Barbie Girls Now Live in a Much Wealthier Barbie World
The average working woman in 2023 earns enough money to buy a Barbie doll every 33 minutes. In 1959, it took nearly two hours.
The average working woman in 2023 earns enough money to buy a Barbie doll every 33 minutes. In 1959, it took nearly two hours.
The former Cheers producer explains why the studios are failing, the writers and actors are missing the big picture, and creators fear their audience.
Join Reason on YouTube Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a discussion about the Hollywood strikes with television writer and political commentator Rob Long.
Between A.I. and TikTok, the actors and writers will be returning to a changed industry.
"Government in general does a lot of things that aren't necessary," says Jared Polis.
It's a portrait of a complex man, and a warning about the nuclear era he created.
The glitter-filled movie got involved in authoritarian geopolitics by allegedly displaying Chinese propaganda.
It might as well have been titled Indiana Jones and the Quest for Cash.
The Apple TV+ film tells the story of an entrepreneur who helped bring a Soviet designer's game to the world.
A listless, cynical wrap-up to a decade of chaotic superhero storytelling.
It's no Orson Welles as Unicron, sadly. But I'll take it.
The Little Mermaid was a dull exercise in box-checking. Spider-Verse uses its diverse cast as an opportunity for narrative delights.
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is more Rob Reiner than J.R.R. Tolkien.
The 10th entry in the muscle-car series is loud, ugly, and all too self-aware.
In 2018, director James Gunn was fired from the film for gross tweets. But this comic book sequel shows the value of his gross-out sensibility.
Politicians in the last century accused pinball of being mob activity.
Their last strike previewed the struggles of the streaming era. This one might be giving us an early taste of the age of artificial intelligence.
The movie wants to be a call to arms for climate activists. Instead, it portrays them as delusional, apocalyptic depressives.
Predictably, the machine-learning robot starts killing.
Companies make decisions all the time, some of them regrettable and unfortunate, that shouldn't be any of the government's business.
In this film, it's mean and funny enough to work.
Why are so many filmgoers and politicians eager to prop up baseball's boondoggles?
Austin Bragg and Meredith Bragg talk Remy, libertarian parodies, and their new indie film, Pinball: The Man Who Saved the Game.
In a chaotic universe full of infinite realities where all choices are relative, individualism still matters.
Hating tech billionaires is The Current Thing.
Big corporations and entire industries constantly use their connections in Congress to get favors, no matter which party is in power.
Today's Star Wars fulfills the promise of the late '90s internet.
Jason Statham in an underpowered Guy Ritchie spy flick.
The glowing documentary makes no mention of her failures or even shortcomings as speaker.
After a tragic on-set accident, a district attorney used a law passed after the incident to threaten Baldwin with years in jail.
A male stripper takes on London's historic preservation rules in Channing Tatum's latest ode to hot, sensitive dudes.
Shyamalan’s latest twist and a most unexpected Oscar nom.
Why are educational institutions in real life more like the one in Carrie than the one in Harry Potter?
The actor is a polarizing figure. That shouldn't matter when evaluating the criminal case against him.
An underground network in Chicago helped women terminate thousands of pregnancies amid abortion prohibition.