| | Why Netflix and Spotify don’t seem to care if we are paying attention From Spotify’s Perfect Fit Content that fills headphones with bland ghost artists to Netflix’s ‘will this do?’ roster of not-great movies, have audiences succumbed to the age of distraction? |
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Over Christmas, two articles were released that felt like harbingers – if not full-on sirens – for the direction of travel of popular culture. There was Will Tavlin’s piece for n+1 about Netflix’s less-than-stellar film output, which was briefly touched on in last week’s newsletter. And in Harpers magazine, there was an extract from music journalist Liz Pelly’s new book on Spotify. It focuses on the streamer’s Perfect Fit Content (PFC) programme, which pays production companies to create cheap, generic music by “ghost artists” in order, Pelly alleges, to populate Spotify’s playlists and reduce royalty payouts to real artists. (In Pelly’s book Spotify acknowledges the existence of the Perfect Fit Content programme but denies that it is trying to increase the share of streams of Perfect Fit Content.) Both are eye-opening reads, depicting the two companies as industry disruptors with little or no care for the thing they’re disrupting, and making their respective industries worse in the process. But if Netflix and Spotify are cast as the villains of these stories, it is clear that we, the consumers, have a degree of complicity. Both streamers are, after all, simply adapting to, and profiting from, our viewing and listening habits. Two striking details from those articles underline this. Tavlin, in his piece, claims that screenwriters for Netflix movies are being asked by execs to include scenes where characters “announce what they’re doing so that viewers who have this program on in the background can follow along”. Meanwhile, Pelly notes in her piece that Spotify’s “internal research showed that many users were not coming to the platform to listen to specific artists or albums; they just needed something to serve as a soundtrack for their days, like a study playlist or maybe a dinner soundtrack … listeners often weren’t even aware of what song or artist they were hearing.” If this sense of entertainment being something to pay half attention to while getting on with other, more significant things sounds dispiriting, it’s hardly unprecedented. Such ideas were baked into radio from its earliest days, with the BBC’s Music While You Work serving up light arrangements of popular music standards to boost the morale of factory workers during the second world war. And daytime TV has a long, proud history of chuntering away in the background while housewives or husbands rattle through menial tasks (while researching this piece I discovered a 1996 Guardian article titled The Importance of Ironing to Television). In some cases this TV background babble might even be cast as a social good, offering the sensation of companionship and comfort in an empty house. In that setting, it doesn’t matter what’s being said, it just matters that it’s on. | | What feels different about Netflix and Spotify’s alleged approaches though is that they pander to our distracted, half-attentive states rather than try to jolt us out of them. After all, even the cheesiest song on an easy listening radio station is still intended to rise to the foreground, to stir something in the listener, to distract them from whatever they are doing. Not so with Spotify’s Perfect Fit tracks, which like lift music before them, are intended to be as inconspicuous as possible. Likewise, the corniest of daytime soaps is still being made under some assumption that viewers are paying attention to it – or if they’re not, it’s the soap’s job to grab hold of that attention and not let go of it. But that becomes less necessary when your show is simply designed to be part of a rolling churn of autoplayed content. As Pelly notes: “a model in which the imperative is simply to keep listeners around, whether they’re paying attention or not, distorts our very understanding of music’s purpose” – a point that might just as easily be made about Netflix as well. It’s hard to imagine things getting any better with the advent of AI – which soon will be capable, if it isn’t already, of churning out nondescript tracks, or scripts with plot summaries shoehorned in at algorithmically determined intervals. If there’s room for optimism it’s in the fact that so much of the biggest and best popular culture of the moment demands your full attention. Netflix’s biggest show ever, Squid Games, is a Korean drama that the vast majority of its audience watches with subtitles – hardly conducive to distracted half viewing. Triumphant in the TV categories at Sunday’s Golden Globes was Shōgun (Anna Sawai, above, won best female actor in a TV show among the series’ other awards), another subtitled show, and one with a complex plot to boot. To top it all, next week brings the much-anticipated return of Severance, a drama that demands you pore over every last shot. And while, Pelly alleges, Spotify’s Perfect Fit content dominates playlists that prioritise ambient or modern classical, other non-instrumental genres and sounds are unlikely to be as shamelessly replicable (I’d like to see them have a go at ripping off, say, Geordie Greep). As ever, the antidote to these dire dystopian developments lies with the artists: if they keep making singular, engrossing stuff, there will always be an audience to lap it up – and not while doing the ironing. |
| | | Take Five | Each week we run down the five essential pieces of pop-culture we’re watching, reading and listening to | | 1 | FILM – A Real Pain This comedy drama from Jesse Eisenberg is slight in length compared with many of this year’s awards season candidates but lingers far longer than it’s 90-minute runtime. It stars Eisenberg and Kieran Culkin as very different cousins (Eisenberg’s repressed but with it, Culkin’s unfiltered and volatile) who embark on a trip around Poland to celebrate their late grandmother and reckon with their Jewish heritage. Culkin seems nailed on to win an Oscar for best supporting actor for his performance, a more anguished but likable evolution of his Roman Roy character from Succession. Out now. Want more? Nicole Kidman’s much talked about erotic thriller Babygirl is also in cinemas from today. And here’s seven films you can watch from home this week.
