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CULTURE

TikTok and estates optimize art for virality over coherence

Wednesday, May 13, 2026 · from 2 podcasts
  • Songwriters now start with the 8-second viral climax, sacrificing the journey to a payoff for a 'jump scare' effect.
  • Michael Jackson's estate erased scandals via obscure contracts, proving sanitized IP sells better than a complex living artist.
  • The result is a mainstream where art is structured for platform algorithms, creating memorable moments but disposable songs.

Algorithmic distribution is reshaping the architecture of mainstream art, forcing a trade-off between a cohesive whole and a viral moment.

For modern musicians, the pressure to farm clips on TikTok has inverted the songwriting process. On Modern Wisdom, musician Nik Nocturnal argues composers now identify the breakdown or vocal hook first, then work backward to fill space. The goal is an instant 'jump scare' payoff for a scrolling audience, not a three-minute journey. Industry labels and producers identify the three meme-ready segments of a track before it's even finished.

"If you're just writing a song for one little clip, you're probably writing a worse song. I think you're missing out on replayability."

- Nik Nocturnal, Modern Wisdom

This focus on manufactured moments creates an authenticity gap. Listeners detect when a moment is engineered for a video rather than a genuine creative window, Nocturnal warns. The result is often a 'meme song' that gains hype but fails the replayability test, rarely surviving the trend cycle to land on permanent playlists.

The same optimization is applied to legacy intellectual property, with estates treating artists as sanitized assets. Michael Jackson died in 2009 as a toxic figure, $500 million in debt, with brands refusing to sponsor his tour. As detailed on The Daily, his lawyer John Branca turned the hospital room into a war room, realizing a dead Jackson - unable to create new scandals - was finally a stable IP to exploit.

"The estate essentially proved that Jackson was worth more as a silent icon than a living person."

- The Daily

The strategy required active erasure. When the 2019 documentary Leaving Neverland surfaced detailed abuse allegations, the estate used a 1992 non-disparagement clause in an old HBO contract to force its removal from U.S. streaming. A 1993 legal settlement forced the new biopic Michael to avoid the scandals entirely; the film ends in 1988. Critics panned it as propaganda, but it grossed $200 million in its opening weekend.

In both cases, the market rewards simplification. Audiences prefer humming Billie Jean without a messy reckoning, just as the feed rewards an instant breakdown over a slow build. The art that endures, Nocturnal notes, succeeds because its natural intensity fits the medium, not because it pivoted to meet it.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

Nik Nocturnal - How TikTok Hijacked the Future of Music - #1095May 9

  • Nik Nocturnal argues TikTok has a major impact on modern metal music by prioritizing short, high-impact clips like breakdowns or vocal moments over full songs, which normalizes the genre for a wider, scrolling audience.
  • Nocturnal states that many bands now write songs with TikTok in mind, curating specific 3-second segments intended to be clipped and seed memes for virality.
  • He observes a shift in songwriting process from collaborative garage jams to segmented digital production, with some bands starting compositions at the climactic breakdown and working backwards.
  • Nocturnal notes that focusing on creating a viral moment often results in a poor overall song, lacking replayability and timelessness compared to crafting a complete, quality track.
  • He highlights the resurgence and TikTok suitability of 2000s-era deathcore, citing Bring Me The Horizon's return to that sound and bands like Reverend and Psychoframe modernizing the style.
  • Nocturnal describes the metal scene as both big and small, where everyone knows each other and being a dick or blatantly copying a song has immediate professional consequences.
  • He cites the Wired article confirming that the band Geese's viral rise was an engineered 'psyop' by marketing firm Chaotic Good Projects, which used fake accounts to simulate trends.
  • Nocturnal claims metal fans are uniquely invested, treating a band's stylistic shift as a personal insult and supporting them through merch and concert tickets more than other genres.
  • He explains his YouTube hiatus was due to burnout from an 11-year, always-on career that blurred his identity with his channel, requiring a break to establish work-life balance and self-worth outside content creation.
Also from this episode: (4)

Culture (4)

  • Nocturnal and the host discuss how bands like Architects and Bring Me The Horizon achieved consistent, linear growth over decades and multiple albums, a rare feat in the industry.
  • He credits producer Mick Gordon's work on the Doom soundtrack as a lasting, major influence on modern metal production a decade after its release.
  • Nocturnal states modern metal production is now focused on sophisticated sound design, using layered synths, quad-tracked guitars, and meticulous mastering rather than raw recording.
  • He argues true originality in music is nearly impossible, as every chord progression has been used; differentiation comes from the specific combination of sequence, key, BPM, and groove.

The Resurrection of Michael JacksonMay 8

  • Michael Jackson's estate orchestrated a years-long project to rehabilitate his reputation, turning him from a toxic asset into exploitable intellectual property.
  • Jackson died in 2009 with his reputation severely damaged by child sexual abuse allegations, a public trial, problematic interviews, and mounting debt.
  • At his death, Jackson's estate argued his name and likeness had nearly zero value for tax purposes, citing only $24 earned in the first half of 2009.
  • Jackson was deeply in debt, nearing $500 million, and could not secure sponsors for his planned 50-date London O2 Arena tour.
  • The estate's first major revenue project was the concert film 'This Is It', compiled from rehearsal footage, which grossed about $260 million.
  • The estate subsequently developed a Cirque du Soleil show and a Broadway musical, 'MJ', which sanitized his story by setting it before the abuse allegations.
  • The 2019 documentary 'Leaving Neverland' threatened the rehabilitation project by detailing allegations of sexual abuse from two men, James Safechuck and Wade Robson.
  • The estate used a 1992 contract with HBO containing a non-disparagement clause to force the removal of 'Leaving Neverland' from HBO's platforms.
  • The biopic 'Michael' was conceived as the ultimate brand reset, but an original script aggressively attacked accusers and was shelved due to a legal settlement clause.
  • The released film 'Michael' avoids all controversy, ending in 1988 before any allegations, and has become a massive commercial success.