Monday, January 28, 2019

Bait-and-switch photos in lying clickbait

I’ve written many times about how clickbait purveyors will use unrelated photos to get people to click on their articles.
What follows are a few of the latest examples of this deceptive tactic.

Revcontent carried an article recently titled “28 celebrities who are mega Trump supporters now; Number 12 seems unreal.” It used a photo of comedian Jon Stewart, which is ridiculous. Stewart isn’t shy about promoting his liberal politics and hatred of Trump. Still, some people probably clicked on the article to see if Stewart was listed as a “mega Trump supporter.”

A sponsored article on Yahoo titled “Brooke’s grown-up son looks just like his father” used an old photo of Brooke Shields with Michael Jackson. The implication is that Jackson is the father of Shields’ son. Ha, ha, ha. Nevertheless, it probably got some people to click.


Speaking of celebrity children, another clickbait article titled “Sandra Bullock’s son is all grown up and he might look familiar to you” used a photo of 40-year-old pro football player James Harrison. There’s no relation between Harrison and Bullock’s adopted son. By the way, her son is only about 9 years old. So he’s not “all grown up.”


Outbrain distributed an article from Livesty titled “These yearbooks were printed and handed out to the whole student body before the teachers realized the photo error.” Versions of the article used different photos of pretty female cheerleaders.
I usually don’t click on these articles, but I made an exception in this case. The actual article used neither of the photos shown here. They were presented with the clickbait without explanation.
The first one with the blonde girl with red war paint was taken by Jason Duchow of Oldtown, Idaho.
I could not identify the origin of the photo of the three girls with black shorts and tops. If anyone knows, send me an email.




Sunday, January 27, 2019

Photoshopped fakes of Donald Trump, nature and airplanes in lying clickbait

Phony photos continue to be the milkshake that brings all the boys to the yard. They are used in lying clickbait to draw curious web surfers.
My latest installment on lying clickbait looks at such Photoshopped fakes.
Let’s get started.

A recent article distributed by Revcontent was titled “15 photos Donald Trump tried to keep from the public.” It featured a Photoshopped picture of the current president golfing. The picture was altered to give Trump a bigger belly. Included here are the lying clickbait article and the original photo for comparison.


Another Revcontent article was titled “60 unedited nature photos – This is not Photoshop.” Wrong! It featured a Photoshopped fake. The photo of a bear growling and peering into a tent was a composite created for a Photoshop contest. It has been debunked by Snopes.com and Tvurce.



Finally, a recent article distributed by Outbrain was titled “The F-15 is no match for this plane.” It used a picture of a fake aircraft purported to have a dual fuselage design. The original photo is of a Russian Antonov An-124 heavy transport aircraft. It has been Photoshopped to have two or three fuselages. (See article by Popular Mechanics.)





Saturday, January 26, 2019

Vampire TV shows stage comeback as zombie TV shows fade

Several years ago, you almost couldn’t change the channel on your TV without landing on a vampire show. The first half of the decade was flooded with shows about blood-suckers, including “True Blood,” “The Vampire Diaries” and “The Strain.” But the trend petered out. Those shows and others have since been canceled.
In its place came a wave of zombie shows, riding on the success of AMC’s “The Walking Dead.” But now zombie shows seem to be ebbing. Ratings are way down for “The Walking Dead”; Syfy recently canceled “Z Nation” after five seasons; and the CW’s “iZombie” is preparing to air its fifth and final season starting in May.
But it looks like vampire TV shows could be staging a comeback.
Earlier this month, Fox premiered “The Passage,” a drama series based on the trilogy of vampire-themed novels by Justin Cronin. It joins Syfy’s vampire apocalypse show “Van Helsing,” which was just renewed for a fourth season.
In March, FX is set to air “What We Do in the Shadows,” a comedy series based the 2014 film of the same name. It follows three vampires who have been roommates for hundreds of years.
Meanwhile, the CW has ordered a pilot for a possible series based on the 1987 vampire movie “Lost Boys.” Rob Thomas, showrunner for “iZombie,” is executive producing the new show, according to Deadline.
The following are lists of TV shows featuring vampires and zombies. I’ve included only English-language, live-action series.

