The battle for your attention span is not a war with a winner. It is a divorce. Popular media is finally admitting that it cannot be everything to everyone.
But even the superhero factory is showing cracks. The Marvels underperformed. Ant-Man shrank. The audience, exhausted by homework (you have to watch two series and three movies to understand one new film), is starting to rebel. Here is the twist in the third act. As the mainstream media gets louder, faster, and more referential, a counterculture is emerging. It is not happening on Netflix or in theaters. It is happening on a cozy website called “Are.na,” on private Discord servers, and in the resurgence of physical media.
The numbers are stark. According to a recent Nielsen report, the average American adult now spends over 34 hours a month on short-form video apps. That is nearly an entire day of looking at 15-second clips. Deeper.24.08.08.Aubrey.Lovelace.Interlude.XXX.1...
This has led to what critics call “the anxiety edit”—dialogue so fast it borders on auctioneering, plot twists every three minutes, and a soundtrack that never stops telling you how to feel. Shows like The Bear and Succession won Emmys not just for writing, but for pacing that mimics the stress of a group chat blowing up. Yet, in the midst of this fragmentation, a strange opposite force is pulling the industry: nostalgia.
“The algorithm loves familiarity,” says Marcus Thorne, a media analyst at Creston Digital. “Streaming services don’t pay for movies anymore. They pay for ‘engagement hours.’ A weird, quiet indie drama might be a masterpiece, but it won’t keep subscribers on the couch for eight hours. A Marvel show will.” The battle for your attention span is not
“The traditional three-act structure is dying,” says Helena Vance, a screenwriter who has worked on three major streaming pilots. “You can’t spend ten minutes setting up a character anymore. If you don’t grab them in the first 90 seconds, they’re gone. They’ve literally opened another tab.”
“I think we hit peak optimization,” says 24-year-old librarian and content creator Mara Liu. “I got so tired of watching a movie that was designed by a spreadsheet. ‘Include a sad part here, a joke here, a post-credits scene here.’ I started watching old Tarkovsky films on mute just to feel something real.” But even the superhero factory is showing cracks
So the next time you sit down to watch something, try an experiment. Put the phone in the other room. Watch the first ten minutes of a movie you know nothing about. If you get bored, don’t check Instagram. Just sit in the boredom for a minute.