Since #MeToo went mainstream in 2018, audiences have shown a measurable shift in how they respond to sexual misconduct on screen. A new study from the University of Arizona argues that this cultural change has economic consequences—particularly at the box office, where even small content adjustments can meaningfully alter demand.
Marketing researcher Nooshin L. Warren and collaborators analyzed commercial and creative data from more than 1,500 high-grossing films spanning 2010–2023. Their goal was to test whether the movement’s public pressure translated into tangible marketplace outcomes, rather than remaining “just loud” online.
The team mapped films’ depictions of sexual violence, harassment, exploitation, and gender portrayals such as agency and stereotypical roles. Content scoring was conducted with ChatGPT-assisted review procedures, using structured definitions supplied in advance to standardize the evaluation.
To strengthen reliability, the researchers cross-validated the AI-driven assessments against large-scale thematic signals extracted from the Internet Movie Database, incorporating over 300,000 keyword indicators tied to prominent plot and character themes. They also accounted for confounders including seasonality, theatrical release timing, and contemporaneous scandals tied to the industry.
Beyond content coding, the study incorporated audience-level information drawn from surveys of more than 4,700 U.S. moviegoers. This allowed the researchers to estimate which segments of viewers were most responsive to specific portrayals, rather than treating “the audience” as a single group.
The results suggest a quantifiable penalty for problematic sexual content: minor increases or decreases in such depictions corresponded to roughly $8–$13 million shifts in box office revenue. In parallel, expectations around gender roles did not move at the same pace as intolerance toward misconduct.
Warren frames this in supply-and-demand terms: when perceptions of a product change, demand follows, and producers eventually adjust. Yet she notes that durable behavioral change—especially around gender dynamics—appears slower than headline-driven outrage.
The film industry provides an unusually controlled test environment because production lags behind public discourse. That makes it possible to observe how post-#MeToo preference evolved without relying on immediate rewrites of scripts, casting, or release strategy.
Overall, the study implies that social movements can act like an “invisible hand” disturbing market equilibrium—penalizing certain representations quickly, while leaving other cultural norms partially sticky. For entertainment economics, the takeaway is stark: risk management now includes not only talent conduct, but also how narratives signal gender power.
Subject of Research: Not provided
Article Title: How the #MeToo Movement Has Reshaped Gender Dynamics in the Marketplace: Evidence from the Entertainment Industry
News Publication Date: 19-Jun-2026
Web References: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/epdf/10.1177/00222429261464934
References: 10.1177/00222429261464934
Image Credits: Not provided
Keywords: #MeToo; gender dynamics; marketing; box office economics; social movements; media content analysis; audience demand

