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Kyle Buchanan

NYT Film Reporter Kyle Buchanan Analyzes**youtube-to-theater Pipeline**franchise Fatigue Is Real and Measurable**"corn Plating" Drives Repeat Ticket Sales**reaction Content Is Now Part Of
2episodes
1podcast

We have 2 summarized appearances for Kyle Buchanan so far. Browse all podcasts to discover more episodes.

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All Appearances

2 episodes
The Daily (NYT)

A Gen Z Revolution at the Movies

The Daily (NYT)
29 minNew York Times Film Critic

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS NYT film reporter Kyle Buchanan analyzes how two micro-budget horror films — Obsession ($750K budget, $265M global gross) and Backrooms (made by a 20-year-old, A24's fastest-ever hit) — drove Gen Z back to theaters in record numbers, revealing what Hollywood has been missing in its approach to younger audiences. → KEY INSIGHTS - **YouTube-to-theater pipeline:** Both films were directed by creators who built audiences on YouTube before Hollywood. Obsession's Curry Barker (age 26) and Backrooms' Kane Parsons (age 20, signed at 17) bypassed traditional film school entirely. Studios seeking Gen Z engagement should scout YouTube creators with established fanbases rather than relying on conventional development pipelines. - **Franchise fatigue is real and measurable:** Obsession and Backrooms generated comparable box office numbers to the first Star Wars film in seven years, despite costing a fraction of the budget. Gen Z audiences demonstrably reject legacy IP hand-me-downs — properties like He-Man toys from the 1980s or decades-old franchises hold no cultural equity with audiences who didn't grow up with them. - **"Corn plating" drives repeat ticket sales:** Films that embed ambiguous themes — Obsession's layers around consent, covert narcissism, and relationship anxiety — generate sustained online discourse that pulls audiences back for second and third viewings. Filmmakers should deliberately build interpretive depth into narratives to fuel social media analysis cycles and extend theatrical runs beyond opening weekends. - **Reaction content is now part of the theatrical experience:** Gen Z audiences film and post their in-theater reactions, creating a parallel social viewing layer that extends a film's reach far beyond ticket buyers. Films engineered to produce visible, shareable emotional responses — particularly fear or shock — gain organic distribution through platforms like TikTok, functioning as free, peer-generated marketing at scale. - **Protect source material when adapting internet IP:** Kane Parsons resisted studio offers for years, citing examples like American Horror Story's failed Backrooms episode as proof that Hollywood strips internet-native content of its appeal. Creators and studios adapting creepypastas, memes, or web series should treat existing online lore and community investment as non-negotiable creative constraints, not starting points to discard. → NOTABLE MOMENT Kane Parsons was born four months after YouTube was founded and taught himself filmmaking entirely through YouTube tutorials and Discord feedback. His original Backrooms short film, built using free software Blender, accumulated 80 million views — created entirely by one teenager with no formal training or budget. 💼 SPONSORS [{"name": "Capital One Savor Card", "url": "https://www.capitalone.com"}, {"name": "Capital One VentureX Card", "url": "https://www.capitalone.com"}] 🏷️ Gen Z Audiences, Independent Film, Box Office Trends, Horror Genre, YouTube Creators

The Daily (NYT)

Sunday Special: Wicked, Good?

The Daily (NYT)
52 minHollywood Correspondent

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS The New York Times reviews Wicked For Good, examining why the two-film adaptation succeeded where other musicals failed, the viral marketing campaign, and Hollywood's struggle to attract audiences beyond young women. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Young women as repeat viewers:** Female audiences drive box office success by watching films multiple times and creating fan content, making them the most loyal demographic while studios continue targeting underperforming male and older audiences with insufficient product. - **Event filmmaking strategy:** Films succeed by creating urgency through premium formats like IMAX 70mm and cultural conversation momentum, making audiences feel they must participate immediately or miss out on the shared experience and discussion. - **Act two adaptation challenges:** Wicked For Good stretches forty-five minutes of stage material into two hours eighteen minutes, resulting in repetitive political messaging and thin plot despite strong performances from Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo in intimate character moments. - **IP chain evolution:** Wicked represents a century-long intellectual property chain from 1900 book to 1939 film to 2003 musical to current movies, with younger audiences potentially experiencing Wizard of Oz primarily through Wicked rather than the original. → NOTABLE MOMENT The viral holding space interview moment became an accidental marketing phenomenon when an interviewer asked an incomprehensible question about fans holding space for Defying Gravity lyrics, creating genuine confusion that brands unsuccessfully tried to replicate. 💼 SPONSORS None detected 🏷️ Film Musicals, Hollywood Box Office, IP Adaptation, Fan Culture

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