Skip to the main content area Skip to the footer section

Fixing the entertainment and media landscape requires a shift away from low-effort AI content and engagement-bait algorithms toward human-centric creation and quality-focused metrics [1]. Revitalizing content involves prioritizing human-curated platforms, empowering independent creators, and abandoning the "all-you-can-eat" model in favor of intentional curation [2, 3]. You can read the full analysis at The Atlantic, New York Times, and Criterion Channel.

We will not fix entertainment and media content with a new app or a new AI. We will fix it with boredom and intention .

The entertainment and media industry has undergone significant changes in recent years, with the rise of streaming services, social media, and online content platforms. However, with these changes comes a need for improvement and innovation in the way content is created, distributed, and consumed. This review aims to identify areas that need fixing in the entertainment and media content landscape.

Finally, the responsibility of fixing media does not lie solely with tech giants or creators; it requires a more discerning audience. Media literacy must be treated as a fundamental modern skill. When audiences stop rewarding "clickbait" and start seeking out long-form, investigative, or artistically ambitious content, the market will inevitably follow.