The Medium from Andrew Rosen

The Medium from Andrew Rosen

"The Math Doesn't Work": Why 2026's $1T Ad Market Is Bad News for Storytellers

Platforms need moments to monetize, not storytellers to succeed. 95.6% of creators fail. The math doesn't work. That's the intended outcome.

Jan 12, 2026
∙ Paid

The $1 trillion advertising market emerging in 2026 sounds like good news for storytellers. It’s not.

A CES panel last week—“Balancing AI Ad Innovation With IP Protection”—revealed where that trillion dollars is actually going: scene-level contextual targeting that lets NBCU place ads “right after a holiday kiss,” AI tools that compress production from weeks to hours, programmatic efficiency that optimizes for ‘the moment when consumers can be found.’

Missing from this equation are the storytellers, their stories and the value they create.

The infrastructure being built—scene-level targeting, AI production tools, programmatic efficiency—extracts value from creator content without distributing value to creators. Platforms and advertisers are building moats. Storytellers are building stories that platforms monetize.

This has always been YouTube’s business model, but the numbers prove how extreme it is: only 4.4% of YouTube’s 67 million creators monetize their content. That means 95.6% do not. It is a distribution system governed by power laws. Even within the 4.4% who do monetize, power laws concentrate value further: MrBeast and creators at the very top capture exponentially more than everyone else. Power laws within power laws.

AWS’s Samira Panah Bakhtiar said on the panel that “Gen Z is spending 54% more time on social and 26% less time on traditional viewing experiences.” The innovations in advertising—shorter production pipelines, contextual targeting—follow audiences to platforms, not to storytellers. They optimize for the moment when consumers can be found, not the story being told.

The storytellers do not capture this value. The story—really the moments in the story being monetized, like “a holiday kiss” or a touchdown in an NFL game—is secondary to the targeting.

The $1 trillion advertising market emerging in 2026 is not good news for storytellers. The real question for 2026 is whether it is bad news.

Survivor Bias

Past examples suggest three forms of business model for storytelling in the AI era—none of them scalable, none of them accessible to most storytellers.


Past essays related to today’s analysis:

Storytelling vs. Advertiser Infrastructure: The Creator Survival Question for 2026

Storytelling vs. Advertiser Infrastructure: The Creator Survival Question for 2026

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Jan 8
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Storytelling vs. Advertiser Infrastructure: The Creator Survival Question for 2026

Storytelling vs. Advertiser Infrastructure: The Creator Survival Question for 2026

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"More Content" Isn't A Strategy When Creators Don't Need You To Make It

"More Content" Isn't A Strategy When Creators Don't Need You To Make It

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November 6, 2025
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