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Top media strategist on Netflix ending its war on sleep to battle against ‘an infinite number of monkeys’—or the Army of the Dead

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Netflix’s potential acquisition of Warner Bros. represents more than just a consolidation of media giants; it is a strategic retreat from a lost battle and a fortification against a terrifying new one. According to Doug Shapiro, an independent consultant and senior advisor at Boston Consulting Group with nearly 30 years of media industry experience, the move signals that the streaming leader is admitting defeat in its famous “war on sleep” and scrambling to survive the “infinite monkey theorem” of the AI era.

Shapiro’s widely read Substack, The Mediator, reflects years of analysis and experience from his long career, including a stint at WarnerMedia, where he served on the Executive Committee and headed the Corporate and Data Strategy functions. For much of 2025, months before Paramount sparked a bidding war for Warner, or Netflix emerged as the preferred acquirer, Shapiro has been writing about the end of the last wave of media disruption—distribution, dominated by Netflix—and the beginning of the next: infinite content. His collected thoughts on infinite content will appear soon in a book by the same name, being collected on Substack, but he spoke to Fortune in the wake of Warner reaffirming its preference for the Netflix deal in the first week of January, unpacking more of his thoughts on what he’s called “one battle after another” in the media disruption space.

Shapiro told Fortune that we shouldn’t overlook just how significant it is “that Netflix is even doing this,” noting that it’s very “out of character” for a company that has historically avoided large acquisitions. In general, he added, big acquisition attempts, especially ones that are out of character, “are always telling us something.” He said the deal is a powerful signal that Netflix believes the media landscape has fundamentally shifted and that the strategies that built its empire are no longer sufficient to defend it. Hence the infinite monkeys.

Losing the time battle

Netflix co-founder Reed Hastings once infamously said that Netflix’s primary competitor wasn’t Hollywood or even linear TV—it was sleep itself. With “binge-watching” still a relatively new phenomenon when Hastings made his remarks in 2017, he explained, “You get a show or a movie you’re really dying to watch, and you end up staying up late at night, so we actually compete with sleep.”

From the vantage point of 2025, Shapiro contends, Netflix’s $72 billion bid for Warner is a tacit admission that the battle on sleep was one thing, but the battle against social media and all the other distractions of the super-plugged-in-world are another. “Traditional media cannot win the time game,” he said, with the battle for consumer attention being lost to social platforms like YouTube, Roblox, and TikTok, he argued, where consumption has become “reflexive” rather than deliberate.

Shapiro explained that these platforms “hack our biology” with dopamine loops, making consumption “mindless and habitual” while also making consumption reflexive. By contrast, Netflix requires a deliberate choice—sitting down, selecting a title, committing to a narrative—it cannot compete with the sheer volume of low-friction content on phones. Instead, he argued that they have to pivot from a model based on broad time-share to one based on deep engagement and higher willingness to pay.

Shapiro explained his allusion to a plethora of primates by citing the famous “infinite monkey theorem,” which argues that it’s possible that an infinite number of monkeys could recreate, with an infinite number of typewriters, the collective works of William Shakespeare. Saying that it’s “really a commentary about infinity more so than about Shakespeare,” he said this absurd idea really gets to what Netflix is grappling with when it comes to user-generated content with new AI tools. “That’s what you’re starting to deal with, practically speaking, is an infinite number of creators empowered by AI. You don’t need them to all make something good. You only need a tiny, tiny, tiny percentage of them to make anything decent for that to really compete for time.”

Instead of monkeys with typewriters, Shapiro offered another stark metaphor from Game of Thrones to describe the threat of AI-enabled user-generated content to all the entertainment companies that make content with actors on sets, standing in front of cameras: “There’s an army of the dead amassed at the wall.”

This disruption is happening from the bottom up, Shapiro argued, citing kids and unscripted content, which are dominated by YouTube now, with creators like Mr. Beast emerging. The next wave will be scripted drama and comedy, he predicted, powered by AI tools that lower the barrier to entry. He sees the risk for Netflix long-term being that consumers resist paying a monthly subscription fee when so much content is free, and consumers’ definition of quality shifts away from high production values. “How do they ensure that people are still gonna be willing to pay $25 … $30 a month, when there’s just such a vast amount of free content?”

Netflix’s last three years of sudden pivots show how seriously it’s taking this challenge, as its stock crashed in 2022 following the first slowdown in subscriber numbers in more than a decade, after which it piled into advertising and sports after long saying it wouldn’t—it also juiced revenue by cracking down on its famously lax attitude to password sharing. The company said in 2024 that it would stop disclosing subscriber numbers as part of its quarterly earnings. Its churn—or subscribers leaving the business—has been the envy of the industry for years, and yet in terms of both streaming and linear TV time, it currently trails YouTube, even after the close of a potential Warner acquisition.

