If the answer is no, turn it off. Close the app. Read a book. Go for a walk. Starve the beast of mediocrity.
Those days are dead.
If you only read reviews that validate your taste, you will never discover the weird, challenging film that changes your life. tonightsgirlfriend240308ellienovaxxx1080 better
Find five friends, three critics, and two Substack writers whose taste you genuinely admire. Ignore everyone else. In the age of noise, signal is found via trusted gatekeepers you choose, not algorithms imposed upon you. The Future of Better Popular Media We are seeing the green shoots of recovery. The "Streaming Wars" are ending, and the "Quality Wars" are beginning. Studios are realizing that spending $200 million on a generic superhero film that gets a 45% on Rotten Tomatoes is a worse investment than spending $40 million on a sharp, original thriller that wins Oscars. If the answer is no, turn it off
For decades, the relationship between the audience and the entertainment industry was simple: creators produced, distributors pushed, and consumers consumed. We watched what was on the three major networks. We read what the major publishing houses printed. We listened to what Clear Channel (now iHeartMedia) decided to play on repeat. Go for a walk
The next time you pick up the remote or open Spotify, ask yourself: Is this good, or is it just new? Does it respect my time? Does it have a point of view?