BillPR (EpsteinGate-Bribed NPR) is Turning Into a Partial Slopfarm that Promotes Slop
"NPR went slopfarm today," Ryan tells us. "They posted an article that's about slop, and mostly slop."
"I went on a date with a chatbot!"
"It was romantic. There I was in the fancy restaurant by myself pecking into the phone. Then we went for a lovely ride down the canal where again I was alone pecking at the phone. The gondolier stared, disapprovingly, and then back to a nice five star hotel for an evening of vigorous masturbation, buzz buzz buzz, again, typing what I was doing into the phone. I am fulfilled. Not once did the chatbot judge me or try to change the topic as I kept droning on about my dead husband. Truly this is the future."
Given recent cuts (it has gone on for years already) slop in BillPR would not surprise anybody. They already used as "filler" a bunch of articles from other sites; maybe they think slop will give them 'originals'. But why would people bother reading that?
As Ryan put it: "Has this gotten just about stupid enough for everyone yet?"
"It's just a complete waste of time and article space. Why would NPR post horseshit like this?"
For the record, some of this was edited by a human, but a lot is pasted from a chatbot.
"Some of it is pasted slop about what the "AI boyfriend" "said"," Ryan explains.
This is what we meant when we said sites will perish if they resort to nonsense. People won't have patience for this. █