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10 votes
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The system that fuels media negativity
12 votes -
How social media shapes our perceptions about crime
7 votes -
US local news outlets need tax breaks to help save democracy, says advocate
3 votes -
BuzzFeed says it will use AI to help create content, stock jumps 150%
8 votes -
How Finland is teaching a generation to spot misinformation
8 votes -
New Jersey requiring students to learn 'media literacy' to fight 'disinformation'
15 votes -
Top Down News
2 votes -
Former WarnerBros executive Jason Killar on the streaming wars and the future of media
@Jason Kilar: The @WSJ asked me to write about the streaming wars and the future of media. Here is the essay + a Twitter thread which covers a few of the main points. https://t.co/BzRQIEAZMY via @WSJ
5 votes -
CNN stole my video
9 votes -
World Cup organisers have apologised to a Danish television station whose live broadcast was interrupted by Qatari officials who threatened to break their camera equipment
6 votes -
How "Unser Mitteleuropa" is building a network of right-wing media in Europe
5 votes -
As the midterm elections approach in the US, does Finland have the answer to fake news?
6 votes -
Reddit CEO Steve Huffman discusses how he wants every subreddit to be its own media company and he wants to see money being exchanged from users to users and users to subreddits
35 votes -
How life has changed for Afghans since the Taliban takeover
10 votes -
What are some of your favorite melodramas?
From Wikipedia A modern melodrama is a dramatic work in which the plot, typically sensationalized and for a strong emotional appeal, takes precedence over detailed characterization. Melodramas...
From Wikipedia
A modern melodrama is a dramatic work in which the plot, typically sensationalized and for a strong emotional appeal, takes precedence over detailed characterization. Melodramas typically concentrate on dialogue that is often bombastic or excessively sentimental, rather than action. Characters are often flat, and written to fulfill stereotypes.
Contemporarily, we use the word melodrama for narrative works that go to great lengths to induce certain kinds of emotion at all costs, to detriment of the internal cohesion of both plot and characterization, often in a manner that some consider cheesy, corny, or excessive. All soap operas are melodramas, as are many movies and TV shows. Some melodramas are cheap and fail to achieve their effects, while others can be more rich and even sophisticated. In a way, many mainstream stories are, to some extent, melodramas, even when there are other, more salient genres. There's melodrama in action, crime, and science fiction.
Here are some examples of what I consider more or less contemporary melodramas:
- The Young and the Restless
- Grey's Anatomy
- The Color Purple
- Downton Abbey
- Dawson's Creek
- Avatar
- Gone with the Wind
And here are some stories that are not melodrama, but contain a whole lot of it:
7 votes -
The philosophical guide to software piracy
14 votes -
The hunger
14 votes -
The irresistible force vs the ironized object
2 votes -
The impact of digital media on children’s intelligence
10 votes -
Does anyone else feel like Tildes gets less effective at surfacing new stuff the longer you're on it?
I notice this primarily with the YouTube videos. I've started to notice that the videos I see posted in here I have already had recommended to me by YouTube. And I realize it must be because when...
I notice this primarily with the YouTube videos. I've started to notice that the videos I see posted in here I have already had recommended to me by YouTube. And I realize it must be because when I watch a video here, the YouTube algorithm decides I'm interested in that kind of thing. So, functionally, by posting and interacting with content in Tildes we are tuning the various algorithmic recommendation feeds that we interact with to view us all similarly.
It's just an interesting side effect I noticed and some food for thought about the effectiveness of a link aggregator or discussion forum at surfacing novel, interesting content we might not find otherwise. In part, this could just be an effect of Tildes being kind of small and having lots of self-selection biases for its user population. Perhaps if it was more diverse we'd be exposed to more things that break the mold and recommendation algorithms won't be able to pin it all down as easily. In fact, we may be able to use this effect as a way to test the breadth and diversity of content and types of people a site is attracting.
11 votes -
The first standard to assure a photo’s authenticity has been created
7 votes -
BBC licence fee to be abolished in 2027 and funding frozen
32 votes -
Chris Wallace announces he is leaving Fox News, joining CNN+
11 votes -
We lied to you and we'll do it again
11 votes -
Where are all the Black teen comedies?
4 votes -
The Guardian is trying to intimidate Eoin Higgins into retracting his coverage of transphobia in their newsroom
14 votes -
CNN, spilled milk, and why any of this matters
8 votes -
Former US president Donald Trump launches 'TRUTH' social
24 votes -
Epistemology of the Internet — and of traditional media
6 votes -
“Hacker X”—the American who built a pro-Trump fake news empire—unmasks himself
21 votes -
How one man was wrongly accused in Kongsberg attack – many international media outlets picked up on speculative tweets
11 votes -
Christopher Biggins’ car-crash Superman interview proves how toxic the media has become
6 votes -
Four things I liked in Q3
1 vote -
China's media cracks down on 'effeminate' styles
8 votes -
High Court of Australia rules that media outlets are publishers of third-party Facebook comments
12 votes -
Anti-vaccine protesters storm BBC HQ – years after it moved out
14 votes -
How major media outlets screwed up the vaccine 'breakthrough' story
12 votes -
Is Glenn Greenwald the new master of right-wing media?
6 votes -
A remarkable silence: Media blackout after key witness against Assange admits lying
20 votes -
The day I almost decided to hold the press to account
8 votes -
Screenshot, save, share, shame: Making sense of new media through screenshots and public shame by Frances Corry
4 votes -
Looking for more home and building related content!
I'm really not sure if I posted this in the right place, but I have been watching the Youtube channel "The B1M" and the guy's other channel "Tomorrow's Build" and I really like his type of...
I'm really not sure if I posted this in the right place, but I have been watching the Youtube channel "The B1M" and the guy's other channel "Tomorrow's Build" and I really like his type of content. I've also been watching tv shows about homes and the types of people who live in what homes in which parts of the country (Denmark). I also watched a couple of episodes of "The World's Most Extraordinary Homes" on Netflix...
So yeah, I obviously really have an itching for more content along the lines of buildings and especially homes. So, does anyone have suggestion on what to watch next?
6 votes -
How some Americans are breaking out of political echo chambers
14 votes -
The rise of elevated stupidity - America’s hot-take economy has created a kind of smart that is indistinguishable from stupid
28 votes -
Five things the media does to manufacture outrage
14 votes -
Confronting the banality of modern evil
5 votes -
EEAS special report update: Short assessment of narratives and disinformation around the COVID-19 pandemic
4 votes -
AT&T may spin off WarnerMedia assets to Discovery
3 votes -
Substack is selling soap operas
8 votes