AndroidPure
  • Leaks
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Updates
  • How to
No Result
View All Result
  • Leaks
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Updates
  • How to
No Result
View All Result
AndroidPure
No Result
View All Result

How to Stop the Google Discover Feed From Spoiling Your Shows

Androidpure Staff by Androidpure Staff
July 17, 2026
in Guide

Ever opened your phone, swiped over to the Google Discover feed, and had a card blurt out that a major character just died in the show you’re three episodes behind on? You’re not imagining it, and you’re not alone. Discover — the swipe-left panel next to your Android home screen and the card stream inside the Google app — regularly surfaces auto-generated news and video cards whose headlines give away plot points for shows and movies people are actively watching. And there is no button anywhere that says “stop spoiling my shows.”

Google's current 2026 logo wordmark, representing the Google app that powers the Discover feed on Android
Image: Google

Why the Google Discover feed keeps spoiling your shows

This one isn’t our discovery — credit goes to a PSA thread on r/GooglePixel (“The Google Discover feed spoils TV shows”) where readers laid the problem out plainly. One commenter had the final season of The Bear spoiled by a Discover card headline before they’d finished watching. Several others pointed out the core issue: when you tap the feedback menu on a card, there’s no “spoiler” option to choose. You get generic choices like “Not interested” or “Other” — nothing that tells Google the specific reason the card is unwelcome.

Here’s the part worth being clear-eyed about. Discover’s personalization is on by default and opt-out, not opt-in — you never asked for it, you have to go switch it off. Google has run this feed for years, and “it spoiled my show” is a foreseeable, recurring complaint, yet there’s still no spoiler-specific control. That’s a design choice, and it favors engagement over precise control: the feed is built to keep you tapping, and the settings that would actually rein it in are buried. It’s worth saying out loud that even the act of “hiding” a card is an interaction Google logs — the more you poke at the feed to fix it, the more behavioral data you hand over about exactly what you watch. The tools below help, but only the first two genuinely solve the problem; the rest are damage control.

How to turn off the Google Discover feed (the only real fix)

The steps below are verified against Google’s own support documentation. If you want to guarantee no more spoilers, the honest answer is to switch Discover off. It’s two separate toggles because Discover shows up in two places.

  1. Turn off Discover inside the Google app. Open the Google app, tap your profile picture (top right), go to Settings > General, and toggle off Discover. This kills the card stream inside the app itself.
  2. Remove the Discover panel from your home screen. Long-press an empty area of your home screen, tap Home settings, and toggle off Show Google app. On most launchers, including Pixel’s own, this removes the swipe-left Discover panel next to your home screen entirely.

If you want to keep Discover but see fewer spoilers

Not ready to lose the feed altogether? You can nudge it, but manage your expectations — none of this is a real spoiler filter, and it all works reactively, after a headline has already flashed in front of you.

  1. Hide individual cards. On any card, tap the three-dot menu and choose “Hide this” or “See less like this.” This steers personalization away from that topic or show. It won’t retroactively un-spoil anything, and you’ll be doing it one card at a time.
  2. Block a specific source, where that’s still an option. On a card from a particular publisher or channel, the three-dot menu may offer “Hide stories from [source].” Worth flagging: some commenters in that r/GooglePixel thread report this option getting harder to find or disappearing in certain regions and app versions. Treat that as user-reported and region-variable, not a confirmed global change from Google — but if you can’t find it on your phone, that may be why.

A note for non-Pixel phones

This is where things get fuzzy across brands. The exact menu wording and paths vary by launcher — Samsung’s One UI Home, Google’s Pixel Launcher, and other OEM skins each phrase things a little differently — and Google app menus also shift by version and region. If your wording doesn’t match exactly, look for the equivalent: the Home settings option after a long-press on the home screen, and the profile picture > Settings > General path inside the Google app. The toggle you want will be there even if it’s labelled slightly differently.

The bigger takeaway: the cleanest way to stop the Google Discover feed from spoiling your shows is to turn it off, precisely because Google hasn’t built the granular control that would let you keep the feed and avoid spoilers. Until there’s a genuine spoiler filter, “off” is the only setting that actually respects your watchlist.

Sources: r/GooglePixel, Google Support

Tags: Android Tipsdiscover feedGooglegoogle discoverhow-to
ShareTweetSendShare
Previous Post

EU Spares Smartwatches From Swappable-Battery Rule — But Not Your Next Phone

Androidpure Staff

Androidpure Staff

Androidpure Staff delivers the latest from the Android world — phone launches, software updates, and practical how-to guides — without the press-release fluff. We focus on what genuinely matters to readers, in India and around the globe.

Follow Us

  • 914 Followers

Popular

  • Motorola Edge 70 Max official teaser showing Qi2 magnetic wireless charging

    Motorola Edge 70 Max launches July 15 in India: Qi2 magnetic charging

    Share
    Share Tweet
  • Realme Narzo 100x 5G Launches July 15: 8,000mAh Battery Confirmed

    Share
    Share Tweet
  • Samsung Health Asks: Consent to AI Training or Lose Your Synced Data

    Share
    Share Tweet
  • Google Photos Video Remix: How to Use the New AI Video Editor

    Share
    Share Tweet
  • Subway Surfers receives a New York themed update

    Share
    Share Tweet
  • Redmi Note 17 and Note 17 Pro Launch in China: Price and Specs

    Share
    Share Tweet
  • What is the Citra resolution hack? Learn how to improve FPS in 3DS games on your Android phone

    Share
    Share Tweet

Latest

Google's current 2026 logo wordmark, representing the Google app that powers the Discover feed on Android

How to Stop the Google Discover Feed From Spoiling Your Shows

July 17, 2026
Hands disassembling a Google Pixel Watch 4 with a screwdriver to replace its battery, showing the watch's serviceable design

EU Spares Smartwatches From Swappable-Battery Rule — But Not Your Next Phone

July 17, 2026
OnePlus logo, as the company officially confirms OxygenOS is being retired in favor of Oppo's ColorOS 17

OnePlus Confirms OxygenOS Is Being Replaced by ColorOS 17

July 17, 2026
Google logo, the company ordered by the EU to open Android and Search to AI rivals

EU Orders Google to Open Android and Search to AI Rivals

July 16, 2026
Vivo T5 Lite 5G in Twilight Shadow colour showing the rear dual-camera module

Vivo T5 Lite 5G launched in India: Price, Specs, and Availability

July 16, 2026
OnePlus 15 smartphones in black, purple and gold, with Powered by OxygenOS branding, as OnePlus reportedly plans to exit the US, Europe and eventually India

OnePlus May Exit India Too by 2027, Bloomberg Report Claims

July 16, 2026
Xiaomi 17 Ultra in green, the flagship now receiving Xiaomi's first stable Android 17 update

Xiaomi 17 Gets Stable Android 17: First Phone After Pixel

July 15, 2026
AndroidPure

© 2024 AndroidPure - NonStop Android.

Navigate Site

  • Privacy
  • About Us
  • Tip Us
  • Contact Us

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Leaks
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Updates
  • How to

© 2024 AndroidPure - NonStop Android.