Why Does WordPress Keep Asking About Our Favourite Movies?

What are your top ten favorite movies?


My “top ten favourite movies” change each year—not because the films change, but because I do. Each list reflects where I am in life, making it less about cinema and more about growth, memory, and meaning.

Every year, WordPress asks the same deceptively simple question: What are your top ten favourite movies? At first glance, it feels repetitive—even trivial. But look closer, and you’ll see that this isn’t really about cinema at all. It’s about how we change, how our stories evolve, and how repetition can quietly become one of the most powerful mirrors of growth.

Beyond the List: Why WordPress Keeps Asking About Our Favourite Movies

August 19, 2025

For the third consecutive year, WordPress has served up the same prompt: “What are your top ten favourite movies?” This isn’t a coincidence. This isn’t creative bankruptcy. This is algorithmic wisdom disguised as repetition.

As someone who has responded to this prompt twice before, I find myself asking a different question entirely: What does this recurring prompt reveal about us, about storytelling, and about the very nature of human preference?

The Sociology of Repeated Questions

When a platform with millions of users repeatedly asks the same question, it creates an unintentional longitudinal study. We become unknowing participants in a vast experiment about cultural evolution, personal growth, and the fluidity of taste.

My 2023 list included films that spoke to my journey as an educator. My 2024 selection reflected my transition into legal practice and policy work. Today, I realise that these lists weren’t really about movies at all—they were autobiographies written in cinema.

The question persists because our answers change. Not because new films displace old favourites, but because we transform. The lens through which we view art shifts with experience, wisdom, and circumstance.

The Impossibility of Ranking Art

There’s something fundamentally flawed about ranking creative works. When we create lists of “favourite” movies, we’re attempting to quantify the unquantifiable—the emotional resonance, the intellectual stimulation, the spiritual awakening that certain stories provide.

A film that devastates us at twenty-five might feel melodramatic at forty. A movie we dismissed as shallow in our youth might reveal profound truths when viewed through the lens of parenthood or loss. The ranking system assumes static preferences in a dynamic world.

Perhaps WordPress understands this better than we do. By asking the same question annually, it acknowledges that our relationship with art is evolutionary, not fixed.

The Mirror of Cultural Memory

Every time bloggers respond to this prompt, they contribute to a collective cultural memory. Thousands of posts, millions of titles mentioned, patterns emerging and dissolving across years. Some films appear consistently—the canonical choices that represent shared cultural touchstones. Others surge and fade, reflecting momentary zeitgeists or personal phases.

This repetitive prompt creates something unprecedented in human history: a real-time, crowd-sourced documentation of how artistic taste evolves across cultures, generations, and individual lives.

The Spiritual Dimension of Story

In my work bridging faith and reason, I’ve come to understand that our favourite films often serve as modern parables. They carry the moral weight, emotional truth, and transformative power that sacred stories have provided throughout human history.

When we list our favourite movies, we’re not just cataloguing entertainment preferences. We’re revealing our values, our fears, our aspirations, and our understanding of what it means to be human. We’re creating a personal canon of stories that have shaped our worldview.

The Technology of Taste

From a technological perspective, this recurring prompt represents something fascinating: the intersection of artificial intelligence and human creativity. WordPress’s algorithm doesn’t know it’s asking the same question—it’s following patterns, optimising for engagement, responding to data that suggests this prompt generates meaningful content.

But the result is profoundly human. By accident or design, we’ve created a system that encourages annual self-reflection disguised as a simple list-making exercise.

The Legal Framework of Memory

As someone who works in law and policy, I’m struck by how these repeated prompts create an interesting digital footprint. Our answers become evidence of our intellectual and emotional development, stored permanently in the digital commons.

Future scholars studying early 21st-century culture will have access to this unprecedented record of how ordinary people related to art during a time of rapid technological and social change. Our movie lists are primary source documents for future anthropologists.

Embracing the Repetition

So this year, instead of fighting the repetition, I’m embracing it. Instead of trying to craft a “new” list that avoids my previous choices, I’m acknowledging that the value isn’t in the novelty—it’s in the continuity.

The films that have remained constants across my three years of responses reveal something about my core values. The ones that have shifted show growth, change, and adaptation. Both categories offer insights that a single list never could.

The Rise and Inspire Response

At Rise & Inspire, we believe that knowledge should be accessible and useful, that faith and reason work together, and that words can change people who then change the world. This recurring prompt embodies all of these principles.

It makes the abstract concept of personal growth accessible through the concrete act of list-making. It invites both emotional response (faith) and analytical thinking (reason) as we consider why certain stories resonate. And it uses the simple power of sharing our preferences to connect us across time and space.

Beyond the Algorithm

WordPress may ask this question again next year. If it does, I’ll answer again—not because I haven’t answered before, but because I’ll be a different person asking the question of a different version of myself.

The prompt isn’t broken. The system isn’t flawed. The repetition isn’t a bug—it’s a feature that reveals truths about human nature that we might never have discovered otherwise.

Our favourite movies aren’t just entertainment choices. They’re windows into our souls, maps of our journeys, and bridges to our future selves. The question bears repeating because we’re worth asking again and again.

Sometimes the most profound wisdom comes not from new questions, but from new ways of hearing old ones. In the case of WordPress’s recurring movie prompt, the question remains the same, but the answer—and the answerer—transforms each time.

That’s not repetition. That’s growth disguised as redundancy. And that’s exactly the kind of paradox that makes both life and cinema endlessly fascinating.

Explore more at the Rise & Inspire archive |  Daily Prompts

Categories: Astrology & Numerology | Daily Prompts | Law | Motivational Blogs | Motivational Quotes | Personal Development | Tech Insights | Wake-Up Calls

What does your relationship with recurring questions reveal about your growth? How have your answers to life’s persistent prompts evolved over time? Share your thoughts, and let’s rise and inspire together through the stories that shape us.

© 2025 Rise & Inspire. Follow our journey of reflection, renewal, and relevance.

Website: Home | Blog | About Us | Contact| Resources

Word Count:1144


Discover more from Rise & Inspire

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a Reply