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How ‘monoculture’ became a catchall for two opposing anxieties – that we no longer share enough, and that we all share too much

Have algorithms and AI flattened popular culture the way industrial farming flattened the prairie? alffoto/iStock via Getty Images Plus

When “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” aired its final episode on May 21, 2026, critics lamented more than the end of a television program.

It was a nightly ritual that millions of Americans participated in, with Bloomberg media reporter Lucas Shaw describing its cancellation as one more sign of “the decline of monoculture.”

Eulogies for “the monoculture” have appeared elsewhere. In fall 2025, BuzzFeed announced “the death of celebrity monoculture.” The Ringer asked whether summer 2025 was the “summer without monoculture.”

In all of these uses, the word describes a vanished era of shared cultural experience, a time when most people watched, listened to and talked about the same things.

But “monoculture” gets pulled in a different direction, too. Other writers, like cultural critic Kyle Chayka, have used it to describe the opposite problem: a sense that the culture today is becoming too uniform, too flattened, too much the same everywhere you look.

When the same word is used as a lens to view the world in different ways, something else is usually going on.

As a marketing professor who studies culture and consumer behavior, I find the current usage of “monoculture” telling. The word comes from agriculture, and tracing its journey from the farm to the algorithm reveals quite a bit about a tension many people are feeling right now: a craving for connection and community that coincides with a longing to stand out as unique.

From the farm to the feed

“Monoculture” began as an agricultural term in the early 20th century to describe planting a single crop across a large area of farmland. The practice was efficient and profitable, but it was also risky. Single-crop fields are more vulnerable to pests, disease and weather shocks. They also displace the smaller, scrappier ecosystems that once occupied the land.

The word migrated into cultural criticism in the 1980s and 1990s. Music writers like Robert Christgau and later Chuck Klosterman used it to describe a media landscape dominated by a handful of TV networks, magazines and record labels.

Much of the agricultural meaning came along for the ride. When people complain about “creeping monoculture” today, they’re often referring to the way the algorithms, artificial intelligence and the economics of the attention economy have flattened popular culture the way industrial farming flattened the prairie.

For example, urban studies scholars have traced how independent coffee shops across North America have come to look strikingly alike, with the same exposed brick, vintage furniture and tattooed baristas.

“Whether it’s popular fashion, architecture or interior design, idiosyncrasies are collapsing into a generic, hegemonic aesthetic,” they write, and it’s due, in part, to the way “social media algorithms promote the visuals that users are most likely to engage with.”

A bird's eye view of identical-looking homes in a suburban development.
Many cultural critics worry that a hegemonic aesthetic is taking hold across fashion, architecture and design. RoschetzkyIstockPhoto/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Generative AI is starting to foment the same dynamic. A study published in January 2026 found that when generative systems are allowed to run on their own, they quickly converge on what researchers call “visual elevator music” – generic, familiar outputs that strip away quirks and kinks. The technology that promises infinite variety, it turns out, has a strong pull toward sameness.

The original problem with monoculture in farming is the same one people now see in culture: Efficiency at scale crowds out the small, the spontaneous and the strange.

What people are actually responding to

But there is another way the word gets used, and it points in a different direction.

People mourning the loss of monoculture are rarely mourning the loss of aesthetic diversity. They are mourning the experience of shared attention, the sense that a lot of people were oriented toward the same thing. When commentators eulogized “The Late Show” as the end of a nightly ritual, this is largely what they meant.

In 1983, the series finale of “M-A-S-H” was watched by an estimated 106 million Americans. Finales from other shows – “Cheers” in 1993, “Seinfeld” in 1998 and “Friends” in 2004 – were also watched by huge swaths of the public.

There’s still the Super Bowl, which reliably pulls in 100 million-plus U.S. viewers. But in terms of weekly television and pop music releases, the shared cultural experience that once defined American life appears to have gone by the wayside.

So while some people worry that the culture is becoming too uniform, others worry that it is becoming too fragmented. “Monoculture” gets used in both cases because the word captures something a lot of people are struggling to name: a sense that the relationship between individuals and the larger culture they live in has become harder to navigate.

Nearly half of the U.S. population in 1983 watched the series finale of ‘M-A-S-H.’"

Standing out and belonging

This is where my own field has something useful to add.

Consumer researchers have spent decades studying how people balance two competing desires that turn out to be central to almost every cultural choice: the desire to belong to a group, and the desire to express something distinct about oneself.

My research on bicultural consumers – people who hold two cultures at once, like a first-generation Chinese American who navigates the traditions of family life at home and mainstream American culture at school or work – looks at how they manage this tension.

In my research, I found that biculturals prefer and choose "paradox brands” – brands that hold seeming contradictory meanings – more often than other consumers do. Burberry signals both centuries-old heritage and modern fashion. Range Rover holds rugged utility and luxury refinement in the same vehicle. For people who already live with contradictions every day, brands that don’t force a single identity choice feel right.

That tension is exactly what all the monoculture talk is reaching for. When people lament the death of monoculture, they are often missing the experience of belonging, of sharing references and emotional beats with millions of strangers. When they lament the rise of monoculture, they are often worrying about the cost of that belonging, the way being part of a mass audience can feel like a flattening of who you actually are.

The agricultural metaphor captures both sides. A monoculture is productive precisely because it concentrates resources. It is fragile precisely because it leaves no room for what doesn’t fit.

What the word can’t quite say

There is one thing “monoculture” struggles to capture, and it shows up clearly in events like Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show.

By raw attention, the performance drew 128 million U.S. viewers and set a global cross-platform record with more than 4 billion views in 24 hours.

But the reception was far from uniform. To some viewers, it was a Spanish-language celebration – long overdue – of Latin Americans, both inside and outside the U.S. Some conservative critics, however, objected to a predominantly Spanish-language performance headlining America’s biggest broadcast.

