Television and Radio are 75% advertisement.

Most of my favorite youtubers from 2010s are gone replaced with nonstop politics, drama, reaction, and streaming content farming.

I feel it in my heart that short form content is damaging everyones attention spans especially my tablet ridden younger family members.

Weekend trips to Blockbusters to rent out a game and movie is gone.

When I go into the search bar on YouTube I see stuff literally called “brain break” and “brain rot”.

I switch on the news and its 90% pure political propagandano matter the station.

Even the memes suck now, say what you want about caption memes and dancing babies and troll face, Pepe, me gusta but that shit was at least comprehensible in humor. go on 67 Wikipedia and it literally says “It has no fixed meaning.”

Even the steam store just feels different now. Its full of gooner porn bait visual novels and mundane activity sims and 1 season relevant fps shooters.

All the stuff I enjoyed is gone, and everything they make now seems so empty and pessimistic now. The last bastion of enjoyment zi have is older media and indie made stuff by a few select artist/small teams . Is this just me getting old yelling at clouds, or is something wrong?

  • protist@mander.xyz
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    4 months ago

    Entertainment is getting worse and you’re getting old. The media landscape has fractured, and there are no dominant cultural touchstones anymore. You’re looking for media in all the ways you used to, but everything is different now. There is still plenty of amazing long form content on YouTube, and lots of great movies. You have to do more seeking now, though, where before you could just open up YouTube or turn on the TV

    • Hackworth@piefed.ca
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      4 months ago

      The loss of widely shared cultural touchstones in media has messed with my perception of time. But also, I’m getting old.

      • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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        4 months ago

        My favorite part to that is to discover something for the first time, fall in love with it, think it’s the most amazing thing ever … then realize that it’s ten years old and everyone got excited about it a long time ago.

        But it also means I don’t give a shit anymore and I just enjoy watching things that make me happy and interest me, instead of trying to chase after the latest fad.

      • Zephorah@discuss.online
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        4 months ago

        I too am old. I loved YouTube for the lack of prescribed format until it became prescribed format by becoming enslaved to and hopelessly manipulated by an algorithm.

        The random free form was lovely and enjoyable. Was.

        There was one point in which I stumbled into “beige” culture, then found myself watching a vid, long form, of a millennial discussing decor. Not my thing. I’m there for comedy, instruction, and journalistic documentary forms. Watching millennial man discuss decor, the psychosocial of it hit me. Here’s this personable fellow talking right to me (the camera) about nonsensical daily crap, on a subject you might engage in a work breakroom. Living space decor is pretty light fare.

        For people who are fairly devoid of random, natural socialization that is not stressful for them, of course this is popular. It conveys a false sense of human interaction and agreement. Dopamine hit success without talking to anyone real.

        Explains reaction vid popularity, for sure. I find them to be the most obnoxious waste of time, worse than ads, but they are popular. And probably for the lack of socialization and need for that type of dopamine hit reason.

        If you have people, and get genuine reaction in regular conversation, why would you want this?

    • Zephorah@discuss.online
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      4 months ago

      The scifi television renaissance was fantastic, while it lasted. Says the Star Wars generation genx media consumer.

      Things like McNally, fast/fancy/clean woodworking snippets, and cat vids are great short form, in moderation, sure. But short form domination feels like the room time of the main character on the second episode of Black Mirror, “Fifteen Million Merits”.

    • Boomer Humor Doomergod@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Also, the restrictions of their medium have largely been removed. Time was a tv show had to fit into 42 minutes. And you needed to make enough episodes for syndication.

      So you’d have an A plot which is something simple and a B plot which has the season arc plot and it would be short cuts and a lot of exposition.

      Now you can make episodes almost as long as you want, and there’s no need for any consideration of syndication. So you get long establishing shots and not much actually happening in an episode.

  • PrivateNoob@sopuli.xyz
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    4 months ago

    I think on the YT part we can blame the extremely crazy recommendation engine for it, because I can find great content easily, but even just 1 genre alteration throws me into a whole different recommendations.

    Ex: You watch 1 political vid, and suddenly half of your new vids are politically related

    • Zedd @lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      4 months ago

      Carefully curating you watch history is key. I try to check mine once per week and pull out anything that causes me to get angry about something. Basically if it’s not a video that teaches me how to do something, I remove it.

      • moonlight@fedia.io
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        4 months ago

        Are recommendations based on the “watch history” list, or just your actual watch history? I doubt they are just disregrding data they have on you just because you remove it from the ui.

        • Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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          4 months ago

          Nah it works.

          Why would they keep forcing content on you when you explicitly go out of your way to remove it?

          I know Google is fan of forcing things on their users, but they aren’t that stupid.

