Slop is not necessarily false, stupid or insincere. It is material chosen mainly for the reaction it will produce in the public. It triggers familiar habits, fears and loyalties first, then often supplies the language people use to explain that reaction afterwards.
This site studies slop partly by manufacturing it.
Three forms of slop
The manifesto defines the condition. The artefacts below show how it appears in institutional and media forms.
Institutional costumes
Three polished forms built around one simple account of political parties, electoral compression and control over political meaning.
The Overton Field
Voters become particles, parties become attractor poles, and election day becomes the portal that converts complex lives into admissible signals.
From Representation to Capture
Parties still speak the language of representation, but their practical work becomes the management of salience, aversion, turnout, and capture.
Democratic Resilience in the Digital Age
Misinformation, AI, trust, and resilience become the administrative vocabulary for restoring control over political meaning.
The attention pipeline
A fictionalised case study of how incidents, anxieties and ideological frames become a repeatable media product.
The Anti-AI Attention Pipeline
Nobody needs to coordinate the system or disbelieve what they say. Authors, hosts, publishers, platforms, and audiences independently reward the version of criticism that travels best.
Media slop is information compressed into the shape most useful to an attention market.
Its strongest form may be factual, sincere and articulate. Its defining feature is what it has been selected to make the audience do.