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id="article-body" class="row" section="article-body" data-component="trackCWV"><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>is a tried-and-true means for delivering fast download speeds to people's homes, and Cox Communications is available to more than 20 million people in the US. Billing itself as  and boasting nearly $12 billion in annual revenue, Cox serves more than 6 million residential and business customers and offers cable internet in 19 states and Washington, DC.<br>If you live within that Cox footprint, there's a good chance you've at least considered it -- especially if  aren't available where you live. In cases like that, Cox's cable speeds are likely the next best thing and certainly faster than what you'll get from ,  or a . <br>[http://www.mos77.org mos77.org]<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>6.2<br><br><br>Cox Communications home internet<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>LikeGigabit speeds available across entire service areaReasonable data usage terms, no throttling<br><br>Don't LikePlans are pricier than other cable internet providersSteep price increases after first yearCox gateway device doubles as a public hotspot by defaultUnlimited data bundles are a bad value<br><br><br><br><br><br>That said, Cox plans skew toward the pricey side, with a higher cost per megabit than  (including  and ). What's more, Cox's pricing structure will try to push you into a more expensive plan each year. You'll also need to contend with a monthly data cap -- though, fortunately, Cox's data usage policies are about as reasonable as you could hope for. <br><br>All of that makes Cox a middle-of-the-pack option for getting connected at home. But there's a lot you should consider before you sign up. Here's a full rundown on everything from prices and plans to terms, fees and the company's customer service track record.<br><br>Cox's home internet footprint is smaller than other cable providers, and concentrated in key cities and regions throughout the continental US.<br><br>FCC/Mapbox<br>Where does Cox Communications offer home internet service?<br>Along with the majority of Rhode Island, Cox's network covers parts of 19 states and the District of Columbia, with service most prevalent in areas around the following cities:<br>Cleveland, OhioGainesville, FloridaLas Vegas, NevadaMacon, GeorgiaNew Orleans, LouisianaOklahoma City, OklahomaOmaha, NebraskaPensacola, FloridaPhoenix, ArizonaSanta Barbara, CaliforniaTopeka, KansasVirginia Beach, VirginiaWichita, Kansas<br>According to , Cox's home internet footprint reached just under 7% of the US population as of December 2020. That's tens of millions of people, but it's short of  and , two larger cable internet providers that offer service to roughly one-third of US households.<br><br>Cox's more focused footprint also shows that it isn't a top pick for rural customers, as most of its cable infrastructure is located in dense urban areas. Other providers are better positioned to offer service outside of America's cities. If that's what you're looking for, check out .<br>How does cable internet stack up these days, anyway?<br>Pretty well, as a matter of fact. In addition to the fact that it's easy to , most cable providers can offer download speeds of up to 940Mbps or higher. That's much better than what you'll get with DSL, satellite internet or fixed wireless, and it's competitive with a lot of the country's top fiber providers.<br><br>That said, a good fiber connection will offer concurrent upload speeds as fast as the downloads -- and this is where cable internet falls short. You'll likely be stuck with upload speeds in the double digits, even with near-gigabit download speeds. For instance, with Cox, the fastest plan (940Mbps) comes with upload speeds of 35Mbps, while the four plans beneath it offer max uploads that range from 3Mbps to 10Mbps. That  if you've got multiple people in your house making Zoom calls, gaming online or doing anything else that requires you to upload lots of data to the cloud in short order.<br><br>And hey, speaking of those plans... <br><br><br>Cox internet plans, prices and terms <br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Plan<br><br><br><br><br><br>Max speeds<br><br><br><br><br><br>Regular monthly rate (no contract)<br><br><br><br><br><br>Promo monthly rate (with contract)<br><br><br><br><br><br>Monthly rate after one year<br><br><br><br><br><br>Equipment rental fee<br><br><br><br><br><br>Monthly data cap<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Starter 25<br><br><br><br><br><br>25Mbps download, 3Mbps upload<br><br><br><br><br><br>$40<br><br><br><br><br><br>$30<br><br><br><br><br><br>$45<br><br><br><br><br><br>$13/month (skippable)<br><br><br><br><br><br>1.25TB<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Essential 50<br><br><br><br><br><br>50Mbps download, 3Mbps upload<br><br><br><br><br><br>$50<br><br><br><br><br><br>$40<br><br><br><br><br><br>$66<br><br><br><br><br><br>$13/month (skippable)<br><br><br><br><br><br>1.25TB<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Preferred 250<br><br><br><br><br><br>250Mbps download, 10Mbps upload<br><br><br><br><br><br>$70<br><br><br><br><br><br>$60<br><br><br><br><br><br>$84<br><br><br><br><br><br>$13/month (skippable)<br><br><br><br><br><br>1.25TB<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Ultimate 500<br><br><br><br><br><br>500Mbps, 10Mbps upload<br><br><br><br><br><br>$90<br><br><br><br><br><br>$80<br><br><br><br><br><br>$100<br><br><br><br><br><br>$13/month (skippable)<br><br><br><br><br><br>1.25TB<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Gigablast<br><br><br><br><br><br>940Mbps, 35Mbps upload<br><br><br><br><br><br>$110<br><br><br><br><br><br>$100<br><br><br><br><br><br>$120<br><br><br><br><br><br>$13/month (skippable)<br><br><br><br><br><br>1.25TB<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Cox offers a variety of plans with a variety of speeds at a variety of prices, and there are a lot of important ins and outs to consider. Let me start with the one that's so critical, I'm going to write it in big, bold letters.<br>Your bill will go up after Year 1, no matter what<br>Cox offers promotional rates on its plans and those promo rates will each knock $10 off the price of your monthly bill for the first year. The catch is that you have to agree to sign a one-year service contract to get the discount. That's fine: One-year contracts are typical in the ISP industry.