It's a hodgepodge. These paragraphs near the end might be the point. I don't blame you for not getting this far.
"Here, streaming platforms have achieved a strange paradox. Never has a group of studios gained so much control over the production, distribution, exhibition, and reception of movies by making movies no one cares about or remembers. Having not only failed to discover a new generation of auteurs, the streamers have also ensured that their filmmakers are little more than precarious content creators, ineligible to share the profits of any hit. It’s a shift that has induced a profound sense of confusion.
“What are these movies?” the Hollywood producer asked me. “Are they successful movies? Are they not? They have famous people in them. They get put out by major studios. And yet because we don’t have any reliable numbers from the streamers, we actually don’t know how many people have watched them. So what are they? If no one knows about them, if no one saw them, are they just something that people who are in them can talk about in meetings to get other jobs? Are we all just trying to keep the ball rolling so we’re just getting paid and having jobs, but no one’s really watching any of this stuff? When does the bubble burst? No one has any fucking clue.”
"Netflix has created a pyramid scheme of attention, with no end in sight. And yet if the streamer admitted how little impact its movies make, it would undermine its long-running pitch to audiences, Hollywood talent, and their business representatives that the company is a grand star-making enterprise that produces great cinema with commercial appeal.
This is the inevitable consequence of tuning the content of productions to a subscription based business model once you have achieved market saturation. The purpose of the videos on Netflix is not to entertain or inform you, but to do the bare minimum to stop you from switching to something else.
This is beginning to take hold in parts of the games industry too, where it's far more important to keep the player "engaged" (in the absolute loosest possible term) than give them time to go off and do something else.
I believe a lot of 80s and 90s nostalgia stems from the fact media creators were incentivized to give the consumer what they actually valued in a relatively short time, whereas once given the opportunity the producers will drag it out as long as possible eventually milking everyone dry. You may have less in the way of explicit commercial breaks today, but the whole thing has become one big commercial break for something which the service is constantly promising to deliver and never does.
It's popular right now because it's Christmas time. The video stimulates the yule log tradition for people who don't have fireplaces (most people) or don't want the mess of a real fire. A lot of people are off work right now, visiting friends and family, and want a nice seasonal ambiance.
This is because many businesses would put this up as a decoration. Probably private people too. I wouldn't be surprised if it was #6 because there isn't much choice in it.
Oh yes but Cindy from the coffee shop probably doesn't know this.
Usually they have a fire tv stick connected to a tv or something. So it's not like a full PC. And for sideloading something like snarttubenext you need to be pretty savvy..
Here it's really pretty common. Almost like a fad lately. It's becoming a bit boring.
I still have no idea what the point is. I gave up.
Anyone care to summarize?