        • Ech@lemmy.ca
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          4 months ago

          Clear your history and check for yourself. It’s not hard to do.

      • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 months ago

        On top of that, I personally set my default youtube app to be newpipe, so if I’m just casually browsing lemmy or elsewhere I can click a youtube link and figure out what it is, even watch it if I want, without it effecting my normal account and watch history.

        If I like the video and want more like it, I’ll share to the Youtube (Revanced) app and finish it there.

  • fitgse@sh.itjust.works
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    4 months ago

    Go to your local library. Many have a great selection on blu-ray and dvds. Having to select something from a shelf is way more enjoyable than the endless scroll of junk streaming services give you. I am now actually purposefully selecting movies and shows to watch and making time and effort to finish them instead of just streaming random stuff.

    Plus you get commentaries and bonus features.

      • bcgm3@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        I donated my DVD collection (200ish titles) to my local library last year. Warmed my heart a bit to read this.

  • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@slrpnk.net
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    4 months ago

    It is sharply ironic to see someone complaining about short-form content immediately after lamenting the loss of their favorite youtubers.

    Look, it’s Sturgeon’s law. You’re comparing the best of yesteryear to the whole of today, and 90% of content today is crap. But 90% of yesteryear was crap, too, we just only remember the very best (and sometimes the very worse) and forget the dross.

    But you can ignore the dross of today, too. If you don’t like it, don’t read / listen-to / watch it. It really is that simple.

  • cRazi_man@europe.pub
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    4 months ago

    There’s more good stuff to find than ever. It’s just that it’s hard to find. There’s too much volume of content out there to sift through, and mainstream tastes have changed so it isn’t as easy to find since the stuff that’s popular really isn’t your taste. You likely liked the stuff that’s was popular back then. Look harder. Find the niche like-minded communities. Look for content related to what you already like. There are tons of new good movies, games, music, etc out now and you just need to find it. Even for news you can find the sources you like and filter out toxicity.

  • bsit@sopuli.xyz
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    4 months ago

    There’s just way more content today but probably the percentage of good vs. bad hasn’t changed much. Finding the good in the sea of bad might be harder though. Actively maintain and curate your feeds.

    And keep around indie web and federation etc. Internet used to be a niche domain of the nerds. It is happening again where some find it’s just the time to depart from the mainstream web. Just don’t get too attached to visible engagement.

  • ch00f@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Go to Goodwill and shop some DVDs. I’ve discovered so many films that are either not available on streaming or are available but have never been recommended to me. Just watched The Game with Michael Douglas recently which I had never heard of and was pretty good. For $3/pop, it’s not a huge risk.

  • 5too@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    People keep talking about divided media and a lack of shared shows - did nobody else see all the KPop Demon Hunter outfits last Halloween? I swear it was about 20% of the outfits at my kids’ school. Nobody seeing the Stranger Things merch in stores for the new season?

    There’s still new shows most people see, and some are good ones - but the media landscape changed. Used to be, in the US, you had CBS, NBC, ABC, etc. The difference is now it’s Netflix, Disney, Paramount, and so on. The quality mix is still pretty much what it was, but you’ve got to go to where they’ve moved to - YouTube doesn’t have much professionally done content.

    As for 67, that just seems like what memes have always been to me. The Beans meme here was random too, but no less meaningful for it.

  • it_depends_man@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    All the stuff I enjoyed is gone, and everything they make now seems so empty and pessimistic now.

    Eeeeeh. First of all, all the stuff you liked is still there.

    But also good stuff is rare. You really need to know where to look and which tips to follow. For example, if you disregard anime as a whole, you’ve probably missed absolute 10/10 media experiences you can’t find anywhere else. Sometimes it’s about leaving your comfort zone and trying something new.

    But then also, about the only really good star wars content we got in the last… 30 years is Ep. 3, the clone wars animated series (later seasons) and Andor. And they made SO MUCH.

    Also, maybe you should make your own. If you like the old stuff so much, try to make it yourself and give it a spin. get close to it, recapture, reinterpret, re-imagine. Maybe you’ll do that for 15 years, go back to your inspiration and find that your “imitation” has surpassed it.

    Necessity is the mother of invention. If you’re bored make your own.

    You have all the blueprints for the stuff you like. What else are you going to do? You can watch reruns, of course… not sure if it will be equally satisfying though.

  • myfunnyaccountname@lemmy.zip
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    4 months ago

    Not just you. It’s worse. It’s all ads, not just the ad breaks, but the 14 billion product placements. Clickbait, rage bait, lies, exaggerated stories for views/sales. Rehash of the same plot/story again. Maybe a remake or reboot of a series that has already been milked to death. There still some quality out there. But it’s buried under a mountain of trash.