Sony, Netflix, Paramount and private equity are all taking meetings about acquiring Letterboxd, the film-logging platform that built the most genuinely engaged cinephile community on the internet. The value here is not the technology. It is the taste graph: decades of film opinions, watchlists, and social signals from the exact audience every streamer is spending billions trying to reach. Whoever buys Letterboxd is not buying a platform, they are buying an audience's memory of what they love. The risk is obvious: the moment the acquisition closes, the community that made it valuable will begin to distrust it.
Three stories today converge on the same structural shift: Letterboxd's sale process reveals that streamers are willing to pay for curated taste data that their own platforms failed to generate; Chanel acquires Charvet not for revenue but for encoded heritage and category rights; and ASOS enters the couture calendar to borrow institutional credibility it cannot build organically.
In each case, the thing being acquired is not the product or the technology but the accumulated cultural authority that took decades to form. The pattern is this: platforms and brands that spent the last ten years building reach are now spending heavily to buy depth, because depth turned out to be the scarcer resource.
For people who’d rather be early and wrong than late and safe.