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Showing posts from October, 2025

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Finding Meaning In A Media-Saturated World

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Finding Meaning In A Media-Saturated World 

The Psychology of Going Viral: How to Engineer Content That Explode Online

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THE PSYCHLOGY OF VIRAL CONTENT HOW TO ENGINEER CONTENT THAT EXPLODES ONLINE 

The Evolution of Attention: From TV Monoculture to TikTok’s Algorithmic Age

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THE EVOLUTION OF ATTENTION: HOW TIKTOK AND GENERATIVE AI REWIRED MEDIA, CULTURE AND IDENTITY   FROM TELEVISION'S  MONOCULTURE TO TIKTOK'S ALGORITHMIC FEEDS, EVERY SHIFT IN MEDIA RESHAPES HOW  WE SEE— AND WHO WE BECOME 

How to Spot Media Bias and Read the News Critically

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Once, the news felt like stone : Steady, serious and certain. Anchors in gray suits promised, “ just the facts”.  Walter Cronkite closed each broadcast with, “ And that’s the way it is”,  and millions believed him. But neutrality in journalism has always been more complicated than it appeared.  Even deciding which stories to cover and which to leave out shapes public opinion.  What was once seen as a straightforward, objective voice turns out to have been built on selective choices and limited competition. Today, the news feels noisier and more divided than ever.  Let’s look at where the idea of objectivity came from, why bias feels stronger now, and how we can navigate the media landscape more thoughtfully.