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While media polarizes towards short-form video and marathon-length podcasts, the classic 30-minute sitcom format remains a powerful and underserved niche. Sean Evans notes it invites comfortable, repeatable viewing without feeling like a major time commitment.
Sean Evans argues that chasing trends and algorithms is a losing strategy, citing the failure of Quibi. The most durable media properties, like SNL, are defined by their consistency and timeless appeal, which builds unbreakable audience trust over decades.
Contrary to the belief in ever-shrinking attention spans, brands are successfully using longer, cinematic 'slow content' to tell compelling stories. This format builds a deeper brand world and engages viewers on platforms like Instagram and TikTok.
The idea of a universal short attention span is a fallacy. In reality, audiences have very little patience for low-quality or irrelevant material. They will happily consume long-form content, like a 20-minute video, if it's engaging and valuable.
The move to video favors formats cheap to produce visually, like interviews. This elevates celebrity talk shows while making expensive, long-form narrative series less viable, fundamentally changing what a 'typical' podcast looks and feels like for creators and audiences.
Despite competing with short-form content like TikTok, Ken Burns' long documentaries succeed because they are built on compelling storytelling. This challenges the myth of shrinking attention spans, suggesting instead that audiences demand more engaging content, regardless of its length.
Ken Burns refutes the common complaint that attention spans are shrinking. He points to binge-watching culture—where viewers consume entire seasons of shows in a weekend—as definitive proof that audiences still have an appetite for deep, long-form content. He notes this panic is not new, citing the telegraph's arrival in the 1850s.
The narrative that attention spans are universally shrinking is incomplete. Media consumption is forming a "barbell" distribution. While ultra-short-form video is exploding, so is ultra-long-form content like three-to-ten-hour podcasts and deep-dive essays. It's the middle-ground, traditional media formats that are being squeezed out.
Instead of everything simply getting dumber, media is splitting into two extremes. Both hyper-short (four-second videos) and hyper-long (four-hour podcasts) content are thriving. It is the middle-length, moderately complex content that is being hollowed out as audiences gravitate towards the poles.
Podcast growth isn't just about loyal listeners; it's about "samplers" who consume bite-sized clips on platforms like X and TikTok. These clips create a strong sense of familiarity and positive association with the show, even among people who have never listened to a full episode.
Content under 60 seconds or over 22 minutes is succeeding because it minimizes mental effort. Viewers can either endlessly scroll short clips or commit to a single long program, making 5-10 minute videos less appealing as they require repeated choices.