
America This Week America This Week Live 11/10/25
Nov 11, 2025
In this lively discussion, hosts explore the unsettling phenomenon of engineered internet personalities designed to confuse. They dive into the rise of Nick Fuentes, examining his controversial rhetoric and the media's backlash. The conversation shifts to how antisemitism operates politically across the spectrum. Meanwhile, the 'War on Happiness' trend is scrutinized, revealing how some influencers profit from misery. They also critique euphemistic media language and tackle Canada's assisted dying reforms, linking these topics to broader cultural malaise.
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Internet-Manufactured Influencers
- The internet often manufactures sudden influencers and controversies that seem engineered to confuse and divide audiences.
- Walter Kirn and Matt Taibbi argue many viral personalities function as operations to capture attention, not grassroots movements.
Front-Page Incentives Skew Truth
- Major media outlets favor stories that serve agendas and pay off, not merely the truth, because front-page space is scarce and valuable.
- Kirn suggests institutions prefer attention-grabbing narratives over sober facts to drive influence and revenue.
Truth Is A Low-Value Playing Card
- Walter Kirn recounts his theory that front pages must 'pay for themselves' with attention-grabbing content.
- He uses the metaphor that truth is a low-value playing card, so editors prefer face cards above the fold.





