
Do you struggle to maintain mental focus? What actions can you take to resist the attention economy?
In The Sirens’ Call, MSNBC host Chris Hayes demystifies the mechanics of an economy built to commandeer your attention. He reveals how our attention has become a commodity seized and controlled by media platforms and advertisers for their profit.
Continue reading for an overview of the book, along with insights on how to regain control of your mental life.
Overview of The Sirens’ Call
In The Sirens’ Call (2025), MSNBC host Chris Hayes argues that attention has become the world’s most valuable and contested resource. Unlike previous eras where physical materials or even information held primary economic value, we now live in an “attention economy” where our mental focus has become a commodity that powerful businesses systematically extract and monetize. Tech companies like Facebook and TikTok, media organizations, advertisers, and politicians have developed sophisticated techniques to capture our involuntary attention—an automatic response we can’t consciously control—and convert it into profits and power.
Hayes contends that commodification of attention represents a fundamental transformation of human consciousness, similar to how industrial capitalism commodified physical labor, with equally profound consequences for autonomy and social well-being. The problem Hayes identifies goes far beyond simple distraction or screen addiction. When our attention is controlled by others rather than directed by ourselves, we lose our capacity for deep thought, meaningful relationships, and democratic participation.
Hayes draws on his experience in cable news, where he has witnessed firsthand how the competition for viewers degrades journalistic standards and public discourse. Our guide explores Hayes’s insights into three main sections: First, we establish what attention is as a psychological and economic resource. Second, we examine how the attention economy reshapes different sectors of society and fragments public discourse. Finally, we explore Hayes’s proposed remedies at the personal, collective, and systemic levels—and along the way, explore questions like how attention-seeking behavior shapes our identities and whether it’s really possible to regulate the attention economy.
What Is Attention? Why Is It Now Our Scarcest Resource?
Every moment of every day, you’re paying attention to something. Whether you’re reading a book, listening to music, having a conversation, or simply daydreaming, your mind is constantly directing your focus toward specific information while filtering out everything else. Hayes argues that attention is not merely something we do: It’s the fundamental substance of our conscious experience. Without attention, there would be no awareness, no thought, no perception of the world around us.
This mental capacity operates through two mechanisms: voluntary and involuntary. Voluntary attention is the conscious, intentional focusing of our minds on a particular task or object. When you deliberately concentrate on reading while ignoring background noise, you’re exercising voluntary attention. This type of focus requires effort and cognitive control, since you have to actively suppress distractions and maintain concentration on your chosen target.
Involuntary attention, by contrast, operates automatically, and you can’t consciously control it. When a loud crash occurs nearby, your attention immediately shifts to the sound regardless of your intentions. Hayes explains that this involuntary response evolved as a survival mechanism: Our ancestors needed to quickly detect potential threats or opportunities in their environment. Bright flashes, sudden movements, unexpected sounds, and perceived dangers all trigger involuntary attention shifts that bypass our conscious will entirely.
The interplay between these two systems allows humans to balance focused concentration on a specific task with awareness of important changes in our surroundings. This attention mobility—our ability to shift focus rapidly between different stimuli and mental processes—proved crucial for our ancestors’ survival and remains essential for navigating complex modern environments. It lets you engage with relevant information while maintaining awareness of what’s around you—like reading a news article on your phone while walking down the street. However, this same mobility makes you vulnerable to exploitation by forces designed to capture your attention and turn it into an extractable resource.
Attention Has Become an Extractable Resource
Hayes draws a direct parallel between attention and other resources that have been commodified throughout history. Just as industrial capitalism transformed human labor into a commodity that could be bought, sold, and exploited, the digital age has transformed human attention into an extractable resource. He explains that attention, like labor, represents something intimate and essential to human experience that can be separated from the person and converted into economic value.
The attention extraction process works by targeting our involuntary focus mechanisms. Tech platforms and media companies have learned to trigger the automatic responses that evolved to detect threats and opportunities—and to make these responses serve commercial purposes rather than survival. A push notification creates the same neurological urgency as a predator’s growl. An infinite scroll of content mimics the unpredictable rewards that kept our ancestors searching for food. Bright colors, rapid scene changes, and conflict-driven content all exploit the involuntary attention systems that once helped humans survive in dangerous environments.
