Look at the streaming revolution. In the race for viewer attention, the bar for “shocking” is buried six feet under. Producers have discovered that virtue is quiet, but scandal is loud. Consequently, narratives that normalize betrayal, greed, and manipulation are greenlit with enthusiasm, while stories that uphold traditional morality—restraint, fidelity, hard work—are dismissed as “preachy” or “unrealistic.”
The question is not whether we can handle the darkness on screen. The question is whether, after the credits roll, we can still remember what the light looks like. slutty immoral
But the most insidious damage is not to the screen; it is to the soul of the viewer. There is a proven psychological principle: familiarity breeds acceptance. When you watch four hundred hours of anti-heroes lying, stealing, and exploiting others without consequence, the moral alarm in your own conscience begins to fray. We are not merely passive consumers; we are students of the narratives we love. If we spend our leisure time applauding the villain’s wit, we should not be surprised when we start mimicking his logic. Look at the streaming revolution
When the Spotlight Glorifies the Void: Entertainment’s Embrace of Immorality and exploiting others without consequence
We are told to separate the art from the artist. We are told that a late-night talk show is just “jokes,” a hit TV drama is just “storytelling,” and a chart-topping rap anthem is just “a beat.” But at what point does the constant, hypnotic drip of transgression stop being entertainment and start becoming an endorsement?