You Won’t Believe What Happens Next!
BREAKING: “You Won’t Believe What Happens Next!”
(Spoiler: Still Nothing. But Also Maybe Taxes.)
By Barbie McHonesty, Senior Satirical News Analyst, Bohiney.com
The Lie That Launched a Million Clicks
WASHINGTON, D.C. — In a revelation that stunned absolutely no one except a guy named Phil who just woke up from a coma he entered during the Ice Bucket Challenge era, America’s most recycled headline — “You Won’t Believe What Happens Next!” — has officially been classified by researchers as a non-event wrapped in a mystery box full of emotional manipulation.
After a grueling six-second investigation — powered by seven interns, three expired Red Bulls, and one AI that quit mid-click — journalists at Bohiney.com confirmed the worst:
Nothing. Happens. Next.
Unless you count a mildly offensive ad for reverse mortgages and a close-up of a mole that “might be cancer but could also be a baked bean.”
The Evidence No One Asked For
Lead researcher Karen Clickensworth, a former BuzzFeed employee turned whistleblower (and Etsy llama-themed sock magnate), described the betrayal with tears welling in her blue-light-fatigued eyes.
“We clicked on 4,732 articles, including ‘This Grandma’s Last Words Will Haunt You Forever,’ and all we got was an ad for teeth whitener and a reminder that Grandma’s still alive and doing Zumba in Sarasota.”
Among the most revealing findings from their study:
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84% of “unbelievable stories” begin with a stock image of a woman holding her face like she just saw her credit score.
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67% lead to a video that auto-plays at 120 decibels.
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1 in 5 pages use more slide transitions than a high school PowerPoint about Abraham Lincoln.
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100% resulted in the phrase “Just one more page!” being followed by “Just kidding, we sold your data.”
A Nation Betrayed (Again)
Protests broke out across Silicon Valley this morning, with demonstrators hurling expired clickbait headlines at the Googleplex. The protest group, Citizens for Honest Disappointment, carried signs reading:
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“We Demand the ‘Next’!”
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“Clickbait Ruined My Marriage (Details in Slide 14)”
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“I Waited 45 Minutes to Learn That Gwyneth Paltrow Was Just Tired That Day!”
One traumatized user, 34-year-old Mark Hammilson (no relation to Luke, but arguably more emotionally scarred), recounted:
“The headline said, ‘This Man Ate a Banana Every Day — What Happened Next Will Shock You!’ After 17 pages, the only thing that shocked me was that I still hadn’t pooped. Turns out what happened next was… nothing. He just kept eating bananas. Like a potassium-driven psychopath.”
Big Clickbait: “We Regret Absolutely Nothing”
In a joint statement from several major clickbait syndicates including ZorkFeed, ClickoBuzz, and DefinitelyRealNews.net, executives defended their practices, comparing their misleading titles to…
“The fine print on a gym contract: legally vague, morally optional, and basically impossible to escape.”
They even invoked freedom of expression, claiming the phrase “You won’t believe what happens next!” is protected under the First Amendment, “right next to yelling ‘FIRE!’ in a crowded theater or calling an almond milk latte ‘coffee.’”
Facebook Unveils New Algorithm: Surprise Disappointment
To address growing public mistrust, Facebook has promised greater transparency by developing the “Surprise Disappointment Algorithm”, which will:
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Promise life-changing revelations.
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Deliver 22 seconds of loading time.
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Conclude with the words: “You’ll never guess what happened… because we’re not telling you.”
Beta testing has already led to 3,000 spontaneous phone throws, 11 cracked screens, and one elderly man in Topeka asking Siri to “fight the internet.”
What Actually Happens Next? (Spoiler: Mild Existential Dread)
Media scholars and one very lonely guy with a podcast agree on the likely fallout:
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Absolutely nothing will change. Humanity, as studies show, loves being duped if it means momentary escape from reality.
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Clickbait will evolve. The next generation of headlines may include:
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“She Blinked Once at a Taco Bell — What She Saw Next Changed Government Policy Forever”
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“You’ll Cry, Then Laugh, Then Question Democracy”
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“This One Weird Mole Cured My Depression”
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New Yorkers will continue clicking while standing in line for bagels, unaware that their grandchildren are being named after fonts.