Vampire TV shows:

Angel (WB, 1999-2004)
Being Human (BBC, 2008-2013)
Being Human (Syfy, 2011-2014)
Blade (Spike, 2006)
Blood Ties (Lifetime, 2007)
Buffy the Vampire Slayer (WB, UPN; 1997-2003)
Cliffhangers: The Curse of Dracula (NBC, 1979)
Dark Shadows (ABC, 1966-1971)
Dark Shadows (NBC, 1991)
Death Valley (MTV, 2011)
Demons (ITV, 2009)
Dracula (NBC, 2013-2014)
Dracula: The Series (syndicated, 1990-1991)
Forever Knight (CBS, USA Network; 1992-1996)
From Dusk till Dawn: The Series (El Rey, 2014-2016)
The Gates (ABC, 2010)
Kindred: The Embraced (Fox, 1996)
The Lair (Here TV, 2007-2009)
Moonlight (CBS, 2007-2008)
My Babysitter’s a Vampire (Disney Channel, 2011-2012)
The Originals (CW, 2013-2018)
The Passage (Fox, 2019-present)
Penny Dreadful (Showtime, 2014-2016)
Preacher (AMC, 2016-present)
The Strain (FX, 2014-2017)
True Blood (HBO, 2008-2014)
Ultraviolet (Channel 4, 1998)
The Vampire Diaries (CW, 2009-2017)
Vampire High (YTV, 2001-2002)
Van Helsing (Syfy, 2016-present)
Young Dracula (CBBC, 2006-2014)

Zombie TV shows:

Death Valley (MTV, 2011)
Fear the Walking Dead (AMC, 2015-present)
Helix (Syfy, 2014-2015)
In the Flesh (BBC, 2013-2014)
iZombie (CW, 2015-present)
Santa Clarita Diet (Netflix; 2017-present)
The Walking Dead (AMC, 2010-present)
Z Nation (Syfy, 2014-2018)

Photos: Promotional art for “The Passage” and “Van Helsing.”


Friday, January 18, 2019

It’s time to revisit Netflix’s DVD-by-mail service

Movie fans dissatisfied with the selection of films on Netflix and other subscription video-on-demand services have a great, old-school solution available to them: Netflix DVDs by mail.
That’s right; the business that gave Netflix its start is still ticking. And it offers the best selection of movies to watch of any service. You just have to be willing to wait a day or two to get each one delivered to your home and use your DVD or Blu-ray Disc player, if you remember how.
Streaming services are focusing more on original content and less on licensed content, including current and catalog movies. That’s created an opening for Netflix DVDs to fill. Unfortunately Netflix is concentrating on its streaming future and isn’t that interested in promoting a service it sees as having a limited lifespan.
So it’s up to diehard fans of Netflix’s U.S.-only DVD.com service to get the word out.
As of Dec. 31, there were 2.7 million subscribers to the service. It’s a number that’s been slowly dwindling away. In fact the service lost 624,000 subscribers in past year.
But “we few, we happy few, we band of brothers” must stand together to keep this vital service going.
The standard plan (one disc out at a time, unlimited rentals) costs $7.99 a month for DVDs and $9.99 a month for high-definition Blu-ray Discs. The premier plan (two discs out at a time, unlimited rentals) costs $11.99 for DVDs and $14.99 for Blu-ray.

Wednesday, January 16, 2019

More 2019 predictions: Walmart buys Roku, tough year ahead for Snap and Twitter

Some pundits like to wait until a new year has begun to trot out their predictions for the year ahead.
So, here’s a roundup of predictions from a few Johnny-come-latelies.

Walmart Buys Roku

BTIG media analyst Richard Greenfield thinks Walmart will buy streaming video platform Roku.
Walmart’s first foray into the online video market with its 2010 acquisition of Vudu has been a “clear failure,” Greenfield said in a Jan. 7 blog post. Now the retailer is exploring its own subscription video-on-demand service, but is late to the market.
“If the goal is to increase time spent with Walmart to drive retail spending (as Prime Video does for Amazon), we believe acquiring Roku could be Walmart’s most compelling entry point into streaming video,” Greenfield said.

