Black Mirror: Bandersnatch was a trial balloon. Future popular media will be branching narratives where the viewer chooses the plot. Video games (which now outsell Hollywood movies) have perfected this. The line between playing a game and watching a film is disappearing.
We are entering the "post-truth" entertainment phase. Deepfakes of Tom Cruise or Taylor Swift performing acts they never did will be indistinguishable from reality. Popular media will no longer be a record of what happened, but a tool for what could happen. Audiences will develop "media literacy" as a survival skill—learning to distrust everything they see, even on trusted platforms. Part VII: Critical Theory – Is There Still a "Mainstream"? A central debate in cultural criticism today is whether a unified “popular media” still exists. In 1995, nearly 40% of Americans watched the Seinfeld finale. In 2024, the most-watched scripted show on television might reach 5 million viewers—a tiny fraction of the population. Justice.League.XXX.An.Axel.Braun.Parody.2017.DV...
Instead of a mainstream, we have : islands of interest. One person’s “best show ever” ( Succession ) is another person’s “never heard of it.” The algorithms have given us the illusion of choice, but they have also trapped us in filter bubbles. The Return of Curation Interestingly, there is a counter-trend. As AI and algorithms flood the zone with mediocre content, human curation (newsletters like Garbage Day , podcasts like The Rewatchables , and even old-fashioned book clubs) is becoming valuable again. We are exhausted by infinite choice. We want trusted guides to tell us what is worth our time. Conclusion: You Are the Media The most important truth about modern entertainment content and popular media is this: you are no longer a passive consumer. Black Mirror: Bandersnatch was a trial balloon