<br><br>What's less fine is that your bill will shoot up at the end of that year, in some cases, by as much as $26. That's not outrageous -- Spectrum's cable internet plans go up by $25 or $30 after the first year, and Xfinity cable internet plans come with an average increase of $40 in some regions -- but keep in mind that Cox plans start more expensive than those of its competitors. And while Cox's website doesn't do a great job of making this clear, you'll see that price increase regardless of whether you accept the promo rate.<br><br>So, let's say you want to sign up for Cox's Preferred 250 internet plan, which nets you download speeds of 250Mbps. You can sign up at the regular rate of $70 per month with no contract, or you can accept the one-year service contract and bring the monthly cost down to $60. Either way, when that first year is up, your bill will go up to $84.<br><br>Here's how the promo trap works. You sign up for service and then your bill goes up after a year (orange arrows). You call to complain, and the "best value" available is the promo rate for a more expensive plan (green arrows). The cycle repeats, and your bill keeps getting higher.<br><br>Ry Crist/CNET<br><br>At this point, there's a good chance you'll call Cox to complain or . Cox doesn't have an incentive to lower your costs. Instead, there's a good chance the clever salesperson will tell you that they can't offer you the same promo rate again, but they can offer you the promo rate on a faster plan. After all, you want a better deal, right? As it just so happens, you could be getting speeds of up to 500Mbps for $80 per month -- $4 less than you're paying right now for 250Mbps. Doesn't that sound good to you?<br><br>Here's the thing. That's another promo rate -- a fresh bait-and-switch -- and if you take it, the cycle starts all over again.<br><br>Look for yourself. It's no coincidence that those Year 2 rates shoot up to a monthly fee greater than or equal to the promo rate for the next most expensive plan. Like the nauseatingly busy carpets at a casino that nudge dizzy gamblers into stopping and sitting at a [https://cutt.us/MYQM5 situs slot online terbaik] machine, the price structure is carefully constructed to confuse you into spending more money. Whenever someone with an expired promo rate calls to complain about their bill, it's easy for Cox to guide them into an even more expensive speed tier at a new promo rate. Doing so locks them in as a customer for another 12 months, and it dooms their bill to increase even more.<br><br>If you don't want to tumble down that slippery slope, you'll need to accept that Year 2 rate and stick with it. That's a tall ask, given that Cox prices are on the high side. Take that 250Mbps Preferred plan, which costs $84 after Year 1. Cable competitor  offers a 300Mbps plan for $70 after the promo period expires. That's faster speeds for less per month than Cox.<br>What else do I need to know about Cox?<br>Cox's lineup of home internet plans gets confusing fast, and not just because of the promo shenanigans. Other fine print to consider includes contract quirks, extra fees and data caps. Isn't shopping for an internet plan fun?<br>Additional fees<br>You can use your own modem and router, or you can rent Cox's modem and router gateway device for $13 a month.<br><br>Cox Communications<br><br>Though Cox doesn't specify the actual cost anywhere on its website that I could find, you'll need to pay an installation fee of $100 if you want a technician to get your home's internet connection up and running. You can skip this fee by ordering an  -- it's totally free, but you'll need to plug everything in yourself.<br><br>Cox also charges an extra $13 each month if you use its . Starter, Essential and Preferred customers get a Wi-Fi 5, DOCSIS 3.0 device, while Ultimate and Gigablast subscribers get a faster device that supports  and . In either case, you can order  to pair with your Panoramic Wi-Fi modem and router at a one-time cost of $130 per pod. Cox also commits to keeping your system's hardware and software up to date.<br><br>You can skip that $13 fee by using your own , along with a router of your own. I've also heard from Cox sales agents that it isn't uncommon for the company to lower that rental fee upon request.<br><br>"I've seen rental fees of $5, and personally, I have added that promotion when I have offered that to current customers," one agent told me in a recent chat. "So please feel free to ask for a discount on the modem if you rent it."<br><br>The other fee to be aware of is Cox's early termination fee. If you cancel your internet service while under a one-year contract, you'll be charged $120. Make that $240 if you're under a two-year contract.<br>Panoramic Wi-Fi doubles as a public hotspot<br>One more important point of note here: If you use Cox's Panoramic Wi-Fi system instead of your own modem and router, it'll put out a second, separate network from your own home network that other Cox customers can use as part of . It's a separate stream from your home network, so it won't affect your speeds or data usage, but you should still be aware of it, especially because the feature is on by default.<br><br>"Panoramic Wi-Fi devices are enabled as hotspots, expanding Wi-Fi access to eligible Cox Internet customers," reads . "These devices are automatically enabled as Cox Hotspots upon activation. To disable this functionality, go to Privacy Settings on  and sign in with your Cox User ID."<br><br>I can think of plenty of people who wouldn't want strangers to connect to the internet using the networking hardware in their homes. It's good to know that Cox customers can opt out, but it would be much better if the company sought their express permission before turning it on in the first place. If Cox is worried that too many people would say no, it should consider offering those customers a discount on their bill for participating.<br>The dish on data caps<br>Every Cox plan comes with a data cap -- and if you use more data than it allows in a given month, you'll start incurring extra charges. The cap used to be set at 1 terabyte per month (1,000 gigabytes), but when the  hit and , Cox did a nice thing and raised it by about 25% to 1.25TB (1,280GB).<br><br>That's pretty reasonable as far as data caps go. Internet usage is still climbing, but Americans went through an average of 536GB of data per month in the last few months of 2021, . Then again, here at my place, we used about 1,300GB of data per month in 2021. Keep in mind that my roommate and I both work from home and use the internet pretty heavily (, for Pete's sake). Good thing our plan doesn't come with a data cap -- no such luck with Cox.