Snap, Twitter stocks cut in half

Scott Galloway, professor of marketing at the NYU Stern School of Business, sees a tough year ahead for social media firms Snap and Twitter. In a Jan. 13 post on Seeking Alpha, he said both companies will have their valuations cut in half this year.
When he published his article, Snap was trading at $6.28 a share (it was 5.64 at Wednesday’s market close) and Twitter was at $32.87 a share (now 32.47).
He called Snap “the walking dead.” Meanwhile, Twitter has seen its content overrun by bots and foreign agents, Galloway said.

A Big 3 network abandons its evening news broadcast

Robert Silvershein, a senior adviser with research firm TDG, thinks one of the Big 3 TV networks (ABC, CBS and NBC) will announce the end of its evening news broadcast after the 2020 election.
“2019 will be the year that TV network executives are forced to come to grips with the financial realities of their business,” he wrote in a blog post. “A television product that is expensive to make, with a 40-year decline in ratings, and a median viewer age of 60+ should have been cancelled a long time ago. But the prestige of owning a #1 evening news broadcast has been a legacy difficult to part with.”

Related articles:

Top 20 celebrities predicted to die in 2019 (Jan. 1, 2019)

2019 will be big year for plant-based meat, beer-brewing machines and ‘Harry Potter’ mobile game (Jan. 2, 2019)

2019 psychic predictions for Donald Trump, Taylor Swift and Apple (Jan. 14, 2019)

Photo: Limited-edition Roku SE streaming player sold exclusively at Walmart stores for Black Friday 2018. (Roku)

Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Samsung, Google win CES 2019 media buzz

Social media analytics firm Talkwalker on Tuesday said CES 2019 received over 1.02 million mentions on news sites, blogs, forums and social media.
Samsung was the top brand during the annual consumer electronics show, held Jan. 8-11, in Las Vegas. Samsung merited over 62,800 mentions for its 8K televisions and other new gadgets, Talkwalker said. Samsung’s 219-inch television called The Wall was an attention-grabber.
Google came in second with over 58,400 mentions. Google had a huge presence at CES 2019 for its Google Assistant software, which has found its way into scores of electronic devices.
Amazon placed third with over 49,800 mentions. Amazon’s Alexa voice assistant rivaled Google Assistant for announcements at the show.
LG Electronics was fourth with over 42,800 mentions. LG made jaws drop with its immersive “OLED Falls” exhibit on the show floor. It featured 260 LG OLED digital signage screens, in curved and flat configurations.
Apple came in fifth place with over 41,100 mentions. It did not exhibit at CES 2019, but purchased an advertisement that wrapped around a building across the street from the Las Vegas Convention Center.
Some products at CES 2019 that generated buzz on social media, according to Talkwalker:
  • Youcam’s augmented reality app that lets you try new hair colors, makeup, etc.
  • Royole FlexPai foldable smartphone
  • Foldimate, a laundry-folding robot
  • Wicharge, a wireless technology to charge your devices no matter where you are in the room
  • BMW’s self-riding motorcycle
  • Amazon Alexa after it interrupted a Qualcomm presentation at CES saying “No, that’s not true.”
  • Hyundai Elevate car than can also walk
  • Hoobox Robotics Wheelie, a motorized wheelchair that can be directed through facial expressions
Photos: LG OLED Falls (LG Electronics); and Samsung’s The Wall television (Samsung)


Monday, January 14, 2019

2019 psychic predictions for Donald Trump, Taylor Swift and Apple

Psychic predictions are silly, because no one can see into the future. Still, people like the idea of someone who’s able to foretell what lies ahead. And psychic predictions make for fun reading.
Here’s my roundup of psychic predictions for 2019.

Apple merges with Samsung; Penguins invade cities

Nikki, “the Psychic to the Stars,” made over 700 mostly vague predictions for 2019 on her website.
She takes a shotgun approach to most categories. For instance, she names about 90 people in her broad category of “Death and Health Watch.” With the sheer volume of guesses, she is bound to be “correct” on some of them.
Here is a sampling of her more interesting predictions:
  • Apple and Samsung merge
  • A tsunami in Malibu, California
  • An attack at the Washington Post
  • Arrest made in the Natalie Wood case
  • An arrest in the Madeline McCann case
  • A shark will kill a movie star
  • A soap opera star and a Washington politician sex scandal
  • The world’s largest carrot will be grown in the U.S.
  • Kangaroos will invade a city in Australia
  • Large vampire bats invading a city
  • Dogs invading cities
  • Penguins invading cities

Taylor Swift unlucky in love, again; Cher and John Mayer hook up

Psychic John Cohan made a bunch of celebrity predictions for columnist Cindy Adams of Page Six.
Here are a few:
  • Taylor Swift remakes “Valley of the Dolls.” Career, great. Love life, ungreat.
  • Cher and John Mayer. Romantic relationship
  • Roseanne’s revenge. New TV show! A success!

