Madonna is one of the best-selling artists of all time. She just promoted her new album on a dating app.
When a pop icon hunts for clicks on Grindr, the attention game has changed for all of us.
A Times Square Show, Streamed On A Dating App
On June 4, Madonna played a surprise Pride Month concert in Times Square. The venue was a new spot called The Square.
The whole show streamed only on Grindr. A big crowd packed the square to watch.
Times Square glowed in pink Madonna and Grindr colors. Fans cheered as she hit the stage.
The set leaned on club beats and big visuals. Pride Month gave the night a hook.
She sang her new single with Sabrina Carpenter, "Bring Your Love." She also played old hits like "Hung Up."
The show was really a launchpad for her album "Confessions II." It is a sequel to her 2005 dance record, due out July 3.
She made it again with producer Stuart Price. The first one was a big hit, so the bar is set high.
Grindr has been trying to become more than a dating app. A splashy concert helps it look like a culture brand.
The app also got its name in front of millions. That kind of buzz is hard to buy.
We explain how attention and money move together across markets in Market Briefs, delivered every weekday morning, with a free investing masterclass when you sign up.
Why Even Madonna Has To Fight For Attention
Fame used to promise reach. Those days are gone.
Now everyone lands in the same feed, ranked by the same app. And that app does not care how many records you sold in 1985.
So big stars chase attention the same way new creators do. Madonna and Paul McCartney both work harder than ever to get seen.
Even a star this big cannot just post and coast. The feed rewards fresh effort, not old fame.
The crowd they fight is not other icons. It is every phone screen and every endless scroll.
There is a business lesson buried in the glitter. Brands and apps now win by renting a cultural moment.
The app got headlines, while Madonna reached a young crowd that lives online. Both sides got the thing they wanted most.
A surprise show on an app is built to be shared. Clips spread faster than any ad buy.
Streaming pays artists very little per play. So a viral moment can be worth more than a quiet release.
Reach is the real prize now. A trending clip can do what a TV ad once did.
Worth Noting
Attention is the scarcest thing online right now. A splashy platform deal is really a way to buy reach in disguise.
For any brand, the lesson is the same. You cannot win attention on fame alone anymore.
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