Industry analysts reported on this day that the number of original scripted series dropped for the second consecutive year. The era of "Peak TV" (2015-2022) is officially dead. In its place, we see "Right-Sized TV." Major players like Netflix, Disney+, and Max are no longer greenlighting niche passion projects. Instead, the top-performing content on 24 09 10 consisted of:
No major Tuesday album releases (standard global release day is Friday), but:
A landmark event for this specific date: The EU has expanded its Digital Services Act to classify "emotional state tracking" as illegal data collection. legalporno 24 09 10 kaitlyn katsaros and nuria top
Why does this matter for entertainment? For the last five years, platforms like Netflix and Spotify used "affective computing" (tracking your facial micro-expressions via webcam or your tone of voice via smart speakers) to recommend content.
On September 10, 2024, major apps are disabling these features. The result? A return to "collaborative filtering" (i.e., "People who liked X also liked Y"). This is causing a volatility in the charts, as media companies can no longer micro-target a user who is "slightly sad and physically fatigued." Industry analysts reported on this day that the
The fall TV season was in full swing. Key episodes airing around Sept 24, 2010:
| Show | Episode Title / Note | |------|----------------------| | Dancing with the Stars (ABC) | Season 11, Week 2 performance episode (aired Sept 27, but taped Sept 24). | | Smallville (CW) | Season 10 premiere: “Lazarus” – final season of the Superman prequel. | | Supernatural (CW) | Season 6, Episode 2: “Two and a Half Men” (parody title). | | Blue Bloods (CBS) | Season 1, Episode 2: “Samaritan” – early in Tom Selleck’s long-running cop drama. | | The Soup (E!) | Joel McHale hosted, satirizing the week’s reality TV and media moments. | The fall TV season was in full swing
📺 Streaming context: Netflix still primarily mailed DVDs in 2010. Hulu offered ad-supported network episodes. Streaming was not yet dominant.
On this Tuesday in mid-September 2024, the entertainment world was a fascinating mix of late-summer blockbuster hangover, prestige TV ramp-up, and surprise digital drops. Here is what a consumer flipping through channels, apps, and theaters would have found.