Assassination attempt on President Trump

British psychic Craig Hamilton-Parker believes Nostradamus predicted an assassination attempt on U.S. President Donald Trump, the U.K. Express reported. “I feel Trump will have a second term but Nostradamus’s predicted assassination attempt will be in the second term,” Hamilton-Parker told Express.co.uk.

Trump poised for re-election; Apple debuts electric car

Psychic Judy Hevenly made a bunch of predictions on her website.
She predicted that President Donald Trump will be re-elected because of a strong economy and consumer confidence.
“There will be further revelations of those in the administration around him trying to take him down, but they won’t succeed,” she said.
She also predicted that Apple will come out with an electric car in 2019.

Photo: Storefront psychic fortuneteller in Boston in 2009. (Photo by John Stephen Dwyer)

Sunday, January 13, 2019

Celebrities at CES 2019: Foo Fighters, Rita Ora, Elle Goulding and more

CES 2019 was light on celebrities attending the trade show itself, but was packed with star power at private company events.
On the show floor, you could find mostly professional athletes and celebrity chefs.
Magician and CES regular Penn Jillette was at the Withings booth. TV host and radio personality Steve Harvey spoke at the CES Entertainment Summit and walked the show floor.
Actress Aisha Tyler hosted the Dell press event. Recording artist and producer Pharrell Williams appeared at the Sony media event.
As usual, the big stars were at private, invitation-only events.
Singer Rita Ora performed at MGM Grand’s Hakkasan nightclub for Spotify.
Rock band Foo Fighters performed at the Joint at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino for JBL by Harman.
Actor Jamie Foxx entertained the crowd at the Mansion at MGM Grand for Handl as a guest DJ.
Musician Mark Ronson and singer Ellie Goulding performed at iHeartRadio Live@CES, this year co-hosted by Mastercard.
Lenovo held evening concerts with Jakob Dylan (with co-sponsor Microsoft) and Daughtry (with co-sponsor Intel). Singer-songwriter Chris Daughtry also spoke at the CES Entertainment Summit.
Alienware sponsored a concert featuring electronic music group The Glitch Mob at Brooklyn Bowl at the Linq.


Photos: Foo Fighters at Harman concert (Foo Fighters) and Pharrell Williams at Sony media event (Consumer Technology Association)
 













CES 2019 buzzword of the show: 5G

The top buzzword at CES 2019 was 5G, the abbreviation for fifth-generation cellular networks. You’re going to hear that term a lot in the year ahead as wireless carriers rollout their high-speed, low-latency broadband networks.
CES, the world’s largest consumer technology trade show, ended Friday after a week-long run in Las Vegas. It featured keynote presentations from AT&T and Verizon, media briefings from wireless chipmakers Intel and Qualcomm and host of other companies explaining the impact of 5G on various industries.
Runners up for buzzword of CES 2019 included 8K and smart.
This year’s show saw the major television makers like LG and Samsung unveil 8K TV sets, which have twice the resolution of today’s 4K TVs. But a lack of native content for the sets will delay adoption of the super-high-definition televisions.
Smart “everything” was another key theme at the CES 2019. The show saw the introductions of scores of smart products from home appliances to oddball items like smart toilets and smart sofas.

CES buzzwords through the years:

2010: Green
2011: Smart
2012: Ultra
2013: Super
2014: Curved
2015: Wearable
2016: HDR (high dynamic range)
2017: Voice
2018: AI (artificial intelligence)
2019: 5G

This year’s CES also saw some non-traditional companies exhibiting. They included farm equipment giant Deere & Company, consumer products maker Procter & Gamble, plant-based meat substitute innovator Impossible Foods, and unbreakable pantyhose maker Sheertex.
CES 2019 attracted about 180,000 attendees and more 4,500 exhibitors covering more than 2.9 million net square feet of exhibit space, the Consumer Technology Association said Friday.

