Abstract
The internet promised to counter cultural homogeneity by enabling niche content to find a larger audience, but attention online often resembles offline patterns in which generic cultural forms attract the bulk of attention while a long tail of niche forms remains under resourced. I argue that understanding the internet’s potential to sustain cultural diversity requires moving beyond studying audience size to consider the mode and location of attention capture. Leveraging longitudinal data from Reddit, I find that communities that shift toward niche content find success not by attracting larger audiences, but instead by capturing deeper engagement in high-traffic hubs shared with the platform’s largest, most visible communities. This is in contrast to offline settings, where niche forms survive only in the periphery. These findings suggest that the internet offers a counterforce to cultural homogeneity in which niche content becomes more accessible and visible within the centers of digital attention.
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