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Topic: This Prank Proved That Americans Don’t Read Past Headlines (Read 1211 times)

member
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Find people go at issues in face to face interactions the same as this articles key point.
You get the nods or spew back mirroring but people tend to work on a very superficial plain.
If you dig deep you will find people are not paying attention at all or are thinking you are talking about something completely different. Perception comes into play but we humans tend to misread each other a enough of the time to be a issue.
So is it really that big a issue that people do not follow or read the article! Grin Grin
Insert sarcasm where you want,its interesting that we can be so limiting in interactions with people.
Internet heightens the issue,due to the unknown on the other side not being able to slap you.
hero member
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Just Americans? This is the norm for journalism, it's just about leveraging perceptions and exploiting them to create narratives

Not just Americans. It´s just that this particular experiment involved them as subjects. It may be most acute with them though.
newbie
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Just Americans? This is the norm for journalism, it's just about leveraging perceptions and exploiting them to create narratives
full member
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People now have less time to read and in fact they don't want read..when is news they look only on internet main headlines without click on link to read all article..not to mention books..with fb and other networks simply people are nervous and don't have patience to read

People nowadays especially on the social media are just basically scheming through the content and reading practically what they just want to read. This is very unfortunate. Children and the next generation won't be able to stand chapters and chapters of books now.
legendary
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That'd be a bit easy to abuse, I think just showing them up in a thread will be enough because people like that can't help themselves and just dogpile people without thinking, that's really the biggest issue I have with people like this.
hero member
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If people overreact to it all though, then they just completely destroy their own credibility, I'e been pissed off with the way people just make up conversations in their heads that have happened and post based on that rather than what's actually being said or on the screen in front of them.

You know we should put a badge along it! A "don't read in a debate" badge!
We spread such article and all the people commenting without reading get the badge! So they can't debate anymore in the forum xD
legendary
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If people overreact to it all though, then they just completely destroy their own credibility, I'e been pissed off with the way people just make up conversations in their heads that have happened and post based on that rather than what's actually being said or on the screen in front of them.
hero member
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By the way, I've been saying this elsewhere, but I wonder if we all shouldn't take part in a wave of headline trolling to get idiots to pick up on it who don't read the articles properly.

Not sure it would help much... The consequence would probably be just more spam. They don't really believe or care about the headline they just read, they just want to express their opinion. No matter the subject or the purpose of the thread/article/discussion.
legendary
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By the way, I've been saying this elsewhere, but I wonder if we all shouldn't take part in a wave of headline trolling to get idiots to pick up on it who don't read the articles properly.
sr. member
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This Prank Proved That Americans Don’t Read Past Headlines

By WakingTimes September 29, 2015

http://www.wakingtimes.com/2015/09/29/this-prank-proved-that-americans-dont-read-past-headlines/

Heather Callaghan, Contributor
Waking Times

But it may have proven more…

A social media April Fool’s prank spearheaded by NPR in 2014 is – ironically – drawing some reflection. This isn’t one of those frustrating social media psychology tests without the users’ knowledge. It appears to have been a lighthearted joke and a thank you to readers.

NPR posed a question with a link:

Why Doesn’t America Read Anymore?

According to writer Jay Hathaway, commenters squawked:

We totally do, NPR. Shut up. We read all the time. We’re reading your article right now!

Which only proved that they didn’t.

Had they actually gone to the link on the NPR website they wouldn’t have seen a story, but would have seen this message:

npr-social-media-prank

“If you are reading this, please like this post and do not comment on it,” it says.

But the social media post was heavily weighted with response-baggage, many of them paragraphs long, chiding NPR and defending their book diet trying to ward off perceived disapproval. But they didn’t read the “article,” did they? Some circles suggest that only 2 out of 10 people will read past the headline.

Even though it was all in good humor, it actually unwittingly proved a few points – both in the positive and something-to-think-about categories.


 
Writers already know people do this – it’s the frustration they feel when they visit their story’s post to see if there are discussions, only to see mile-long arguments based on a faulty presumption of the headline. They know the person hasn’t read the article before deciding a belief and that headlines invite rock-throwing. That seems to be par for the Internet course.

