Movie talk isn’t dying because people stopped loving films—it’s dying because platforms like Twitter and YouTube turned it into a business model built on outrage and manipulation. Passion has been replaced with monetized controversy, and the loudest, most toxic voices get rewarded. Strangely enough, TikTok feels like one of the last places where genuine movie discussion still exists, free from the constant grind of turning every opinion into engagement bait.
Regal Fires Employee Over Viral TikTok Calling Out Minecraft Movie Madness
A Regal Cinemas employee went viral on TikTok for exposing the chaos of the Minecraft Movie's opening weekend. Instead of support, she got fired—proving again that theater chains protect profits, not people.
TikTok Made Minecraft a Hit — But It’s Destroying Movie Theaters From the Inside
TikTok didn’t just help A Minecraft Movie become a hit — it turned it into a full-blown cultural event. And not in the “stand in line and quote the movie with your friends” kind of way. No, this was pure Gen Alpha chaos. Popcorn flying, kids screaming “CHICKEN JOCKEY!” mid-show, and actual live chickens showing … Continue reading TikTok Made Minecraft a Hit — But It’s Destroying Movie Theaters From the Inside
The Chicken Jockey Trend Is Just the Latest Excuse to Treat Staff Like Trash
The Minecraft movie is making bank. That part’s not surprising. It’s the kind of IP that practically guarantees success—globally beloved, endlessly memeable, and generational in its appeal. But instead of people talking about the movie itself, the conversation online has been hijacked by TikTok chaos: the Chicken Jockey trend. If you’re not familiar with Minecraft … Continue reading The Chicken Jockey Trend Is Just the Latest Excuse to Treat Staff Like Trash
