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The Franchise Is Over. Here’s Who’s Winning Now.

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Something shifted in the last 12 months that Hollywood is still struggling to explain. The blockbusters kept coming—sequels, prequels, shared universes, reboots—and the audiences kept showing up a little less excited each time. The numbers don’t lie: in 2025, there were 112 wide-released films, yet the domestic box office still lagged more than 20% below 2019 pre-pandemic levels. Studios spent more, marketed harder, and kept betting on familiar IP. And still, something wasn’t landing.

Meanwhile, something else was quietly winning.

The audience already knew before Hollywood did

A YouGov study released in early 2026 made it plain: only 29% of Americans want to see more superhero and franchise films, while 40% want fewer. The most-requested genre? Comedy—with 57% of respondents calling for more of it. People aren’t done with movies. They’re done with being processed through a content pipeline designed for IP portfolios, not human beings.

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The data backs that up at the box office too. Ryan Coogler’s Sinners—an original film, no existing IP, no cinematic universe setup—opened No. 1 and became the highest-grossing original movie since 2019. A24 has built an entire empire off originals, with 18 Oscar wins in a single year. The pattern is consistent: when audiences actually feel something, they show up and they tell everybody.

Independent film is filling the emotional void

The indie world already knew this. Independent films that crack the code share a simple formula: 90%+ audience satisfaction scores, festival validation, and word-of-mouth that money can’t buy. Films like HamnetThe Secret Agent, and Eternity all hit those thresholds and turned limited-screen runs into cultural moments that rivaled blockbuster marketing campaigns.

As one industry analyst put it, “The landscape has changed; audiences are more discerning now. Word of mouth carries more weight than ever.” You can’t manufacture that in a writers’ room built around a franchise bible. It has to be felt.

Film festivals are now the most important discovery engine left. As streaming platforms pull back from their buying frenzies and studios keep recycling familiar characters, festivals have become the place where real taste is made—where a film earns its audience one real human reaction at a time.

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Comedy specifically is having a cultural reset

This isn’t a general indie moment—comedy is leading it. After years of the industry treating comedy as a lesser genre, audiences are reclaiming it as essential. Sundance 2026 leaned hard into pitch-black satire, romantic comedies, and showbiz send-ups that generated the most buzz of the festival. People are exhausted, anxious, and overloaded—and laughter that means something is exactly what they are looking for.

The comedy films that are breaking through aren’t the safe, focus-grouped studio comedies. They’re the ones with a point of view, a real voice, and something uncomfortable to say. They’re the indie ones. They’re the festival ones.

What this means for independent filmmakers right now

Three top indie producers at Sundance 2026 said what needed to be said: independent film doesn’t just need to survive the current landscape, it needs to own it. The tools have never been more accessible. The audience hunger has never been more real. And the gatekeeping structures that kept indie films in the margins are visibly cracking.

The filmmaker who wins in this moment isn’t the one who pitches the safest version of a familiar story. It’s the one who trusts that real, specific, human storytelling is the only kind that spreads in a world drowning in content.

The franchise may not be dead. But the audience’s emotional loyalty to it? That’s already gone. And the filmmakers who understand that first are the ones who get to be next.

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FIPRM Expands Into Sports, Partners With Bolanle Media to Launch New Media Platform

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FIPRM is expanding its footprint into the sports industry through a new partnership with Bolanle Media, marking a strategic move into athlete-focused media and content development.

The Houston-based public relations firm announced the launch of its sports division alongside plans to co-develop a new sports media platform in collaboration with Bolanle Media.

The initiative reflects a growing demand for athlete-driven storytelling, as players increasingly seek control over their narratives both during and after their careers.

Through this expansion, FIPRM will offer specialized services including crisis management, media training, and business consulting tailored specifically for athletes. The goal is to support clients not only in navigating public visibility but also in building long-term business ventures beyond sports.

The partnership with Bolanle Media adds a strong content and distribution component to the strategy. Known for its work in digital storytelling and media production, Bolanle Media will play a key role in developing original programming and amplifying athlete voices across platforms.

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One of the first projects under the collaboration is The Basketball Exchange, a biweekly podcast focused on news, analysis, and cultural conversations surrounding the WNBA, BIG3, Unrivaled, and women’s college basketball. The show will be executive produced by Bolanle Media founder Roselyn Omaka, who also serves as a network partner on the project.

Hosted by publicist Kretonia Morgan, the podcast will feature contributions from former NBA player Orien Green, BIG3 player Adam Drexler, and former WNBA champion Janell Burse. The format is designed to combine insider perspective with broader conversations around the evolving business and culture of basketball.

The move comes as both companies position themselves at the intersection of sports, media, and branding. For FIPRM, the sports division represents a natural extension of its public relations expertise into a high-growth sector. For Bolanle Media, the partnership strengthens its expansion into sports content and athlete-led programming.

