The Matrix is many things to many people, but I think it was most significant as a perfect escapist fantasy for those of us who grew up with the film. It's a world where your unsatisfying everyday ...
The 1999 film The Matrix is famous for coining the metaphor of the “red pill.” In the imaginary world of the movie, people live largely in a state of illusion, experiencing a completely managed ...
As a person who has an active Loyalfans account and as a person who has worked in the adult video and relationships industries for ages, a few things upset me about the way that the modern dating ...
In Netflix’s new mini-series "Adolescence," which follows a 13-year-old boy accused of murdering his classmate after becoming radicalized online, characters say Jamie Miller (Owen Cooper) is “red ...
In The Matrix, Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne) offers Neo (Reeves) a red and a blue pill. He tells him, “You take the blue pill… the story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to ...
Charlie Tye receives funding from the Morrell Centre for Legal and Political Philosophy. The Matrix is among the most influential science fiction films of all time. Nearly 20 years since the third ...
The anti-feminist red pill community advocates a harmful and misguided approach to dating women. Here’s what ex-partners of red pill men have to say about it. “Red pill” men represent a growing ...
Dating can be a tough pill to swallow. A small-scale study published in the journal Personal Relationships has uncovered what researchers claim are some ways so-called “Red Pill” subscribers align ...
In the 1999 film “The Matrix,” Morpheus gives Neo the choice of a blue pill or red pill. The blue pill offered the chance to remain in his comfortable fantasy world, believing whatever he wants to ...
Too many people ignore the burgeoning research on male birth control. Critics of the concept often cite hormone changes and the dangers of new external medication, but what if these issues could be ...
Robert Wright describes a central scene in The Matrix in his bestselling 2017 book, Why Buddhism Is True: “Morpheus (played by Laurence Fishburne), explains the situation to Neo: 'You are a slave, Neo ...