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Andrew Yang Alleges Big Tech Revenue Model Deliberately Erodes Public Mental Health

Rich Roll Podcast · Touch Grass: Andrew Yang Returns To Talk Phone Addiction, AI's Cognitive Toll, & The Fight For Your Attention · June 8, 2026
Andrew Yang Alleges Big Tech Revenue Model Deliberately Erodes Public Mental Health
Rich Roll Podcast
Rich Roll Podcast
Touch Grass: Andrew Yang Returns To Talk Phone Addiction, AI's Cognitive Toll, & The Fight For Your Attention
"Of course it's addictive. I mean, you can see the generational impact it's had on, unfortunately, young girls over the last number of years...these devices, not great for our kids. And so you know that if it's having that, that effect on our children, It's having an effect on us too."
Former presidential candidate Andrew Yang claimed smartphone addiction is real and that tech platforms intentionally maximize engagement at the expense of mental health, particularly among young people. Yang cited data from Jonathan Haidt's research showing measurable psychological impact on adolescents and argued adults face similar cognitive erosion.

About this episode

In this episode of the Rich Roll Podcast, host Rich Roll sat down with entrepreneur and former presidential candidate Andrew Yang for an unflinching conversation about smartphone addiction, the predatory economics of wireless carriers, and the cognitive erosion caused by AI dependency. Yang, who founded Noble Mobile as a cost-plus alternative to major carriers, revealed Americans overpay $100 billion annually for wireless service compared to Europeans, with $21 billion going directly to Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile shareholders as dividends. The discussion centered on smartphone addiction as a genuine neurological condition, with Yang citing Jonathan Haidt's research on adolescent mental health decline and Roll presenting studies from Carnegie Mellon, MIT, Oxford, and UCLA showing AI reliance impairs cognition worse than drunk driving. Yang detailed how Noble Mobile incentivizes reduced screen time by refunding customers based on data usage, describing it as the first carrier that financially rewards users for doomscrolling less. Both men acknowledged their own struggles with compulsive phone use despite being public advocates for digital wellness. Roll framed the issue through the lens of addiction recovery, arguing willpower alone cannot solve the problem and that users must break denial through objective measurement and accountability. The conversation expanded to critique tech platforms' engagement-maximizing revenue models, with Yang revealing even Meta's internal research shows one week off social media significantly improves mood. Yang hinted at another presidential run focused on AI regulation and tech reform, joking he's 'almost too young not to run again' given recent candidates' ages. The episode closed with practical advice including phone-free dinners, avoiding phones an hour before bed, and Yang's signature recommendation to never sleep in the same room as your device.

Key takeaways

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