Culture

Soap operas, reimagined

Microdramas are the new daytime drama, except they don’t wait for you to sit down. You just… scroll, and then somehow you’re watching a billionaire plot with your thumb already halfway to the next episode.

Misryoum newsroom reported that the fastest-growing entertainment format in America right now doesn’t star anyone you’ve heard of. It isn’t on Netflix $NFLX or network television. Each episode runs about a minute, the production budgets are a rounding error by Hollywood standards, and the plotlines lean heavily on billionaire CEOs, forbidden romance, and revenge arcs.

Welcome to microdramas, the vertical-video serialized stories that users watch on apps like ReelShort, DramaBox, and TikTok’s new standalone entry, PineDrama. What started as a pandemic-era phenomenon in China has crossed the Pacific and is now reshaping how Americans consume scripted entertainment on their phones. And yes, it’s hard not to notice—especially when your phone starts buzzing right when the cliffhanger lands. One small real-world detail: I caught the smell of burnt coffee from the kitchen and still didn’t stop watching, which is… probably not a healthy sign.

In-app revenue for short drama apps hit nearly $3 billion in 2025, a 115% year-over-year jump, according to Sensor Tower. Globally, microdrama revenues reached $11 billion last year and will climb to $14 billion by the end of 2026, according to media analyst Omdia. The United States is now the second-largest market after China, and growing rapidly. Omdia’s analysis of U.S. cell phone behavior found that Americans are now spending more daily time watching vertical video content than they spend on Netflix, Disney $DIS+, or Prime Video on mobile devices. The audience is smaller (for now), but the grip is tighter—actually, maybe that’s the point.

Part of the magic is mechanics, not just melodrama. Episodes run one to three minutes, end on cliffhangers, and auto-play into the next installment. The first few episodes are free, then viewers pay through in-app purchases to keep watching. It borrows from mobile gaming more than traditional television, and it works because the stories are engineered to make stopping feel impossible. Mafia heirs fall for forbidden lovers. Secret billionaires reveal themselves to unsuspecting waitresses. Abandoned heiresses return to claim what’s theirs. Series titles like “Fake Married to My Billionaire CEO” and “Fated to My Forbidden Vampire” tell you everything you need to know about the emotional register.

This was the gap that Quibi, Jeffrey Katzenberg’s $1.75 billion short-form streaming venture, famously failed to identify before shutting down in 2020. Quibi spent $100,000 per minute on content featuring Hollywood stars. Microdrama platforms like Holywater spend about $150,000 on an entire series of 60 to 90 episodes. Quibi tried to shrink prestige television into phone-sized episodes. The apps that succeeded where it stumbled took the opposite approach—building cheap, addictive stories purpose-built for the device people already hold in their hands all day.

Microdramas are the direct descendants of daytime soap operas, but with a crucial economic twist. Procter & Gamble $PG created the soap opera genre in the 1930s as an advertising delivery vehicle, inventing stories to hold audiences in place long enough to sell them detergent. Microdramas have flipped that model. Instead of giving away the story and selling the audience to advertisers, apps like ReelShort hook viewers with free episodes and then charge them directly to keep watching. The innovation isn’t the cliffhanger. It’s getting the viewer to pay to resolve it. But brands are finding their way in anyway, Trojan-horsing products into a format where audiences aren’t expecting a sales pitch.

Crocs recently partnered with ReelShort and Creative Artists Agency on a five-part microdrama called “Charmed to Meet You,” a Valentine’s Day romance in which the love story is essentially a three-way relationship between two characters and a pair of shoes. Procter & Gamble, the original soap opera patron, launched a 55-episode microdrama for its personal care brand Native. Microdramas are already being shot in the epicenter of the entertainment industry. The Los Angeles City Council voted in January to explore a $5 million production subsidy for the format, and empty Hollywood sound stages are filling up with seven-day vertical shoots. Microdramas have made it onto the lot, in other words. They just haven’t been invited into the executive suites yet. Much of traditional Hollywood, from producers to talent agencies to international buyers, is still scratching its head over how one-minute episodes shot with non-union casts fit into a business built around prestige series and hourlong dramas. But the audience trajectory is clear, and it suggests something bigger than a fad. The soap opera didn’t die. It just learned to fit in your pocket.

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Culture

Soap operas, reimagined

The entertainment format growing fastest in America right now doesn’t feature anyone you’ve likely heard of. It’s certainly not on Netflix or your standard network channels. Each episode is barely a minute long, the budgets are—honestly—just a rounding error compared to Hollywood, and the plotlines? They’re all billionaire CEOs, messy revenge arcs, and forbidden romances. Welcome to the era of microdramas.

These vertical-video serialized stories are taking over apps like ReelShort and DramaBox. What started as a pandemic-era trend in China has fully crossed the Pacific. By the end of 2025, in-app revenue hit nearly $3 billion—a massive 115% year-over-year jump, according to Misryoum. Globally, these revenues hit $11 billion last year and are on track for $14 billion by 2026. Or maybe even higher, actually, it’s hard to track exactly how fast this is moving. The US is now the second-largest market, and the growth is… well, it’s rapid.

Americans are now spending more time watching these vertical videos than they spend on Netflix, Disney+, or Prime Video on their mobile devices. There’s a specific smell in the air—the faint, sterile scent of a newly rented office space in Burbank being turned into a seven-day vertical shoot. It feels disjointed, but somehow, it works.

How do they actually keep people watching? It’s a mix of cliffhangers every 60 seconds and auto-play mechanics. The first few are free, then you start paying. It borrows more from mobile gaming than from traditional TV. Series titles like “Fake Married to My Billionaire CEO” tell you everything—or maybe nothing—you need to know. It’s the gap Quibi missed back in 2020. They spent $100,000 per minute on stars; platforms like Holywater spend maybe $150,000 on an entire 90-episode series. It’s cheap, it’s fast, and it’s addictive. Actually, it’s just plain addictive.

Wait, I should mention the monetization shift. Procter & Gamble invented the soap opera in the 30s to sell detergent, but these apps are selling the story itself. The viewer pays directly to resolve the cliffhanger. Still, brands are sneaking in—like that recent Crocs partnership with ReelShort, where the shoes were basically the third wheel in a romance.

Hollywood is still a bit confused, scratching its head over non-union casts and one-minute episodes. But the Los Angeles City Council is already talking about a $5 million production subsidy. It’s happening. The soap opera isn’t dead—it just learned to fit in your pocket, waiting for that next subway ride or coffee break.

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