STILL WATCHING
As of June 23, 2026 at 9:00 AM, this is how Optics News reads the wording differences in this story.
What happened The success of horror film Obsession is shining a light on who gets paid what when things go unusually well.
The headline split The headlines are mostly aligned. The differences are small wording choices, not a major framing split.
Match confidence Developing. The source map is still developing. Keep watching for more sources to join.
Same-event confidenceDevelopingNot enough sources yet to confirm this is the same specific event.
Framing confidenceHiddenWording-gap score hidden — source map is too narrow to read confidently.
WHAT EACH SIDE EMPHASIZED
Left / center-leftPaid $6700 for a $300 million movie? Indie hit ignites bitter Hollywood debateThe Age (Australia) · Center-left · News report
CenterPaid $6700 for a $300 million movie? Indie hit ignites bitter Hollywood debateThe Sydney Morning Herald · Center · News report
Right / center-rightNo matching source in this bucket yet.Optics keeps watching for pickup.
SEE THE HEADLINES
Paid $6700 for a $300 million movie? Indie hit ignites bitter Hollywood debate
The success of horror film Obsession is shining a light on who gets paid what when things go unusually well.
Open source
Center-leftMostly FactualPaid $6700 for a $300 million movie? Indie hit ignites bitter Hollywood debate
The success of horror film Obsession is shining a light on who gets paid what when things go unusually well.
Open sourceDetails0/99 Wording Gap · Low confidence · 2 sources
0/99 Wording GapLow confidence2 sources · 2 bias bucketsDeveloping · 2 sources · 2 bucketsFormats: News report
SOURCE MAP CHANGES
Jun 23, 9:00 AM: The Sydney Morning Herald joined the source map.
Jun 23, 9:00 AM: The Age (Australia) joined the source map.
Now: Wording Gap is 0/99 and story health is developing · 2 sources · 2 buckets.