top of page

Missax180521ivywolfegivemeshelterxxx1 | Fix

Instead of a static list, the user selects a viewing philosophy, and the tool instantly reorganizes the content:

  • Enforce validation rules at creation time:
  • Store human-readable metadata separately (title, author, date) so identifiers can be opaque and safe.
  • The current state of entertainment and popular media is not a natural disaster. It is a result of perverse incentives: algorithms optimizing for time, studios optimizing for safety, and audiences optimizing for numbness.

    Fixing it is not a passive act. It requires pulling your wallet away from the franchise sequel and buying a ticket to the original script. It requires turning off the autoplay and waiting a week between episodes. It requires reading the news article, not just the headline.

    We are not doomed to a life of mediocrity. But the cavalry isn't coming. Disney isn't going to fix Marvel. Netflix isn't going to cancel The Gray Man 2 out of the goodness of its heart. missax180521ivywolfegivemeshelterxxx1 fix

    The fix is simple, though not easy: Demand less content, but better art. Starve the algorithm. Feed the outlier.

    Do that, and the golden age isn't behind us. It’s just beginning.


    Imagine the media landscape ten years after these fixes. Instead of a static list, the user selects

    The Problem: Modern entertainment is fragmented. A popular franchise like the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), Star Wars, or even One Piece might span 30 movies, 15 TV shows, 2 web series, and a handful of canon shorts. Currently, streaming services separate these by platform, and wikias provide confusing lists that don't account for how the user wants to watch.

    The Solution: A dynamic, platform-agnostic viewing guide tool called "Franchise Flow" that lives within a streaming aggregator, smart TV interface, or media server (like Plex or Jellyfin).

    It fixes the "content mess" by intelligently curating the viewing order and availability of popular media. Enforce validation rules at creation time:


    Marvel broke cinema's brain. The post-credits scene has turned every movie into a commercial for the next movie. Nothing stands alone anymore.

    The Fix: A five-year moratorium on post-credits scenes. Movies must end. Credits must roll. You ride off into the sunset or you die. No teasers. This forces storytellers to make the movie we just watched satisfying, not just a trailer for a Phase 4.

    bottom of page