Hayes explains that the extraction of our involuntary attention happens at a neurological level before our conscious minds can intervene. A flashing advertisement or breaking news alert captures our focus, and by the time we realize we’ve been distracted, our attention has already been redirected away from our chosen activities and toward profit-generating content. This differs fundamentally from traditional media consumption. When you choose to buy a newspaper or attend a movie, you decide to allocate your attention in exchange for information or entertainment. Hayes argues that modern attention extraction operates through compulsion rather than choice, using psychological manipulation to capture your focus against your will.
The Emergence of the Attention Economy
The transformation of attention into an extractable resource has created what Hayes calls the “attention economy,” where human focus is the most important commodity. As digital technologies made information infinitely abundant and instantly accessible, information lost its place as the scarcest, most valuable resource. Unlike information, which can be copied infinitely, attention can’t be manufactured or duplicated. Each person has a limited supply, and when one entity captures that attention, it becomes unavailable to others. Tech companies compete for these limited hours because controlling attention gives them control of the most valuable commodity in an information-rich world.
Companies use a simple business model to profit from capturing and holding human attention: Platforms provide free content or services to attract users, then sell access to those users’ attention to advertisers. The more engaging the platform, the longer users stay, and the more valuable their attention becomes. This creates incentives for platforms to maximize the time you spend with them. Social media platforms have perfected this model with algorithms that analyze billions of data points about your behavior—what you click, how long you linger, when you scroll—to identify and deliver content specifically designed to exploit your particular triggers, whether those involve political anger, social comparison, fear, or curiosity.
Hayes argues that the emergence of the attention economy has implications beyond individual distraction. When society’s most powerful institutions—technology companies worth trillions of dollars—have business models that depend on fragmenting human attention, the cognitive resources necessary for democracy, education, relationships, and long-term thinking come under systematic assault. He contends that the attention economy doesn’t merely compete with other economic activities; it undermines the mental foundations that make other forms of human flourishing possible.
How Is the Attention Economy Reshaping Society?
In this section, we’ll take a closer look at how these changes have played out in the media we consume, the political dialogue we take part in, the social validation we pursue—and the resulting fragmentation of our public discourse.
Media Organizations Compete for Our Limited Attention
The transformation of attention into a commodity has altered how media organizations operate. Hayes explains, based on his experience at MSNBC, that the competition for attention degrades public discourse as news organizations abandon their traditional role of informing citizens in favor of capturing eyeballs. Every cable news show receives minute-by-minute ratings data that creates intense pressure on hosts and producers. Hayes describes how when a segment performs well, the rush of validation encourages more of the same content. When ratings drop, the fear of failure drives increasingly sensational programming choices.
Hayes explains that the competition for eyeballs has led to the adoption of slot machine mechanics across news and entertainment platforms. Television producers use rapid scene changes, flashing graphics, and urgent music to grab our involuntary attention. Breaking news alerts multiply, even for minor stories, because novelty captures focus more effectively than importance. Social media platforms employ infinite scroll designs that eliminate natural stopping points, keeping users engaged through the compulsive need to check for new content.
Media organizations have also learned to weaponize interruption and novelty as attention-capture strategies. Push notifications create artificial urgency around routine news updates, auto-playing videos assault users’ involuntary attention systems, and clickbait headlines promise information rewards that the actual content rarely delivers. The result is a media landscape where attention-grabbing ability matters more than truth, importance, or public benefit. Stories that generate strong emotional reactions—particularly outrage, fear, or tribal identification—receive disproportionate coverage. Meanwhile, complex issues, such as climate change or policy details, struggle to compete with more immediately stimulating content.
Politicians Adapt Their Communication to Maximize Attention
Political communication has been restructured around the mechanics of attention capture, and Hayes identifies Donald Trump as the exemplar of this transformation. Trump’s communication strategy exploits the fundamental asymmetry between attention-grabbing and attention-holding. Grabbing attention is relatively easy: Any loud, shocking, or novel statement can briefly capture focus. Holding attention requires sustained engagement with complex ideas, which is much more difficult in a fragmented media environment. Trump has mastered the art of generating a constant stream of attention-grabbing moments without ever needing to hold an audience’s focus long enough to scrutinize his statements in detail.
