Announcing a New Series: The Safari Is Over: Why Louis Theroux Never Made It Inside the Manosphere

A new series on the manosphere, media spectacle, misogyny, extremism, platform power, and the urgent need for clearer public literacy and stronger institutional response.

[Published on Substack on April 01, 2026]

Read the first essay in the series here: Inside the Manosphere I: The Media Spectacle Is a Distraction

There is now an entire media economy devoted to making extremism impossible to ignore while doing far less to make it intelligible.

That problem sits at the center of this new series, The Safari Is Over: Why Louis Theroux Never Made It Inside the Manosphere, which examines the manosphere not as an internet curiosity or passing media spectacle, but as part of a wider ecosystem of misogyny, hate, extremism, and violence evolving in plain sight.

Using the Louis Theroux documentary as a starting point, and placing it alongside other pop-cultural texts, news stories, case studies, and emerging social trends, the series explores both the shared dynamics and the important differences across these formations.

It asks two central questions: what does it mean to live in a media environment that makes extremism easier to consume, circulate, and act on than to understand, and what can be done to interrupt and mitigate that harm more effectively, ethically, and responsibly?

This is no longer a fringe issue, if it ever truly was. The overlap between manosphere culture, broader far-right ecosystems, and more mainstream reactionary politics has become too consequential to dismiss as online spectacle or subcultural noise. What is at stake here is not only cultural analysis, but the public interest, public safety, and national security.

Across the series, I examine the structures that shape and sustain these worlds: media and journalism, platform design, Big Tech and its incentives, emerging technologies and AI, regulatory and legislative bottlenecks, policy failures, and the public habits that can either intensify harm or help contain it. The aim is not simply to interpret the spectacle, but to make it legible.

The series is written for both practitioners and general readers, with particular relevance for journalists, researchers, educators, policy specialists, legal analysts, trust and safety teams, and security practitioners. It combines analysis with practical literacy: how to recognize these dynamics early, how to respond more effectively, and how to avoid making them worse through weak analysis, careless language, poor ethics, or ineffective tools.

Series Rollout

The series will be published here on Substack over the coming months, generally on a fortnightly cadence. Alongside the main essays, I’ll also be publishing companion pieces, practice notes, source breakdowns, practical explainers, and media-literacy resources.

The first essay, Inside the Manosphere I: The Media Spectacle Is a Distraction,” is now live. Upcoming companion materials will include a practice note on the relationship between spectacle journalism and amplification, along with tip sheets for practitioners and audiences on how to recognize, resist, and avoid reinforcing spectacle-driven narratives.

The next installment turns to the emotional economy beneath the spectacle, and to the thing most people still mistake for its primary product.

Where to Follow

To follow the full series and receive new installments directly, subscribe on:

Substack (@rajaalthaibani): full essays, companion pieces, and extended analysis

Instagram (@raja_althaibani): shorter posts, bite-sized educational slides, visual explainers, live commentary, links, and frequent updates.

LinkedIn (@rajaalthaibani): practitioner-focused reflections, applied takeaways, and professional context

Media, Research, and Professional Inquiries

For media requests, speaking invitations, consultations, collaboration inquiries, or professional contact, please reach out at raja[at]rajaaltllc[dot]com or connect via Substack or LinkedIn messenger or via this website’s contact form.