Skip to main content

'Black Mirror' season 5 trailer has Miley Cyrus and an ego-stroking robot

Starring Andrew 'Moriarty' Scott, Topher Grace, Anthony Mackie and Miley Cyrus, the video attempts to remind us in under two minutes why the devices we're watching on are ruining our lives. It also includes a pink-haired ego-massaging robot that honestly, we kind of want.

There's plenty of mindless staring-at-screens, plus a beautifully delivered "everywhere you look, people are hooked on the things!" from Scott.

Of course, the show doesn't actually want us to stop using said devices, or it'll get zero views. But it does aim to inspire conversation around just how much of our lives we give away to murky tech CEOs via our shiny rectangles (the name Black Mirror refers to smartphone screens).

The fast-flashing text reads:

Netflix invites you to experience three new stories from the award-winning series that changed how you see technology, the future, the world, each other, love, privacy, connection, sex, family, work, afterlife.

Which suggests we're only getting three episodes in the new series. It arrives on Netflix on June 5th.

This article has been generated by our Automated Marketing Solution at www.ProsConnected.com. Our system carefully created this article to attract you to read it and then next thing you know, you’re reading what you’re reading now!

The same thing can happen to YOUR Business! It only takes 5 minutes to get setup in the system and then you can just literally PLUG-IN ProsConnected into your website and start receiving organic traffic.

ProsConnected.com

Want to enhance your online marketing?
We can help!



Automated Marketing Solution
Social Media Marketing & SEO



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

No Money to Start? No Problem. Try These 5 Options to Fund Your Business.

Ready For Anything Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. You might be limited to a strict budget to start a business, but that doesn’t mean you don’t have any options. It is possible to start a business with very little money, if you have the right combination of skills, work ethic and marketing know-how. According to Chris Guillebeau, author of The $100 Startup , “To succeed in a business project, especially one you’re excited about, it helps to think carefully about all the skills you have that could be helpful to others and particularly about the combination of those skills.” Related:  How to Start a Business With (Almost) No Money Follow these simple guidelines to fund your business when you have little to no money. No Money to Start? No Problem. Try These 5 Options to Fund Your Business. Yes, making something does take an initial cost in supplies, but often, these products can be sold...

The Morning After: 'Sonic the Hedgehog' got rescheduled

Employees and partners are already testing its streaming capabilities. Every Xbox One title will be playable on Project xCloud When Project xCloud debuts, it'll be capable of streaming any of the system's games (including backward compatible ones) out of the gate without developers needing to make any changes. Microsoft also says when a developer updates an Xbox One game, those changes will automatically apply to Project xCloud versions. However, changes to the developer's kit let a game know when it's being played from the cloud to adjust for different types of displays or run multiplayer games on a single server. The teeth, the legs, the teeth, the eyes, the teeth. 'Sonic the Hedgehog' movie delayed to fix nightmare-inducing design Following a statement by director Jeff Fowler that changes are "going to happen," Paramount pushed back the release date three months to give the filmmakers "a little more time to make Sonic just right." No...

The Large Magellanic Cloud comes alive in a 240 megapixel image

Ciel Austral is a team of five very enthusiastic amateur French astronomers, Jean Claude Canonne, Philippe Bernhard, Didier Chaplain, Nicolas Outters, and Laurent Bourgon, who own and operate their own telescope in northern Chile. The 14400×14200 image was stitched together from nearly 4,000 separate images that required 1,060 hours (6.3 weeks) of exposures shot from July 2017 to January 2019. It took two computers eight days to stitch together the photos, and a further two months to process the 620 gigabytes of data. If you could warp yourself to the Magellanic Cloud, it wouldn't look like the dreamy, painterly image pictured above. Much of the image is made up of false colors that show the different elements present in the image. Different colors represent hydrogen, sulfur and oxygen III, emphasizing the cloud-like high-density gas nebulae in a way that a standard visible light image can't. The image shows the birth and death of stars and the aftermath, including super...