Ironically, the very algorithms designed to serve content have created a hunger for curation. Users are tired of algorithmic "optimization" that leads to homogenized plotlines (the "Netflix yellow" poster, the generic thriller synopsis). They are turning to human curators—YouTubers like Karsten Runquist, newsletters like The Watcher, and forums like Reddit’s r/television—to find the needle in the haystack.
Data from 2025 shows that the average subscription household now carries 4.7 streaming services. Time is the scarcest resource. Consequently, consumers view a 2-hour movie or a 10-hour series as a time investment. They refuse to invest in mediocre returns. Extra quality entertainment respects that transaction: You give me your time; I give you an unforgettable experience. xxxvdo2013 extra quality
We are in a virtuous cycle. High-quality popular media makes money. Money funds more high-risk, high-quality projects. Those projects train audiences to reject lazy storytelling. Audiences then punish lazy storytelling, forcing studios to invest in craft. Ironically, the very algorithms designed to serve content
Extra quality entertainment is no longer the alternative to popular media. It is the definition of it. The content that survives the next five years won't be the loudest or the cheapest. It will be the best. What to watch next (The Extra Quality Starter Pack):
Because in a world of infinite content, the only scarce resource is excellence.
What to watch next (The Extra Quality Starter Pack):