The studios wanted to scan background actors’ faces for perpetuity and use AI to generate scripts. The unions shut Hollywood down for 148 days. It was the first time the assembly line stopped since 1960.
In a homogenized culture, weirdness is the only remaining scarcity. A24 is popular precisely because it refuses to be popular for everyone. Part IV: The Legacy Comeback (Warner Bros. Discovery) No studio has had a more public nervous breakdown. Under CEO David Zaslav, Warner Bros. made the decision to shelve Batgirl for a tax write-off, angered every filmmaker on earth, and then rebranded HBO Max to “Max,” erasing one of the most prestigious names in television.
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"The global slate." While Disney focuses on American four-quadrant blockbusters, Netflix chases every niche simultaneously. Squid Game (South Korea), Lupin (France), Berlin (Spain), Rana Naidu (India). They aren’t making shows for the world; they are making the world into a single, bingeable audience.
Popularity in the streaming era is not about quality. It is about completion rate . The most popular show is not the best show; it’s the show that makes you hit “Next Episode” at 2 AM. Part III: The Auteur’s Last Stand (A24) Amid the franchises and algorithms, a tiny independent studio with a hipster logo became the most unlikely powerhouse. A24, founded in 2012, has no superheroes, no sequels (except one: Talk 2 Me ), and no theme parks. Yet it has won 19 Academy Awards, including Best Picture for Everything Everywhere All at Once . The studios wanted to scan background actors’ faces
Baby Reindeer (2024). A low-budget, disturbing, one-man show from comedian Richard Gadd. No stars. No action. It became a global phenomenon, viewed by 50 million accounts, because the algorithm fed it to people who liked You and Maniac . A legacy studio would have passed. Netflix took a swing and hit a cultural nerve.
In the summer of 1975, a rogue shark sank the concept of the “small picture” for good. When Steven Spielberg’s Jaws refused to leave theaters, it didn’t just invent the summer blockbuster—it transformed movie studios from factories into religions. Nearly fifty years later, the high priests of popular entertainment no longer just produce movies and shows. They engineer ecosystems. In a homogenized culture, weirdness is the only
Intellectual Property (IP) fortress. Disney owns Marvel, Pixar, Lucasfilm, 20th Century Studios, and National Geographic. Its vault is the Louvre of childhood.