The media industry isn’t heading for a clean recovery but bracing for another year of pressure, recalibration, and structural change.
Welcome back to The Media Odyssey Podcast with a special thanks to Spectrum Reach! In this first part of their 2026 predictions, Evan Shapiro and Marion Ranchet lay out what the coming year will likely bring for media, technology, and entertainment. They cover ongoing layoffs, fragile ad markets, the rise of global distribution strategies, and a new phase of AI-driven discovery. 2026 will test which companies have truly adapted and which are still relying on outdated assumptions.
2026 is not a breakout year, but a proving ground, where survival depends on cost discipline, platform fluency, and the ability to monetize audiences directly rather than through legacy intermediaries.
Key Takeaways:
1. 2026 Will Be Another Brutal Year for Media Economics
Evan predicts that advertising markets will remain soft, public service media will continue to face funding pressure, and layoffs will persist across the industry. There will be no broad recovery, only isolated winners and many organizations forced to do more with less.
2. Discovery Will Matter More Than Content Volume
Marion predicts that success in 2026 will be defined by distribution and discoverability, not by how much content companies produce. Media organizations that don’t adapt to YouTube, FAST, social, and AI-driven discovery will struggle to reach audiences at all.
3. The AI Bubble Will Pop
Both predict that generative AI and large language models will reshape discovery, navigation, and search long before they meaningfully change creative workflows. The biggest short-term impact of AI will be invisible but existential for traffic-driven media, but the hype and direct-to-consumer models are unsustainable.
4. GEO Will Undermine Traditional SEO-Based Media Models
Evan predicts that Generative Engine Optimization will replace classic SEO as search engines move from links to answers. Media companies built on referral traffic will see declining reach unless they rethink how their content surfaces in AI-driven environments.
5. FAST Will Become More Crowded and Less Forgiving
Marion predicts continued FAST channel proliferation without equivalent ad growth. The result: more fragmentation, lower yields, and fewer viable players with success limited to brands with strong IP, live content, or true differentiation.
6. Media Companies Will Be Forced to Think Globally by Default
Growth will increasingly come from international audiences, not domestic ones. Both predict that companies without global distribution strategies will hit growth ceilings faster in 2026.
7. Experimentation Will Be a Core Survival Requirement
The final prediction is cultural: organizations that don’t test formats, platforms, and monetization aggressively will fall behind. In 2026, waiting for clarity will be a losing strategy.
Thank you to Spectrum Reach! https://www.linkedin.com/company/spectrum-reach/
Interested in sponsorship? https://forms.gle/2LCWfX2HBNT8mtpx8
Connect with us on Linkedin:
Evan Shapiro - https://www.linkedin.com/in/eshap-media-cartographer/
Marion Ranchet - https://www.linkedin.com/in/marionranchet/
The Media Odyssey Podcast - https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-media-odyssey-podcast
- (00:00) - Introduction and Hosts
- (00:57) - First Prediction: AI Bubble Burst
- (04:03) - Debate on AI's Future
- (10:01) - Second Prediction: Micro Drama Bubble
- (14:22) - Third Prediction: Outcome-Based Advertising
- (17:01) - Fourth Prediction: Midterm Election Advertising
- (19:19) - Fifth Prediction: Social Media Politicians
- (21:51) - Sixth Prediction: New Generation of Media CEOs
- (25:56) - Seventh Prediction: Media Mergers and Acquisitions
- (27:06) - The Largest Leverage Buyout in Corporate History
- (27:21) - The Role of Saudis in American Media
- (27:38) - Mergers and Acquisitions in Advertising
- (29:00) - Cultural Clashes in Mergers
- (29:56) - Netflix's Strategic Moves
- (31:23) - The Future of European Media
- (31:57) - Predictions for Media Mergers
- (34:30) - The Rise of YouTube and Social Media
- (39:09) - The Impact of AI on Media
- (43:18) - The Extinction of Ad-Free Viewing
- (49:55) - Final Thoughts and Predictions