SHOWBIZ • YEAR IN REVIEW

2025 in Entertainment: The Year We Couldn’t Look Away

Blockbusters went global, streaming crowned new prestige favorites, and pop culture moved at meme-speed. Here are the biggest stories, winners, and moments that defined 2025 — in one high-gloss rewind.

The Big Picture in 60 Seconds

If 2024 was about “event TV” and legacy tours, 2025 was about scale: bigger worldwide box office swings, louder online fandoms, and awards conversations that spilled out of industry circles and into the group chat. The biggest winners weren’t just titles — they were moments: the clip, the quote, the instantly remixable beat, the scene everyone had an opinion about by breakfast.

Film

Global box office went truly global

International hits didn’t just travel — they led the year.

TV

Prestige + popularity finally aligned

Limited series and new dramas turned into appointment viewing again.

Music

Pop’s storytelling era leveled up

Albums played like worlds — and fans lived inside them.

Movies: 2025’s Biggest Box Office Heavyweights

The year’s top-grossing list mixed animation, franchise stamina, and a reminder that worldwide audiences don’t move as one — they move as many.

Rank Film Worldwide gross (approx.)
1Ne Zha 2$1.90B
2Zootopia 2$1.28B
3Lilo & Stitch$1.04B
4A Minecraft Movie$958M
5Jurassic World: Rebirth$869M
ShowBiz takeaway: The “global No. 1” conversation is no longer Hollywood-only. In 2025, international audience power shaped what a “mega-hit” looks like.

Awards: The Winners That Set the Tone

GRAMMYs

A headline-making night for music

  • Beyoncé won her first Album of the Year with Cowboy Carter.
  • Kendrick Lamar’s “Not Like Us” swept all five categories it was nominated in.
Oscars

A film that dominated the night

  • Anora won Best Picture.
  • Director Sean Baker took Best Director.
Emmys

Streaming’s trophy shelf got crowded

  • The Pitt won Outstanding Drama Series.
  • The Studio won Outstanding Comedy Series.
  • Adolescence won Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series.
What it meant

The vibe shift: “culture-first” winners

The winners that broke through weren’t just critically loved — they were widely discussed. 2025 was the year awards season felt like social season again.

Music: The Year of Big Albums & Bigger Fandom

Year-end lists were stacked across genres, but the bigger story was how fans consumed music: albums as lore, tracks as “scenes,” and every release treated like a world you can enter.

Chart power

Taylor Swift’s blockbuster album moment

The Life of a Showgirl became one of Swift’s biggest Billboard 200 performers, extending her chart-era dominance.

Critics’ picks

A “best of 2025” year for discovery

Multiple outlets dropped deep year-end album lists — great for adding “If you liked X, try Y” recs to your coverage.

Streaming & TV: The Shows Everyone Had to Catch Up On

The most talked-about series didn’t just trend — they stayed. The binge model evolved into something closer to “sustained obsession,” where each episode had its own afterlife: breakdowns, theory threads, and reaction clips.

Culture & Internet: 2025’s Viral Mechanics

The clip economy

If it wasn’t clipped, it “didn’t happen”

Biggest moments were engineered for replay: a line, a look, a beat drop — then remix.

Nostalgia 2.0

Reboots weren’t the story — the upgrades were

Sequels and revivals won when they felt like a fresh POV, not a museum exhibit.

Global fandom

The center moved

Hits traveled faster — and sometimes originated far from the usual “industry capitals.”