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What was once a low-budget TV special is now a dominant force in entertainment content. Podcasts like Serial and Crime Junkie , documentaries like Making a Murderer , and Netflix docuseries have turned criminal justice into spectator sport.
Entertainment content and popular media are no longer a distraction from "real life"—they are real life. They shape our politics (think The Daily Show or Last Week Tonight ), our language ("main character energy," "red flag," "glow up"), and our morality. IHaveAWife.24.06.16.Ava.Addams.REMASTERED.XXX.1...
This has shattered the Western monopoly on storytelling. Today, the most exciting entertainment content comes from global hubs: Korean dramas (K-dramas), Nigerian Nollywood thrillers, Spanish-language telenovelas on Telemundo, and Japanese anime (which has moved from a niche subculture to a dominant pillar of global media). What was once a low-budget TV special is
Tools like OpenAI’s Sora (text-to-video) and advanced scriptwriting LLMs are threatening to turn the production pyramid upside down. Very soon, a single person will be able to generate a feature-length film using voice prompts. They shape our politics (think The Daily Show
Popular media has become a giant game of "connect the dots." Viewers no longer just watch a show; they invest in a "universe." The success of The Last of Us on HBO depends on nostalgia for the video game. The anticipation for Barbie (2023) relied on a 60-year-old toy heritage.
But how did we get here? And what does the relentless churn of streaming, gaming, and social media mean for the future of storytelling? For most of the 20th century, "popular media" meant a one-way street. Studios produced; audiences consumed. The barrier to entry was financial and technical. To create entertainment content, you needed a production studio, a distribution network (theaters, cable lines), and a marketing budget big enough to buy a small island.
The promise, however, is immense. We live in a time where a filmmaker in Lagos can collaborate with a musician in Seoul and an animator in Buenos Aires. The global village McLuhan predicted is finally here, and it is fueled by stories.