non-clickbaity detail
The Many, Many Twists of Netflix's Hit em Clickbait /em , Explained in Non-Clickbaity Detail
Deciding which of Netflix's thousands of shows and movies to grant your all-important click can be a paralyzing task for many of us, so there was something brilliant, or cynical--or in all likelihood, both--about the streaming service coming out with a show called Clickbait. It's announcing itself as potentially dishonest and exploitative and daring you to click anyway, and the gambit clearly worked: As of Tuesday, the limited series, which premiered on the streaming service last week, was topping Netflix's most-watched list. Whether you don't want to give Clickbait the satisfaction of your click or you've already clicked many times over, let's talk about it--and there is a lot to talk about--spoilers and all. In the first episode of the eight-episode series, a video surfaces online of Nick Brewer (Adrian Grenier), an improbably perfect husband and father, being held hostage and holding a series of signs: One says he abuses women. Another says that if the video gets to 5 million views, he will die.