<br><br>At any rate, once you've exceeded Cox's data cap, you'll be charged $10 for each additional 50GB block of data that you use, up to a maximum charge of $100. One nice surprise here -- if it's your first month going over the cap, Cox will cut you a break, waive the charges and let you off with a warning.<br><br>"If it's your first month going over, you'll get a one-time, courtesy credit for each $10 charge on your next bill," .<br><br>That's pretty generous of Cox -- especially since you won't see any such first-month mulligan from , the other major cable provider that enforces a data cap. On top of that, Cox says you don't need to worry about speed reductions once you've broken the cap.<br><br>"We don't throttle service [or] reduce speeds if customers exceed their usage plan," says a Cox spokesperson. "We simply work with them to get them on the best usage plan to meet their needs."<br><br>So, does Cox offer any plans with unlimited data? The answer is yes, but it will cost you an additional $50 on your monthly bill. Cox offers a few discounts on unlimited data with some of their bundle packages, but you'll need to sign a two-year contract to dodge the data caps in most cases.<br><br>Cox's rating with the American Customer Satisfaction Index improved by three points in 2021, but that's still below the category average.<br><br>American Customer Satisfaction Index<br>How does Cox rank on customer satisfaction?<br>Internet providers are , to begin with, and Cox is a little bit below average in terms of its customer satisfaction track record. In 2021, the  gave Cox a 63 out of 100, which was two points better than the year before but worse than the overall ISP average of 65. Still, Cox's score tied it with Spectrum for second place among cable providers and ahead of  (61),  (60),  (60) and  (55). The only cable provider that outscored Cox in 2021 was Xfinity, which finished with a score of 67.<br><br>Cox's strongest customer service rating came from the US East region, where J.D. Power scored it just below the category average.<br><br>J.D. Power<br><br>Meanwhile,  also takes its own look at ISP customer satisfaction each year. Cox was included in three of the four regions surveyed in 2021. it did slightly better here overall than it did with the ACSI but still ended with scores below the overall average for the internet providers surveyed in three of those regions. <br><br>We'll start in the East, where Cox finished with a score of 708 out of 1,000 -- slightly below the overall region average of 714, and behind  (758) and Xfinity (725), but ahead of cable rivals Spectrum (676) and Optimum (655). <br><br>Cox was further below average in the South region with a score of 707, trailing the overall category score of 727 and behind five other ISPs, including  (753), Xfinity (740), Spectrum (725), Mediacom (723) and  (716). Still, it was a good enough finish to beat out  (698), Kinetic by Windstream (682),  (674), Suddenlink (621) and  (578).<br><br>Finally, Cox's most disappointing score came in the West region, where it had done well in 2020. This time around, its score of 696 put it near the bottom, above only Mediacom (654) and Frontier (645). <br>To sum it up<br>If  is available in your area, you'll likely be better off going with that, as you can expect faster speeds (particularly uploads) and better value. If not, then a cable provider like Cox is probably your next best option, with faster speeds than you'll get by going with ,  or a .<br><br>I can't say that you'll be getting a great value with Cox, though, especially given that other major cable providers like  and  offer faster plans for less per month. Then again, if you're living in an area with limited choices for high-speed internet, you might not have many other options. <br><br>As for Cox's data caps, they might seem off-putting, but the terms surrounding them are about as reasonable as you'll find from an internet provider -- enough so that the company's over-inflated unlimited data bundles probably aren't worth it for most subscribers.<br><br>All of that makes Cox worthy of consideration for high-speed internet at home. Just remember to stay wary of those price hikes.<br>Cox internet FAQs<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Can I bundle Cox home internet with other services?<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Yes, you can. Like most cable providers, Cox offers , along with bundles that include home phone service, security monitoring, and home automation.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Are there any perks or other features available to Cox subscribers?<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>In addition to  mentioned earlier, Cox also offers a feature called , which promises to reduce lag by up to 32% while gaming online. Elite Gamer comes at no additional charge if you use Cox's Panoramic Wi-Fi modem or router. If you're using your own modem, Elite Gamer costs $7 a month.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Does Cox offer any discounts for low-income customers?<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>Yes. Cox offers a 100Mbps, $10-a-month plan for low- or fixed-income families called . Homes with children who receive free or reduced-price school lunches should qualify -- you can learn more or .<br><br>Similarly, Cox also features a  aimed at low-income households without children. Customers enrolled in government financial assistance programs may be eligible for a 100Mbps plan for $30 a month.<br><br>Finally, Cox is also participating in the government's , which offers a $30 home internet discount for those who qualify.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>,
