Ask any teen what they do during Mata Najwa or Indonesian Idol , and they will tell you they aren't watching it on the TV. They are watching reaction videos to those shows on YouTube.

"I’m not addicted," she whispers. "I'm just... entertaining my brain until it falls asleep."

As the clock strikes 9 PM and the homework is finally (almost) done, Keysha turns off her bedroom light. The TV is silent. But her face is still lit by the blue glow of her tablet, watching one last "Study With Me" live stream from Seoul.

"I watch Podcast Kesel while eating," says . "It feels like having friends at the table. My parents think I'm ignoring them, but actually, I'm just 'multitasking.'" The Rise of the "Second Screen" Perhaps the most critical shift for the SMA Sepulang Sekolah demographic is the Second Screen Syndrome .

I have written this in a long-form, feature-style format suitable for a digital magazine (like Vice , Kompasiana , or The Guardian ’s youth section). By [Your Name]

But what are these teens actually watching? And how has the shift from TV to 5G changed their identity? A decade ago, being an ABG meant rushing home to catch Sinema Sore (Afternoon Movies) or Dahsyat on RCTI. Today, 17-year-old Keysha , a student in South Jakarta, laughs at the concept of scheduled programming.

The bell for tomorrow’s school rings in eight hours. The bell for content rings in ten minutes.

The commute home. This is the domain of Korean Pop and Playlists . Headphones are non-negotiable. While their parents listen to Dangdut or Pop Rock , the teens are deep into the latest comeback from NewJeans or the softer sounds of Indie Indonesian bands like .Feast or Lomba Sihir.