Knowing the typicalness of any ordinary French guy, they don't apply deodorant, which means they sweat like pigs, using this common sense, this sex act is when a french guy lubes up a females foot with his sweat and shoves it as far up his ass as he can until he cums
"I want to France over the summer, and this guy named Pierre, asked me out, he was charming at first and when we got back to his place, he started to rub his armpits on my foot, he tried to give me a french foot-massage!"
by JamesPage February 4, 2025
Get the French Foot-Massage mug.This is the classic "manufacturing consent" model. It analyzes how large-scale, centralized media outlets (TV networks, major newspapers) act as a control system by selecting, framing, and repeating narratives that shape public perception on a massive scale. Control works through agenda-setting (telling you what to think about), priming (telling you how to think about it), and cultivating a shared, often simplified, reality that serves established political and economic interests.
Theory of Mass Media Social Control Example: During the lead-up to a war, every major news network endlessly repeats government talking points about "imminent threats" and "national security," while giving minimal airtime to anti-war experts or diplomatic alternatives. This mass media control creates a overwhelming consensus narrative that manufactures public consent for military action, marginalizing dissent by making it seem fringe and unpatriotic.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 7, 2026
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The study of how large populations are influenced, directed, or manipulated—through media, propaganda, education, and the subtle shaping of culture. Mass control isn't about mind control in the science fiction sense; it's about shaping what people believe, want, and fear so that they voluntarily behave in desired ways. The psychology of mass control explains why entire societies can support policies against their interests, why populations can be divided against each other, why people can believe obvious falsehoods. It's not that people are stupid; it's that the systems shaping belief are incredibly sophisticated, evolved over millennia to manage exactly this species.
Example: "He studied the psychology of mass control and realized his beliefs weren't entirely his—they'd been shaped by his education, his media, his social circle, his algorithms. He wasn't a puppet, but he wasn't fully autonomous either. The question wasn't whether he was controlled but how much and by whom. He started questioning everything, which was probably the point of studying it."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
Get the Psychology of Mass Control mug.The study of the institutions, technologies, and practices that together constitute systems for managing large populations—governments, corporations, media, platforms, algorithms. These systems don't just control through obvious coercion; they shape the very categories through which we understand ourselves and our options. They define what's normal, what's desirable, what's possible. The psychology of mass control systems examines how these systems maintain themselves, how they adapt to resistance, and how they're experienced by those within them. It's the psychology of living inside systems so large you can't see their boundaries, so pervasive you can't imagine alternatives.
Psychology of Mass Control Systems Example: "She mapped the mass control systems operating in her life—the state that tracked her taxes, the corporations that tracked her purchases, the platforms that tracked her attention, the algorithms that shaped her choices. Each system claimed to serve her; together, they managed her. The psychology wasn't about resisting—that was nearly impossible—but about understanding, which was at least possible."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
Get the Psychology of Mass Control Systems mug.The study of how cultural products and practices are created for and consumed by large populations, and how this shapes individual and collective psychology. Mass culture—movies, music, fashion, memes—isn't just entertainment; it's the wallpaper of our mental lives, the background against which we think and feel. The psychology of mass culture examines how cultural trends spread, how they create shared reference points, and how they can both unite and divide. It also reveals how mass culture can be alienating (making us feel like we should be different) and connecting (giving us shared language and experience). We are all products of mass culture, whether we admit it or not.
Example: "She studied the psychology of mass culture and realized her tastes weren't entirely hers—they'd been shaped by marketing, by peer pressure, by the constant hum of what everyone else was doing. She wasn't unique; she was a demographic. The realization was humbling, then freeing. She could choose her culture rather than just absorbing it."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
Get the Psychology of Mass Culture mug.The study of how newspapers, television, radio, and digital platforms shape human consciousness on a population scale. Mass media isn't just a delivery system for information; it's a psychological environment that shapes what we think about, how we think about it, and who we think we are. The psychology of mass media examines how media creates reality through selection (what stories get told), framing (how they're presented), and repetition (what becomes familiar). It explores how media exploits psychological vulnerabilities: fear for attention, outrage for engagement, hope for loyalty. It also investigates how media consumption affects cognition (attention spans, critical thinking), emotion (collective moods, manufactured consent), and identity (who we imagine ourselves to be, who we imagine others are). In the 21st century, with personalized algorithms and 24/7 connectivity, mass media has become more pervasive and more insidious than ever—not just showing us the world but actively constructing it.
Example: "She studied the psychology of mass media and couldn't watch the news the same way. She saw how every story was chosen to provoke a specific emotional response, how every frame served a narrative, how every repetition normalized what should have been shocking. She wasn't being informed; she was being conditioned. She didn't stop watching—the conditioning was too strong—but she started watching differently, with a critical eye that saw the machinery behind the message."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
Get the Psychology of Mass Media mug.The study of how cultural products are produced for and consumed by large, anonymous audiences, and how this shapes social life. Mass culture—movies, music, television, advertising—is often criticized as shallow, homogenizing, and manipulative, but the sociology reveals a more complex picture: audiences are not passive consumers but active interpreters, mass culture can be a source of shared identity and community, and even commercial products can carry resistant meanings. The sociology of mass culture examines the culture industries (how they work, who controls them), the audiences (how they use, interpret, and sometimes subvert cultural products), and the effects (on identity, on community, on politics). Mass culture is where most people get most of their stories; understanding it is understanding the modern soul.
Example: "She studied the sociology of mass culture and realized her tastes weren't entirely hers—they'd been shaped by marketing, by peer pressure, by the constant hum of what everyone else was doing. But she also saw how people made mass culture their own—reinterpreting, remixing, finding community in shared fandom. Mass culture was both oppressive and liberating, like most things."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
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