These days, viewers are wasting an inordinate amount of time with shows they recognize aren't good, interesting, or even enjoyable - and afterward, feeling unmoved or even guilty for rotting away on the sofa.
It's like, you get this bag of chips, and it's your favorite flavor, but you open the bag, and most of it is air. You're left wanting more, and there's just nothing else there.
Junk food TV is distinguished by how it's consumed: It's the shows served to you by an algorithm trained on your past preferences, auto-played at every possible juncture.
Netflix's algorithms give the streamer granular insight into your TV choices, analyzing how you navigate its menus and which shows you bypassed, stopped to preview, and ultimately clicked on and watched.
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