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This morning, while having coffee, I was scrolling through my feed and noticed that the same news story had appeared on different sites almost simultaneously. It was about Lane Riggs, who passed Rajah Karut on the final lap to win the truck race in Nashville, and the reports there described the final stretch of the race in great detail. At first, I didn’t even understand why it had spread so quickly across different websites, as if someone were deliberately publishing everything in sync.
Then I started thinking that the same thing happens with celebrity news only there’s even more confusion. Because sometimes it feels like you’re reading the same story, just worded differently. This isn’t the first time I’ve noticed this. Have you ever noticed where the news first appears?
Yeah, I saw the story about Lane Riggs, too. It had a really exciting conclusion. He overtook Karut in the last few minutes of the race. I saw about the story here https://getcelebrity.com/ , and they explained in depth how he was able to accelerate in the last part of the race, and win. He strategically did not break away early, keeping his energy for the last lap. This is really a time when strategy is more important than the actual start. When you read some studies like this you do tend to start looking at even ordinary sports and showbiz news in a different way. You do start to see that there is logically something behind the news. Do you follow more baseball or Hollywood?
This morning, while having coffee, I was scrolling through my feed and noticed that the same news story had appeared on different sites almost simultaneously. It was about Lane Riggs, who passed Rajah Karut on the final lap to win the truck race in Nashville, and the reports there described the final stretch of the race in great detail. At first, I didn’t even understand why it had spread so quickly across different websites, as if someone were deliberately publishing everything in sync.
Then I started thinking that the same thing happens with celebrity news only there’s even more confusion. Because sometimes it feels like you’re reading the same story, just worded differently. This isn’t the first time I’ve noticed this. Have you ever noticed where the news first appears?
Yeah, I saw the story about Lane Riggs, too. It had a really exciting conclusion. He overtook Karut in the last few minutes of the race. I saw about the story here https://getcelebrity.com/ , and they explained in depth how he was able to accelerate in the last part of the race, and win. He strategically did not break away early, keeping his energy for the last lap. This is really a time when strategy is more important than the actual start. When you read some studies like this you do tend to start looking at even ordinary sports and showbiz news in a different way. You do start to see that there is logically something behind the news. Do you follow more baseball or Hollywood?