“This state” takes ten characters; “Nevada” takes six.

This is a forward reference headline, which goes out of its way to conceal what the corresponding story says.

It’s a consequence of click-based advertising and of course it makes our information streams less useful. The practice started among clickbait junk websites but has spread to CNN, the Washington Post, the New York Times, and others.

@ct_bergstrom it's an outcome of how social media and search engines display headlines: if people get all the info they need from it, the publisher doesn't get any ad money. So they have to hide some crucial information to get you into their website.
@ct_bergstrom which is not to say I approve of this. But we do need to acknowledge there is a legitimate problem here, and this bad solution is the best one available, for now.
@Dubikan yes I wrote a book about this
@ct_bergstrom sorry, didn't know that. But then you understand that the problem is not the news media but that there is no viable financial model for online news

@ct_bergstrom

Saw this topic and when I you mentioned there was a book I knew it was going on my reading list. I bet I'm not the only one, so...

Calling Bullshit by Carl T. Bergstrom

Link available in Carl's profile. Get those book sales my dude!

@Dubikan

@ThirteenthWorrier @ct_bergstrom oh, that's the book? I've read it. Didn't think of it as a book on clickbait...