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: Synthetic celebrities and AI influencers with distinct personalities are now common, even as they spark debates about the future of human talent in acting and modeling.
The current era is defined by a specific, unprecedented condition: the collapse of the monoculture. In the age of three TV networks and a handful of major film studios, entertainment was a shared civic space. When M A S H* aired its finale, over 100 million Americans watched the same event. Today, we live in a fragmented multiverse of niches. One household may be immersed in the sprawling lore of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, another in the high-stakes drama of Formula 1: Drive to Survive, and a third in the quiet, unsettling world of indie horror games on Twitch. This fragmentation, enabled by streaming and social media, has democratized culture, allowing subcultures from K-pop stans to D&D enthusiasts to thrive. But it has also eroded a common ground. It is increasingly possible for citizens to live in entirely different informational and emotional universes, a fragmentation that has profound political consequences. The shared ritual of watching a popular show is no longer a reliable social glue. alsscan240623explicitkaithotbeatsxxx72 hot