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id="article-body" class="row" section="article-body" data-component="trackCWV"><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>What's happening<br>Social media has been flooded with videos from the domestic abuse and defamation trial between Johnny Depp and Amber Heard, whose marriage fell apart in 2016.<br>[https://www.wafflecomb.com/ wafflecomb.com]<br>Why it matters<br>People on TikTok and YouTube turned this case into one of the most popular topics on the internet.<br><br><br>What it means for you<br>While views and comments climb, critics say the internet pile-on may lead people to take abuse allegations less seriously.<br><br><br><br><br><br>Marc Musso has a habit of writing a silly song about whatever he's doing. Sometimes it's about feeding his cat Malmo, other times it's about playing board games.<br>So it's probably no surprise that as the 27-year-old Texan was watching a live feed of the , he found himself writing a song about the divorced couple.<br><br>Sung from the perspective of Heard's lawyers, Musso's song pokes fun at how often they raised objections to Depp's comments while on the stand.<br><br>"I used to be respected. People took me at my word," he starts singing with . "Then I became a lawyer representing Amber Heard."<br><br>Indeed, the weeks-long drama that was the  became one of the most popular topics on the internet. In between images of ,  and , it was video snippets coming from a static, dark wood-paneled courtroom in Fairfax, Virginia, that went viral. <br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>On Wednesday, a jury found both Depp and Heard liable for defamation, with Heard taking the bigger hit. The jury awarded Depp $10 million in compensatory damages and $5 million in punitive damages, though the judge reduced the punitive damages to $350,000, which is the cap in Virginia. Heard was awarded $2 million in compensatory damages and no punitive damages.    <br><br>The case began as a reaction to an opinion piece Heard published in 2018 in The Washington Post , discrimination and assault. Her piece, which discussed domestic abuse she'd experienced, did not name Depp. But Depp sued her in 2019, alleging that Heard defamed him and that she had been the abuser. The next year, Heard countersued Depp.<br><br>Then they were in court, with a camera live feed streaming free to the internet from their proceedings in Virginia, and millions tuned in. Some people watched because it was entertaining. Others cheered on their preferred side. Before the trial's conclusion this week, Saturday Night Live lampooned the case as a spectacle being put on "for fun." In reaction, critics have said they're disgusted by how callously audiences treated the case. <br><br>But that didn't stop people from sharing links, watching videos by the millions and tumbling further down the rabbit hole, remixing trial footage into their own brand of parody. <br><br>That included Musso, who didn't initially plan to post his 87-second tune to the internet, until his girlfriend convinced him to put it on YouTube and then on TikTok. Less than two weeks later, his song has racked up more than 15 million views.<br><br>Musso thought the trial "was ridiculous, and most people seem to agree," he said. After all, to him it's just one rich person suing another rich person while airing out their drama to the public.<br><br>Search for Depp or Heard on YouTube or TikTok, and most of what you'll find are short clips from the trial with tabloid-worthy headlines like  (13 million views) or one drawn from a now famous quote from Heard's testimony, "" (29 million views). The people who run these accounts say they uploaded the clips, which run to several minutes in length, to draw attention to a detail they believed was important that might otherwise get overlooked. <br><br>Critics, meanwhile, worried that the attention had turned from mocking celebrities to . That particularly became clear after Saturday Night Live lampooned the trial in a May 14 skit, reducing Depp's and Heard's arguments over domestic abuse to, as SNL said, a "news story we can all collectively watch and say, 'Glad it ain't me?'"<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>"Domestic violence is not a joke," sex and culture critic  a few hours after the skit was aired. "In twenty years people are going to look back at this trial and all of the media coverage and be disgusted.   Some of us are already disgusted."<br><br>Despite the criticism, SNL's video pulled in more than 4 million views in the first day after it was posted, more than any other video the show's posted in the past month, and was the top trending video on YouTube. Other accounts across YouTube and TikTok saw similar success, racking up views along with torrents of new followers. Some made money off it, too.<br> <br>Creators noticed the growing interest in the trial. Eventually, they started to post videos because they're longtime Depp fans from his days as  in the multibillion-dollar  movies, or perhaps his more recent run as the villain Gellert Grindelwald in the Harry Potter prequel series, Fantastic Beasts -- a role  amid the controversy surrounding the couple's split.<br><br>Haider Ali said he saw himself in Depp and Heard's explosive marriage, which began in 2015 and ended just over a year later. Heard filed for divorce . Ali, a 27-year-old digital artist and web developer, said he'd been a victim of domestic violence and believed sharing clips from the trial  might help other people who've been in that situation.<br><br>"I posted a few videos and they didn't do so well, and I sat down and wondered, Why am I posting these videos?" Then his third video hit more than 2 million views. And a day later, another hit 2.6 million views. Within the week, his channel had shifted from his self-styled singer-songwriter roots, which saw him playing rock performances on his electric guitar, to several-minute-long videos from the trial.<br><br>Johnny Depp in a Virginia courtroom during his defamation trial against ex-wife Amber Heard.<br><br>Getty Images<br><br>One of his most popular so far, with more than 2.6 million views, shows Depp and Heard on screen, overlaid with laughing emoji, and the title .<br><br>Ali said he incorporates emoji with dramatic titles like Johnny Depp's Lawyer Ben Chew Blasts Amber Heard because that's the culture of the internet sites he grew up with, like Twitter, Tumblr and MySpace. "I'm trying to mask the negativity with fun stuff," he said.<br><br>Alice Parkes took it a step further. She created animations to play over audio from the actual trial, lampooning everyone involved. Her most popular video so far portrayed Heard doodling while Depp's on the stand, until he accuses Heard or one of her friends of defecating in the couple's bed, at which point she's sweating and visibly uncomfortable.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>"I was thinking, 'the absurdity of the whole trial would just look so funny animated,'" Parkes said. The 28-year-old professional illustrator based in Wales had about 50 followers on her TikTok account, , before her first video went viral with more than 12.7 million views. Three more hit videos later, she's got about 108,000 followers and joined the TikTok Creator Fund that pays her for video views.<br><br>"I could do this and, you know, possibly make money off it, which would be nice," she said.<br> I shouldn't have access to animation software. 