House of Content podcast

Social Media Ate TV: Clip Culture and the Future of Entertainment

0:00
30:14
Manda indietro di 15 secondi
Manda avanti di 15 secondi

In this episode of House of Content, hosts Christine Göös and Melissa Kontu unpack how social media has become the new TV — not just where we talk about culture, but where we experience it first.

From Olympic highlights to viral movie scenes, podcast clips to reality TV drama, more and more of us are consuming entertainment in fragments before ever watching the full thing.

But if the moment happens on social, what does that mean for the original content? The episode explores how clips, edits, and commentary are reshaping how audiences discover, engage with, and define what’s worth watching. As songs break on TikTok before the charts, shows gain traction through memes, and podcasts grow through short-form video, social is deciding what succeeds.

Christine and Melissa dig into how entertainment is increasingly being engineered for shareability, with producers, platforms, and creators all optimizing for the algorithm. They also explore the rise of creators as the new media layer, interpreting, reframing, and sometimes even shaping the narrative around cultural moments faster than traditional outlets ever could.

Key Takeaways:

  • Social media has become the primary stage where cultural moments happen, not just where they’re discussed
  • Audiences can feel culturally “in the loop” without consuming full content
  • Virality is increasingly acting as the new success metric for entertainment
  • Content is being created and optimized for shareability, not just viewership
  • Creators now act as a critical layer in interpreting and amplifying cultural moments


Altri episodi di "House of Content"