What ambiguity?
Comment on Booking.com ignored me after my bedbug nightmare
meekah@lemmy.world 3 days agoTbf, reading the headline I also assumed the author accidentally took them home. I’m pretty sure this ambiguity is on purpose, and should be frowned upon.
deranger@sh.itjust.works 3 days ago
meekah@lemmy.world 3 days ago
The ambiguity of what exactly is meant by ‘nightmare’
deranger@sh.itjust.works 3 days ago
That’s on you for assuming. Had the author not bought new clothes and washed the rest that would have been the outcome.
meekah@lemmy.world 3 days ago
The thing I’m trying to get at: a good title shouldn’t leave room for assumptions, and I’m pretty sure this kinda stuff is being done just to make you click, not to provide good journalism.
CmdrShepard49@sh.itjust.works 3 days ago
Shouldn’t making assumptions about an article before reading it be frowned upon too?
meekah@lemmy.world 2 days ago
You do have a point there. Media literacy should get a better focus during education.
However I don’t think its a fair comparison. The general public cannot currently be expected to have good media literacy, as long as there is no proper public education. I’m not aware of any public schools properly teaching media literacy during the general education (I mean before college), so a good chunk of the population, if not the majority, will never even stop to consider things like what kinda assumptions they made about an article.
It is something you can expect from someone who studied journalism though.
So if the goal of the journalist was good journalism, they should plan ahead and use clear language without any room for assumptions. If they use headlines like this it just seems like clickbait to me.