The Death of Hollywood and The Media

It is done. Stick a fork in it. We are looking at the end of an era.

Hollywood is on the way out. This means actors, writers, directors, and executives are going away. It is a foregone conclusion.

Add to the pile most in cable news. They are history. Late night television. Likely going to meet the same result. And let us not forget ESPN, which is owned by the dumpster fire Disney.

Pull the plug and watch them go down the toilet.

How can I make these proclamations? After spending 25 years watching and monitoring technological trends, it becomes easier to spot what is happening. The end result is rather simple to predict; the timing near impossible.

In this article I will go through the demise of Hollywood along with the media.

Understanding Technology

There is no other way to say it:

-If you do not have some basic understanding of technological trends, then you have no clue what is taking place.

It is really that simple. In a world which is advancing so rapidly in terms of technology, one is a lost ship without being able to fully grasp the implications. Even then, foreseeing how things unfolds is still rather difficult. However, some things become very obvious, especially over the long term.

Technology is a growing animal, and a very hungry one at that. This decade along we are going to see a number of "retail apocalypses", i.e. industries totally upended by disruption. These forces cannot be stopped. The only choice is whether to believe they exist or wait until the carnage is too much to ignore.

Can anyone in the United States make the claim shopping malls are doing well? Did you see this coming around 2010? How about 2013 when I finally clued in? Or did you start to grasp it when the media began to talk about it in 2016 or 2017?

The point is the signs are there long before it is evident to the masses. We are closing in on the point where it is becoming evident for cable news, the media, and maybe even late night television.

Hollywood, on the other hand, is still hidden away.

That is what we will clear up.

The Overriding Technological Trend

We start with a basic premise: technology is advancing at a pace that is going to disrupt many professions and industries. This is especially true for AI. We are seeing the advancement charted in months, not years. It presents a situation where we will see a radically different product in 24 months.

That means the things that humans can do better than the applications is going to decline. When it comes to Hollywood, we basically are dealing with the ability to develop scripts, video, and distribute. The last one is decades old so we will only briefly touch upon that.

The other two are still in the primal stages. However, we are already seeing the numbers moving against Hollywood. The trend towards social video is in full swing. It is one that is going to mirror photography.

Eyeballs

Hollywood and the media were always about eyeballs. They understood the attention economy long before crypto (or Web3) was even a thought. The companies involved in these industries fully grasped the importance of gaining an audience. It was also a direct translation into dollars.

The attention economy was completely disrupted by the Internet. It also affected many industries to the point where the traditional companies are suffering.

One of the keys is we are dealing with abundance. Hence, let us look at photography.

Here is an industry which was completely obliterated by the Internet and smartphone. The combination of these two caused a massive explosion in the number of photos taken each year.

Let us look at this chart:


Source

The number of phots went from around 600 billion in 2013 to around 1.75 trillion a decade later. This is expected to grow to 2 trillion by 2026 with a growth rate of 14.6% annually.

Smartphones made taking photos easy. Were these professional quality? Not even close. But they were good enough for grandma to see how her granddaughter is growing or the funny ways the cat sleeps.

With the Internet, people had an easy way to share the photos. Social media allows for the uploading of photos that can be shared with the world.

People are taking advantage of this. The success of Instagram is all we need to know.

This is a very important lesson for Hollywood and the media.

Video

Unfortunately, the numbers are a bit dated since Google doesn't seem to update them. However, we can still get an idea of what is going on. If anything, with the addition of other platforms such as Rumble, things are only growing.

The future is really nothing more than a game of numbers.

Here is what Hollywood produces:

Hollywood released about 15,000 hours of new TV episodes and films in the U.S. in 2022. Compare this to YouTube which creators upload 500 hours of content to YouTube each minute, or over 250 million hours per year (as of 2019 stats).

Certainly, we are not talking about the same thing. Hollywood produces feature length films along with top notch television shows. YouTube cannot compete with that.

Actually, when it comes to attention, it can.

