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OpenAI’s Sora and similar text-to-video models threaten to upend the entire production chain. Soon, generating a 90-minute movie from a prompt may be possible. This raises existential questions: Who owns the copyright? What happens to actors? However, AI will likely augment rather than replace. Expect AI-generated background actors, deepfake dubbing for foreign markets, and personalized endings for the same film.

Platforms like TikTok, YouTube Shorts, and Instagram Reels have redefined narrative structure. In this realm, a story must hook a viewer in the first 0.5 seconds. This has trained a generation to expect rapid dopamine hits, forcing traditional media to adapt. Movie trailers are now cut like TikTok compilations; news segments are clipped into 60-second "explainers." sexart170301sybilalflyundressxxx1080p top

One of the most defining characteristics of modern popular media is the collapse of traditional genres. Consider the "celebrity reality game show" (e.g., The Traitors or Special Forces) or the "docu-drama" (e.g., The Dropout). Even news media has adopted entertainment’s visual grammar: dramatic zooms, suspenseful music, and cliffhanger teases. OpenAI’s Sora and similar text-to-video models threaten to

This phenomenon is often dismissed as "infotainment," but that label is insufficient. We are witnessing narrative colonization—where the storytelling techniques of fiction (character arcs, rising tension, resolution) are now the standard template for all popular media, from true-crime podcasts to political livestreams. The result is a populace that is exceptionally literate in narrative but increasingly suspicious of raw, unstructured information. What happens to actors