Hayes argues that Trump’s success with this approach has normalized attention-seeking behavior across the political spectrum. He contends that politicians now compete to generate viral moments, memorable soundbites, and social media engagement rather than substantive policy proposals because attention has become the currency of political power. Politicians who capture more public attention receive more media coverage, attract more campaign donations, and gain more influence over public discourse. In the attention economy, successful political communication prioritizes simplicity, emotional intensity, and tribal identification over nuance, evidence, or deliberation because they’re more effective at commanding focus.
The Lincoln-Douglas debates serve as Hayes’s counter-example to illustrate how political discourse has degraded. In 1858, Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas held three-hour public debates featuring complex, layered arguments about slavery that required sustained focus from audiences numbering in the thousands. Their speeches assumed that citizens had the ability to follow extended arguments and weigh competing evidence.
By contrast, modern political debates are designed around attention scarcity. Questions jump from topic to topic, candidates receive two-minute response windows, and success is measured by memorable moments rather than substance. The format assumes that audiences don’t have the focus for serious deliberation.
People Strive to Gain Others’ Attention
The attention economy also compels ordinary people to compete for attention from strangers. Social media gives everyone access to immediate feedback through likes, shares, comments, and views. Hayes explains that as we monitor our success at generating attention and become addicted to external validation, we adjust what we post: Because provocative content generates more engagement, we adopt increasingly extreme positions or share more personal information to keep our audience’s interest. Since conflict and controversy capture more attention than cooperation, we pick fights rather than seeking understanding.
Hayes also contends that the attention economy exploits our fundamental need for social recognition. We become trapped into constantly seeking approval from strangers who give us likes and follows, but not genuine human connection. We become separated from our authentic selves because we learn to perform versions of our identity optimized for attention capture rather than personal fulfillment or genuine connection, leaving us feeling psychologically fragmented and unsatisfied.
The Result: Fragmented Public Discourse
The cumulative effect of these changes—media organizations competing for clicks, politicians optimizing for viral moments, and individuals pursuing online validation—has been the fragmentation of public discourse. Hayes argues that shared attention has become nearly impossible to achieve. Where previous generations watched the same three television networks or read the same newspaper, algorithmic personalization has created individualized information bubbles. With our collective attention divided among countless competing sources and platforms (and our individual attention spans shortened through constant exposure to rapid content switching), our collective focus shifts constantly between crisis and distraction.
The result is a public discourse that prioritizes the urgent over the important, the simple over the complex, and the emotionally satisfying over the factually accurate. Complex problems that require sustained public engagement, like climate change, suffer most from this fragmentation. Unlike a viral video or political scandal, climate change lacks the immediate sensory triggers that capture involuntary attention in our current media environment. Hayes argues that this represents not merely a communication problem, but a crisis of democratic governance: Democratic institutions designed for deliberative decision-making cannot function effectively when citizens lack the attentional resources necessary for informed participation.
How Can We Reclaim Our Attention?
Hayes explains that we can take action, individually and collectively, to resist the attention economy and demand a healthier path forward.
Resist the Attention Economy Personally
Hayes acknowledges that individual resistance to the attention economy faces enormous challenges, but argues that personal strategies remain both necessary and potentially effective. The attention economy is designed by teams of engineers and psychologists using billions of dollars and sophisticated technology to exploit human psychology. Individual willpower alone can’t consistently overcome such systematic manipulation. But individual action, while it can’t solve a systemic problem, can help you reduce harm as larger changes develop—and it gives you a way to model more thoughtful approaches for others to follow.
The most radical personal strategy Hayes proposes is abandoning smartphones in favor of “dumb phones,” which can make calls and send texts but can’t access the internet or run apps. Hayes argues that smartphones have become so central to the attention economy’s business model that opting out represents a form of economic resistance as well as personal protection. For those unwilling or unable to abandon smartphones, Hayes suggests implementing strict boundaries around digital engagement—turning off all nonessential notifications, using website and app blockers during focused work periods, and establishing phone-free zones to eliminate as many involuntary attention triggers as possible from daily life.
