Observer Blind Spot Bias

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1 views · Added 7d ago · 6 definitions

1
When someone who thinks they're unbiased actually has a brain full of junk food and only sees what they want to see. They ignore facts like they ignore their mom’s advice.
The sports reporter said the game was fair, even though the ref gave the other team 10 extra seconds.
The critic loved the movie, even though it had more plot holes than a cheese factory.
The judge said the kid was innocent, even though he was caught red-handed.
2
It's when someone who's supposed to be neutral acts like a fanboy who only sees their team's mistakes and ignores the other team’s.
The food critic said the restaurant was the best, even though the waiter spilled soup on his shirt.
The movie reviewer gave it 5 stars, even though the plot was worse than a bad bedtime story.
The teacher gave the kid an A, even though he cheated on the test.
3
A fancy way of saying someone is so full of hot air that they only believe what they want to believe, like a kid who thinks they’re the best at everything.
The news anchor said the politician was honest, even though he lied to the whole country.
The reviewer gave the book 5 stars, even though it was full of nonsense.
The referee said the team was fair, even though they cheated twice.
4
When someone thinks they're being fair, but they're just picking sides and ignoring the facts like they're not even there.
The sports reporter said the game was fair, even though one team had a secret cheat code.
The critic said the movie was perfect, even though it had more mistakes than a broken calculator.
The judge said the kid was innocent, even though the evidence was right in front of him.
5
It's like someone has a blind spot in their brain that only lets them see what they already believe, like a kid who thinks they’re the smartest in the class.
The movie reviewer said it was the best film ever, even though the plot was a disaster.
The teacher said the kid was the best student, even though he failed every test.
The reporter said the story was true, even though he got it all wrong.
6
When someone acts like they're fair, but they're just ignoring the facts like they're not even there, and they’re too full of themselves to notice.
The critic said the restaurant was the best, even though the food was tasteless and the service was terrible.
The judge said the kid was innocent, even though he was caught red-handed.
The reporter said the politician was honest, even though he lied to everyone.
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