Win / KotakuInAction2
KotakuInAction2
Sign In
DEFAULT COMMUNITIES All General AskWin Funny Technology Animals Sports Gaming DIY Health Positive Privacy
Reason: None provided.

I feel I should be clear on what I mean by psyop because inevitably language use gets quite shit online. Honest advertising is something I've never had a problem with even if it is bullshit sometimes how they do it. When I write about corporate psyops I'm meaning the stuff they do that's subliminal where they pay influencers to say certain things about their product and insert it into their content as propaganda while trying to pretend it's their own opinion. This often happens as 'review' content among other things or unboxing content and the person making the video tries to pretend they totally did it because they liked the product and wanted to try it.

Or they have people mysteriously making videos and then have social media sites tweak the algorithm to favour that particular content to make people believe that shit is either real or an opinion worth heeding. Seeing some sponsorship in a video where a youtuber shills a product unless it's something shady barely bothers me. See earlier rants about youtubers I like trying to shill mysterious sleep drug powders disguised as harmless drinks. I wonder if other people noticed that too because it's interesting how it suddenly stopped after awhile.

Edit: If there's one thing normies and especially normie women need to be educated on in this era is how all of this shit is real and it's not a conspiracy theory, it could end up saving a lot of people from mental breakdowns

85 days ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

I feel I should be clear on what I mean by psyop because inevitably language use gets quite shit online. Honest advertising is something I've never had a problem with even if it is bullshit sometimes how they do it. When I write about corporate psyops I'm meaning the stuff they do that's subliminal where they pay influencers to say certain things about their product and insert it into their content as propaganda while trying to pretend it's their own opinion. This often happens as 'review' content among other things or unboxing content and the person making the video tries to pretend they totally did it because they liked the product and wanted to try it.

Or they have people mysteriously making videos and then have social media sites tweak the algorithm to favour that particular content to make people believe that shit is either real or an opinion worth heeding. Seeing some sponsorship in a video where a youtuber shills a product unless it's something shady barely bothers me. See earlier rants about youtubers I like trying to shill mysterious sleep drug powders disguised as harmless drinks. I wonder if other people noticed that too because it's interesting how it suddenly stopped after awhile.

Edit: If there's one thing normies and especially normie women need to be educated on in this era is how all of this shit is real and it's not a conspiracy theory

85 days ago
2 score
Reason: Original

I feel I should be clear on what I mean by psyop because inevitably language use gets quite shit online. Honest advertising is something I've never had a problem with even if it is bullshit sometimes how they do it. When I write about corporate psyops I'm meaning the stuff they do that's subliminal where they pay influencers to say certain things about their product and insert it into their content as propaganda while trying to pretend it's their own opinion. This often happens as 'review' content among other things or unboxing content and the person making the video tries to pretend they totally did it because they liked the product and wanted to try it.

Or they have people mysteriously making videos and then have social media sites tweak the algorithm to favour that particular content to make people believe that shit is either real or an opinion worth heeding. Seeing some sponsorship in a video where a youtuber shills a product unless it's something shady barely bothers me. See earlier rants about youtubers I like trying to shill mysterious sleep drug powders disguised as harmless drinks. I wonder if other people noticed that too because it's interesting how it suddenly stopped after awhile.

85 days ago
1 score