Andrew Garfield reveals why he doesn't use social media: 'I'm too sensitive and permeable'
Andrew Garfield said he doesn't like using social media and though he is on Twitter, he only uses it only for news and to follow people who are funny.
Actor Andrew Garfield might be playing a social media influencer in his new movie Mainstream but that doesn't mean that the actor likes using such platforms.

According to Fox News, the British actor is starring as Link, a YouTube star who takes a young artist (Maya Hawke) under his wing. The two are soon consumed by what it means to become a viral celebrity.
Garfield told Fox News this was a departure for him in terms of character. "It is a very outlandish, extreme, kind of liberated, uncensored, untethered from reality in certain ways, kind of pure id, pure ego kind of character," he described.
He further added, "I got to be liberated and play something that was very, very foreign to me and maybe access parts of myself that maybe I had buried since I was a kid."
Even before signing on to the film, directed by Gia Coppola, Garfield believed in limiting his social media use. He explained, "I have a Twitter account, but it's not like a 'me' thing. It's like, I just have it to follow news and people that are funny. I don't have a reason to really use it particularly."
Garfield admitted, "I don't think using social media would be beneficial to my mental health. I think I'm too sensitive and permeable, and I want to stay that way."
The former Spider-Man star said he watched different YouTube personalities to help develop his character but also realized the pressure many social media stars face to constantly create content and continue to up the ante.
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Garfield said, "It's like that hustle culture thing, and it's not conducive to good mental health I would argue, but also it's not conducive to one's true self in a way because you're constantly chasing something outside or rules that have been placed upon you from the outside."
"I think it's unnatural to feel the pressure to be constantly making things. Inevitably you're going to start making things that must feel more mass-produced or feel less authentic to you or less, you know, from your own soul," he added.
In terms of who the villain of the story is, Garfield doesn't think it's so cut and dry. In the US Mainstream is in select theaters and available on-demand.