“It’s like emotional whiplash for the soul,” said Dr. Linda Scrollsworth, Professor of Click Studies at DeVry Online College of Media Trauma. “We’ve conditioned people to expect payoff, but all we give them is… ads for colon cleanses.”
What the Funny People Are Saying
“I clicked that article about the guy who slept with a snake. Turned out the ‘snake’ was just his mother-in-law. Now I need therapy and a divorce lawyer.” — Ron White
“They told me, ‘This baby goat did something you won’t believe.’ It pooped. That’s it. It pooped. I believe it. I’ve pooped. Millions have pooped. That’s not a twist, that’s biology.” — Jerry Seinfeld
“‘You won’t believe what happens next’? How about, ‘You won’t believe you’re still unemployed after clicking 40 of these.’” — Amy Schumer
Helpful Content for Our Loyal Readers
How to Survive the Clickbait Apocalypse:
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Develop trust issues early. This way, you’ll never believe the next slide is “worth it.”
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Treat headlines like Tinder bios. If they say “fun, exciting, and adventurous,” assume they mean “confusing, desperate, and full of malware.”
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Use the 3-Second Rule. If it doesn’t load faster than your microwave popcorn, abort mission.
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Install the Bohiney Browser Extension. It turns all “You Won’t Believe” headlines into “You’ll Deeply Regret.”
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Ask yourself: Would Ron White click this? If yes, then close your laptop and go outside.
Final Verdict: The Click Heard Around the Nothing
As the digital smog clears, and millions come to terms with being emotionally catfished by pixels and punctuation, one fact remains:
You believed something would happen next.
That’s on you.
UPDATE:
If you’ve read this far, congratulations. You’ve unlocked our exclusive Nothingburger NFT — a .jpeg of an empty plate signed by “Definitely Not Mark Zuckerberg.”
Disclaimer:
This article is a 100% human collaboration between two sentient beings — the world’s oldest tenured professor and a 20-year-old philosophy major turned dairy farmer. No AIs were harmed in the making of this disappointment.
What the Funny People Are Saying
“I clicked ‘This Grandma’s Last Words Will Leave You Speechless’—turns out her last words were ‘Turn off the Wi-Fi.’”
— Ron White
“Every time I click on ‘You Won’t Believe What This Dog Did,’ I believe it. It’s a dog. It barked. That’s the whole career right there.”
— Jerry Seinfeld
“Clickbait titles are like bad Tinder dates. Full of promise, ends with an ad for toe fungus.”
— Amy Schumer
“I clicked on ‘He Took One Sip of Beer and You Won’t Believe What Happened!’ I’ll tell you what happened. He joined my family.”
— Dave Chappelle
“The article said, ‘Doctors Hate Him!’ I clicked. It was a dude who eats nothing but celery and screams at clouds. Yeah. I hate him too.”
— Chris Rock
“‘You’ll Cry When You See What This Baby Goat Did.’ Yeah, I cried. Mostly because I realized I’m 42 and crying over goat videos at 2 a.m.”
— Tina Fey
“They got me with ‘You Won’t Believe This Trick to Lose Belly Fat.’ I believed. Now I’m just hungry and ashamed.”
— Kevin Hart
“I once clicked on ‘This Simple Trick Will Fix Your Marriage.’ It was a pop-up ad for duct tape. Accurate, but still.”
— Sarah Silverman
“Clickbait headlines are like a magician who saws a woman in half… then never puts her back together. Just leaves you hanging.”
— Stephen Colbert
“I clicked on ‘This Man Found Something Shocking in His Backyard.’ It was a rock. He found a rock. And I lost 11 minutes of my life.”
— Hasan Minhaj
“They said ‘This Trick Can Save You Hundreds!’ I clicked. It told me to stop clicking clickbait. I guess that’s fair.”
— Ali Wong
“Clickbait is the only place where ‘This One Weird Trick’ always ends in a virus and a weird Amazon recommendation.”
— John Mulaney
The post You Won’t Believe What Happens Next! appeared first on Bohiney News.
This article was originally published at Bohiney Satirical Journalism
— You Won’t Believe What Happens Next!
Author: Annika Steinmann Journalist
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Trish Clicksworth – Breaking news reporter who can turn a cat stuck in a tree into a national security crisis.