This is an excellent phrase to unpack, as it sits at the intersection of ("better") and reach ("popular"). When people ask for "better entertainment content and popular media," they are usually expressing frustration with a specific gap in the current market.
But the audience is getting restless. We aren't just tired; we are hungry . We are entering a new era—one defined not by more content, but by better content.
For the past decade, the algorithm has been the ultimate tastemaker. It fed us what we would tolerate, not what we would love. The result? A landscape of "good enough" content: sequels no one asked for, true crime docs that blur the line between journalism and gore, and sitcoms designed to be loud enough to hear while scrolling on a second screen.
AI is moving from a back-end tool to an infrastructure layer, enabling "frictionless" entertainment that predicts exactly what you want to watch next.