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Update 154-how-ads-wrecked-entertainment.md
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Part II - How Ads Wrecked Entertainment (And What You Can Do About It)
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---
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author: Brinck
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title: 'How Ads Wrecked Entertainment (And What You Can Do About It)'
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date: '2018-11-17 14:00:00'
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cover: 'Draper.png'
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---
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YouTube stars like Logan Paul have made careers out of [being awful, obnoxious human beings](http://nymag.com/selectall/2018/01/logan-paul-suicide-forest-video-youtube.html). 79% of Americans think that their fellow Americans [pay too much attention to celebrity news](http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/lifestyle/general_lifestyle/november_2017/americans_see_too_much_celebrity_news), and only 20% think [celebrities are good role models](http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/lifestyle/general_lifestyle/january_2017/few_see_hollywood_celebs_as_good_role_models), but we keep hearing about the same people over and over again.
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[embed of [Danielle Bregoli music video](https://www.youtube.com/embed/-ioilEr3Apw)]
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If you’re in the right place at the right time with Dr. Phil, you can even make a living from unorthodox pronunciation and spelling of common words.
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<video width="100%" controls poster="" src="https://spee.ch/eb7b083c4d4c531e66bb2f37a8bc1111d1a94c9e/Heaux.mp4"/></video>
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_If you’re in the right place at the right time with Dr. Phil, you can even make a living from unorthodox pronunciation and spelling of common words._
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How did we get here? How can people who are so widely disliked remain at the center of attention? By the end of this article, you’ll have a better understanding of why advertising was grafted onto art in the first place, how advertising made mass culture terrible, and what you can do to stop the death spiral.
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For almost a century, newspapers have rented out space on their pages (and in their editorial columns) to corporate advertisers.
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Four networks broadcasting prime time schedules (8PM to 11PM) seven days a week on 128 channels along with dozens of 24 hour commercial radio channels meant a larger audience than ever for creators. But the price of entry was high. To bridge that gap, companies foot the bill - in exchange for editorial control and commercial breaks.
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Four networks broadcasting prime time schedules (8PM to 11PM) seven days a week on 128 channels along with dozens of 24 hour commercial radio channels means a larger audience than ever for creators. But the price of entry is high. To bridge that gap, companies foot the bill - in exchange for editorial control and commercial breaks.
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Instead of paying for entry to a concert or play, consumers bought a device (a radio or TV) that gave them access to a seemingly infinite variety of content - with a catch. In exchange for access to that content, they’d have to spend their time paying attention to ads from the companies paying for the broadcast.
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Instead of paying for entry to a concert or play, consumers buy a device (a radio or TV) that gives them access to a seemingly infinite variety of content - with a catch. In exchange for access to that content, they have to spend their time paying attention to ads from the companies paying for the broadcast.
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This new setup led to some interesting results.
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_This new setup led to some interesting results._
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This change was the first step on the road to our modern mass culture. Instead of paying for entertainment directly, regular people paid in their attention and time spent watching ads. When an advertiser buys an ad, they’re covering some part of the cost of the content. But the product they’re really buying is the attention of people who are consuming that content.
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In this new world, advertising concerns drove mass culture and the arts. Andy Warhol became famous in the early 60s for inverting the formula and turning ads back into commercially successful art, but a little social commentary can’t stop an economic juggernaut. It’s more than a little ironic that art as commentary on advertising can be worth hundreds of millions of dollars, and can end up being purchased by the very people who created the ads being commented on.
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"I can’t tell if I’m ironically enlightened or hungry for some of that delicious Campbell’s soup."
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_"I can’t tell if I’m artistically and ironically enlightened or hungry for some of that delicious Campbell’s soup."_
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That subtle shift completely changed the incentives for creators. Instead of creating art that pleased *their *audience, the biggest rewards went to whoever could create whatever was palatable to the most people at once - i.e., the lowest common denominator.
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It’s 2018 - over 40 years ago, cable TV was introduced as the ad-free, subscriber-supporter alternative to broadcast TV, and almost immediately succumbed to the siren song of that sweet corporate ad revenue. Hollywood crumbled under the pressure as well, and movies have become product placement bonanzas.
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Transformers, based on cartoon that was itself created to sell toys, has morphed from a big rig of simple toy shilling into a meta-Optimus Prime capable of [selling ad space on top of an ad](https://consequenceofsound.net/2017/06/an-annotated-history-of-product-placement-in-the-transformers-series/)
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_Transformers, based on cartoon that was itself created to sell toys, has morphed from a big rig of simple toy shilling into a meta-Optimus Prime capable of [selling ad space on top of an ad](https://consequenceofsound.net/2017/06/an-annotated-history-of-product-placement-in-the-transformers-series/)_
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At first, the internet was a ray of light on the dark horizon, providing creators with the ability to connect directly with fans anywhere in the world, and the start-up cost to create a website is low enough that almost anyone can afford it.
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This is why you’re always being tempted to learn this one weird trick for bellyfat that doctors hate. It’s the reason for almost everything wrong with the internet.
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Dermatologists hate her because she is clearly some sort of life-stealing demon shedding her skin
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_Dermatologists hate her because she is clearly some sort of life-stealing demon shedding her skin_
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Whatever gets the most clicks wins. More clicks means more eyeballs, more eyeballs means more ad click-throughs, more ad click-throughs mean more revenue for the advertisers.
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Let’s say I have a video of a terrible car accident. Would you pay me to watch it?
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Most people would say no, unless an unusual number of [David Cronenberg](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crash_(1996_film)) fans are reading this.
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_Most people would say no, unless an unusual number of [David Cronenberg](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crash_(1996_film)) fans are reading this._
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Now, imagine that instead of asking you to pay for it, I just stuck it in front of your face and pressed play. Would you watch then?
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# Jane, How Do I Stop This Crazy Thing?
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Et tu, Jane?
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_Et tu, Jane?_
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There are three steps you can take to help stop this ad-supported death spiral. Before getting into too much detail, here they are:
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