💩 <br>Courtroom dramas have long been a pillar of American pop culture. TV shows like NBC's Law & Order have been on the air longer than many popular TikTokers have been alive. Key moments in US history, like the , are taught in school. The  hearings on Capitol Hill ahead of President Richard Nixon's resignation from office in 1974 changed American politics so much that nearly any major controversy winds up with a nickname that includes a "-gate" .<br><br>Over the past 30 years though, cable TV and, eventually, internet streaming have offered people a chance to watch every moment of a high-profile case. All the attention changes the way we look at these court proceedings as well. Often, the most-watched ones are called "trials of the century."<br><br>"With big trials like this, you get these rare opportunities where practically everybody does at least have a little bit of a passing knowledge of what's going on," said , founding director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture at Syracuse University.<br><br>Millions of people across the country were glued to their TVs watching football star , pop star 's molestation trial in 2005 or even the heartbreaking case surrounding the  in 2011. And in each of the major cases often cited as pop culture phenomena, the drama from the courtroom became as much a topic of fascination as the circumstances of the case.<br><br>"Who gives a damn who wins?"<br>Amy Singer, trial consultant and psychologist<br><br><br><br>Though Depp v. Heard didn't have the same stakes as a criminal trial, or the political importance of a presidential impeachment, it did have a dramatic storyline filled with bizarre characters and salacious details.<br><br>And it had social media.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>"With the O.J. trial, you could turn it off," said , a professor of media at DePaul University in Chicago. "You could not watch it. You could not read the newspaper." <br><br>But computer programs running our social feeds on Twitter, YouTube, Facebook and TikTok kept feeding Depp v. Heard to us because even if we weren't interested, our friends probably were.<br><br>And the  can change our perspectives as well. The social feeds may start showing you only pro-Depp videos and posts, because that's what the apps think you'll want. And, Booth added, TikTok's short-video format makes it even harder to find nuance beyond the hero-or-villain narratives people often [https://cutt.us/stgi4 situs slot terpercaya] into.<br><br>"Where it becomes bad or where it becomes problematic," he said, "is when you lose that kind of critical focus on it and you start thinking that the rabbit hole you've gone down is the whole world, and you lose perspective on everything else."<br><br>The political-type online mudslinging between Depp fans and Heard defenders didn't just made it tough for an internet passerby to quickly understand what's going on. It's made the job harder for people like longtime trial consultant and psychologist , too. She's often brought in to consult on high-stakes cases, including the Casey Anthony criminal trial and Michael Jackson's civil trial. <br><br>Singer wasn't consulting for Depp or Heard, but she was watching. Singer's team has a set of  that deduce what jurors might be thinking by following social media posts of people with similar demographics and backgrounds. What she found wasn't the typical policy debate we hear during an emotional murder case, or the cultural conversations we usually have around child abuse during molestation trials. <br><br>Instead, Singer's team detected rifts between the two movie stars' fandoms.<br><br>"It's more like a political debate," she said, referring to the trial as a "pig v. pig" case, where "who gives a damn who wins?"<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>If you weren't being bombarded by Depp v. Heard videos, by the way, Singer's social media listening tools indicate you're probably older. While the court case was , where viewers tend to skew younger, the "adult population" she tracks on Facebook and Twitter were more worried about the Ukraine war and inflation. <br><br>"They're not talking about Amber Heard. 'Amber who?'" Singer said.<br><br>Some online videos track the little moments when Johnny Depp and Amber Heard seem to interact in the courtroom.<br><br>Getty Images<br>Making dollars<br>Lahiru Darsha started posting videos about Depp v. Heard when he felt like the trial wasn't going the Pirates of the Caribbean star's way. Soon, Darsha was posting short video snippets -- less than 2 minutes -- on his YouTube channel, .<br><br>Before the trial, the 25-year-old's channel mostly had videos of his streaming gameplay from the hit crime drama game . The game had helped him learn English, and the videos made him about $100 in ad revenue every few months while he was in school earning a cybersecurity degree.<br><br>But his Depp videos took off, garnering millions of views within days of being uploaded. The 35-second Johnny Depp's Bodyguard Being Hilarious rang up 1.3 million views, Johnny Depp Trying to Resist Laughter, uploaded the same day, attracted nearly 4 million views. By the end of his first day uploading, he'd made $3,700.<br><br>"I wanted to draw attention to specific points that might be missed from the livestreams," he said. And the thrill of finding an audience -- most of whom were positive to him -- inspired Darsha to upload even more clips.<br><br>He's made more than $11,000 since the trial began, and plans to use the money either to help build a home in Sri Lanka, where he lives, or study abroad in Europe. He also intends to pay back family who've supported him through school.<br><br>Several days into May, Darsha noticed his YouTube earnings had dropped. He then heard rumors that YouTube moderators were penalizing accounts that posted snippets from the trial, so decided to hide those videos. After this story's publication, YouTube further reduced his earnings by several thousand dollars. YouTube didn't respond to several requests for comment for this story.<br>Making sense<br>Amid the courtroom snippets pulled from the live feed, people on YouTube and TikTok dedicated their time to sober, serious analysis too.<br><br>DC-based lawyer , who heads the YouTube channel , posted  breaking down the case and what led up to it. But he began his video by making fun of the flood of videos cheering on Depp and bashing Heard. "This latest suit and countersuit is already turning into a circus," he said in his video, . "Determining the truth of domestic violence allegations is invariably a challenging prospect. As a result, the public's response to these allegations has been incredibly polarizing."<br>

