
Times discovers women mad, uses stats as personality
The Times drops a vague survey claiming 25% of UK women experience rage, then pivots to complaining about healthcare rankings with all the strategic concern of a newsletter template. This is the journalistic equivalent of someone rage-posting a screenshot of a headline—technically newsworthy, fundamentally soulless. The link-baiting caption and performative social activism reek of corporate engagement farming masquerading as serious reporting.