Mother Jones

MAN IN THE MIRROR

How a British satirist turned our technological anxieties into must-watch television

CHARLIE BROOKER IS 45 minutes late for our phone interview, and I’m starting to feel like a desperate adolescent. Then again, fans of Black Mirror, Brooker’s smart, Twilight Zone-esque TV series, have waited years for the six new episodes that hit Netflix this fall (with six more to come). For American viewers, the closest comparison to the 45-year-old Brooker might be our two Jo(h)ns—Stewart and Oliver. Over the years, on Britain’s Channel 4 and in a Guardian newspaper column, Brooker has wittily skewered politicos, celebrities, TV hosts, and culture in general—his satirical shows (Newswipe, Screenwipe, Charlie Brooker’s Weekly Wipe, etc.) pair current events with snarky sofa commentary.

But

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Mother Jones

Mother Jones3 min read
Pay Dirt
LIKE A REVELER who chases each of many tequila shots with a seltzer, US farm policy consists of comically clashing impulses likely to result in a nasty hangover. The Department of Agriculture doles out substantial subsidies each year to entice farmer
Mother Jones12 min read
Givers and Takers
IN A DECEMBER 2021 blog post, novelist MacKenzie Scott expressed surprise at the “inclusive and beautiful” definitions of philanthropy, such as “love of humankind,” that she’d discovered in the dictionary. Scott, who has given away more than $14 bill
Mother Jones6 min readAmerican Government
Arch Rivals
WESLEY BELL, St. Louis County’s first-ever Black prosecuting attorney, appeared at a virtual Democratic event in mid-October, eager to discuss the race he was running against Sen. Josh Hawley. “We’re in a place to get this guy,” Bell boasted. Come El

Related Books & Audiobooks