Entertainment
How Truth Was Destroyed By The 1970s Most Iconic Movie
By Joshua Tyler
| Updated

Americans used to believe the news was unbiased, and, whether that was ever true or not, for a long time, there was an attempt to make it seem true. Eventually, the news media dropped even the pretense of being factual and went full force into openly delivering sensationalist propaganda, but they couldn’t have gotten away with it at scale if their viewers hadn’t already been conditioned to accept it.
That conditioning first began working on the public with one hugely influential movie that twisted viewers into thinking it was condemning irresponsible television, while subtly convincing them that irresponsibility was the only path to truth. And maybe, just maybe, it was right.
This is the story of how Network Screenwashed audiences into accepting fake news.
Network’s Story Of Corruption
Network follows aging news anchor Howard Beale, played by Peter Finch, as he learns he’s about to be fired after years of declining viewership. In a moment of despair, Beale announces on live television that he plans to kill himself during a broadcast.

The shocking moment briefly boosts ratings, and when Beale returns to the air, he delivers a furious rant urging viewers to shout from their windows that they are “mad as hell.” Sensing an opportunity, ambitious producer Diana Christensen (Faye Dunaway) reinvents the news broadcast as a spectacle built around Beale’s emotional tirades.
The script presents this as a horrifying corruption of journalism. But the film’s structure quietly and intentionally undermines that message at every turn. It does that using a four-step persuasion pattern.
Screenwashed By Affective Conditioning
Affective Conditioning is a persuasion process where repeated emotional cues are paired with a person, idea, or behavior so audiences automatically feel positively or negatively about it without consciously evaluating the argument.

Beale’s tirades are honest and compelling. His rants about alienation, corporate power, and media manipulation resonate because the film never actually proves him wrong, and they accurately mirror what people in the 70s were beginning to suspect about the true nature of their world.
Meanwhile, Beale himself is a true believer in what he’s saying and one of only two people in the film who isn’t a liar or a hypocrite. More on who the other one is, in a moment.
Though Beale is breaking all the rules and standards, you can’t help but feel good about him.
Screenwashed By Poisoning the Well
Poisoning the Well is a rhetorical tactic where the people criticizing a position are themselves portrayed as corrupt, immoral, or evil, so the audience dismisses their criticism before considering it.

Network tries to seem like it’s offsetting sympathy for Beale by framing him as mentally ill, using other characters who are shocked by what he’s doing. But every character who calls Beale insane or condemns his editorializing rants is portrayed as morally repulsive and unreliable.
The network executives exploiting him are greedy opportunists. The corporate leadership is portrayed as cold and sinister. When these characters insist Beale is unstable, the audience instinctively distrusts those accusers, because our opinion of them has already been poisoned.

The only character truly defending traditional journalism is Max Schumacher (William Holden). Unfortunately for the argument he’s supposed to represent, Max spends the entire movie cheating on his wife and enabling the very circus he claims to oppose. His moral authority is nonexistent, and the institution he defends collapses with him.
What Howard does is far more authentic than the fake dog and pony show of normal news that 1970s news consumers have been watching in the real world. At first, Howard’s tirades are largely anger and frustration. His ratings soar and audiences flock to him. When he demands they open their windows and shout “I’m mad as hell and I’m not gonna take it anymore!” into the wind, city streets echo with the sound of outraged voices.
That’s when we meet the only other honest character in the film.
Screenwashed By Revelation Framing
Revelation Framing is a persuasion technique where information is presented as if it’s a shocking truth that the audience is just now discovering. Instead of arguing a point, the message is structured like a reveal: first, something seems confusing or wrong, then the “hidden truth” is exposed.

This often produces a feeling of emotional release or catharsis, because the audience feels like they’ve finally figured out what’s really going on. The power of the technique comes from making people feel like they’ve had an awakening, rather than feeling like someone is trying to convince them.
By framing an idea as a profound revelation rather than an argument, the audience is encouraged to accept it as insight or enlightenment rather than critically evaluate it as a claim. Instead of exposing Beale as a lunatic, the film validates him.
Howard Beale has begun trashing his network’s parent company, and so he’s brought to a meeting with conglomerate chairman Arthur Jenson, played by 1970s powerhouse Ned Beatty. Arthur Jensen doesn’t dismiss Beale’s warnings about corporate power. He confirms them. In one of the film’s most famous speeches, Jensen explains that the world is run by vast economic forces beyond the control of nations or voters.

The movie’s supposed madman is suddenly the only person who understands reality. For unstable Howard Beale, it’s a revelation. He says he believes that he has just seen God.
Howard stops his tirade against the company and begins preaching a deeper truth to his audience. Not because he’s been corrupted, but because he’s been converted by revelation.
Screenwashed By Martyrdom Framing
Martyrdom Framing is a narrative device in which a character is killed or punished for their beliefs, signaling to the audience that their message must have been true or threatening to powerful interests.

