Ron-s Gone Wrong (RECENT ✦)

So, grab your device, log off Netflix, and watch this movie. Just be prepared to look at your phone a little differently afterward.

We’ve all seen the trailer: A socially awkward kid gets a defective robot best friend. It looks cute, it looks colorful, and on the surface, Ron’s Gone Wrong looks like standard family-friendly fare.

But because he is broken, Ron is the only character in the movie who is authentic. He doesn't change his personality to get more views. He doesn't have a curated avatar. He is just... Ron. Ron-s Gone Wrong

What follows isn't just a slapstick chase scene. It is a philosophical exploration of what happens when technology stops performing for us and just is . Here is where the movie shines. Ron is glitchy. He doesn't understand social norms. He walks into walls. He blurts out secrets. By our digital standards, he is a failure.

Released by 20th Century Animation, Ron’s Gone Wrong isn’t just a movie about a "bad" robot. It’s a mirror held up to our obsession with algorithms, likes, and the illusion of connection. The film introduces us to Barney, a middle-schooler who feels invisible. In his world, everyone has a B*Bot—a cute, connected digital companion that uses AI to match you with friends. Think of it as an iPad, a smartphone, and a best friend rolled into one plastic sphere. So, grab your device, log off Netflix, and watch this movie

Barney finally gets a B*Bot (the titular Ron), but there’s a catch. Ron is defective. His social programming is corrupted. He doesn't curate content. He doesn't filter his thoughts. He doesn’t know what "friending" someone means.

Have you seen Ron’s Gone Wrong ? Did it make you question your relationship with social media? Let me know in the comments below—or better yet, tell me in person, like a real Ron. It looks cute, it looks colorful, and on

Barney realizes that while his classmates’ B*Bots are showing them filtered versions of reality (suggesting friends based on proximity and popularity), Ron is offering the real thing: clumsy, awkward, physical friendship. Watching Ron’s Gone Wrong as an adult is an uncomfortable experience. We see the CEO of the B*Bot company (voiced brilliantly by Ron’s Gone Wrong... I mean, Colin Hanks) acting exactly like every Silicon Valley tech bro. He cares about "engagement" and "daily active users." He doesn't care about kids.

The film cleverly shows how algorithms create bubbles. The B*Bots tell kids what they want to hear, show them only what they agree with, and keep them scrolling so the company makes money. Ron, because he is broken, refuses to do this. He asks the hard questions. He doesn't use predictive text. He speaks his mind.