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What's happening
Social media has been flooded with videos from the domestic abuse and defamation trial between Johnny Depp and Amber Heard, whose marriage fell apart in 2016.
wafflecomb.com
Why it matters
People on TikTok and YouTube turned this case into one of the most popular topics on the internet.


What it means for you
While views and comments climb, critics say the internet pile-on may lead people to take abuse allegations less seriously.





Marc Musso has a habit of writing a silly song about whatever he's doing. Sometimes it's about feeding his cat Malmo, other times it's about playing board games.
So it's probably no surprise that as the 27-year-old Texan was watching a live feed of the , he found himself writing a song about the divorced couple.

Sung from the perspective of Heard's lawyers, Musso's song pokes fun at how often they raised objections to Depp's comments while on the stand.

"I used to be respected. People took me at my word," he starts singing with . "Then I became a lawyer representing Amber Heard."

Indeed, the weeks-long drama that was the  became one of the most popular topics on the internet. In between images of , and , it was video snippets coming from a static, dark wood-paneled courtroom in Fairfax, Virginia, that went viral. 

















On Wednesday, a jury found both Depp and Heard liable for defamation, with Heard taking the bigger hit. The jury awarded Depp $10 million in compensatory damages and $5 million in punitive damages, though the judge reduced the punitive damages to $350,000, which is the cap in Virginia. Heard was awarded $2 million in compensatory damages and no punitive damages.