| 2 | ALBUM – Ethel Cain: Perverts Hayden Anhedönia, AKA Ethel Cain, became an unlikely star with her debut album, Preacher’s Daughter, a compelling brew of goth-tinged ambient indie that won her an army of young fans. Anhedönia’s response to all this attention has been to recoil from it, both in public statements objecting to her newfound fame, and sonically in nine-track follow-up, Perverts. It sees her dig deeper into the less commercial elements of her sound, full of chilling electronic convulsions and buried, sinister vocals. Decidedly not for everyone, but a bold move nonetheless. Want more? Franz Ferdinand return with more dapper backwards-facing indie with sixth album The Human Fear.
| 3 | TV – American Primeval The murky, revisionist western is a genre that seems to have migrated from film to TV in recent years, most recently in Hugo Blick’s excellent The English. American Primeval, a new Netflix series directed by Peter Berg (Friday Night Lights), tries to mark itself out from the pack through sheer grimness, ramping up the violence and murk to levels that have divided critics. If you can get past it there’s a gripping tale to follow. Berg’s old Friday Night Lights compadre Taylor Kitsch stars alongside Betty Gilpin. Want more? An autistic criminologist is on the case in Channel 4 detective drama Patience. Plus: here’s seven more shows to stream this week.
| 4 | BOOK – The Bright Side by Sumit Paul-Choudhury
You might not expect someone whose wife has died of ovarian cancer to identify as an optimist, but science journalist Sumit Paul-Choudhury makes a convincing case for why we should look on the bright side in this life-affirming book. Paul-Choudhury is “serious about optimism” wrote Guardian reviewer Helen Thomson, “but he is never glib or Pollyannaish. His book is as much a careful examination of the misuses of optimism as its uses … what unfolds is a convincing case that, while we might frequently feel we have grounds for pessimism, a particular form of optimism is the only morally serious choice.”
Want more? As her final novel is published posthumously, Colin Grant has rounded up the very best of Zora Neale Hurston – so if you’re looking for where to start with the late, great writer, have a look at his recommendations.
| 5 | PODCAST – Hollywood Stories: Tales From the 90s Hit movie newsletter The Ankler also does a good line in podcasts. This series of its Hollywood Stories strand speaks to some of the people involved in making the 90s such a memorable decade for movies, from the execs behind runaway success story studio New Line, to the screenwriters of Last Action Hero, a film that summed up the decade’s worst excesses. Most interestingly of all, there’s an interview with Drew McWeeny who, as one of the people behind pioneering internet site Ain’t It Cool News, changed how the movies were reported on for ever – for good or ill. Want more? Terrific movie pod The Big Picture has started a new project: picking the 25 best films from the century so far. |
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| | | Read On | | ‘“A new definition of sexy”: 50 years after their founding, the New York Dolls are celebrated by peers including Joan Jett and the Damned. | The New York Times asks a timely question with the Oscars looming: what do producers actually do? (A lot it turns out.) | Jonathan Jones writes about the complicated legacy of Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, futurist founder, Mussolini fraterniser and a man who shared a fair bit in common with a certain tech billionaire. | 2024 was the year of the fan, according to Wired. That wasn’t necessarily a good thing, as proved by Trump’s election. |
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| | | You be the Guide | Last week we asked for your favourite musical samples. Here were your choice cuts: “We just had this conversation over WhatsApp yesterday. Paper Planes was mentioned (as in the newsletter), as was Stan, two heavy hitters. Can I Kick It? And Is Kanye persona non grata? If not, then Stronger. But one random one we immediately agreed in as being in the mix (ha mix, geddit!) was Freak Like Me by the Sugababes, borrowing rather heavily but to great effect from the already excellent Are Friends Electric.” – Antony “Two favourite samples to choose from. Firstly, Beyoncé’s opening to Crazy In Love is a wholesale lift from Are you My Woman? by Chicago soulsters The Chi-Lites. Meanwhile, Eminem used Chas Hodges’ – of Chas & Dave fame – guitar riff off Labi Siffre’s I Got The … as the hook for My Name Is. All four are absolute bangers.” – Rob It’s hard to look past NWA’s Express Yourself, which samples … Express Yourself by Charles Wright & the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band. Taking a laid back, soulful bassline, speeding it up and laying down a furious track taking on censorship, self-censorship and the limits placed on Black artists’ expression surely is one of the best uses of a sample we have. Dominique Turner |
| | | Get involved | This week I want to hear about the culture you consume when you’re doing something else. What’s that show you rattle through while doing the ironing, or the album that soundtracks the weekly shop? Let me know by replying to this email or contacting me on gwilym.mumford@theguardian.com |
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