Conventional wisdom said the screen would kill live entertainment. The opposite happened. As digital saturation rose, the appetite for live, embodied, present-moment spectacle grew with it.
The Presence Premium
Live attention is qualitatively different from screen attention. Audiences who can scroll past anything online are physically committed in a theatre. That commitment is the most valuable form of audience attention available in 2026.
The Shared-Experience Premium
Crying alone is private. Crying in a room of 600 people is communal. Communal emotion is increasingly rare and increasingly valued — and live shows are the most efficient way to produce it at scale.
The Embodiment Premium
The brain processes embodied performance — real bodies in real space — differently from video. Mirror-neuron activation is higher. Memory retention is higher. Emotional resonance is higher. The neuroscience is unambiguous.
What This Means for Show Design
Productions that lean into presence — intimate scale, performer proximity, real risk on stage — outperform productions that try to compete with screen-style polish. The competitive advantage of a live show is everything a screen can’t do.
The Producer’s Conclusion
Don’t design against screens. Design what screens can’t reproduce. The audience already has screens. They came to the show for something else.
