Reality Is Still Out There. It's Just Under New Management. cover art

Reality Is Still Out There. It's Just Under New Management.

Reality Is Still Out There. It's Just Under New Management.

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Let’s start with the good news. Reality still exists. Somewhere. Probably. It’s hiding under a pile of sponsored content and a terms-of-service agreement you clicked “agree” on in 2019 without reading — which means you technically signed over your soul, your browsing history, and your cat’s emotional support status to a Delaware LLC that doesn’t exist anymore.The deed to reality changed hands six months ago in a server farm outside Reno. No witnesses. No press coverage. The notary was AI-generated. His digital signature looked like a reindeer-Chihuahua hybrid sat on a keyboard, sneezed, had a full grand mal seizure, rolled off the desk, and then got up and asked for a treat. The notary’s name was Chad. Of course it was Chad. Chad doesn’t exist. Chad is a prompt written by a twenty-three-year-old in Scottsdale who manages four Instagram accounts for a protein powder brand. Chad is what happens when ambition and emptiness have a baby and the baby gets venture capital funding.Welcome to the information age — where every fact comes with a disclaimer, every image comes with a question mark, and every video comes with a “this may have been altered” warning that everyone ignores the way you ignore “objects in mirror are closer than they appear” until the thing is already inside your car.The Cary Harrison Files airs on KPFK 90.7 FM Los Angeles and the Pacifica Radio Network. Subscribe here on Substack for the full transcript, extended commentary, and the occasional history lesson that will ruin your day in the most productive way possible.Find us at caryharrison.com — and for the love of the Founders, tell a friend.Membership here sustains public radioYou wanted the marketplace of ideas. Congratulations. It got acquired by private equity. The ideas are fine. The marketplace got dismembered like a piñata at a hedge fund retreat — everything spilled out, the children dove for it, shrieking, elbowing each other in the throat, and a man in a fleece vest — always a fleece vest, that’s the uniform of consequence-free capitalism, the fleece vest is what you wear when you want to look approachable while committing crimes against the social contract — scooped up ninety percent of the candy before anyone else’s knees hit the ground. He rebranded it The Narrative Suite™ — Powered by Palantir. The candy is now a subscription service. The piñata is a podcast. The children are content.Here’s what happened, and I’m going to tell it to you straight. We had, once upon a time — and I’m being generous, romantic even, like a completely hammered uncle at a wedding whose glass eye has moved out of center orbit and it’s now staring up to the the left. Remember the shared reality? Messy, imperfect, full of Walter Cronkite’s authoritative brow and ink-stained reporters who smelled like cigarettes, existential despair, and a low-grade conflict of interest they at least had the good taste to be slightly embarrassed about. But shared. You and your neighbor and the guy at the diner — you all agreed, more or less, on the basic facts of existence. The sky was blue. Nixon was a crook. The Pentagon lied about Vietnam. And we didn’t need a chatbot to explain what a tariff does to the price of a washing machine.That’s gone now. Not eroded. Not “in decline,” which is how NPR would say it in a seventeen-part series with a theremin score. Gone. Atomized. Vaporized. Scooped into a content blender the size of Delaware — which, as states go, is already basically a server farm with a flag — spun at ten thousand RPMs by a guy who went to Stanford, peaked emotionally at age twenty-six, and has the emotional range of a parking meter on a Sunday in a closed municipal lot.Here’s the operating manual. It fits on a cocktail napkin, which is where most crimes against democracy are first sketched out.A billionaire buys a media platform. He doesn’t issue memos that say “stop writing things that make my portfolio uncomfortable.” He just has to own it — because ownership is the thermostat that controls the temperature of the entire building, and every reporter and editor in that building knows, on a marrow-deep cellular level, exactly which way the wind has turned. Slowly, invisibly, like a gas leak that makes everyone politely stupider, the editorial choices shift. The investigations get “deprioritized” — which is corporate-speak for taken behind the barn and made to squeal like a pig — and the chilling effect does the whole filthy job without mussing its hair. It’s the laziest form of censorship in the history of power, and it works like a charm, and the charm smells like wet money and a very expensive fear of accountability.The Cary Harrison Files is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Copyright Audiences United, LLC – all rights reserved. This is a public episode. If you'd like to ...
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