Outrage (as a Hook)
A mechanism that recruits moral anger — the sense that something is not just wrong but offensively, sharably wrong — to drive engagement. As a sub-tag it marks titles whose primary lever is indignation, the invitation to be furious on the right side.
If the outrage engine is the system, outrage-as-a-hook is the individual move — the specific title-level lever the system selects for. Molly Crockett's framing is the one I find most precise: digital environments don't merely carry our moral anger, they may amplify and accelerate it, because expressing outrage online costs less and pays more — in likes, in shares, in belonging — than expressing it ever did offline (Nature Human Behaviour, 2017).
The mechanics show up in the data. Brady's network study found moralized-emotional language spreading measurably faster and farther, and notably staying within ideological groups — outrage bonds the like-minded while it travels (PNAS, 2017). A title that hooks on outrage isn't just provoking you; it's recruiting you into a side.
Here is the line I try hardest to hold honestly. The outrage is frequently justified. Real wrongs deserve real anger, and "calm down" is not a virtue when something genuinely warrants fury. The manipulation isn't the anger itself — it's the farming of it, the engineering of a title to harvest indignation as engagement regardless of whether the wrong is proportionate or even real.
The pause: am I angry because this is wrong, or because the title was built to make me angry? Sometimes both. Naming the lever doesn't dissolve the anger — it just keeps the anger yours.
Also known as
Moral Outrage · Indignation Hook