This interprets the numbers as either age guidelines (23, 10, 11) or categorical codes for structuring content across popular media (film, TV, games, streaming, social platforms).


2. Content Pillars for Each Segment

5. Emerging Trends (2026 Update)

  • Blurring of 10/11: Animated shows like Digital Circus are being watched by both, but 11-year-olds engage with fan theories while 10-year-olds enjoy the colors.
  • 23’s shift to “unproduced” media: Podcasts and newsletters (e.g., Garbage Day, Snax) have replaced sitcoms for cultural commentary.
  • The 11-year-old producer: Kids now edit shorts for school projects using CapCut templates – teach credit & consent early.

2.1 The Box Office Top Tier

On October 11, 2023, the box office was dominated by holdovers from the late summer and early fall. Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (released October 13) was looming, having broken advance ticket sale records for a concert film. The major narrative was the absence of traditional October horror franchises (e.g., Saw X, released September 29, was performing well but below pre-pandemic highs) and the surprising endurance of The Creator (released September 29), a rare original sci-fi IP from a major studio.