Netflix cemented its position as the largest streamer in the world by number of subscribers after recovering from its 2022 stock wobble, with its last reported subscriber number crossing 300 million in the first quarter of 2025. Its SEC filings show that it still overwhelmingly generates revenue from streaming subscriptions (including its ad tier), with no separate reported line for consumer products, theatrical, or significant third‑party TV licensing. Warner Bros. Discovery’s Distributions segment, on the other hand, was its largest revenue generator in 2024—that’s the declining linear TV business of “fees charged to network distributors,” a segment that is notably not included in the Netflix deal. But Netflix would be acquiring what the industry considers the “crown jewel” of Warner IP, with DC superheroes, Harry Potter/Wizarding World, Lord of the Rings (based on the books, not the appendices, as those rights belong to Amazon/MGM), and HBO franchises including Game of Thrones and The Last of Us.

The fortress of intellectual property

This is why the Warner bid is essential, Shapiro said, repeating one of his recent theories about the coming wave of disruption in media. He outlined a three-part framework for why established intellectual property (IP) is the only viable defense in this new reality: IP as a filter, IP as a moat, and IP as a platform.

First, IP is a filter. As content becomes infinite, the “search costs and the opportunity costs” for consumers skyrocket. People become paralyzed by choice and the risk of wasting time on something bad. Consequently, “people fall back on stuff they already know,” because known quantities are safer bets with built-in communities.

Second, IP is a moat. Shapiro argues that “you can’t really make new IP anymore,” or at least, it has become incredibly difficult. He points out that despite producing roughly 1,000 original projects, the number of true franchises Netflix has created can be counted on one hand—citing Stranger Things as a rare success, while noting they don’t even fully own Wednesday. Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos himself alluded to this on the conference call announcing the Warner bid, saying that it will offer “new IP universes for us … They’ve got 100 years of creative development experience. We’ve been at it for a little over a decade.”

According to Shapiro, the IP stagnation is industry-wide, far beyond Netflix. Shapiro highlights that among the top 50 animated films of all time, very few are from franchises created in the last decade. Similarly, in gaming, the top titles remain largely the same year after year—usually Call of Duty or Madden. While saying it’s not “impossible,” Shapiro said he thinks it’s getting harder and harder to make compelling new franchises, harking back to his earlier point about the war on sleep being lost. “For consumers, their willingness to sample anything is a function of the search costs and the opportunity costs.” In other words, the ability to find something that you like by yourself is diminishing. “Like right now, I don’t really watch a show unless three people tell me to … There’s just so much stuff out there.” By acquiring Warner, he added, Netflix isn’t just buying movies; they are buying a moat made of Friends, Harry Potter, and Batman.

In a separate interview, S&P Global’s Melissa Otto, head of visible alpha research, agreed in an interview that AI is “at the heart” of the deal, with Netflix and other bidders jockeying to own video “corpus” at scale so they can train and deploy next‑generation models on top of it.

Third, Shapiro said, IP is a platform. In the future, he predicted, media companies must operate like video games, running “live ops” where content is a service rather than a product. It has to learn how to “monetize fandom.”

Shapiro pointed to Hybe, the agency behind BTS, which directs fans to its own engagement platform, Weverse, something Hollywood missed out on. “In the West, all these media companies completely ceded all of that fan engagement, it’s all ceded to Reddit and Twitter” and other social networks. “It all happens to some other platform, they don’t control that.” Shapiro argued that Netflix needs Warner’s IP to create similar ecosystems where fans can engage continuously, perhaps even using AI to create their own content within those universes.

Otto similarly framed YouTube as “just a stage”: for many creators, all that matters is a platform that can get them an audience, raising questions about what legacy studios are even useful for, when distribution has been radically democratized. She went further, noting that she used to play Dungeons & Dragons, the role-playing game from the 1980s made famous for a new generation by, ironically, the Netflix hit Stranger Things.

In D&D, players start with a prefab character and world, but the thrill comes from the “free will to creatively add something,” a style of participatory storytelling that changed board games forever and ultimately led to MMORPGs (Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Games) such as Fortnite, where a D&D mentality merged with video gaming to create an immersive world. If movies, shows, and franchises enabled a “similar type of interactive capability,” she said, entertainment could be entering a new era. She added that the technology and infrastructure currently being built “could facilitate that in a monetizable way.” In fact, she pointed out that OpenAI has been openly saying that AI-generated video is monetizable, with characters and IP in particular a potentially significant opportunity in the space.