But even worse…

Is to see people sharing something as though it’s the gospel, commenting on it and calling for action – when you can clearly gather it’s a completely fabricated satirical headline. Unlike NPR, the satire sites and the malicious, fake websites are not making sure people finally get that it was a joke.  I’ve commented on threads about sources in hopes that the 12,000 people I saw share faulty posts did not throw literal rocks at the groups of people targeted in them. That is to say, please don’t believe the fake church sign that suggests Muslim Americans are about to jihad everyone in the U.S. For starters, have you ever seen a mosque sign?

islamicagenda
That same RV shows up behind every church sign – must be one of those “coexist” families.
Yet, there is no shortage of amazing information; and, unfortunately, the nature of the beast requires that catchy headlines be chosen unless the writer was the Stephen King of article authors and just the name could encourage a click. It’s hard for any writer or site to vie for attention. Even then, people often don’t read past the headlines.

This fact merely shows that people have limited amounts of time in their day and there’s nothing wrong with that. The NPR prank might show that people want approval and they want to argue before they know what’s what, but it also highlights that people simply feel crunched for time.

And this is a problem…

IdiocracyIt’s time to prioritize our lives if we want to take information to the next level. It’s hard to delve deeper into understanding when time for reading is spread throughout the day over a phone. Wisdom would require understanding to permeate all areas of our lives. This is difficult but it requires “batching” your time, like what would be effective at work.

Studies overwhelmingly show that multitasking is seriously unhealthy. Yet, we are compelled more and more to engage that way – is this making us more disengaged at life?

Reductionism

Lastly, are we being compelled only to accept communication in memes, bytes, blips, drips and drabs? Is Idiocracy happening before our eyes?

“Unaware of what year it was, Joe wandered the streets desperate for help. But the English language had deteriorated into a hybrid of hillbilly, valleygirl, inner-city slang and various grunts. Joe was able to understand them, but when he spoke in an ordinary voice he sounded pompous and…”

If so, we’d be better off taking some time to have deeper discussions or time alone to reflect. It’s impossible to ban together for better changes if we cannot even communicate ideas.

Sensory Overload

It might time to take charge of our online reading and harness our time, making sure to reconnect with your spirit, family and nature.

http://www.wakingtimes.com/2015/09/29/this-prank-proved-that-americans-dont-read-past-headlines/

this is so logical.. people should read the articles before comentted on it.. if not you would look like an idiot..
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Prank is awesome Smiley
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Most people just like hearing themselves talk, and this has been known for as least as long as people have been speaking.  

But I concede that the internet has made me stupid as all hell.  My attention span has been constricted to milliseconds.  Bye.

Yeah doesn't help, cause it's most of the time due to the amount of informations...

It proved that some people leave comments on articles after only reading the headline.

Or am I missing something?

No that's exactly that. But the funny thing is that some people are also commenting this thread without reading it Grin

Exactly. That soon becomes the inevitable point of the thread. It´s one of those self-fulfilling prophecies, I guess.
hero member
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Most people just like hearing themselves talk, and this has been known for as least as long as people have been speaking. 

But I concede that the internet has made me stupid as all hell.  My attention span has been constricted to milliseconds.  Bye.

Yeah doesn't help, cause it's most of the time due to the amount of informations...

It proved that some people leave comments on articles after only reading the headline.

Or am I missing something?

No that's exactly that. But the funny thing is that some people are also commenting this thread without reading it Grin
legendary
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Most people just like hearing themselves talk, and this has been known for as least as long as people have been speaking. 

But I concede that the internet has made me stupid as all hell.  My attention span has been constricted to milliseconds.  Bye.
legendary
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It proved that some people leave comments on articles after only reading the headline.

Or am I missing something?
hero member
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In Island people read a lot and every house has a huge library..it's a matter of culture and way of life

And you don't read headlines neither...

Your commentary is exactly like the ones after the false article dude! You're exactly like them you didn't went after the headlines!
sr. member
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In Island people read a lot and every house has a huge library..it's a matter of culture and way of life
sr. member
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Are you trying to say that the media would be non-existent if there weren't any headlines?

 Grin

More that people wouldn't have any opinion without headlines  Grin
legendary
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Are you trying to say that the media would be non-existent if there weren't any headlines?

 Grin
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Oh yeah, NPR's famous 2014 April Fool's joke.

NPR shared that article on their Facebook page and the comments were hilarious. Thing is, perhaps the real social experiment is to see if people can follow instructions:

Quote
If you are reading this, please like this post and do not comment on it. Then let's see what people have to say about this "story."
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