As the sports media landscape continues to shift toward direct-to-audience platforms, collaborations like this highlight a larger trend: athletes are no longer just subjects of coverage—they are becoming media brands in their own right.

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ON MAY 8, 2026, YOUR INSTAGRAM DMS STOP BEING TRULY PRIVATE

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Bolanle Tech Newsroom Report

Instagram Is Quietly Changing What “Private” Means in Your DMs

From the Bolanle Tech Newsroom: Instagram has officially confirmed it will stop supporting end‑to‑end encrypted DMs on that date, and this is a documented policy change, not a rumor. That optional encrypted mode was the one feature that kept certain chats locked so tightly that not even Meta could read them, and once it’s gone, your “private” conversations lose their highest level of protection. In simple terms, the lock on those messages is being removed, and Meta will once again be in a position to see more of what you say in DMs if it chooses to, or if it is compelled to by law.

End‑to‑end encryption is what made some Instagram chats feel like a sealed envelope: the message left your phone scrambled and only arrived readable on the other person’s device. Without that, your DMs sit on Meta’s servers in a form that can be scanned by safety systems, reviewed for policy violations, and potentially used to inform AI and ad targeting. Meta is presenting this as a clean‑up of a “low‑usage” feature and is directing privacy‑focused users toward WhatsApp instead. But if you’ve been sending addresses, money talk, contracts, intimate photos, or receipts over Instagram, this marks a serious shift in what “private” really means on the platform.

“THESE CHATS WON’T BE PUBLIC, BUT THEY WON’T BE FULLY LOCKED DOWN EITHER.”

Practically, this does not mean your DMs become public or searchable by other users—strangers still can’t just open your messages, and your audience settings, blocking, and reporting tools remain in place.

What changes is who else can see inside: Meta’s internal systems, safety tools, and, when required, law enforcement will have a clearer path to the content of your conversations than they did under full end‑to‑end encryption. That is why privacy advocates are sounding the alarm—and why, from the Bolanle Tech Newsroom, our guidance is to treat Instagram DMs as semi‑public space: useful for networking, coordination, and light conversation, but not the place to keep your most sensitive secrets.

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Advice

How Far Would You Go to Book Your Dream Role?

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The question Sydney Sweeney’s career forces every serious artist to ask themselves.


Most people say they want to be an actor. But wanting the life and being willing to do what the life requires are two entirely different things. Sydney Sweeney’s performance as Cassie Howard in Euphoria is one of the clearest examples in recent television of what it actually looks like when an artist refuses to protect themselves from the story they are telling.


The Performance That Started a Conversation

Cassie Howard is not a comfortable character to watch. She is messy, desperate, and heartbreakingly human in ways that most scripts would have softened or simplified. Sydney Sweeney did not soften her. She played every scene at full exposure — the breakdowns, the humiliation, the moments where Cassie is both completely wrong and completely understandable at the same time.

What made the performance remarkable was not the difficulty of the scenes. It was the consistency of her commitment to them. Night after night on set, take after take, she showed up and gave the camera something real. That is not a small thing. That is the kind of discipline that separates working actors from generational ones.

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What the Industry Does Not Tell You

The entertainment industry sells you a version of success built around talent, timing, and luck. And while all three matter, none of them are the real differentiator in a room full of equally talented people. The real differentiator is willingness — the willingness to be honest, to be vulnerable, and to let the work require something personal from you.

Most actors hit a wall at some point in their career where a role demands more than they have publicly shown before. The ones who say yes to that moment, who trust the material and the director enough to go somewhere uncomfortable, are the ones audiences remember long after the credits roll.

Sydney Sweeney said yes repeatedly. And the industry took notice.


The Question Worth Asking Yourself

Before you answer, really think about it. There is a moment in every serious audition room where someone might ask you to go further than you are comfortable with — to access something real, to stop performing and start revealing. In that moment, you have to decide what your dream is actually worth to you and, more importantly, what parts of yourself you are not willing to trade for it.

That is the question Euphoria quietly raises for anyone watching with ambition in their chest. Not “could I do that,” but “should I ever feel pressured to.” There is a difference between an artist who chooses vulnerability as a creative tool and one who is pressured into exposure they never agreed to. Knowing that difference is not a weakness. It is the most important thing a young actor can understand before they walk into a room that will test it.

Because the only role that truly costs too much is the one that asks you to abandon who you are to play it.

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What You Can Take From This

Whether you are an actor, a filmmaker, a content creator, or someone simply building something from scratch, the principle is the same. The work that connects with people is almost always the work that cost the creator something real. Audiences can feel the difference between performance and truth. They always could.

Sydney Sweeney did not become one of the most talked-about actresses of her generation because she got lucky. She got there because she was willing to be completely, uncomfortably human in front of a camera — and because she knew exactly who she was before she let the role take over.

That combination — full commitment and a clear sense of self — is rarer than talent. And it is the thing worth chasing.


Written for Bolanle Media | Entertainment. Culture. Conversation.


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