Shapiro cited another recent piece of his, in which he wondered why Disney+ is a distribution platform, not a fan engagement platform for everything Disney. The recent $1 billion licensing deal with OpenAI shows “they’re taking baby steps in that direction,” he said, agreeing that the Netflix House initiative shows that Netflix is also tentatively moving toward making its IP something that fans can engage with more tangibly. “A big part of it is, really, all these media companies have to reorient their focus to: how do we superserve our fans?”

The analyst repeated one of his current theories. “The past of media is about reaching as many people as possible, and the future is about selling more stuff to fewer people. Because traditional media cannot win the time game. The time battle is lost.” He mentioned Disney’s franchises as an example of the successes—and stresses—of managing IP. Entertainment companies “have to start thinking about media as a service, not as a product, because the idea that you’re gonna put out a Star Wars movie every five years and try to restart the engine of cultural awareness and all that sort of stuff … I think that’s not going to cut it anymore. You’re gonna need to have a way for people to engage on a continuous basis.”

The cultural paradox: “Slop” vs. engagement

However, Shapiro acknowledged that the transition to an AI-saturated future is not straightforward. There is a profound cultural tension regarding the adoption of these technologies, best illustrated by the generational divide he observes in his own home.

Shapiro noted that his 23-year-old daughter, who lives in Brooklyn, may be in the prime demographic, but she represents a “backlash to modernity.” She shops vintage, listens to vinyl, shoots on film, and is “very anti-AI,” embodying the demo that values authenticity and rejects the synthetic nature of generative content.

Yet, Shapiro warned against viewing this as a binary choice between human art and AI “slop.” He argues we are in a “Mesozoic, sort of inchoate, bubbly period” where standards are still settling. (Dartmouth Business School professor Scott Alexander, author of the new book Epic Disruptions: 11 Innovations That Shaped our Modern World, recently told Fortune that “in the middle of a change like this, it’s very messy.”)

While people claim to find AI “creepy,” Shapiro said the data tells a different story. He said he’s seen AI-generated videos, created on Sora, passed around his friend group, garnering millions of likes and reposts. “That’s not passive… these are people actively engaging with that content,” Shapiro pointed out. This contradiction suggests that while there may be a cultural rejection of AI art in principle, the “dopamine loops” of social media may still reward AI content in practice.

Editor’s note: the author worked for Netflix from June 2024 through July 2025.



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Top Univ. of Minn. grads are ‘as good, maybe better’ than Harvard’s best: former Goldman Sachs CEO

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When Lloyd Blankfein was CEO of Goldman Sachs, thousands of newly minted graduates from top universities joined the ranks of the investment banking giant.

But despite being a Harvard alum himself, he wasn’t a snob about where someone went to school and recognized that superior talent can come from outside the Ivy League.

In an interview on the Big Shot podcast two weeks ago, Blankfein pointed out that his colleague Gary Cohn, Goldman’s former president and chief operating officer, attended American University, and current CEO David Solomon went to Hamilton College.

To be sure, the overall population of grads from elite schools should exceed their peers elsewhere, Blankfein conceded.

“The average is going to be higher at these great schools, which are very, very hard to get into and have very high thresholds,” he said. “And the average person may be higher, and certainly the bottom quartile is going to be a lot higher.”

But when assessing the cream of the crop, that advantage disappears, Blankfein added. That’s because a large public university has a much bigger student population.

So surviving such a gauntlet to emerge at the head of the class means more than being the best in a significantly smaller pool.

“If you’re going to look at the tippy, tippy top of Harvard or the tippy, tippy top of the University of Minnesota—where you’re the top of 50,000 as opposed to the top of 1,600—and you’ve gone through that,” he said, “I would say that having gone through that they’re at least as good, maybe better.”

In fact, developing that edge actually begins before college even starts. Students who matriculated into non-elite universities have been “swimming upstream against a much bigger current,” Blankfein said.

But for students who went to top prep boarding schools like Choate or Andover, which send many grads to the Ivy League, “the current’s going with you.”

The comments come as Americans reconsider the value of a college degree as AI shrinks demand for entry-level workers in professional careers. By contrast, interest in skilled trades is booming as those jobs have been less affected by AI and don’t require taking out tens of thousands of dollars, or more, in student loans.

In addition, college students are increasingly using AI to do coursework, which is often graded by professors using AI. The academic rigor of higher education is also in doubt, with Harvard admitting that rampant grade inflation has resulted in about 60% of the marks that are handed out being A’s, up from 40% a decade ago and less than a quarter 20 years ago.

