I try to space them out; it would bum me out to not have another book or movie waiting that I’m sure I’ll love. Also, if I burn through their works so fast I don’t feel like I can think about them as individual works as much as I’d like.
- If it’s gripping, and I don’t get distracted by something else more gripping, I’ll burn myself out binging everything. ADHD and OCD might play a role. 
- I burn through the catalogue, me. Musicians, listen to every album, typically in reverse chronological order. Authors, finish the series I started with then read the mist popular series, then the rest of their books in chronological order. Visual artists, I’ll sift through in whatever order I can find their works and then loop back to my favorites for closer study. Videogame studios, usually in order from cheapest to most expensive. 
- YouTube’s algorithm seems to think that if someone watches one video by a creator they’ve never watched before, that their feed of recommendations should immediately be filled by everything that creator ever made, so unless someone at YouTube made a conscious decision for it to do that, it would suggest that people generally go nuts and watch everything. - The fact I noticed and was annoyed by it suggests I’m the exception rather than the rule. 
- If I have time, I’ll check out enough content to make sure. If I’m bored, I’ll watch/listen to a lot. 
- I like to have some time between books by the same author. This isn’t a hard and fast rule, because I’ll make an exception if it’s a series. 
- I usually burn through it. 
- binge some and then it spaces out. like watched a bunch of sopranos the next generation today. I do tend to go and watch stuff from way earlier before watching a new thing that popped up. 
- I space everything out. 
- I’m autistic and I have ADHD, so it’s a bit of a toss up. Sometimes they demand I go through an entire thing in a day. Other times it’s years later and I’ve barely made progress. I never know what I’ll get, but it’s more likely to be the latter if there’s more content. When there’s a long backlog my brain tends to check out earlier because it’s too busy focusing on everything I haven’t done yet. 





