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That era is dead. In its place is the phenomenon.

Cable television fractured the dial into hundreds of niche channels (MTV, ESPN, Bravo). Suddenly, there was content for every subculture, but the signal was still broadcast. The internet's arrival, initially text-based, began to erode the gatekeepers. Napster and peer-to-peer sharing decimated the music industry's economic model, while blogs began to challenge the critics at major newspapers. Popular media began to feel less like a top-down lecture and more like a chaotic, global conversation. colegialasxxxinfo

This fragmentation is leading to a and a strange return to the "bundle"—ironically, exactly what cable TV was. That era is dead