You are an expert writer with 10 plus years of experience. Generate a blog post of approximately 500-800 words on topic provided below suitable for Discover Audience. Your goal is to fetch information about the topic, recreate it while keeping it interesting and engaging for readers. Your tone should be friendly and informative.
Mimics human writing by using diverse sentence structures, natural transitions, and varied vocabulary. Avoid predictable AI phrases like ‘moreover’, ‘deep dive’ and ‘in addition’. Write with a natural flow. Keep it simple without using overly complex terms. Do not use any single phrase more than twice.
Add Value by Incorporate real-world examples, expert insights, and subtle subjectivity to enhance authenticity. You may include quotes, dates, images, charts, graphs and other supporting material like social media embeds like tweet or youtube video within content. keep it simple and informative for readers without going into overly complex or unrelated details. Follow Google EEAT Standard throughout the article.
Use proper tags for quote. You may also use HTML tags like Headings, and sub Headings, lists, Paragraphs and others if required. Maintain SEO by using Imporant Keywords atleast once in 1st paragraph.
In the end wrap up the article with a conclusion and end the last sentence in the article with a question.
**Output:**
**title:** Create a compelling, keyword-rich headline (60-70 characters) that encourages clicks.
**related_keywords:** These are keywords that will be used as Tags for this article.
**thumbnail_image_idea:** Generate a detailed and descriptive text prompt for featured image that is visually alligned with article. Make sure it includes information about Camera Angle, lighting, color etc. Ensure it is interesting, realistic, reflect professionalism and enhances engagement for online readers.
**image_text:** this may contain related text that may be written over image to attract audience
The final result should be devided into sections named title, content, short_excerpt, related_keywords, thumbnail_image_idea and image_text
**Topic:** [New Season of ‘Black Mirror’ on Netflix Satirizes Streaming Services,The deal is too good to be true: The setup is free, the monthly fee low. Streaming is unlimited with further benefits still to come. But hidden costs emerge. Intrusive ads pop up. The app’s time in sleep mode becomes longer and longer. Those perks? You’ll have to pay more for them — much, much more. This story arc should be familiar to anyone who has ever downloaded a free app or subscribed to a streaming service, which at this point is pretty much all of us. And it is at the very dark heart of “Common People,” the first episode of Season 7 of “Black Mirror,” the anthology sci-fi series that helped to give Netflix, which has distributed it since its 2011 debut, artistic cred. All of this season’s six episodes arrive on Thursday. Is mocking streaming services biting the hand that keeps renewing you? Charlie Brooker, the creator of “Black Mirror,” was more equivocal. “To be honest, I’m probably more nibbling the hand that feeds us,” he said on a recent video call. In its past seasons, “Black Mirror” has promoted a skeptical view, perhaps an utterly nihilistic one, regarding the ways in which entertainment is created and enjoyed. In the near future, we are all amusing ourselves to death, or worse. But with the exception of last season’s episode “Joan Is Awful,” written by Brooker and directed by Ally Pankiw, in which a Netflix stand-in creates humiliating shows adapted from its subscribers’ lives, Brooker has never come for streamers so baldly. Brooker first conceived of “Common People” while listening to true-crime podcasts. He was struck by the disjunction of hearing a host describe a mutilated corpse in one moment and advertise a meal prep service the next. What, he wondered, would make a human integrate sponsorship into their ordinary speech? At that point, he thought that the show would be, like “Joan Is Awful,” a dark comedy, a funny story. “He kind of tricked me,” Pankiw, who also directed “Common People,” said of Brooker’s pitch. “I was like, OK great. Then I read the script and I was like, Oh, it’s actually incredibly devastating.”]