Zzseries.23.04.18.day.of.debauchery.part.4.xxx....

It is 3:47 AM. The room is lit only by the pale blue glow of a television screen. On it, a former chemistry teacher turned meth lord is sharing a quiet, devastating moment with his wife. You have watched this scene before. You know exactly how it ends. Yet, you cannot look away. Your thumb hovers over the remote, but instead of pressing “Sleep,” it taps the touchpad to confirm: Play Next Episode.

This has led to a fascinating, and terrifying, homogenization of storytelling. Screenwriters will tell you that notes from executives used to be about character arcs or dialogue. Now, notes are about data. ZZSeries.23.04.18.Day.Of.Debauchery.Part.4.XXX....

The average consumer has access to over 1.1 million unique TV episodes and movies across the major U.S. streaming services. That is a lifetime of viewing. Faced with this infinite library, we do not feel liberated; we feel anxious. We scroll through menus for forty-five minutes, watching trailers, reading synopses, and ultimately either giving up or rewatching The Office for the tenth time. It is 3:47 AM

The catalyst was two-fold: the proliferation of streaming platforms and the explosion of user-generated content on social media. Netflix, beginning as a DVD-by-mail service that killed Blockbuster, pivoted to streaming in 2007. By 2013, with the release of House of Cards , it proved that data (not just talent) could manufacture a hit. The algorithm knew you liked David Fincher’s dark lighting and Kevin Spacey’s fourth-wall-breaking menace. It gave you a Frankenstein’s monster of your own viewing habits. You have watched this scene before