Fictional politics tends to portray either purity‑turned‑corruption or purity‑triumphing, while the real work of change is incremental bargaining and coalition‑building. Biopics like Spielberg’s Lincoln can show the ‘slow boring of hard boards,’ but invented stories struggle to make meetings and horse‑trading compelling. This storytelling bias distorts how the public thinks politics should work.
— If popular narratives minimize compromise, voters will mistrust moderation and demand cinematic heroics, worsening polarization and governance.
Matthew Yglesias
2025.10.17
100% relevant
Yglesias’s claim that Lincoln succeeds by putting the tedious, transactional legislative work on screen, whereas most fictional films avoid it.
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