>>719910138
>they're pandering to the modern audience
>the modern audience love to cheer on the HR management class
>>719909989
Write what you know?
Would it make more sense if megacorps made stories where entrepreneurs and brands (and You, the consumer!) are fighting governments, the morally repugnant and other enemies in ways that test well with audiences?
Or does it make more sense that in a world where you have your position not because of your creativity, self awareness or potentially even your genuine value to the company, and you've lost all connection to the "common man" (or consumer demographic of choice), that you instead make or commission stories influenced by other political trends like "America Bad, USSR Good"?
I think the entire middle class (where you get artists and project managers from) is just subverted by political activism but either has zero control over their own fate or the indoctrination hasn't reached critical mass yet, as the end goal of their rhetoric is the genocidal destruction of the 1%, which includes them.