The case began as a reaction to an opinion piece Heard published in 2018 in The Washington Post , discrimination and assault. Her piece, which discussed domestic abuse she'd experienced, did not name Depp. But Depp sued her in 2019, alleging that Heard defamed him and that she had been the abuser. The next year, Heard countersued Depp.

Then they were in court, with a camera live feed streaming free to the internet from their proceedings in Virginia, and millions tuned in. Some people watched because it was entertaining. Others cheered on their preferred side. Before the trial's conclusion this week, Saturday Night Live lampooned the case as a spectacle being put on "for fun." In reaction, critics have said they're disgusted by how callously audiences treated the case. 

But that didn't stop people from sharing links, watching videos by the millions and tumbling further down the rabbit hole, remixing trial footage into their own brand of parody. 

That included Musso, who didn't initially plan to post his 87-second tune to the internet, until his girlfriend convinced him to put it on YouTube and then on TikTok. Less than two weeks later, his song has racked up more than 15 million views.

Musso thought the trial "was ridiculous, and most people seem to agree," he said. After all, to him it's just one rich person suing another rich person while airing out their drama to the public.

Search for Depp or Heard on YouTube or TikTok, and most of what you'll find are short clips from the trial with tabloid-worthy headlines like  (13 million views) or one drawn from a now famous quote from Heard's testimony, "" (29 million views). The people who run these accounts say they uploaded the clips, which run to several minutes in length, to draw attention to a detail they believed was important that might otherwise get overlooked. 

Critics, meanwhile, worried that the attention had turned from mocking celebrities to . That particularly became clear after Saturday Night Live lampooned the trial in a May 14 skit, reducing Depp's and Heard's arguments over domestic abuse to, as SNL said, a "news story we can all collectively watch and say, 'Glad it ain't me?'"

















"Domestic violence is not a joke," sex and culture critic a few hours after the skit was aired. "In twenty years people are going to look back at this trial and all of the media coverage and be disgusted. Some of us are already disgusted."

Despite the criticism, SNL's video pulled in more than 4 million views in the first day after it was posted, more than any other video the show's posted in the past month, and was the top trending video on YouTube. Other accounts across YouTube and TikTok saw similar success, racking up views along with torrents of new followers. Some made money off it, too.

Creators noticed the growing interest in the trial. Eventually, they started to post videos because they're longtime Depp fans from his days as in the multibillion-dollar movies, or perhaps his more recent run as the villain Gellert Grindelwald in the Harry Potter prequel series, Fantastic Beasts -- a role amid the controversy surrounding the couple's split.

Haider Ali said he saw himself in Depp and Heard's explosive marriage, which began in 2015 and ended just over a year later. Heard filed for divorce . Ali, a 27-year-old digital artist and web developer, said he'd been a victim of domestic violence and believed sharing clips from the trial might help other people who've been in that situation.

"I posted a few videos and they didn't do so well, and I sat down and wondered, Why am I posting these videos?" Then his third video hit more than 2 million views. And a day later, another hit 2.6 million views. Within the week, his channel had shifted from his self-styled singer-songwriter roots, which saw him playing rock performances on his electric guitar, to several-minute-long videos from the trial.

Johnny Depp in a Virginia courtroom during his defamation trial against ex-wife Amber Heard.

Getty Images

One of his most popular so far, with more than 2.6 million views, shows Depp and Heard on screen, overlaid with laughing emoji, and the title .

Ali said he incorporates emoji with dramatic titles like Johnny Depp's Lawyer Ben Chew Blasts Amber Heard because that's the culture of the internet sites he grew up with, like Twitter, Tumblr and MySpace. "I'm trying to mask the negativity with fun stuff," he said.

Alice Parkes took it a step further. She created animations to play over audio from the actual trial, lampooning everyone involved. Her most popular video so far portrayed Heard doodling while Depp's on the stand, until he accuses Heard or one of her friends of defecating in the couple's bed, at which point she's sweating and visibly uncomfortable.

















"I was thinking, 'the absurdity of the whole trial would just look so funny animated,'" Parkes said. The 28-year-old professional illustrator based in Wales had about 50 followers on her TikTok account, , before her first video went viral with more than 12.7 million views. Three more hit videos later, she's got about 108,000 followers and joined the TikTok Creator Fund that pays her for video views.

"I could do this and, you know, possibly make money off it, which would be nice," she said.
I shouldn't have access to animation software. 💩
Courtroom dramas have long been a pillar of American pop culture. TV shows like NBC's Law & Order have been on the air longer than many popular TikTokers have been alive. Key moments in US history, like the , are taught in school. The hearings on Capitol Hill ahead of President Richard Nixon's resignation from office in 1974 changed American politics so much that nearly any major controversy winds up with a nickname that includes a "-gate" .

