No, Glenn Beck Did Not Say Watch Dogs Teaches You How to Hack in Real Life

No matter how much I wish he had.

Recommended Videos

Glenn Beck has said a lot of completely bonkers stuff over the years, and this segment on how bad video games and technology are for us is no different. Unfortunately, a bunch of really silly arguments aren’t enough for people, and they want to invent some other silly things for him to say. No, he didn’t say Watch Dogs teaches you how to hack in real life.

To be very clear, I did not wake up this morning expecting to defend Glenn Beck. If my alarm goes off in a few minutes and this all turns out to be a weird dream, I wouldn’t be the least bit surprised. I’m also not surprised that people who disagree with someone want to put words in their mouth.

Throughout this segment, starting around the 3:30 mark, Beck repeatedly says that Watch Dogs teaches you to hack into other people’s devices and steal their information for your own use. However, at no point does he say that the game teaches you how to hack. That one word is a very important distinction.

If he said that the game teaches you how to hack, I’d be rolling with laughter and cracking jokes about how my X button doesn’t seem to hack things when I step outside of my apartment. That the game’s “press a button to hack” system gives a player the skills to hack into real technology would be an incredibly silly assertion, but that’s not what I think he’s saying.

Since this whole segment is about the morality that video games teach and the effect they have on the way we think, I take his “it teaches you to hack into other people’s stuff” statements to mean that it’s teaching kids that it’s OK to do that—not how to do it. Whether or not he’s right that what kids will take away from this game is that it’s OK to invade the privacy of others is unknown, but it’s not an absurd point to make.

Of course, I can’t prove that he didn’t mean that kids could learn how to hack real devices from the game, but he never explicitly said it. If we—as gamers—want to make pundits and lawmakers understand that we know the difference between reality and fiction, let’s stick to that and not start adding our own fiction to reality.

(He said plenty of other silly things you can tell jokes about, anyway.)

(via Polygon, image via Alexandre Dulaunoy)

Meanwhile in related links


The Mary Sue is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more
related content
Read Article ‘Demon Slayer: Hinokami Chronicles’ Is Rumored to Have a Sequel
Mitsuri from Demon Slayer
Read Article ‘Little Kitty, Big City,’ in All Its Glory, Is Almost Here
Cats in hats in 'Little Kitty, Big City'
Read Article ‘Funko Fusion’ Is an Unholy Union of IP (That Looks Kind of Fun?)
Funko Pop! characters assemble in the new video game 'Funko Fusion'
Read Article How Did This Racist Message Make Its Way Into ‘Stellar Blade’ in the First Place?
Eve in Stellar Blade
Read Article Gotta Go Fast! The 10 Best Sonic Games, Ranked
Sonic and his friends leave motion blurs while running through the woods in "Sonic Colors"
Related Content
Read Article ‘Demon Slayer: Hinokami Chronicles’ Is Rumored to Have a Sequel
Mitsuri from Demon Slayer
Read Article ‘Little Kitty, Big City,’ in All Its Glory, Is Almost Here
Cats in hats in 'Little Kitty, Big City'
Read Article ‘Funko Fusion’ Is an Unholy Union of IP (That Looks Kind of Fun?)
Funko Pop! characters assemble in the new video game 'Funko Fusion'
Read Article How Did This Racist Message Make Its Way Into ‘Stellar Blade’ in the First Place?
Eve in Stellar Blade
Read Article Gotta Go Fast! The 10 Best Sonic Games, Ranked
Sonic and his friends leave motion blurs while running through the woods in "Sonic Colors"
Author
Dan Van Winkle
Dan Van Winkle (he) is an editor and manager who has been working in digital media since 2013, first at now-defunct Geekosystem (RIP), and then at The Mary Sue starting in 2014, specializing in gaming, science, and technology. Outside of his professional experience, he has been active in video game modding and development as a hobby for many years. He lives in North Carolina with Lisa Brown (his wife) and Liz Lemon (their dog), both of whom are the best, and you will regret challenging him at Smash Bros.