Scroll to top

8 AUGUST 2025

Welcome to this week’s edition of Culture Wire, a newsletter brought to you by Singapore-based pop culture and lifestyle marketing agency Culture Group.

In this week’s edition:

  • Headline of the Week: AI turns everyone into TV creators
  • Fax, No Printer: What is the #1 reason people travel solo in APAC?
  • Before You Leave: People are retreating into hyper-personalised corners – from Jakarta’s living room clubs to China’s solo romance games

Headline of the Week

🎬 AUDIENCE OF ONE  

Launched last week, Showrunner promises to be the ‘Netflix of AI’. The platform allows users to create scenes of a TV show with a few typed prompts and – in a feature that proved popular during alpha testing – insert themselves into a TV show’s world. It’s free to view Showrunner-generated content, and the AI shorts can be shared across YouTube and social media.

Two interactive original ‘shows’ were available at launch: satirical comedy Exit Valley and Everything Is Fine, which centers around a couple’s epic meltdown in IKEA (who can relate?). The current focus is on animated content, which requires less processing power than live-action scenes. Showrunner was developed by San Francisco-based startup Fable, which secured an undisclosed investment from Amazon’s Alexa Fund VC investment arm. Fable CEO Edward Saatchi told Variety that the company is in talks with Disney and other Hollywood studios about licensing IP for the platform.  Another AI novelty… or the future of entertainment and content consumption?

OUR TAKE

We’ve previously explored how content is clustering at extremes and what that means for the middle ground. Instead of disrupting attention, Showrunner is another challenge on authorship and collapses the distance between ‘I watched it’ and ‘I made it’ 👩‍🎨. Sites like Wattpad and fanfic communities require significant user input, but Showrunner allows for creation with just a prompt. And at US$ 10-20 a month for hundreds of scenes – cheaper than a Netflix subscription – economics alone could drive experimentation, regardless of output quality.

Allowing users to insert themselves into the narrative opens up a new category of UGC. These episodes will most likely compete with Instagram Stories or TikTok’s FYP – content users watch because of who made it. After all, a colleague’s AI sitcom about office life hits different from The Office.

But if we’re honest, Showrunner can’t seem to decide what it is. One moment it’s tempting fans to ‘make new episodes of shows you love’ (that sounds legally dubious…), the next it’s positioning itself as a tool for ‘original animated comedies.’ Even Saatchi himself seems unsure of the product-market fit, confessing to Variety that ‘maybe nobody wants this.’ A quick scan of the comments suggests some agree. And the market uncertainty masks a bigger problem: Showrunner can’t sustain stories beyond single episodes, meaning that every episode functions like a pilot.

Technical limitations aside, Showrunner represents an acceleration of an existing trend: the erosion of entertainment’s collective nature. While shows still create shared cultural moments (in 2025 Severance, The White Lotus and Adolescence all got fans talking), Showrunner pushes us toward a future where entertainment is increasingly atomized – think millions of personalized shows with an audience of one. It’s hard to have water cooler conversations about an episode where you were the sole viewer.

So, where does this leave brands? The opportunity isn’t in creating better content – it’s in enabling creation. In markets like Indonesia, where Shopee Live sellers already blur entertainment and commerce, audiences don’t need education on ‘creator-as-entertainer’. The brands that win won’t be those buying ad spots in AI-generated shows; they’ll be the ones giving customers tools to tell their own stories.

In a world of infinite personalized entertainment, the scarce resource isn’t attention – it’s shared attention. We don’t just need a new word for ‘content creator,’ we urgently need new spaces for collective culture. If everyone’s a showrunner, what are we all watching together? And does it even matter?

Fax, No Printer*

For those of you born before 1997, ‘fax, no printer‘ is Gen Z speak for ‘undeniable facts I agree with’

According to Scoot and YouGov’s study on solo travel in APAC, what’s the top reason people choose to travel alone?

Scroll to the end of the newsletter for the correct answer!

Before You Leave

This Week's Trivia Answer

B. Freedom to explore without compromise 🪁

Freedom to explore without compromise topped the list at 50% of respondents, followed by personal growth (38%) and escaping daily life (35%). One in five travelers opted to go it alone because they had no one to travel with. The survey also found that women make up the biggest portion of solo travelers (56%, versus 44% for men). Brands in the travel – or travel adjacent sector – should consider how best to appeal to this growing cohort. Community-based experiences that maintain the independence solo travelers crave while providing optional social connections seem like a smart move.

For everyone else: the rise of intentional solitude represents a shift in consumer behavior beyond travel. Does your product or service appeal to the solo decision-maker? The underlying motivations apply across categories.

🚀 Over and Out!

Pop culture insights are better when shared. Subscribe, forward this on, or share the love on social media. Thanks for reading!

 

Your Culture Mavens,

Angela, Catherine, Teri, Twila, & Vicki

GET IN TOUCH TO LEARN HOW WE DID IT

hello@culturegroup.asia