Disruption occurs when a product is less expensive and available in great3r quantity, albeit with less quality. Over time, as the quality gets better, the gap closes as those who feel it is "good enough" and are more price sensitive.

Is this what is happening with YouTube and other social video platforms?

At the moment, perhaps not. But, based upon the numbers, if 0.01% of this to be competitive with Hollywood, then we are looking at a doubling of the annual output. This gets crazy if we see a .1% of the output accepted as a replacement for Hollywood, registering a 20x.

Of course, while this might not take place today, it is a given down the road.

Content Creation

The Internet forever chanced content distribution. We only have to look at the distribution of photos to see how this is true. It also applies to blogs, videos, podcasts, and anything else is digital.

What did not change a great deal is the tools available to content creators. Sure that was progress but it still took a certain degree of writing skills or graphic design to be able to produce top notch content. Basically, the masses could do okay stuff that couldn't compete.

That is all going to change. We are seeing the massive explosion of software. This is the downfall of Hollywood and the media.

When looking at film production, we have scripts, filming, editing, sound, and a host of other things that go into it. Then we have actors, crew, and directors who ensure it is pulled off. For more than a century, this is how it worked.

Today, there is software which will write a script for you. Then we have others that will design characters. Finally, there are applications which will turn all of this into video.

There are all the components.

The question is does this compete? At the moment, not even close. However, where will it be in two years? Some might believe nowhere near good enough to compete with humans. On this I disagree.

We have another factor to consider. There is work being done in each area of the process. Hence, as the video software improves, it is compounded is the scriptwriting gets better. Add in the ability to generate characters and we see massive improvement.

Does that mean it will be the best there is? Not necessarily. What it means is that, on the whole, the amount generated at an inexpensive price will saturate the market. Again, if only .01% of the video content out there is deemed acceptable as a replacement for Hollywood, it will take a huge chunk out of those companies.

Shift In Expectations

In a future article, we will show where Web3 enters the picture.

For now, we will close with the fact that expectations are declining in terms of high production content. The average person is not able to produce this and, quite frankly, might not get there for a long time.

That said, we see something more important rising. The need for high production content in the marketplace is less than it use to be. Just like grandma will love pics of the grandkids posted on Instagram as opposed to a professional photographer, the same is true for video. Even today, many will watch video game quality films that were designed by small companies nobody ever heard of. They are all over YouTube and generate a fair number of views.

These productions will only get better over the next few years.

High production was desired for decades because it was the only game in town. Today, that is not the case. If the content creation follows the same path as content distribution, which I believe it will, then we are dealing with something that is going to radically transform the entertainment industry.

How soon will this take place? That is the tricky part. Technology always advances faster than humans change. In fact, it often takes the removal of one generation before we see the societal shift. This is the case with the cable news channels. They are still in business because of the Baby Boomers. The Zoomers certainly aren't tuning in. Once enough of those people depart (die off), those channels will have a problem.

Ultimately, we can expect the market to be overrun with "decent quality production" video which will overwhelm everything. If you think things are bad now, just wait another few years.

This is how technology works. A few see it coming but most get run over by it. Again, take a look at the shopping mall and all the retail experts who were wrong on that one.

Hollywood as we know it is a fossil. It will be obliterated. Some companies will adapt but their market share will get much smaller.

After all, there was a time when "as General Motors went, so did the United States". That hasn't been the case in decades.


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(Edited)

A few weeks ago, I watched a short dystopian, animated film that was as high-quality and entertaining as anything I've seen all year from Hollywood. It was from a small outfit I'd never heard of before, and I made a mental note to keep an eye out for whatever they produce in the future.

It was "good enough" and held my interest from beginning to end. In fact, I watched it twice, I liked it so much. I'd be interested in your take on what Web3 will add to it, and agree that more, and better, is on the way. As even I have a prosumer gimbal I've yet to use, along with professional video-editing software. We're going to see more output, and it's going to be "good enough."

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Yep. For that hour or two, your attention was not with the high production entities.

That is how it changes. One hour at a time.

