Forget "good lighting." Eyecon shows possess a proprietary aesthetic. Think of Euphoria (HBO) with its lens-flared, glitter-tear, high-saturation realism. Or Bridgerton’s pastel-toned, Regency-core fantasy. You can recognize a screenshot of these shows without context. They invent color palettes that trickle down into prom dress trends and Instagram filters.

While not yet an official entry in the Oxford English Dictionary, "Eyecon Show" is rapidly becoming the industry’s shorthand for a specific, coveted tier of production. It describes a performance or series so visually dominant, so aesthetically cohesive, and so rich in iconic imagery that it transcends traditional storytelling to become a permanent fixture in the cultural retina.

Netflix, HBO, and Apple TV+ are now aggressively greenlighting shows with high "Eyecon potential"—hiring music video directors (Sam Levinson, Hiro Murai) and fashion photographers to run series, because they understand that The Critic’s Caveat Of course, not everyone is a fan of the trend. Some critics argue that the rise of the Eyecon Show prioritizes style over substance. They point to shows that are "visually arresting but narratively hollow"—beautiful frames that, upon closer inspection, contain no emotional truth. The danger of the Eyecon Show is the "empty cathedral": a stunning building with nothing holy inside.