The Free Press
Think for Yourself in the Forum
ForumNewslettersSign InSubscribe
Inside ‘The Situation Room’
“The bar dedicated to monitoring the situation had no monitors.” (Illustration by The Free Press)
A botched Polymarket publicity stunt turned into an advertisement for logging off and hanging out.
By Nicholas Clairmont
03.22.26 — Culture and Ideas
No description available.
--:--
--:--
Upgrade to Listen
Produced by ElevenLabs using AI narration
13
69
READ IN APP

In The Image, his landmark 1962 book about how mass media was warping American life, historian Daniel Boorstin coined the term pseudo-event to describe something that exists for the sole purpose of its own publicity. A pseudo-event, he explained, is anything that happens just to garner coverage.

We’re all familiar with the concept of the publicity stunt, of course. But Boorstin’s examination is subtler and wider. He explained how, from the fine arts to foreign travel to celebrity culture to publishing, a self-referential process was taking off that even more than half a century ago was making everything feel unreal, because the things one heard about existed only in order to get one to hear about them.

Fourth of July sale
Limited Time Offer
Celebrate 250 years with $25 off an annual subscription.
Already have an account? Sign in
To read this article, sign in or subscribe
Nicholas Clairmont
Nicholas Clairmont is the international editor of The Free Press
Tags:
War
Social Media
Events
Comments
Comments are closed. The conversation isn’t. Keep it going in The Free Press Forum.
Join the conversation
Share your thoughts and connect with other readers by becoming a paid subscriber!
Already a paid subscriber? Sign in

No posts

For Free People.
LatestSearchAboutCareersForumShopPodcastsVideoEvents
Download the app
Download on the Google Play Store
©2026 The Free Press. All Rights Reserved.Powered by Substack.
Privacy∙Terms∙Collection notice