Do you you think there's a sort of... content creation apocalypse coming? Like this sort of thing:
1) People have limited eyeball time. You can increase it marginally, but certainly not an order of magnitude above what it is now (people have to sleep!)
2) Media creation has gotten ever easier
3) Because of 2, the total quantity of media creation has gone up
4) Because of 1, 2, and 3 there are far more people competing for a pie that can't grow much.
5) AI creation of music, video, text, speech has recently gotten very good. Not nearly as good as the best humans, but good enough, and about 0.1% as much work/money.
6) Because of 5, you'll soon see far far more media that's good enough, meaning better than, say, the old bottom 70%
7) That 70% will increase as the tech gets better and as people get better at using it. And, possibly, as people stop caring, to the extent they care at all now, about whether the artist is a human or not.
The result:
The amount of attention available is more or less fixed by the population of Earth and its waking hours. We're probably close-ish to saturation, at least in the developed world. But the amount of media is about to grow exponentially via automation.
So, how does this shake out? I dunno. Possibilities from the artist's perspective
1) The profession of artist becomes like the profession of hand making nails. Almost nobody does it anymore and in fact most people don't realize it used to be a human job.
2) Artists become like artisan makers of soap. Is the soap better than the stuff at CostCo? Probably not, but you're paying for a perceived human connection.
3) Artists like me who have long-standing audiences do OK, but similar to what we see in programming, the ladder upward gets wrecked.