Hayes also recommends consuming media through formats that resist attention extraction techniques. Reading physical newspapers and books helps you engage with content designed for sustained attention, and listening to long-form podcasts or watching documentary films exercises the cognitive muscles required for deep focus. Choosing subscription-based media over advertising-supported platforms reduces exposure to attention-optimized content designed primarily to deliver eyeballs to advertisers.
Perhaps most importantly, Hayes emphasizes cultivating an awareness of where your attention is going, whether that allocation serves your interests, and what you might be missing while focused on digital content. He explains that the practice of meditation, while not explicitly political, can become a form of resistance by strengthening your ability to exercise your voluntary attention and reducing your susceptibility to the capture of your involuntary attention.
Take Action at the Collective Level
Personal resistance strategies, while valuable, cannot address the structural forces driving attention extraction across society. Hayes argues that meaningful change requires collective action to create alternative systems and advocate for broader social changes that prioritize human attention and well-being over corporate profits. He explains that “attention resistance” groups like Friends of Attention are beginning to organize for limits on attention extraction, cognitive safety protections, and the right to mental privacy.
Hayes also identifies the potential for businesses to profit by helping people reclaim their attention rather than extracting it. This includes companies offering distraction-free productivity tools, meditation apps that don’t track user data, and social media platforms designed for meaningful connection rather than maximizing engagement. The demand for these solutions has become so apparent that even Apple and Google now build screen time monitoring and app usage controls into their operating systems, while subscription-based services that eliminate advertising continue gaining traction.
Community-based resistance strategies offer another avenue for collective action. Hayes advocates for creating and participating in private, invitation-only online spaces that operate without advertising or algorithmic manipulation. These might include private group chats, email lists, or small forums where conversations can occur without the attention-extraction pressures of commercial platforms. The goal is to model what healthy digital communication looks like while building networks of people committed to protecting their collective cognitive resources.
Realign Economic Incentives
The most ambitious solutions Hayes proposes involve changes to the economic structures that make attention extraction profitable. His most radical proposal is government-mandated limits on attention extraction—such as a legislated cap on hours of screen time or restrictions on the types of psychological manipulation techniques that platforms can legally employ—similar to how labor laws limit the number of hours employers can require workers to spend on the job. Hayes acknowledges that such regulations would face fierce opposition from technology companies and people who might view them as restrictions on personal freedom.
The framework Hayes envisions would require developing new legal precedents to treat attention as a protected resource, similar to how environmental regulations protect air and water quality. He proposes changes to how tech companies can measure and optimize their success: Government agencies could require them to report metrics like user satisfaction, well-being outcomes, or the quality rather than quantity of attention captured. He argues that workplace safety regulations, environmental protection laws, and consumer protection standards all represent cases where government intervention constrained corporate behavior to protect public welfare—and that the attention economy deserves similar regulatory responses.
Hayes acknowledges significant challenges in implementing such systemic changes. Technology companies possess enormous political influence and financial resources to resist regulation. The global nature of digital platforms complicates national regulatory approaches, and the technical complexity of attention extraction makes it difficult to craft effective regulations without stifling beneficial technological innovation. But the ultimate goal Hayes articulates is to create an economic system where human attention serves human flourishing rather than corporate profits. This would require not just regulatory changes but cultural shifts in how society values and protects cognitive resources.
Exercise: Who’s Capturing Your Attention?
Hayes argues that our attention has become the most valuable and endangered resource in modern society. This exercise helps you analyze how your own attention is being captured, monetized, and potentially exploited.
- Take inventory of your digital ecosystem. List the apps, platforms, and media sources you engage with most frequently. For each one, identify whether it mainly consumes your attention, helps you gain others’ attention, or both.
- Choose one platform or app that you use daily. How does its design specifically target your involuntary attention through techniques like variable rewards, infinite scrolling, or notifications? What behavioral patterns has this created in your usage?
- What would a healthy relationship with this platform look like? Describe specific boundaries or practices you could implement to maintain more voluntary control over your attention while using it.