Howard Beale’s reputation as a truth teller is cemented in the mind of the audience by the film’s ending, in which Beale is murdered live on air. Like Jesus Christ, Socrates, and many others throughout history who were right, Howard Beale is made a martyr for speaking out, further cementing his status as a hero in the minds of Network’s viewers.
How Network Created What It Hated
The film’s director, Sidney Lumet, may have intended Network to be a cautionary tale, but instead it subtly conditions the audience to accept the very thing it’s supposed to be warning them against by making the man who perverts the news into a hero surrounded on all sides by evil.

You might think that could be a positive, since Howard is a truth teller and Network persuades the audience they’d be better off with news men who stand up and voice their opinions, than those who sit and read copy. That would be accurate if audiences could tell who was telling the truth and who wasn’t, but they can’t.
When Network normalized the idea of news men voicing opinions, it normalized the good along with bad, creating a new vector for mass media manipulation.
How Network Changed The World For The Better
There’s another way to read it. A look back at history reveals that maybe news was never truly neutral; it was simply better at pretending to be.
Anchors delivered narratives with calm voices and professional posture, and the performance of objectivity made those narratives feel like facts. If Network helped strip that mask away, it may have exposed something that was already there.

Opinion didn’t invade the news; Network may have inadvertently helped it stop hiding. The result of that is messier and often more manipulative, but it’s also more honest about what the medium actually is: people interpreting events, not machines reporting them. In that sense, the loud, openly opinionated era of media may be less deceptive than the quiet one that claimed neutrality while shaping the story all the same.
George Clooney Proved Network Right
Decades later, the 2005 movie Good Night, and Good Luck would quietly (and accidentally) prove Network’s point by trying to screenwash audiences into believing the opposite. Good Night, and Good Luck was the retelling of how, in 1954, CBS journalist Edward R. Murrow used his television news program See It Now to directly challenge the methods of Joseph McCarthy, who had built national fame by accusing government officials, soldiers, and entertainers of communist ties.

Rather than doing a straight report on the controversy or giving the audience facts, Murrow devoted an entire broadcast to criticizing McCarthy’s tactics. He assembled character assassination clips of the senator’s own speeches and interrogations with the clear goal to persuade his audience into sharing his point of view: that McCarthy’s investigations were fraudulent and must be stopped.
Murrow then cashed in his reputation as an unbiased newsman to deliver an ultra-biased closing editorial warning that the United States risked damaging its democratic principles if suspicion replaced evidence. The broadcast was one of the first major television moments in which a national news anchor openly used his platform to challenge a powerful political figure, helping turn public opinion against McCarthy and marking a turning point in the senator’s influence.

The only difference between Beale’s fiction and Murrow’s history is framing. In the George Clooney-directed movie, Murrow’s opinionated broadcast is presented as courageous journalism through a series of familiar narrative tricks. These are designed to distract the audience from the bias in Murrow’s broadcasts.
Murrow is intentionally depicted as the opposite of Howard Beale. He’s calm, rational, and morally steady. His opponent appears mainly through his most extreme moments. The black-and-white cinematography, cigarette-smoked newsrooms, and restrained dialogue all signal integrity even though there is none.
The audience isn’t just hearing Murrow’s argument. They’re being conditioned to experience it as responsible and sane, whether it is or not. Strip away those cues, and the act itself looks very familiar: a television newsman abandoning neutrality to tell the public what they should believe. Howard Beale and the real anchors who followed Murrow simply did it louder and more obviously.
Network’s Brave New World

