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That chaotic, beautiful, terrifying swirl of data is the mirror of our collective soul. And for the first time in history, we are all holding the camera.
We are also on the cusp of generative AI's integration into media. We already have AI-generated music and deepfake cameos. Within five years, we will likely have personalized —a rom-com where the algorithm writes the love interest to look and sound exactly like your ideal type; a thriller that adjusts its pacing based on your heart rate; a video game where the NPCs are powered by chatbots that remember your past conversations. sexmex200818meicornejohornytiktokxxx1 full
The true rupture came with the internet, then streaming. YouTube (2005), Netflix streaming (2007), and Spotify (2008) eliminated the need for physical distribution. Suddenly, anyone with a smartphone could create and distribute entertainment content and popular media to a global audience. The gatekeepers were not eliminated, but their power was radically diluted. That chaotic, beautiful, terrifying swirl of data is
Generative AI (Midjourney, Sora, ChatGPT) has made it possible to create photorealistic video, audio, and text of anyone saying anything. While this can be used for legitimate satire or low-budget filmmaking, it is already being used for non-consensual pornography, political disinformation, and corporate fraud. The era of "seeing is believing" for entertainment content and popular media is over. We already have AI-generated music and deepfake cameos
While streaming has saved consumers money (compared to buying DVDs or cable bundles), it has devastated many artists. A songwriter might earn $0.0003 per Spotify stream. A mid-list actor on a Netflix hit might never see a residual check (unlike the old TV syndication model). This has led to strikes (the 2023 WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes), a resurgence of vinyl and physical media among collectors, and a push for "fair trade" streaming models.