Like many people I’m here because of reddit going to shit. Twitter has increasingly been shit. gycat is shutting down in September. To me it seems like lots of bastions of social media are crumpling, but as a previous active reddit user, I’ve been personally effected. Is this just a frequency illusion or has something changed in the world that has changed the business case of these sites?

      • Frog-Brawler@kbin.social
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        1 year ago

        Having a highly educated populace tends to be bad for business. Workers need to be educated just enough to work and not ask any questions. A desire to read publications that might expand one’s knowledge or communicate new and different ideas correlates to education. Just work hard and buy these distractions. That’s why there is a war on education in red states. Of course no one is buying National Geographic anymore. They’ve spent the past 30 years dumbing down the US on purpose.

    • ArugulaZ@kbin.social
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      4
      ·
      1 year ago

      Actually it went from Fox to Disney. Fox sank the magazine, really… they were still publishing it, but it was an embarrassment, the kind of vapid trifle that you’d find on a supermarket checkout aisle next to People and the National Enquirer. Remember when David Hasselhoff had a drinking problem and his daughter filmed him eating a hamburger off the ground? It was the magazine version of that. The absolute rock bottom for a cherished institution.