Related articles:

Week in review: CES 2019 coverage (Jan. 12, 2019)

Photos: 5G promoted at the Qualcomm booth, Intel booth and by Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg. (Photo credits: Patrick Seitz and Consumer Technology Association).



Wednesday, January 2, 2019

2019 will be big year for plant-based meat, beer-brewing machines and ‘Harry Potter’ mobile game

The new year has begun and most industry pundits are out with their year-ahead predictions for 2019.
What follows is a summary of some interesting trends and forecasts I have seen. They cover food, consumer electronics, video games and other fields.

Plant-based meat catches on

Grocery-store chains Kroger and Whole Foods Market listed plant-based foods among their top food trend predictions for 2019.
“Consumers are finding it is easier than ever before to incorporate more plant-based fare into their daily diets,” Kroger said. “By electing to go meat or dairy free, whether for a meal, a Meatless Monday, Flexitarian Friday, or every day of the week, there will be more plant-based options available to power through the day. Last year, 31% of consumers participated in meat-free days once per week.”
Kroger’s store brand Simple Truth sells meatless patties, tofu, coconut milk, lentils, hummus and other items.
Whole Foods predicted that faux meat and plant-based foods, such as mushroom jerky, meatless patties and cauliflower-based foods, will continue to grow in popularity.
Forbes magazine highlighted the growing number of faux meat snacks.
“Eating more plants doesn’t mean you have to forgo beloved meaty flavors and textures,” the magazine said. “Mushrooms like king trumpet will play a key role here, flexing their flavor and texture powers in tasty jerky, ‘pork’ rinds and ‘bacon’ snacks (used in both PigOut Pigless Bacon Chips and Snacklins Cracklins Without the Pork) to offer up a satisfying crunch. Beyond these reinvented veggies and plant-based products, vegetarians can indulge in Quevos Egg White Chips for even more snacking.”
Impossible Foods will introduce its Impossible Burger 2.0 next week at CES 2019 in Las Vegas.

Home beer-brewing machines take off

Forbes also predicted the rise of home beer-brewing systems.
LG Electronics will debut a capsule-based craft beer-making machine, LG HomeBrew, at CES 2019 next week.
Industry leader PicoBrew sells six do-it-yourself brewing and distilling machines. PicoBrew also will be at this year’s CES consumer electronics show.
Anheuser-Busch InBev and Keurig Green Mountain formed a joint venture in January 2017 to develop an in-home alcohol drink system.

IPOs could include Beyond Meat, MZ and Peloton

This year is expected to be a big one for initial public offerings on the stock market.
Notable tech companies expected to field IPOs in 2019 include ride-hailing firms Uber and Lyft, picture-sharing social network Pinterest, workplace-messaging platform Slack, big-data analytics firm Palantir Technologies and food-delivery service Postmates.
Consumer-focused IPOs could include Beyond Meat, which sells plant-based meat products, and Peloton Interactive, maker of stationary exercise bikes with spin class subscriptions.
MZ, the mobile video game developer behind “Game of War: Fire Age” and “Mobile Strike” also is considering going public this year, Renaissance Capital said.

Harry Potter mobile game will be the next ‘Pokemon Go’

Niantic’s new mobile video game “Harry Potter: Wizards Unite” will draw comparisons to the company’s “Pokemon Go,” App Annie predicted. “Pokemon Go” popularized location-based augmented-reality gameplay in 2016.
App Annie expects the Harry Potter game to be a chart-topper in terms of downloads, usage and consumer spending when it comes out sometime this year.
“Pokemon Go shattered mobile gaming records, clearing $100 million in its first two weeks and becoming the fastest game to reach $1 billion in consumer spend,” said Lexi Sydow, senior market insights analyst at App Annie. “While we don’t expect it to surpass Pokemon Go’s launch, Harry Potter: Wizards Unite is set to clear $100 million in its first 30 days — which is no small feat.”

