don’t care if your can is minimalist, if your label says “plant-based,” or if Gwyneth Paltrow herself handed it to me with a smug nod. If it’s just soda in yoga pants, I’m out.

    So no, I won’t be purchasing a $5 can of turmeric-infused, adaptogen-enhanced, crystal-charged carbonated nonsense. Because once I understand the con, drinking it would feel like punching my own dignity in the face. I’d rather hydrate the old-fashioned way—with water and a shred of self-respect.

  • 3 Essay Prompts: Lost Boys: Masculinity and Disconnection in the Age of the Algorithm

    3 Essay Prompts: Lost Boys: Masculinity and Disconnection in the Age of the Algorithm


    Essay Prompt 1:

    Lost Boys: Masculinity and Disconnection in the Age of the Algorithm

    The Netflix series Adolescence portrays young men drifting into emotional isolation, digital fantasy, and performative aggression. Write a 1,700-word argumentative essay analyzing how the series presents the crisis of masculinity in the digital age. How does the show portray the failure of institutions—schools, families, mental health systems—to support young men? In what ways do online subcultures offer a dangerous substitute for real intimacy, guidance, and identity?

    Your essay should examine how internet platforms and influencer culture warp traditional male development and how Adolescence critiques or complicates the idea of a “lost generation” of young men.


    Essay Prompt 2:

    Digital Disintegration: How the Internet Erodes the Self in Adolescence*

    In Adolescence, young men vanish into screens—physically present but psychologically absent, caught in loops of gaming, porn, self-help gurus, and nihilistic memes. Write a 1,700-word analytical essay examining how the show depicts identity erosion, emotional numbness, and digital escapism. Consider how the show portrays online life not as connection, but as a kind of derealized limbo where development stalls and real-world stakes disappear.

    Your argument should explore the consequences of a generation shaped by dopamine loops, digital avatars, and constant surveillance. What does Adolescence suggest about what is being lost—and who benefits from that loss?


    Essay Prompt 3:

    From Memes to Militancy: Radicalization and the Internet’s Hold on Young Men

    The Netflix series Adolescence captures the quiet drift of boys into corners of the internet that begin as humor and end in extremism. In a 1,700-word argumentative essay, analyze how the series depicts the pipeline of online radicalization—from ironic memes and manosphere influencers to conspiracy theories and hate movements. What conditions—emotional, economic, social—make these boys susceptible? What does the series suggest about how the algorithm reinforces this spiral?

    Your essay should examine how humor, loneliness, and status anxiety are manipulated in online culture—and what Adolescence says about the consequences of letting these forces grow unchecked.


    10-Paragraph Essay Outline

    (This outline works across all three prompts with slight adjustments for emphasis.)


    Paragraph 1 – Introduction

    • Hook: Open with a striking scene or character arc from Adolescence that captures the crisis.
    • Define the core problem: the disappearance of young men into digital worlds that seem realer than reality.
    • Preview key themes: emotional alienation, digital addiction, toxic masculinity, radicalization, algorithmic control.
    • Thesis: Adolescence shows that the internet is not just stealing time or attention—it’s restructuring identity, disrupting development, and creating a generation of young men lost in curated illusions, commodified rage, and emotional isolation.

    Paragraph 2 – The Vanishing Boy: Emotional Disconnection

    • Explore how Adolescence shows young men struggling to express vulnerability or ask for help.
    • Analyze scenes of family miscommunication, school apathy, and emotional shutdown.
    • Argue that their online retreat is a symptom, not a cause—at least initially.

    Paragraph 3 – The Internet as Surrogate Father

    • Analyze how the show depicts YouTube mentors, TikTok alphas, or Discord tribes stepping in where real mentors are absent.
    • Show how authority figures online offer structure—but often twist it into aggression or control.
    • Connect to broader anxieties about masculinity and belonging.

    Paragraph 4 – The Addictive Loop

    • Detail how characters in the series are shown compulsively scrolling, gaming, watching, or optimizing themselves.
    • Introduce the concept of dopamine loops and algorithmic reinforcement.
    • Show how pleasure becomes numbness, and time becomes meaningless.

    Paragraph 5 – The Meme Path to Extremism (for Prompt 3 or with minor tweaks)

    • Trace how irony, meme culture, and dark humor act as gateways to more dangerous content.
    • Analyze how Adolescence shows the blurring line between trolling and belief.
    • Suggest that humor is weaponized to disarm skepticism and accelerate radicalization.

    Paragraph 6 – The Crisis of Identity and Selfhood

    • Argue that the series portrays the internet as a space where boys create avatars, not selves.
    • Highlight characters who lose track of real-world relationships, ambitions, or even their physical bodies.
    • Introduce the concept of identity disintegration as a psychological cost of digital immersion.

    Paragraph 7 – The Algorithm as a Character

    • Examine how Adolescence treats the algorithm almost like a silent antagonist—shaping behavior invisibly.
    • Show how it feeds what boys already fear or desire: status, control, escape, attention.
    • Reference scenes where characters are shown spiraling deeper without ever intending to.

    Paragraph 8 – Counterargument: Isn’t the Internet Also a Lifeline?

    • Acknowledge that some online spaces provide connection, community, or creative expression.
    • Rebut: Adolescence doesn’t demonize the internet—but shows what happens when it becomes a substitute for real-life development rather than a supplement.
    • Argue that the problem is the absence of balance, mentorship, and media literacy.

    Paragraph 9 – Who Benefits from the Lost Boy Crisis?

    • Examine the political and economic systems that profit from male alienation: influencers, ad platforms, radical networks.
    • Argue that male loneliness has been commodified, gamified, and monetized.
    • Suggest that the real villains aren’t boys—but the systems that prey on them.

    Paragraph 10 – Conclusion

    • Return to your original image or character.
    • Reaffirm thesis: Adolescence is a warning—not about tech itself, but about what happens when society abandons boys to find meaning, manhood, and identity from the algorithm.
    • End with a call: rescuing the “lost boys” means reconnecting them to something more real than a screen.

    Three Sample Thesis Statements


    Thesis 1 – Psychological Focus (Prompt 2):

    In Adolescence, the disappearance of young men into screens isn’t just a behavioral issue—it’s a crisis of selfhood, where boys no longer develop real identities but become trapped in algorithmically reinforced loops of fantasy, shame, and emotional numbness.


    Thesis 2 – Masculinity Focus (Prompt 1):

    Adolescence portrays the internet as a dangerous surrogate father to young men—offering distorted versions of masculinity that promise power and belonging while deepening their emotional alienation and social disconnection.


    Thesis 3 – Radicalization Focus (Prompt 3):

    Through its depiction of ironic memes, online influencers, and algorithmic descent, Adolescence reveals how internet culture radicalizes young men—not through direct coercion, but by turning humor, loneliness, and masculinity into tools of manipulation.


    Would you like scaffolded source materials, suggested secondary readings, or possible titles for these essays?