It's a clickbait trend. "News" outlets figured out that they get more clicks if they hint at things but don't tell you the most basic facts. If they tell you that it's the Mississippi governor, you don't have to click to find out it's the MS governor, for example.
FoxNews is the absolute worst about it. Every video they have is: "Click me to find out about this." "Click me to find out what this guy said," etc. They substitute the word "this" for the information you care about. Faux should be avoided at all costs because they're RINO mouthpieces for the Uniparty, but this is another good reason as well.
I actually actively avoid outlets that do this. I'll block them on platforms like YT or Rumble. I'll refuse to click them. I know it's my own personal war, but I'm beyond sick of being commoditized and disrespected by garbage like this.
It's a clickbait trend. "News" outlets figured out that they get more clicks if they hint at things but don't tell you the most basic facts. If they tell you that it's the Mississippi governor, you don't have to click to find out it's the MS governor, for example.
FoxNews is the absolute worst about it. Every video they have is: "Click me to find out about this." "Click me to find out what this guy said," etc. They substitute the word "this" for the information you care about. Faux should be avoided at all costs because they're RINO mouthpieces for the Uniparty, but this is another good reason as well.
I actually actively avoid outlets that do this. I'll block them on platforms like YT or Rumble. I'll refuse to click them. I know it's my own personal war, but I'm beyond sick of being commoditized and disrespected by garbage like this.
Yeah the Guns & Gadgets channel does this all the time, almost never is the news something in my own state.