Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I generally ignore the advertising side bars and news top bars but almost everything I click on seems to want to take me to sensational stories and pictures. The Yahoo revamp has big glossy stories when I sign in, and rather than the unusual and occasionally informative articles that it used to show, this now appears much more like the Daily Mail with how atrocious modern life is, all the celeb nonsense and to quote the great bard John Cooper Clarke the kind of pornography that is clean.


I ignore it but it is getting visually annoying. Unlike Advanced Painters of Dulwich. Great to know if it just me that is bothered. I of course will write them a very strong letter!

This is a central question for me.


I guess the first time it really hit home was reading George Orwell's 'Coming Up for Air' - the 'legs!' headline. Certainly his best novel.


People seem to be entrained to buying this paper (and others like it) and taking it both literally and as important. Why do retailers think it appropriate to stock it despite what are often obviously inflammatory and stupid headlines?


Do tv soap operas instill a similar fascination? I think the likes of 'news 24' certainly does.


Clearly, this is quite a disturbing issue - all the questions raised by Adorno are quickly coming home to roost.

Clickbait is the bane of the online world. The dirty truth is that online media owners don't know what does and doesn't work when it comes to online advertising, so they use clickbait to rack up massive page views, which they then desperately try to sell to whoever will buy, regardless of approriateness to the brand. Just look the The Independent ? a gracious almost boring newspaper turned into a ghastly garish superficial sewer.

Clickbait - I like that term. I understand that they need revenue but it just seems to be more in your face. Occasionally I get snared by a 'what amazing photos' where I foolishly go to the site only to find that the images are all on separate pages and each one tries to lure you onto another site including guarantees of rapid weight loss.


The Yahooamil page is really peeing me off as there is an in your face pic of a glamorous celeb with a secret or whatever where they used to have a smaller top banner with waht were occasionally interesting news pieces rather than glossy gossip.


Does Gmail Hotmail etc do similar?

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • There's a great badminton club at the Harris girls academy. It runs Friday from 5.30 to 6.45. for more experienced players, they have sessions on Wednesday and Friday, too but that's subject to skill levels 
    • There seem to be all sorts of blocks for this event being mounted on the Common, one is that it was 'designed especially' for the current site, though the organisers seem to have had absolutely no problem rejigging their plans to the original site footprint to expand the event to what we had last year- which I think really imposed on a large part of the park and spoilt the feel. I would suggest pressing very hard for relocation to the Common ( also closer to transport links). There must be a way, surely? If not, then wholesale relocation to a more suitable venue. I just do not think the park should be subjected to a festival-goer footfall of 60,000 plus over the summer.
    • I absolutely will. Fed up of property developments that are funded from offshore investors and price out local people. Fed up of the demise of social rents and the growing crisis of families in bed and breakfast. Fed up of young people being unable to save deposits, start families and generally have the same security of tenure that previous generations had. So yes, I will drill down into the financing, affordability, where the properties aer being advertised for sale, and how many are genuinely for social rent. Otherwise, no opposition to redeveloping that site in that way. 
    • There is now reseach emerging into the impact of festivals on nesting birds and I will be collating that for the consultations this time round. That research is showing that walls of suddenly imposed sound can send birds away never to return to their nests. Some species are affected more than others. Starlings are particularly sensitive. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...