For much of the 20th century, “popular media” referred to a relatively stable, centralized set of institutions: network television, Hollywood studios, mass-market paperback publishers, and Top 40 radio. Entertainment content, in turn, was the output of these gatekeepers—a one-to-many broadcast model that shaped public taste from the top down. Today, that model has collapsed. Streaming services (Netflix, Hulu, Disney+), user-generated platforms (TikTok, YouTube, Twitch), and algorithmic recommendation engines have decentralized cultural production. As a result, the relationship between entertainment content and popular media has become recursive: media is the content, and content perpetually regenerates media logics.
Conversely, the same algorithms create filter bubbles. In the broadcast era, shows like M A S H* or The Cosby Show functioned as shared national texts. Today, two people may have no overlapping entertainment experiences. This weakens the kind of common reference points that enable public discourse. xxx-av-20148
This paper examines the evolving relationship between entertainment content and popular media, arguing that the traditional hierarchy of media influence has dissolved in the post-network era. Drawing on Jean Baudrillard’s theory of hyperreality and Henry Jenkins’ concept of participatory culture, this analysis explores how streaming platforms, social media algorithms, and transmedia storytelling have transformed popular media from a reflective mirror of society into an active, generative engine of collective identity. Through case studies of Stranger Things (2016–present) and the #BridgertonTok phenomenon, the paper demonstrates that contemporary audiences no longer simply consume content but co-create the symbolic landscape of popular media. The conclusion addresses the paradoxical effect: while this shift democratizes representation, it also accelerates cultural fragmentation and nostalgia-driven stasis. For much of the 20th century, “popular media”
This paper proceeds in three parts. First, it theorizes the shift from mass culture to niche-driven participatory culture. Second, it analyzes two contemporary case studies that illustrate this shift. Third, it evaluates the social consequences, particularly regarding identity formation and collective memory. In the broadcast era, shows like M A
[Generated for academic purposes] Course: Media Studies 450: Contemporary Popular Culture Date: October 26, 2023
Previously marginalized groups now see themselves reflected in mainstream popular media faster than ever before. Pose (FX/Netflix), Ramy (Hulu), and Heartstopper (Netflix) demonstrate that niche stories can achieve global popularity, aided by algorithms that surface diverse content.