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It’s going to be wild to be able to create new episodes of things that we loved as a kid but they don’t produce as much or at all. I’m thinking of cartoons and things from when I was a kid. At first I’m sure they are going to try to control it the way they tried with pirate music and videos but once the stuff gets out there in a good, decentralized and fully open source way there’s no stopping it. I’ve got a few shows in mind that I would love to have an AI software generate some new episodes!

One thing I know many people are looking forward to is hearing the opinions of these fucking actors. That annoys me, then using their fame as a platform to push some shit or another.

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The problem for Hollywood actors is they killed the movie star. That is the drawing power. Throughout the last century, there were stars we would turn out for. Now, we have Denzel and Cruise as basically the last two standing, and they are both over 60.

That opens the door for a lot more to enter.

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That's amazing! What a great technological forecast! You have a fascinating way of analyzing how advancing technology is disrupting Hollywood and media. In a rapidly changing world, those who adapt will thrive. Could we be in for a bumpy ride as a result of this seismic shift?

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I'd like to see the % of soft & hard porn in the images section. More than half of the planet is female and yet nearly all young women feel the need of adding to that stack their previous generation has left them with. Snapchat and Instagram have basically no other purpose and Twitch has become a customers funnel for onlyfans as of lately.

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In the 1980s, experts predicted the DVD would kill the movie industry. No one will go to theaters to watch movies any more, they said. Yet, the best opening for a film (in history) was Avengers: Endgame, which took in a whopping $1.2 billion.

In 2019.

Long after streaming services like Netflix and Hulu throat punched DVDs to death.

Hollywood is still churning out amazing content. And likely will for the foreseeable future. Will technology change how movies are made? Yes, absolutely. But I don't expect AI to kill the film industry any more than Amazon has put Walmart out of business.

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Depends upon what you mean by the film industry. If you mean movie and television production, not that isnt going away. However, who is creating it and in control is going to change.

You point to change in distribution. Nothing you stated talks about changes in the development and creation of the content.

That is what is different this time.

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Okay, I see where you're coming from. Creation and development will change, of course, and that will lead to new leaders in the industry in terms of creation and content development. That's an always evolving thing in any industry.

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There is also the component of decentralization. Right now, we see Hollywood (movie and television) and New York (television) as major epicenters for media. With the advancement of technology on the creation site, we can see companies, large and small, get into the game in different regions.

This is, of course, not limited to a single country. People anywhere will be able to create content that is "good enough".

After all, there was a time when the major news source was CNN. Looking at their ratings, that is far from the case. Most of us get our news online, often put together by some individual who is far from a broadcaster or journalists (at least by traditional metrics).

I foresee a similar things happening with film, television, and the entertainment medium.

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It's already happening. I almost joined a group that is connecting script writers with producers without going through the usual agenting channels. I may join them yet. But decentralization of the film industry has already begun.

I am a member of https://adimverse.com/, which attempting the same thing for creators of all kinds including film and script writers, novelists, and other storytellers.

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Yep. They might be small now but they will start to grow in size. This is how disruption works.

It happens on the fringes first before really exploding.

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1980 baby here... and I'm ready for Hollywood to die! I can't even remember the last time I had a good time going to the theater. I've probably seen 5 movies in the theater in the last 5 years, and that was just for the premium 3D IMAX experience that I can't get at home. Let AI run the whole damn thing. I couldn't care less.

But even with my home streaming services (Peacock, Paramount), my favorite theater is watching "The Beautiful Game!" Occasionally I will show my 28-year-old partner some 90s movies from back in my day, before any of the characters had mobile phones and social media. "Modern day classics!"

We recently had an "American" marathon:
American Beauty
American Psycho
American Pie

She hadn't seen any of them!

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Yeah. I read once that the top 100 films were broken down by decade (I believe it was the AFI list). There was either 1 or Zero in the last 20 years.

But aside from the poor product, the technology is even more disruptive. Television shows are still popular. Ultimately, we are going to see a lot of things shifting around.

A bit of insight, there are plans I have for LeoGlossary in this direction. See if I can pull it off.

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