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Unlike any other social media platform, Twitter (more specifically its influence) is the easiest platform to see on TV and movies. Sometimes it’s direct, like the 2019 movie Zola, which literally used tweets to craft the story.
Other times, it’s the relationship to jokes that get their shine on Twitter and get woven into scripts in writers rooms. In rarer instances, a show’s jokes are able to generate Twitter content weekly with each episode drop. Most recently, a show has been created based on a very specific byproduct of Twitter. We’re gonna talk about all of these works, what works or what doesn’t, and if going viral translates to other screens.
Unlike any other social media platform, Twitter (more specifically its influence) is the easiest platform to see on TV and movies. Sometimes it’s direct, like the 2019 movie Zola, which literally used tweets to craft the story.
Other times, it’s the relationship to jokes that get their shine on Twitter and get woven into scripts in writers rooms. In rarer instances, a show’s jokes are able to generate Twitter content weekly with each episode drop. Most recently, a show has been created based on a very specific byproduct of Twitter. We’re gonna talk about all of these works, what works or what doesn’t, and if going viral translates to other screens.