We have entered the era of . The result is a new class of celebrities: YouTubers, streamers, and TikTokers who command larger daily audiences than network news shows. MrBeast, a 25-year-old creator, produces stunt-based entertainment that costs millions to make, funded entirely by algorithm-driven ad revenue and merch sales.
The golden age of entertainment content has given us unprecedented access to art, knowledge, and connection. But the real blockbuster hit of the 21st century—the one we are all starring in, whether we like it or not—is the story of how we lost our attention and tried to get it back.
Disney+ doesn’t just stream The Simpsons ; it curates themed playlists, offers behind-the-scenes “making of” content, and integrates directly with merchandise links. Meanwhile, a teenager on YouTube doesn’t just watch a video essay; they are simultaneously consuming criticism (a literary tradition), comedy (a performance art), and a visual collage of memes (folk art).
That era is dead. In its place is a landscape of micro-cultures.
Every like, every pause, every re-watch is harvested, analyzed, and sold. The “free” content you consume is paid for with the only asset you can never replenish: your time and focus. Understanding this is the first step toward agency. The second step is curation—intentionally choosing slow media, turning off autoplay, and remembering that in a world of algorithmic noise, the most radical act is to decide what you watch, rather than letting what you watch decide who you are.