Platforms like (MBC’s answer to Netflix) and Watch iT have turned the "linear" viewing experience into a year-round obsession. Shows like Al Hayba —a Lebanese drama about arms smuggling and family honor—became a global phenomenon, dubbed into multiple languages for Latin American and European audiences.
For decades, the world’s perception of Arab media was frozen in two clichés: the melodramatic musalsal (soap opera) watched during Ramadan, and grainy news broadcasts from conflict zones. But if you look at the trending charts on Netflix, the billions of streams on Anghami, or the red carpets of the Red Sea International Film Festival, a different story emerges.
Yet, creators are getting smarter. Instead of direct confrontation, they use allegory. A show about a dystopian future ( Al-Masraf ) becomes a critique of bureaucracy. A comedy about a divorced woman ( Rivo ) pushes boundaries not with nudity, but with dialogue about personal freedom.