Governments will crack down on video game loot boxes

Juniper Research predicts that loot boxes in video games will be banned across Europe and North America in 2019. Regulators will treat in-game purchases of mystery items as a form of gambling.
Countries such as Belgium and the Netherlands will lead the move to ban loot boxes, which mostly target minors. Game publishers will remove the feature through game updates this year, Juniper said.

Amazon will introduce a pet tracker

CCS Insight predicts that e-commerce giant Amazon.com will launch a pet tracker in 2019. The small tracking device, which can be attached to a dog or cat collar, will sell for little more than cost, the research firm said.
CCS predicts that by 2020, more pet trackers will be activated on mobile networks than Apple smartwatches. Wireless carriers will push the devices as part of their Internet of Things strategy.

Connected home devices see fast growth

As the smartphone market stagnates, the connected home market will drive consumer electronics sales in 2019, Dealerscope predicted.
“The Connected Home segment is experiencing impressive growth both from the sheer mass of product available, to the innovation in the space,” said Rob Stott, editorial director for CT Lab at NAPCO Media. “It’s getting easier and cheaper to make one’s home connected. And as such, retailers will find greater benefits from this space than any other available to them.”

Robots will take 10% of U.S. jobs in 2019

Research firm Forrester predicts that 10% of U.S. jobs will be lost to automation in 2019. At the same time, these technologies will be responsible for creating the equivalent of 3% of today’s jobs, VentureBeat reported.
Robotic process automation and artificial intelligence will create digital workers for more than 40% of companies next year, Forrester said. Software will automate tasks traditionally performed by humans.

App-enabled rental scooters will fizzle out

Washington Post technology columnist Geoffrey Fowler predicted that app-enabled electric scooters (such as those from Bird and Lime) will “fizzle out” in the year ahead.
“Riding an electric scooter around town is fun — at first,” he said. “But as cities across the United States have learned this year, they’re also vandalism targets, a sidewalk nuisance and an injury risk.”

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

Top 20 celebrities predicted to die in 2019

For the third straight year, actor Kirk Douglas leads the list of celebrities and public figures predicted to die in the year ahead, according to the Stiffs.com dead pool.
Douglas is 102 years old, so the odds of him surviving another year are increasingly against him. Four of the top five are centenarians.
Of the top 20 public figures marked for death in 2018 by Stiffs.com, just four died: former U.S. President George H.W. Bush, Christian evangelist Billy Graham, U.S. Senator John McCain and Marvel Comics creator Stan Lee.
Who’s getting a tombstone in 2019?
What follows are the top 20 public figures (with their ages) predicted to die in 2019, according to Stiffs.com.
  1. Kirk Douglas, 102, actor
  2. Olivia de Havilland, 102, actress
  3. Herman Wouk, 103, author
  4. Bob Dole, 95, retired U.S. senator
  5. Roberta McCain, 106, political matriarch
  6. Prince Philip, 97, husband of Queen Elizabeth II
  7. Beverly Cleary, 102, children’s book writer
  8. Bob Barker, 95, game show host
  9. Carol Channing, 97, actress
  10. Jimmy Carter, 94, former U.S. president
  11. I.M. Pei, 101, architect
  12. Vera Lynn, 101, singer
  13. Doris Day, 96, actress
  14. Ruth Bader Ginsburg, 85, U.S. Supreme Court justice
  15. Betty White, 96, actress
  16. Henry Kissinger, 95, former U.S. secretary of state
  17. Hugh Downs, 97, TV news anchor
  18. Sumner Redstone, 95, media magnate
  19. Olivia Newton-John, 70, singer
  20. Valerie Harper, 79, actress
Here are some notable younger public figures predicted to die this year by multiple Stiffs.com dead-pool players:

52. Artie Lange, 51, comedian
75. Val Kilmer, 59, actor
94. Shannen Doherty, 47, actress
119. Charlie Sheen, 53, actor
130. Heather Locklear, 57, actress
153. Harvey Weinstein, 66, movie producer
165. Demi Lovato, 26, singer
174. Michael J. Fox, 57, actor
202. Lindsay Lohan, 32, actress
225. Johnny Depp, 55, actor
240. Sinead O’Connor, 52, singer
244. Andy Dick, 53, comedian
246. Bashar al-Assad, 53, Syrian president

Photo: Demi Lovato