Meanwhile, author Malcolm Gladwell recently urged prospective college students to pick their second or third choice school, where they have a shot at being at the top of their class.

“If you’re interested in succeeding in an educational institution, you never want to be in the bottom half of your class. It’s too hard,” he said in an episode of the Hasan Minhaj Doesn’t Know podcast. “So you should go to Harvard if you think you can be in the top quarter of your class at Harvard. That’s fine. But don’t go there if you’re going to be at the bottom of class. Doing STEM? You’re just gonna drop out.”

But the proliferation of AI-generated résumés has made many applications appear identical, causing some recruiters to fall back on university prestige to distinguish candidates.

A 2025 survey of over 150 companies found that 26% were recruiting from a narrow range of schools, up from 17% that were doing the same in 2022, according to recruiting intelligence firm Veris Insights.

That means job applicants from top schools or those located near company headquarters have priority, Chelsea Schein, Veris’s vice president of research strategy, told the Wall Street Journal

“Everyone’s not starting from the same place if some people have access to on-campus engagement and some don’t,” she said. 



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Thousands protest in Minneapolis after deadly ICE shooting as agents continue city-wide sweeps

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Thousands of people marched in Minneapolis Saturday to protest the fatal shooting of a woman by a federal immigration officer there and the shooting of two people in Portland, Oregon, as Minnesota leaders urged demonstrators to remain peaceful.

The Minneapolis gathering was one of hundreds of protests planned in towns and cities across the country over the weekend. It came in a city on edge since the killing of Renee Good on Wednesday by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer.

“We’re all living in fear right now,” said Meghan Moore, a mother of two from Minneapolis who joined the protest Saturday. “ICE is creating an environment where nobody feels safe and that’s unacceptable.”

On Friday night, a protest outside a Minneapolis hotel that attracted about 1,000 people turned violent as demonstrators threw ice, snow and rocks at officers, Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said Saturday. One officer suffered minor injuries after being struck with a piece of ice, O’Hara said. Twenty-nine people were cited and released, he said.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey stressed that while most protests have been peaceful, those who cause damage to property or put others in danger will be arrested. He faulted “agitators that are trying to rile up large crowds.”

“This is what Donald Trump wants,” Frey said of the president who has demanded massive immigration enforcement efforts in several U.S. cities. “He wants us to take the bait.”

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz echoed the call for peace.

“Trump sent thousands of armed federal officers into our state, and it took just one day for them to kill someone,” Walz posted on social media. “Now he wants nothing more than to see chaos distract from that horrific action. Don’t give him what he wants.”

Communities unite in frustration

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security says its deployment of immigration officers in the Twin Cities is its biggest ever immigration enforcement operation. Trump’s administration has said both shootings were acts of self-defense against drivers who “weaponized” their vehicles to attack officers.

Connor Maloney said he was attending the Minneapolis protest to support his community and because he’s frustrated with the immigration crackdown.

“Almost daily I see them harassing people,” he said. “It’s just sickening that it’s happening in our community around us.”

He was among thousands of protesters, including children, who braved sub-freezing temperatures and a light dusting of snow, carrying handmade signs saying declaring, “De-ICE Minnesota!” and “ICE melts in Minnesota.”

They marched down a street that is home to restaurants and stores where various nationalities and cultures are celebrated in colorful murals.

Steven Eubanks, 51, said he felt compelled to attend a protest in Durham, North Carolina, on Saturday because of the “horrifying” killing in Minneapolis.

“We can’t allow it,” Eubanks said. “We have to stand up.”

Indivisible, a social movement organization that formed to resist the Trump administration, said hundreds of protests were scheduled in Texas, Kansas, New Mexico, Ohio, Florida and other states.

ICE activity across Minneapolis

In Minneapolis, a coalition of migrant rights groups organized the demonstration that began in a park about half a mile from the residential neighborhood where the 37-year-old Good was shot on Wednesday.

But the large protest apparently did not deter federal officers from operating in the city.

A couple of miles away, just as the demonstration began, an Associated Press photographer witnessed heavily armed officers — at least one in Border Patrol uniform — approach a person who had been following them. Two of the agents had long guns out when they ordered the person to stop following them, telling him it was his “first and final warning.”

The agents eventually drove onto the interstate without detaining the driver.

Protests held in the neighborhood have been largely peaceful, and in general there has been minimal law enforcement presence, in contrast to the violence that hit Minneapolis in the aftermath of the killing of George Floyd in 2020. Near the airport, some confrontations erupted on Thursday and Friday between smaller groups of protesters and officers guarding the federal building used as a base for the Twin Cities crackdown.

