Previous Lecture Complete and Continue  

Porn.stars.like.it.big.-.sadie.west.-.keep.it.in.the.pants

We are adapting to infinite content by becoming anhedonic—losing the ability to feel pleasure. We scroll for two hours, watch nothing, and go to bed feeling empty. Not because the content was bad, but because the act of choosing exhausted our willpower without rewarding our soul. Perhaps the greatest casualty of the Content Singularity is boredom.

Boredom used to be the crucible of creativity. When you were bored in the 1980s, you drew comics, built forts, wrote songs, or stared at the ceiling and had a profound thought. Boredom forces the brain to generate its own stimuli. Porn.Stars.Like.it.Big.-.Sadie.West.-.Keep.It.In.The.Pants

That is the difference between content and meaning. Choose meaning. We are adapting to infinite content by becoming

In this era, Consequently, each piece of media carried weight. It was a cultural touchstone. Everyone watched the M A S H* finale because there was nothing else to watch. Entertainment was the campfire of the modern age—a shared story that bound a tribe (the nation) together. Act II: The Age of Abundance (1980–2010) The cable remote and the VCR broke the first seal. Then the internet burned the door down. Perhaps the greatest casualty of the Content Singularity

But a subtle shift occurred here. Entertainment stopped being a destination and started becoming a utility . It was no longer "What is on?" but "What do I feel like?" The locus of control moved from the creator to the consumer. We called this "empowerment."