After watching the video, I noticed that the media has an inconsistent track record of how accurately they display the process of hacking and cybersecurity in general. The most common distortion was how long these processes take to happen. The clips showed hacks taking seconds to happen, when more complicated hacks could take days, or even months to set up. I noticed that the shows and movies that centered around hacking, like Mr. Robot and Hackers, scored better on accuracy. In contrast, less hacking-focused movies and shows like Star Trek, Skyfall, and Jason Bourne, would overly dramatize the process. These movies also seemed to greatly exaggerate the technological possibilities like the Fast and the Furious clip where multiple cars are remotely hijacked and controlled at once or the scene where the intelligence agency cuts power to a specific building halfway across the globe. Another common distortion was all these flashy visuals, dramatic alert popups, and nonsensical tech jargon. On the other hand, several scenes showed very realistic aspects of hacking, such as the Matrix scene showing Nmap and a real exploit with a realistic-looking terminal window, the spearfishing part of Ocean’s 8, and the Silicon Valley scene using a wifi pineapple. Overall, Hollywood was hit or miss with how accurately they showed how hacking works.