E178: Social Media Isn’t Toxic: Here’s What the Data Says - Dr. Jeff Hall
El Podcast13 Jan

E178: Social Media Isn’t Toxic: Here’s What the Data Says - Dr. Jeff Hall

Social media isn’t “crack for your brain” for most people—Jeffrey Hall argues the best evidence shows tiny average effects on wellbeing, lots of measurement mess, and a bigger story about relationships, leisure, and moral panic.

Guest bio (short)

Dr. Jeffrey Hall is Professor and Chair of Communication Studies at the University of Kansas and Director of the Relationships and Technology Labs, researching social media, communication, and how relationships shape wellbeing.

Topics discussed (in order)
  • Why “social media is toxic” became the default story (and why it may be a moral panic)
  • What the research actually finds: effects near zero for most users
  • The 0.4% figure and why context (baseline mental health, home life, SES) matters more
  • The measurement problem: “screen time” vs “social media time” vs “everything a phone replaces”
  • Media displacement: social media time often replaces TV time more than it replaces relationships
  • Myth: social media addiction is widespread—why self-diagnosis ≠ clinical addiction
  • Teen mental health: social media as a minor factor compared to home, school, money, support
  • “Potatoes and glasses” comparison: putting effect sizes in perspective
  • Content quality debates (TikTok vs Jerry Springer) and why taste ≠ wellbeing outcomes
  • Social bandwidth: why people decompress differently based on work and social demands
  • Real risks (fraud, cyberbullying, nonconsensual content) without treating them as the whole story
  • Tech leaders restricting kids’ tech: privilege, parenting, and “perfectly curated” childhoods
  • Has teaching changed? Jeff’s take: pandemic disruption mattered more than phones
  • Practical takeaway: prioritize relationships; be forgiving about media; align leisure with values
Main points
  • Most studies find tiny average links between social media use and wellbeing; context explains far more.
  • “Screen time” is a blunt instrument because phones replaced many older activities (TV, music, news, books, calls).
  • “Addiction” is often used casually; clinically, we lack strong standards/tools to diagnose “smartphone addiction” the way we do substance use.
  • Social time may be declining for some, but heavy media use often concentrates among people with fewer social anchors (work, family, community).
  • Digital detox results vary—benefits tend to show up when people replace media with chosen, value-aligned activities.
  • Relationships remain the most reliable wellbeing lever: face-to-face is great, calls are strong, texts can help—staying connected matters.
Top 3 quotes (from the conversation)
  • “Social media has become almost like a vortex that pours in every other conversation that we're having right now.”
  • “Study after study basically says the effect is close to zero or approximate zero.”
  • “It is really, really good evidence that relationships are good for you… prioritize relationships in your life.”
Subscribe➡️Review➡️share

If you liked this episode, subscribe for more conversations that cut through moral panics with data. Leave a review (it helps new listeners find the show), and share this episode with one friend who’s convinced social media is “destroying society”—especially if you want a calmer, more evidence-based take.

🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright
💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/
📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.
⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us.

Thanks for listening!

Episoder(186)

1 in 20 Deaths: Inside Canada’s Assisted Dying System - Dr. Ramona Coelho

1 in 20 Deaths: Inside Canada’s Assisted Dying System - Dr. Ramona Coelho

Canada’s MAiD program has expanded rapidly—Dr. Ramona Coelho argues the system increasingly serves vulnerable people, with uneven safeguards and serious ethical, legal, and social risks. Guest bio: Dr...

24 Feb 1h

The Eavesdropper Economy: How Surveillance Built AI (E186)

The Eavesdropper Economy: How Surveillance Built AI (E186)

A lively tour from Cold War “The Thing” to today’s surveillance capitalism—showing how audio capture, too much data, and automation pressures helped turn listening into AI.Guest bios:Dr. Toby Heys — P...

18 Feb 1h

Managerial Class Ruined Tech (E185) - Darryl Campbell

Managerial Class Ruined Tech (E185) - Darryl Campbell

A former Silicon Valley insider explains how MBA-style “spreadsheet management” is breaking software—and why it’s making tech, AI, and everyday products worse.Guest bio:Darryl Campbell is a former tec...

10 Feb 1h 13min

55% of MIT Faculty Self-Censor — Here’s Why (E184)

55% of MIT Faculty Self-Censor — Here’s Why (E184)

MIT Free Speech Alliance president Wayne Stargardt explains how a few high-profile cancellations can drive widespread faculty self-censorship—even at a STEM powerhouse like MIT.Guest bio:Wayne Stargar...

5 Feb 52min

E183: Why Corporate America Will Never De-Woke | Law Prof Explains

E183: Why Corporate America Will Never De-Woke | Law Prof Explains

In this episode, Jesse talks with Fordham University School of Law corporate-law professor Sean J. Griffith about why “go woke, go broke” hasn’t really played out—and why big, publicly traded firms ca...

3 Feb 59min

E181: Politics Is the Best Predictor of Academic Research — Prof Mark Horowitz

E181: Politics Is the Best Predictor of Academic Research — Prof Mark Horowitz

Political beliefs often matter more than data or methods in shaping how social scientists think about controversial issues. In this episode, sociologist Dr. Mark Horowitz explains why many professors ...

27 Jan 1h 8min

E180: Attraction & Disgust: Evolutionary Psychology Explained (Dr. Deb Lieberman)

E180: Attraction & Disgust: Evolutionary Psychology Explained (Dr. Deb Lieberman)

Evolutionary psychologist Debra Lieberman explains how “disgust” and other built-in mental programs shape attraction, kinship, morality, and even law—while modern technology and social media scramble ...

20 Jan 1h 3min

E179: Breaking the Gerontocracy: How Amanda Litman Is Getting Young People into Office

E179: Breaking the Gerontocracy: How Amanda Litman Is Getting Young People into Office

Amanda Litman argues U.S. leadership is too old, local races are dangerously uncontested, and the fastest fix is getting more young people to run—backed by better pay and campaign-finance reform.Guest...

16 Jan 50min

Populært innen Business og økonomi

stopp-verden
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
dine-penger-pengeradet
e24-podden
rss-penger-polser-og-politikk
rss-borsmorgen-okonominyhetene
utbytte
pengesnakk
livet-pa-veien-med-jan-erik-larssen
finansredaksjonen
pengepodden-2
morgenkaffen-med-finansavisen
tid-er-penger-en-podcast-med-peter-warren
okonomiamatorene
rss-sunn-okonomi
liberal-halvtime
lederpodden
rss-markedspuls-2
rss-impressions-2
rss-investering-gjort-enkelt