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Author: [Generated for academic purposes] Date: April 2026 Abstract Indonesia, the world’s fourth most populous nation and a majority-Muslim country with a rich tapestry of ethnicities and languages, has developed a unique and increasingly influential entertainment industry. This paper provides a comprehensive analysis of Indonesian popular video content, covering traditional film and television alongside the explosive growth of digital platforms like YouTube, TikTok, and streaming services (e.g., Vidio, Netflix Indonesia). It traces the evolution from the sinetron (soap opera) dominance of the 1990s–2000s to the current era where user-generated content, horror-comedy hybrids, and Web2Series challenge conventional media. The paper argues that Indonesian popular videos are not merely derivative of Western or Korean pop culture but form a distinct ecosystem characterized by localized genres (e.g., kisah nyata – true stories), linguistic diversity (code-switching between Indonesian and regional languages), and a participatory fan culture that blurs the line between producer and consumer. 1. Introduction Indonesia’s entertainment sector has undergone radical transformation over three decades. In the 1990s, state television (TVRI) and private networks (RCTI, SCTV) dominated with sinetron —melodramatic, family-oriented soap operas. By the 2010s, the rise of affordable smartphones and 4G networks catalyzed a shift toward short-form, comedic, and often irreverent video content. Today, Indonesia is one of YouTube’s largest markets globally (ranked among top five by watch time), and platforms like TikTok have become primary news and entertainment sources for Gen Z.

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Author: [Generated for academic purposes] Date: April 2026 Abstract Indonesia, the world’s fourth most populous nation and a majority-Muslim country with a rich tapestry of ethnicities and languages, has developed a unique and increasingly influential entertainment industry. This paper provides a comprehensive analysis of Indonesian popular video content, covering traditional film and television alongside the explosive growth of digital platforms like YouTube, TikTok, and streaming services (e.g., Vidio, Netflix Indonesia). It traces the evolution from the sinetron (soap opera) dominance of the 1990s–2000s to the current era where user-generated content, horror-comedy hybrids, and Web2Series challenge conventional media. The paper argues that Indonesian popular videos are not merely derivative of Western or Korean pop culture but form a distinct ecosystem characterized by localized genres (e.g., kisah nyata – true stories), linguistic diversity (code-switching between Indonesian and regional languages), and a participatory fan culture that blurs the line between producer and consumer. 1. Introduction Indonesia’s entertainment sector has undergone radical transformation over three decades. In the 1990s, state television (TVRI) and private networks (RCTI, SCTV) dominated with sinetron —melodramatic, family-oriented soap operas. By the 2010s, the rise of affordable smartphones and 4G networks catalyzed a shift toward short-form, comedic, and often irreverent video content. Today, Indonesia is one of YouTube’s largest markets globally (ranked among top five by watch time), and platforms like TikTok have become primary news and entertainment sources for Gen Z.