We are seeing a massive boom in "mid-core" content. These are shows and movies that are high-budget enough to look great but structurally familiar enough to be "second-screen friendly." Think of the procedural dramas or reality competitions that you can watch while scrolling through your phone. Popular media is increasingly designed to be —it fills the space without demanding 100% of our cognitive load. Fandom as Currency
Popularity used to be measured by ratings; now, it’s measured by . A show with 1 million casual viewers is often less valuable to a network than a show with 100,000 "stans" who create fan art, write theories, and buy merchandise. Media franchises like the MCU or Star Wars have pivoted from making "movies" to building "ecosystems" that fans never have to leave. The "Niche-ification" of Everything NinaKayy.22.11.22.Four.Babes.One.Cock.XXX.1080p...
The landscape of entertainment has shifted from the "prime time" era to the era. We no longer just consume media; we live inside a feedback loop where the line between the creator and the audience has almost entirely vanished. The Algorithm as the New A&R We are seeing a massive boom in "mid-core" content
In the past, "gatekeepers" (studio heads, record executives, and editors) decided what became popular. Today, the gatekeeper is an algorithm. Content is often engineered for —hooks that happen in the first three seconds, "aesthetic" visuals designed for screenshots, and sounds specifically made to become TikTok trends. Popular media isn't just about storytelling anymore; it’s about meme-ability . The Rise of the "Mid-Core" Fandom as Currency Popularity used to be measured