O’Hara said city police officers have responded to calls about cars abandoned because their drivers have been apprehended by immigration enforcement. In one case, a car was left in park and a dog was left inside another.

He said immigration enforcement activities are happening “all over the city” and that 911 callers have been alerting authorities to ICE activity, arrests and abandoned vehicles.

The Trump administration has deployed thousands of federal officers to Minnesota under a sweeping new crackdown tied in part to allegations of fraud involving Somali residents. More than 2,000 officers were taking part.

Lawmakers snubbed

Three congresswomen from Minnesota attempted to tour the ICE facility in the Minneapolis federal building on Saturday morning and were initially allowed to enter but then told they had to leave about 10 minutes later.

U.S, Reps. Ilhan Omar, Kelly Morrison and Angie Craig accused ICE agents of obstructing members of Congress from fulfilling their duty to oversee operations there.

A federal judge last month temporarily blocked the Trump administration from enforcing policies that limit congressional visits to immigration facilities. The ruling stems from a lawsuit filed by 12 members of Congress who sued in Washington, D.C. to challenge ICE’s amended visitor policies after they were denied entry to detention facilities.



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Venezuela slow-walks prisoner releases with 11 freed while over 800 remain locked up

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As Venezuelan detainee Diógenes Angulo left a prison in San Francisco de Yare after a year and five months behind bars, his family appeared to be in shock.

He was detained two days before the 2024 presidential election after he posted a video of an opposition demonstration in Barinas, the home state of the late President Hugo Chávez.

As he emerged from the jail in San Francisco de Yare, approximately an hour’s drive south of the capital Caracas, he learned that former President Nicolás Maduro had been captured by U.S. forces Jan. 3 in a nighttime raid in the capital.

Angulo told The Associated Press that his faith gave him the strength to keep going during his detention.

“Thank God, I’m going to enjoy my family again,” he said, adding that others still detained “are well” and have high hopes of being released soon.

Families with loved ones in prison gathered for a third consecutive day Saturday outside prisons in Caracas and other communities, hoping to learn of a possible release.

On Thursday, Venezuela’s government pledged to free what it described as a significant number of prisoners.

But as of Saturday, only 11 people had been released, up from nine a day prior, according to Foro Penal, an advocacy group for prisoners based in Caracas. Eight hundred and nine remained imprisoned, the group said. It was not immediately clear if Ángulo’s release was among the 11.

A relative of activist Rocío San Miguel, one of the first to be released and who relocated to Spain, said in a statement that her release “is not full freedom, but rather a precautionary measure substituting deprivation of liberty.”

Among the prominent members of the country’s political opposition who were detained after the 2024 presidential elections and remain in prison are former lawmaker Freddy Superlano, former governor Juan Pablo Guanipa, and Perkins Rocha, lawyer for opposition leader María Corina Machado. The son-in-law of opposition presidential candidate Edmundo González also remains imprisoned.

One week after the U.S. military intervention in Caracas, Venezuelans aligned with the government marched in several cities across the country demanding the return of Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores. The pair were captured and transferred to the United States, where they face charges including conspiracy to commit narco-terrorism.

Hundreds demonstrated in cities including Caracas, Trujillo, Nueva Esparta and Miranda, many waving Venezuelan flags. In Caracas, crowds chanted: “Maduro, keep on going, the people are rising.”

Acting president Delcy Rodríguez, speaking at a public social-sector event in Caracas, again condemned the U.S. military action on Saturday.

“There is a government, that of President Nicolás Maduro, and I have the responsibility to take charge while his kidnapping lasts … . We will not stop condemning the criminal aggression,” she said, referring to Maduro’s ousting.

On Saturday, U.S. President Donald Trump said on social media: “I love the Venezuelan people and I am already making Venezuela prosperous and safe again.”

After the shocking military action that overthrew Maduro, Trump stated that the United States would govern the South American country and requested access to oil resources, which he promised to use “to benefit the people” of both countries.

Venezuela and the United States announced Friday that they are evaluating the restoration of diplomatic relations, broken since 2019, and the reopening of their respective diplomatic missions. A mission from Donald Trump’s administration arrived in the South American country on Friday, the State Department said.

Amid global anticipation over the fate of the South American country, Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yván Gil responded to Pope Leo XIV, who on Friday called for maintaining peace and “respecting the will of the Venezuelan people.”

“With respect for the Holy Father and his spiritual authority, Venezuela reaffirms that it is a country that builds, works, and defends its sovereignty with peace and dignity,” Gil said on his Telegram account, inviting the pontiff “to get to know this reality more closely.”



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