Let’s be honest: 2021 was complicated. We were still tip-toeing through a global pandemic, masks were still mandatory, and the word “unprecedented” was getting old. But if there was one universal life raft we all clung to, it was entertainment content.
Movies:
The Super Bowl LV Halftime Show featured The Weeknd, and it was a maximalist fever dream. It capped off a year where his album After Hours refused to leave the charts, proving that synth-wave nostalgia had fully colonized the pop mainstream. buttmansfavoritebigbuttbabes1xxx 2021
Loki is one of the more popular and acclaimed shows. They probably won't skip it. Loki Autumn brought a new kind of intensity. Squid Game 2021: The Year We Escaped Through the Screen
In a year still plagued by pandemic fatigue, Apple TV+’s Ted Lasso (Season 2) became an unlikely balm. The show about a folksy American football coach managing a British soccer team transcended sports. It became a source of mental health vocabulary—"Believe" signs, "biscuits with the boss," and the discussion of panic attacks normalized male vulnerability in popular media. "Drivers License" by Olivia Rodrigo "Levitating" by Dua
The internet has dramatically transformed the way we consume and interact with content. With the rise of social media, forums, and specialized websites, people can now easily access and engage with a vast array of topics, including those that might be considered niche or unconventional.
The gaming industry in 2021 saw the release of several highly anticipated titles, including: