The Tems page does not deliver a news update. It opens with a subscription notice that asks readers to click Subscribe to confirm they have read and agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge the Privacy Policy.
That is why people searching now run into a legal notice instead of a story. The same text says readers also agree to receive marketing communications, updates, special offers, including partner offers, and other information from BET and the Paramount family of companies, with the option to unsubscribe at any time.
The only other concrete item in the provided text is a 2026 copyright notice for BET Interactive, LLC, described as a wholly owned subsidiary of Black Entertainment Television LLC. That detail matters because it confirms the page is functioning as a standard site notice, not a reported entertainment item.
The problem is the gap between the headline context and the body text. A reader looking for BET Awards coverage finds no event reporting at all, only terms-of-use language and privacy-policy wording. There is no named person, no announcement, and no dated development to test against the search term.
So the answer is plain: the provided page does not contain the Tems story a reader might expect. It contains a subscription gate and legal boilerplate, and nothing in the text points to when a real entertainment item would appear or what it would say. Until that missing content is supplied, the page remains a notice, not news.