Scholars of culture and branding have long understood that shared cultural moments work by giving a range of different people a common cultural experience, not by forcing them to interpret it in the same way. Marketing scholar Douglas Holt’s foundational work on iconic brands showed that the most powerful cultural symbols succeed because they let different audiences find different meanings in the same thing.

The word “monoculture” cannot quite hold that part of cultural experience – and it might be why people keep reaching for the term, only to see it slip through their fingers.

The Conversation

Maria A. Rodas does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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Bat in the house? Here’s how to remove it safely

A bat hangs onto curtains in a home. Fermate/iStock/Getty Images Plus

There’s a very good chance that you’ll encounter a bat at some point in your life.

There are more than 1,500 species of these fascinating flying mammals, found in almost all habitats outside the polar regions, and many of them have adapted to living around humans.

The big brown bat, a common species in the United States, likes to hang out in buildings, including the attics of homes. The attraction for a bat makes sense: An attic is very similar to a cave. It is climate controlled, dark and free from predators. It is the perfect spot to rest – until the bat gets discovered by humans.

Mother bats and baby bats, known as pups, cling to a wood ceiling.
A maternity roost of mother bats and their pups found in a church attic. If you have bats in your attic, think carefully about timing before blocking the entrances so the pups aren’t left alone inside. Franz Christoph Robiller/imageBROKER/Getty Images

In spring and early summer, bats are migrating to their summer habitats and are more active when they get there, so they’re turning up in unexpected places.

As a bat biologist, I get many calls and emails at this time of year from people wondering what to do about bats in or around their homes. If you find one in your house or elsewhere, here’s what you need to know. Quick tip: Even if it’s not moving, it’s probably not dead.

To avoid health risks, take precautions

First things first: Even though the risk of getting rabies from a bat is low – about one to three people get rabies in the U.S each year – it is a fatal disease and bats can carry it, so it’s important to take precautions.

If a person gets bitten or scratched by a bat, or if the bat was in a room while someone was sleeping, you will want to contain the bat so it can be tested for rabies. Call your local public health department and seek medical attention immediately.

Fortunately, most bats can be removed from homes safely.

How to remove a bat from your bedroom

If a bat is flying around in a room, start by staying calm. I know, that’s easier said than done.

Grab a pair of gloves, ideally leather work gloves or garden gloves. If there are doors or windows to the outside, open them and see if the bat will fly out on its own.

If you don’t have easy access to the outside, grab a small box or trashcan and a thin piece of cardboard. A flattened cereal box is usually perfect for the cardboard. Slowly approach the bat when it settles down and put the box over the bat. Carefully slide the cardboard between the wall and the box so the bat is contained but not harmed.

How to safely relocate a bat and keep it from returning.

Then take the box outside and try to release the bat onto a tree, which would likely mean turning the box on its side and letting the bat crawl out onto a tree branch. Some bats will take right off from the box but others can only fly if they start by hanging upside down.

What to do with bats outside homes

If you spot a bat on the outside of your house, such as on a window screen or siding, just leave it be.

Especially during migration in the spring and fall, bats can get tired. If they are caught in a cold snap, they can go into torpor, like a mini-hibernation, to help survive the cold period when there aren’t insects available to eat for energy.

A small brown fur ball with tiny ears sticks to the top of a window screen, on the outside.
A live bat rests on a window screen. If you find a bat that’s not moving, it’s probably still alive and resting. The best advice: Leave it be. William Messmer

A bat might not move for several days while resting or waiting out the cold, so don’t worry. I have received countless emails from people thinking a bat was dead when it was definitely alive and just resting.

If a bat is outside and not visibly injured, in most cases, just leave it alone. If it is in an area that could be a risk to human health, such as on playground equipment or a frequently used screen door, you can try to gently relocate it with the same box-and-cardboard method.

If the bat is visibly injured, however, call a local wildlife rehabilitator before doing anything.

What if lots of bats are roosting in your home?

If you discover multiple bats are roosting in your home or attic, things get a bit more complicated. Once bats have established a roost, it is hard to get them to stay out.

People ask all the time if I can come remove bats.

Yes, bats can be removed, but if you don’t also block the hole where the bats are getting in, they will just fly right back.

Before trying to evict bats, think about the timing. If the bats aren’t a threat, it’s best to avoid disturbing them when they might have baby bats with them so the pups aren’t left in the attic to die. In the United States this is generally mid-April to mid-August, but you should check your local state laws. Most states have laws regulating when you can exclude bats to protect them during the maternity season, and the dates will vary by region.

Bats flying out of an attic at dusk.

To find how bats are entering your attic, watch different sides of your house around sunset. Starting about 20 minutes before sunset, if the temperature is above 50 degrees Fahrenheit (10 Celsius) outside with no rain, you’ll likely see bats fly off. It could take a couple days of watching to pinpoint the location.

Once you have identified the exit, you will want to make sure the bats can get out but can’t get back in. You can do this with a short piece of 2-inch pipe and some flexible plastic at the end that allows the bats to crawl out of the tube but not reenter it. Once you have had that in place for four to seven nights and you don’t see bats leaving at sunset, you can permanently seal the hole.

Why you should love bats

Even though we don’t want bats in our homes, they are amazing creatures and benefit humans.

Most bat species in the U.S. eat insects. They are critically important for pest control in agriculture, eating insects that eat crops.

A little bat with tiny ears hanging out in a cave
Little brown bats can eat their weight in insects every day. USFWS/Ann Froschauer

If you want to learn to appreciate bats in your own backyard, I encourage you to look up the next time you are outside at night, and hopefully you’ll get the chance to see these impressive creatures in flight.

The Conversation

Tara Hohoff does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article.

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