Whether Network meant to or not, it prepared audiences for a new kind of journalism. One where the anchor isn’t pretending to be neutral anymore. One where outrage replaces reporting. One where the loudest voice in the room becomes the most trusted one. In other words, it helped create exactly the world we live in now.
Congratulations news puppets, you’ve been screenwashed.
Entertainment
NYT Strands hints, answers for April 5, 2026
Today’s NYT Strands hints are easy if you’re an animal lover.
Strands, the New York Times‘ elevated word-search game, requires the player to perform a twist on the classic word search. Words can be made from linked letters — up, down, left, right, or diagonal, but words can also change direction, resulting in quirky shapes and patterns. Every single letter in the grid will be part of an answer. There’s always a theme linking every solution, along with the “spangram,” a special, word or phrase that sums up that day’s theme, and spans the entire grid horizontally or vertically.
By providing an opaque hint and not providing the word list, Strands creates a brain-teasing game that takes a little longer to play than its other games, like Wordle and Connections.
If you’re feeling stuck or just don’t have 10 or more minutes to figure out today’s puzzle, we’ve got all the NYT Strands hints for today’s puzzle you need to progress at your preferred pace.
NYT Strands hint for today’s theme: Pouch perfect
The words are related to animals.
Mashable Top Stories
Today’s NYT Strands theme plainly explained
These words describe pouch-bearing animals.
NYT Strands spangram hint: Is it vertical or horizontal?
Today’s NYT Strands spangram is horizontal.
NYT Strands spangram answer today
Today’s spangram is Marsupials.
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NYT Strands word list for April 5
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Wombat
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Koala
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Bilby
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Marsupials
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Opossum
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Kangaroo
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Wallaby
Looking for other daily online games? Mashable’s Games page has more hints, and if you’re looking for more puzzles, Mashable’s got games now!
Check out our games hub for Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more.
Not the day you’re after? Here’s the solution to yesterday’s Strands.
Entertainment
Hurdle hints and answers for April 5, 2026
If you like playing daily word games like Wordle, then Hurdle is a great game to add to your routine.
There are five rounds to the game. The first round sees you trying to guess the word, with correct, misplaced, and incorrect letters shown in each guess. If you guess the correct answer, it’ll take you to the next hurdle, providing the answer to the last hurdle as your first guess. This can give you several clues or none, depending on the words. For the final hurdle, every correct answer from previous hurdles is shown, with correct and misplaced letters clearly shown.
An important note is that the number of times a letter is highlighted from previous guesses does necessarily indicate the number of times that letter appears in the final hurdle.
Mashable 101 Fan Fave: Nominate your favorite creators today
If you find yourself stuck at any step of today’s Hurdle, don’t worry! We have you covered.
Hurdle Word 1 hint
A spigot.
Hurdle Word 1 answer
SPOUT
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Hurdle Word 2 hint
A leg exercise.
Hurdle Word 2 Answer
LUNGE
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Hurdle Word 3 hint
Fire.
Hurdle Word 3 answer
FLAME
Hurdle Word 4 hint
To smash into.
Hurdle Word 4 answer
CRASH
Final Hurdle hint
Gleam
Hurdle Word 5 answer
SHINE
If you’re looking for more puzzles, Mashable’s got games now! Check out our games hub for Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more.
Entertainment
Terrifying Viral Web Series Makes Its Big Screen Debut
By Jennifer Asencio
| Updated

The wait is over. After years of anticipation, Backrooms is finally here. The first trailer was dropped on March 31, 2026, and the surreal dimension audiences were introduced to in the amateur web series is finally coming into its own. The A24 production was directed by none other than Kane Pixels himself, Kane Parsons.
When Parsons filmed his masterpiece web series, he was a 17-year-old high school student with an experimental eye behind the camera. The Backrooms (Found Footage) follows a young filmmaker as he wanders into another dimension consisting of a labyrinth of rooms in a yellow-walled institutional setting. His work was noticed by Atomic Monster, the studio of horror great James Wan, director of The Conjuring movies and the Insidious franchise. Parsons still isn’t old enough to pop champagne at his movie’s premiere, but his maturity as a director is sure to excite fans of the web series.
Lost In Labyrinth
In the trailer for Backrooms, Chiwetel Ejiofor, known for playing Baron Mondo in the Doctor Strange movies, stars as Clark, an employee in a furniture showroom who one night finds a strange opening in the store’s basement. He passes through the opening and finds the very same dimension that is Parsons’s trademark, yellow walls and all. As he wanders around a little, strange events happen.
This makes him determined to study this strange alternate universe. He recruits some friends and gathers some camera gear, and the group begins its exploration. However, there is a young lady he speaks to that seems to be either a friend or a therapist, and when she stumbles upon the rooms without Clark’s knowledge, she may never come back.

At least, this is what I have gathered from watching the trailer. The script, written by Parsons and Will Soodik, has been kept under wraps since the movie was first announced. It appears to take place in the past (prior rumors said the 1990s), and IMDb doesn’t have a lot of information beyond the name of Ejiofor’s character and some production credits.
What we have been shown is exciting because it draws upon almost everything fans loved about the web series. It will feature found footage in the form of the explorations of Clark and his friends. The vast office complex that makes up the setting is adorned with surreal imagery like strangely stacked furniture and objects sunken into walls. Some of the characters show up in radiation gear. Somehow, between the yellow walls and the varying sizes of the rooms, passages, and hallways, the titular setting is both massive and claustrophobic at once, making it very unsettling.
A Deeply Unsettling Exploration

The whole movie seems to echo the trajectory of Parsons’s career so far: an eagerness to explore combined with an optimism for what Clark might find, while presenting a frightening and solitary menace for anyone who dares enter alone. Parsons began with that eagerness and is now getting to explore the world of cinema that he entered when he posted the original anthology on YouTube, with all the optimism of a kid who got his first directing contract before he even graduated high school.
If Backrooms maintains the tone set by Kane Pixels, it could draw new fans. If it manages to use the resources offered to Parsons by support from a professional studio, it could turn a teenager’s vision into the hottest new horror franchise. The trailer hints that it at least accomplishes the tone. Now to see if it can exceed expectations.

Get lost in Backrooms, in theaters on May 29, 2026.
