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Posts by Chris Beam

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Homophones, Plurals and Language ‘Rulescucks’ Are Roiling Prediction Markets Bets decided on linguistic technicalities are exposing how hard it is to turn language into a binary market with payouts hinging on a single word.

Wrote about prediction market “rulescucks” and how Kalshi tries to wrangle the English language (gift link):

www.bloomberg.com/news/article...

3 weeks ago 0 0 0 0
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A Darkly Modern Guide to Betting on War The Iran conflict, and the way Kalshi and Polymarket handled wagers, shows weaknesses in prediction markets.

Kalshi and Polymarket users who bet on Iran are mad — but for very different reasons:

www.bloomberg.com/news/article...

1 month ago 0 0 0 0
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How Prediction Markets Polymarket and Kalshi Are Gamifying Truth Two companies are pioneering a new way of predicting the future. Critics call it unregulated gambling

NEW for Bloomberg Businessweek: Prediction market companies pitch themselves as sources of truth. Can they be trusted? (gift link)

www.bloomberg.com/features/202...

1 month ago 2 2 0 0
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How Data Centers Became the Leading Villain of 2025 In Hollywood and real life, the once-unremarkable facilities have taken a leading role.

From "Eddington" to fears of an AI stock bubble, 2025 was the year data centers became the villain (gift link):

www.bloomberg.com/news/newslet...

3 months ago 5 1 0 0
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Strong contender for fav. headline of the year @emilyanthes.bsky.social www.nytimes.com/2025/12/02/s...

4 months ago 8 2 0 0
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Mistrial Shows Difficulty in Applying Law to Crypto Can trades on the public blockchain be illegal if the computer code allows them?

Did the esoteric "code is law" debate make a jury cry? A recent mistrial shows why it can be so hard to apply traditional finance laws to crypto:

www.bloomberg.com/news/newslet...

5 months ago 4 1 0 1
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Trump’s Ballroom and Obama’s Library: Critics Assess Presidential Architecture An evaluation of Trump’s White House renovation and his predecessor’s “Obamalisk” in Chicago.

What do architecture critics think of Trump's ballroom and Obama's library? I asked them (gift link):

www.bloomberg.com/news/article...

5 months ago 4 0 0 0
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AI of a Thousand Faces What happens now that AI is everywhere and in everything? WIRED can’t tell the future, but we can try to make sense of it. Behold: 17 readings from the furthest reaches of the AI age.

🎇New package alert @wired.com! This one has been in the works for months. If WIRED was going to tackle AI -- something we cover daily -- we had to go big. So here are 17 different stories about the way AI is changing us, even as the technology itself keeps moving www.wired.com/ai-issue/

5 months ago 187 79 5 5
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‘I Believe It’s a Bubble’: What Some Smart People Are Saying About AI A growing group of critics say we’re in an artificial intelligence bubble. Is it true? If so, how would we know?

Are we in an AI bubble?

George Gilder, the tech guru who famously got blindsided by the 2001 telecom collapse, scoffs at the current AI data center mania. “It’s way overbuilding,” he says.

www.bloomberg.com/news/article...

6 months ago 3 1 0 0
When I called Engel to ask him about all of this, he told me that he does not believe that genetics are “the chief explanation” for how Anglo-Protestant ideals are transferred from generation to generation—but added that “there is an ethnic or racial correlation” between who embodies such ideals and who doesn’t. Our conversation was polite, but strange at times. I mentioned that as a half-Iranian American who was born and raised in the U.S., I share more in common ideologically with the Anglo-Protestant Founders of the United States than I do with Middle Eastern theocrats. “I would also contend that there is something deep inside of you that is attracted to or finds familiar portions of Iranian history,” he said, as though I am genetically predisposed to find the conquests of Darius the Great uniquely moving. I don’t, and told him as much. “I’m not contending that you can’t take someone and raise him within a certain cultural environment and he begins to adopt the taste and all that,” Engel responded. “But I do contend that if you bring in massive groups of people over time, it’s going to, in a few generations, be a lot culturally different than it would otherwise have been if you never had done that.”

When I called Engel to ask him about all of this, he told me that he does not believe that genetics are “the chief explanation” for how Anglo-Protestant ideals are transferred from generation to generation—but added that “there is an ethnic or racial correlation” between who embodies such ideals and who doesn’t. Our conversation was polite, but strange at times. I mentioned that as a half-Iranian American who was born and raised in the U.S., I share more in common ideologically with the Anglo-Protestant Founders of the United States than I do with Middle Eastern theocrats. “I would also contend that there is something deep inside of you that is attracted to or finds familiar portions of Iranian history,” he said, as though I am genetically predisposed to find the conquests of Darius the Great uniquely moving. I don’t, and told him as much. “I’m not contending that you can’t take someone and raise him within a certain cultural environment and he begins to adopt the taste and all that,” Engel responded. “But I do contend that if you bring in massive groups of people over time, it’s going to, in a few generations, be a lot culturally different than it would otherwise have been if you never had done that.”

Obsessed with this portion of @alibreland.bsky.social’s latest, on “heritage Americans,” not just because it’s snappy, but because it reveals much about the nature of the ideology these people have: superior, unwavering, fundamentally rooted in historic unreality www.theatlantic.com/technology/2...

6 months ago 7 1 0 0
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The Future of AI Filmmaking Is a Parody of the Apocalypse, Made by a Guy Named Josh Behold Neural Viz, the first great cinematic universe of the AI era.

Josh Wallace Kerrigan had a bold idea: To make AI video that does not suck.

www.wired.com/story/the-fu...

6 months ago 3 0 0 0
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Crypto Bros Are Trying to Monetize Charlie Kirk’s Death Every big news event is a memecoin now.