Over the past 30 years though, cable TV and, eventually, internet streaming have offered people a chance to watch every moment of a high-profile case. All the attention changes the way we look at these court proceedings as well. Often, the most-watched ones are called "trials of the century."

"With big trials like this, you get these rare opportunities where practically everybody does at least have a little bit of a passing knowledge of what's going on," said , founding director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture at Syracuse University.

Millions of people across the country were glued to their TVs watching football star , pop star 's molestation trial in 2005 or even the heartbreaking case surrounding the in 2011. And in each of the major cases often cited as pop culture phenomena, the drama from the courtroom became as much a topic of fascination as the circumstances of the case.

"Who gives a damn who wins?"
Amy Singer, trial consultant and psychologist



Though Depp v. Heard didn't have the same stakes as a criminal trial, or the political importance of a presidential impeachment, it did have a dramatic storyline filled with bizarre characters and salacious details.

And it had social media.

















"With the O.J. trial, you could turn it off," said , a professor of media at DePaul University in Chicago. "You could not watch it. You could not read the newspaper." 

But computer programs running our social feeds on Twitter, YouTube, Facebook and TikTok kept feeding Depp v. Heard to us because even if we weren't interested, our friends probably were.

And the can change our perspectives as well. The social feeds may start showing you only pro-Depp videos and posts, because that's what the apps think you'll want. And, Booth added, TikTok's short-video format makes it even harder to find nuance beyond the hero-or-villain narratives people often situs slot terpercaya into.

"Where it becomes bad or where it becomes problematic," he said, "is when you lose that kind of critical focus on it and you start thinking that the rabbit hole you've gone down is the whole world, and you lose perspective on everything else."

The political-type online mudslinging between Depp fans and Heard defenders didn't just made it tough for an internet passerby to quickly understand what's going on. It's made the job harder for people like longtime trial consultant and psychologist , too. She's often brought in to consult on high-stakes cases, including the Casey Anthony criminal trial and Michael Jackson's civil trial. 

Singer wasn't consulting for Depp or Heard, but she was watching. Singer's team has a set of that deduce what jurors might be thinking by following social media posts of people with similar demographics and backgrounds. What she found wasn't the typical policy debate we hear during an emotional murder case, or the cultural conversations we usually have around child abuse during molestation trials. 

Instead, Singer's team detected rifts between the two movie stars' fandoms.

"It's more like a political debate," she said, referring to the trial as a "pig v. pig" case, where "who gives a damn who wins?"

















If you weren't being bombarded by Depp v. Heard videos, by the way, Singer's social media listening tools indicate you're probably older. While the court case was , where viewers tend to skew younger, the "adult population" she tracks on Facebook and Twitter were more worried about the Ukraine war and inflation. 

"They're not talking about Amber Heard. 'Amber who?'" Singer said.

Some online videos track the little moments when Johnny Depp and Amber Heard seem to interact in the courtroom.

Getty Images
Making dollars
Lahiru Darsha started posting videos about Depp v. Heard when he felt like the trial wasn't going the Pirates of the Caribbean star's way. Soon, Darsha was posting short video snippets -- less than 2 minutes -- on his YouTube channel, .

Before the trial, the 25-year-old's channel mostly had videos of his streaming gameplay from the hit crime drama game . The game had helped him learn English, and the videos made him about $100 in ad revenue every few months while he was in school earning a cybersecurity degree.

But his Depp videos took off, garnering millions of views within days of being uploaded. The 35-second Johnny Depp's Bodyguard Being Hilarious rang up 1.3 million views, Johnny Depp Trying to Resist Laughter, uploaded the same day, attracted nearly 4 million views. By the end of his first day uploading, he'd made $3,700.

"I wanted to draw attention to specific points that might be missed from the livestreams," he said. And the thrill of finding an audience -- most of whom were positive to him -- inspired Darsha to upload even more clips.

He's made more than $11,000 since the trial began, and plans to use the money either to help build a home in Sri Lanka, where he lives, or study abroad in Europe. He also intends to pay back family who've supported him through school.

Several days into May, Darsha noticed his YouTube earnings had dropped. He then heard rumors that YouTube moderators were penalizing accounts that posted snippets from the trial, so decided to hide those videos. After this story's publication, YouTube further reduced his earnings by several thousand dollars. YouTube didn't respond to several requests for comment for this story.
Making sense
Amid the courtroom snippets pulled from the live feed, people on YouTube and TikTok dedicated their time to sober, serious analysis too.

DC-based lawyer , who heads the YouTube channel , posted  breaking down the case and what led up to it. But he began his video by making fun of the flood of videos cheering on Depp and bashing Heard. "This latest suit and countersuit is already turning into a circus," he said in his video, . "Determining the truth of domestic violence allegations is invariably a challenging prospect. As a result, the public's response to these allegations has been incredibly polarizing."