Fragments of a Former Consensus
There was a time when culture moved in unison. Not perfectly. Not peacefully. But collectively. The 60s through the 80s operated within limited broadcast lanes. Three major television networks. A handful of national newspapers. Radio stations bound to regional frequency. Media cycles moved slower. Stories lingered longer. Debate unfolded over days instead of seconds. Shared culture was not uniformity — it was overlap. Even disagreement began from a common reference point. People watched the same debates. Heard the same headlines. Experienced the same national moments in real time. There was friction, but there was also shared narrative scaffolding. That scaffolding has dissolved. Today we inhabit algorithmic fragmentation. Feeds are personalized. Search results adapt to history. News is filtered through engagement metrics. Social media curates not what is most accurate, but what is most reactive. Each individual moves within a customized stream of information calibrated to preference, ...