Wrote about the Charlie Kirk memecoin frenzy (gift link):

www.bloomberg.com/news/article...

7 months ago 8 0 0 0
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China Is Run by Engineers, and the US by Too Many Lawyers In his new book, Dan Wang argues that America is too good at making rules, and could learn from Beijing’s laser focus on technical innovation.

I spoke with Dan Wang, who argues in his new book "Breakneck" that the US needs to rekindle its love of engineering -- and that means learning from China:

www.bloomberg.com/news/article...

8 months ago 10 1 0 0
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She Wanted to Save the World From A.I. Then the Killings Started.

Spent a brain-melting amount of time talking, reading, and thinking about the Zizians:

www.nytimes.com/2025/07/06/b...

9 months ago 9 0 0 0
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The Zany Sports Movie That Explains U.S.-China Relations A decade ago, I wrote a story about transcending cultural boundaries through football. Now it’s a major Chinese motion picture—with a very different message.

how @chrisbeam.bsky.social inspired a major chinese movie

www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archiv...

10 months ago 11 5 1 0
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How I Accidentally Inspired a Major Chinese Motion Picture A decade ago, I wrote a story about transcending cultural boundaries through sports. Now it’s a movie with a very different message.

"My article, titled 'Year of the Pigskin,' was natural Hollywood bait," Christopher Beam writes. "Now a Chinese studio appeared to have simply lifted the idea":

10 months ago 19 5 0 0
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The Zany Sports Movie That Explains U.S.-China Relations A decade ago, I wrote a story about transcending cultural boundaries through football. Now it’s a major Chinese motion picture—with a very different message.

Story here: www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archiv...

10 months ago 1 1 0 0
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A Chinese movie studio (unofficially) adapted my 2014 article about an American football team. The differences from the original say a lot about how US-China relations have deteriorated

10 months ago 3 0 1 0
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How Trump Defeated Columbia The inside story of an unconditional surrender.

What a sad & poignant story -- the kind of thing that will serve a mile marker when historians write about the loss of US democracy.

11 months ago 191 45 7 1
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Second Life: Having a Child in the Digital Age Having a Child in the Digital Age

SECOND LIFE by @amandahess.bsky.social is out today! bookshop.org/p/books/seco...

11 months ago 5 2 1 1
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the one and only @amandahess.bsky.social has written the most moving book about "having a child in the digital age"—but it's really about so much more. it's a meditation on the oppressiveness of tech, the fragility of humans, the miracle & bittersweetness of life... i would love for you to read it

11 months ago 23 5 1 0
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What Rough Beast Politics Podcast · What Rough Beast, hosted by Virginia Heffernan (Wired, Trumpcast) and Stephen Metcalf (Slate, Culture Gabfest) is a podcast where we bear witness to America’s demise, and ask what m...

If you were a Trumpcast listener, this may be what you need now: my new show w/Stephen Metcalf. It's designed to be adrenaline for a better future.

We look straight at the catastrophe. And we ask what can be built from the rubble. It's also free & ad-free.

podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/w...

1 year ago 175 40 15 3
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‘It was so freeing’: How a cellphone ban is changing life at a Virginia high school | CNN Wakefield High School is part of a pilot program requiring students to put their phones inside magnetic locking pouches every morning. Students – and teachers – are happy with the results so far.

"They’re hanging out, like something out of a movie.”

www.cnn.com/2025/04/02/u...

1 year ago 11 3 0 0
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The Ugly Fight Over Ayn Rand’s Estate The author gave Leonard Peikoff everything—her ideas, her copyrights, and her money. Then he fell in love with his caregiver.

Ayn Rand gave Leonard Peikoff everything—her ideas, her copyrights, and her money. Then he fell in love with his caregiver.

My deep dive on the battle for Ayn Rand’s estate:

www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archiv...

1 year ago 14 5 2 0

Interesting read.

1 year ago 15 3 0 0
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"Devoted aide" might be an understatement www.nytimes.com/2024/11/25/u...

1 year ago 12 3 2 0
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The Business-School Scandal That Just Keeps Getting Bigger The rot runs deeper than almost anyone has guessed.

Behavioral science is troubled and overly influential in general, but “business-school psychology,” as my colleague and editor @engber.bsky.social calls it, is basically just a machine for fraud, erected to enrich its fraudsters.

www.theatlantic.com/magazine/arc...

1 year ago 61 14 1 2
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The ‘Democracy’ Gap Almost all Americans say they support democracy—but they have very different ideas about what the word means.

"In the collective mind of U.S. voters, the concept of democracy appears to be so muddled, and their commitment to it so conditional, that it makes you wonder what, if anything, they’d do anything to stop its erosion—or whether they’d even notice that happening." www.theatlantic.com/politics/arc...

1 year ago 41 13 5 6
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Steve Dunleavy, Brash Face of Murdoch Journalism, Dies at 81 (Published 2019) An Australian with sartorial dash, he was a reporter, columnist, editor and TV correspondent who practiced a feisty brand of tabloid journalism.

“Mate, I’ve never had a bad day in journalism in my life. ...You win, you get drunk because you won. You lose, you get drunk because you lost.” --Steve Dunleavy www.nytimes.com/2019/06/25/b...

1 year ago 33 9 3 0
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The Meme King of Longevity Now Wants to Sell You Olive Oil Bryan Johnson, a data-obsessed Silicon Valley centimillionaire, is promoting food and supplements that promise to help people live longer. Scientists say his program is highly questionable. So why are...

Wrote about longevity guru Bryan Johnson’s pivot to supplements:

www.nytimes.com/2024/01/12/b...

2 years ago 6 0 1 0