The industry is currently stuck in a 20-year nostalgia loop. Why? Because Millennials and Gen X are now the executives, and they are greenlighting the toys and movies they loved as teenagers. Furthermore, in a risk-averse economic climate, known IP is safer than an original idea.
This has led to the phenomenon. In 2023 alone, over 500 scripted series were released. For the consumer, this wealth of choice leads to the infamous "paradox of choice"—the inability to commit to any single title for fear a better one exists in the queue. For the creator, it has led to the "Peak Indifference" era: mid-budget films have collapsed, replaced by either micro-budget horror (massive ROI) or $200 million event spectacles. The Algorithmic Muse: How AI is Changing Creation We are currently witnessing the third revolution of popular media . The first was the printing press (democratization of reading). The second was the internet (democratization of publishing). The third is Generative AI (democratization of creation).
Consider the "Mandela Effect"—a pop culture phenomenon where massive groups of people misremember the same event (e.g., "Berenstain Bears" vs. "Berenstein Bears"). While benign, it opened the door for more malicious narrative hacking. When frames a political rival through the lens of reality TV villain edits, the line between documentary and drama vanishes. The 20-Year Nostalgia Cycle Look at the box office in 2024 and 2025. What do you see? Barbie (a 60-year-old doll). Twisters (a 28-year-old sequel). Deadpool & Wolverine (characters from the early 2000s). Star Wars spin-off #47.
The coming decade will determine whether we master the algorithm or are mastered by it. Will we use AI to generate a thousand unique voices, or will we let it grind culture into a single, palatable paste?