Tags / technology

"technology"

5 BuzzVerdicts across TV Shows (3), Books (2)

Mr. Robot

4.3

2015 · 4 Seasons · USA Network · Drama / Thriller

Mr. Robot is one of the most visually inventive and psychologically ambitious shows of its era, a series that used hacking culture as a lens to examine loneliness, identity, and trauma with uncommon depth. Rami Malek delivers a career-making performance as Elliot Alderson, Sam Esmail's direction pushes the boundaries of what television can look like, and the series finale lands with an emotional force that redefines everything that came before it. Season two's pacing issues and the show's relentlessly oppressive atmosphere will lose some viewers along the way. Those who stay find a show that rewards commitment with one of the most satisfying conclusions in recent television history.

Black Mirror

4.2

2011 · 7 Seasons · Channel 4, Netflix · Sci-Fi / Drama

Black Mirror takes the technology we already use and asks what happens when we push it just a little further. Its best episodes rank among the finest standalone stories in television history, delivering gut-punch twists that stay with you for days. The anthology format means quality swings wildly from brilliant to forgettable, and later seasons haven't matched the consistency of the early ones. Charlie Brooker's signature blend of dark humor and genuine dread works best when it stays grounded in recognizable human behavior rather than chasing spectacle. Uneven as it can be, the highs are high enough that the series remains essential viewing for anyone interested in where our relationship with technology might be heading.

Pantheon

4.0

2022 · 2 Seasons · AMC+ · Animation / Sci-Fi / Drama / Thriller

Pantheon is the kind of show that deserved a bigger audience and got buried by a streaming platform that didn't know what to do with it. Its exploration of digital consciousness, corporate power, and what makes a person a person is handled with the kind of philosophical seriousness that most animated series wouldn't attempt. The slow start is real, and the technical jargon can be dense, but the payoff across both seasons justifies the patience required to get there. This is smart, ambitious science fiction that treats animation as a legitimate vehicle for adult drama.

Brave New World

4.0

1932 · Aldous Huxley · 288 pages · Dystopian Fiction

Brave New World is one of those rare novels where the ideas have only grown sharper with age. Written in 1932, it predicted a world numbed by pleasure, distraction, and engineered consent with an accuracy that still catches people off guard. The characters are thin, the pacing drags in stretches, and Huxley's prose keeps you at arm's length when you want to be pulled in. None of that has stopped the book from becoming essential reading for anyone interested in where technology, entertainment, and social control intersect. Its vision of a society that chose comfort over freedom remains one of fiction's most uncomfortable mirrors.

Recursion

3.8

2019 · Blake Crouch · 320 pages · Science Fiction

Blake Crouch's 2019 follow-up to Dark Matter takes a fascinating premise about memory technology and builds it into a thriller that explores how rewriting the past could unravel reality itself. The dual-timeline structure is expertly handled, the implications of the technology are explored with genuine rigor, and the novel's escalation from personal drama to existential catastrophe is terrifyingly logical. The emotional connections between characters are thinner than the concept deserves, and the relentless pacing leaves little room for the quiet moments that would make the stakes feel more personal. But as a thought experiment about memory, identity, and the danger of giving people the ability to undo their worst moments, Recursion is ambitious, propulsive science fiction.