
6 Black Mirror Episodes That Are Impossible To Watch Now
When Black Mirror was still a semi-obscure show known only to Bit Torrent-savvy millennials and Britbox subscribers, it truly felt like cerebral sci-fi fantasy. Its grim, inventive concepts felt within the realm of possibility, but outlandish enough to provide escapism.
Then Black Mirror moved to Netflix with Season 3 and its content began to come true. Now, just fourteen years after the series’ premiere, some of the show’s once-hypothetical technologies and concepts have either materialized or come depressingly close. Looking back, it now feels like a kick in the gut to rewatch some of the show’s most prescient episodes, knowing full well that they’re accurate predictions of our current lives. That said, here are six episodes that you might find difficult to revisit as you wait for Season 7 to drop on April 10.
Some spoilers ahead.
USS Callister

“USS Callister” episodes tend to arrive with uncanny timing. When the first aired in 2017, it was a tongue-in-cheek evisceration of entitled fanboys who wanted to control their favorite franchises. Incidentally, it arrived shortly after insecure Star Wars fans threw fits over The Last Jedi and put the rest of the Internet forever on guard. Now, Season 7’s follow-up to the episode comes just as Very Online straight white males have thrown their weight around and frightened studios into scaling back LGBTQ representation for fear of pushback. “USS Callister” doesn’t just critique fandom gone wild. It exposes how quickly technology and the thrill of anonymity can lull the most cowardly of haters into becoming online tyrants. In 2025, that’s just our reality.
Be Right Back

In “Be Right Back,” a woman calls upon an AI program to regenerate her dead boyfriend using his text messages, voice recordings, and social media posts. Just like in other similar stories, the resurrected boyfriend proves to be a soulless imitation of the real thing. In 2013, this premise felt speculative. Today, however, multiple startups have made it into a reality. Companies like HereAfter AI and Project December now create realistic chatbots or avatars that reconstruct the personalities of deceased loved ones. Of course, these tools promise comfort but deliver something unavoidably synthetic, falling just short of intimacy. In our increasingly lonely digital world, watching “Be Right Back” is not only sad but discouraging.
Shut Up and Dance

“Shut Up and Dance” follows a teenager being blackmailed by hackers who secretly recorded him through his laptop camera. It culminates in a knockout of an ending. This was also easier to watch in 2016. Now, cybercrime has spiked globally, and in 2023 alone, identity theft cost Americans billions. Ransomware now cripples hospitals, schools, and electric grids. Sextortion schemes are on the rise and target both adults and minors. Even tech-savvy people now cover their webcams, avoid certain sites, and distrust their inboxes. “Shut Up and Dance” has become a feature-length PSA.
The Waldo Moment

In “The Waldo Moment,” a foul-mouthed cartoon bear, created exclusively for comedy, becomes a serious political candidate. This was fascinating in 2013 because no one believed it could happen. No one. It was impossible! How could a populist figure with little to no political experience and a host of problematic ideas ever amass so much real, measurable influence?
I won’t name names. I don’t need to.
White Bear

In “White Bear,” a woman discovers that she’s living in a sadistic amusement park as punishment for her past crimes. Onlookers with smartphones watch, laugh, and film—but never help. It’s distressingly close to how people treat real suffering now. TikTok and YouTube are packed with “bystander videos” depicting fights, accidents, and mental health crises, all of which could have benefited from the filmmaker stepping in to help. Victims have become content and empathy is optional.
Rachel, Jack and Ashley Too

“Rachel, Jack, and Ashley Too” tells the story of a lonely teen who downloads an AI version of her favorite pop star into a lifelike doll. This episode came out in 2019, only a handful of years before AI made us all lose our minds. In 2023, an AI-created Drake song went viral before anyone realized it was fake. Abba Voyage, a London concert featuring CGI “Abbatars,” sells out regularly. Whitney Houston’s holographic “residency” in Las Vegas uses the star’s appearance and voice to line the pockets of everyone but Whitney Houston. What was once industry satire is now an accepted business model. “Ashley Too” is no longer a mere warning about exploitation. It’s an insight into an industry that replaces people with code as long as the show goes on.