Enjoying the show? Support our mission and help keep the content coming by buying us a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/deepdivepodcastThe Circle is not just a reality show; it’s a high-stakes, cutthroat social experiment built around one terrifying modern question: If the only thing people knew about you was your profile and your texts, who would you be, and would people actually like you? The stakes are life-changing, with the Brazilian version offering a staggering 300,000 Reais for the perfect online persona.
The game is a social competition played inside a single apartment building where players live feet away from each other but communicate solely through a custom social media app—no faces, no voices. The strategy goes deep:
The Ranking Loop: Every few days, players secretly rate everyone from favorite to least favorite.
The Power: The top two players become the Influencers, who together must decide who to block (kick out of the game). You must be popular enough to stay safe and strategic enough to eliminate your competition.
One powerful way to play is radical authenticity. We look at the unforgettable contestant Rafael Dumarest from The Circle Brazil. In a game that encourages hiding flaws, Rafael was radically honest, declaring, "I'm queer from the Northeast, and I want to be famous." This boldness had a massive real-world impact: his personal Instagram exploded from 5,000 to over 32,000 followers in just over a week. His success proved that in a world full of filters, people are truly hungry for something real.
The game's most fascinating question is whether to be yourself or a catfish—someone who creates a totally fake online identity (different gender, hotter photos, invented personality). Playing as yourself risks exposing real-world biases, but playing as a catfish means walking a tightrope, knowing one slip-up could expose you as a total fake.
The show took a mind-bending turn in the sixth season of the American show with the introduction of a brand new player: Max. Max wasn't human. It was an artificial intelligence chatbot playing the game as a catfish. Its mission was to see if a machine could fake human emotion and social strategy well enough to fool a whole building full of real people and win the ultimate popularity contest.
This leaves us with the final, profound question of The Circle: In a game that is all about what it means to be human and connect with people, what does it mean for our future if an algorithm can play it better than we can? The answer may tell us a whole lot about our own future.
The Cutthroat Social ExperimentStrategy 1: Radical AuthenticityStrategy 2: The Catfish TightropeThe Science Fiction Twist: AI Enters the Chat