Welp, just got spooked by algorithmic Big Brother again.
I watched a
knowledge hub video quite a while ago about the the competition between streaming services, and the guy makes an offhand mention about some old black&white courtroom drama called
Perry Mason. The whole point of the remark was that it was a show that nobody remembers in the present day.
Today while using Firefox and browsing Pocket articles (I consider it important to stay up to date on current news), an article about
Perry Mason shows up in my feed...
Now what spooks me is not the fact that an algorithm remembered that I watched a Youtube video and decided to latch onto an insignificant detail and recommend me content based off it, it's the fact that someone
wrote a Perry mason article in
[Current year]!
Either there's some sort of underground Perry Mason movement going on that managed to incept the youtuber with the idea of the show
1, or whoever is in charge of deciding what kind of articles to write somehow saw the unusual buzz in the comments section that remark made (either directly or through something like google trends) and commissioned an article to try to capitalize on something that they thought was going to be significant.
6:20 you just watch, there's gonna be a massive surge of kids watching Perry Mason just to spite you.
As someone who turns twenty in less than two months, I think I might watch Perry Mason.
I technically just turned 30 but I like Perry Mason
f Netflix licensed Perry Mason they wouldn’t have lost those 1 million subscribers.
Either way, it's kind of sad nowadays that you can't just have a moment on the internet without worrying about whether a corporation is going to get its hands on it.
1Sometimes I wonder if they did that with the Sopranos to promote the at-the-time-upcoming prequel The Many Saints of Newark?