Rabu, 05 Februari 2020

What Five Oscar Nominations Tell Us About the State of Hollywood - The Wall Street Journal

Five of the best-picture nominees reveal something about Hollywood in transition. From left, ‘Joker,’ ‘Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood,’ ‘1917,’ ‘Parasite' and ‘The Irishman.’ Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures, Columbia Pictures/Everett Collection, Universal Pictures

“Once Upon a Time...in Hollywood.” The title of a top contender at the Oscars could double as the theme of Sunday’s show, as an unusually competitive awards season concludes for an industry that is questioning where its own story is headed.

Going into the 92nd Academy Awards Sunday night, a record-high four movies have 10 nominations or more: “1917,” “The Irishman,” “Joker” and “Once Upon a Time...in Hollywood.” Also in this sizable pack of frontrunners is a competitor that could be blazing a historic trail toward a best-picture victory, the South Korean export “Parasite,” with six nominations.

This crop symbolizes some of the issues Hollywood is grappling with during its annual season of self-celebration and self-scrutiny: How to honor the industry’s old guard without blocking the new; rolling with the seismic shifts of streaming culture while preserving the cinematic experience that the Oscars showcase; defining what constitutes greatness on screen, yet reckoning with why that designation seldom includes the work of women and people of color.

“Each individual Oscar category doesn’t tell you much about how those forces are affecting the industry day-to-day, but they are data points that help look at the macro changes,” says Franklin Leonard, founder of the Black List, a film-industry advocacy group and producer known for its annual list of buzzy screenplays that have yet to be produced (which once included “Jojo Rabbit,” now with six Oscar nominations).

Below, a look at five nominees for best picture, whose frontrunner status is based on their tally of Oscar nominations and the momentum that some (especially “1917”) gained from victories at previous awards shows. The other four nominees aiming to disrupt the big race are “Ford v Ferrari,” “Jojo Rabbit,” “Little Women” and “Marriage Story.”

Joker’: Supervillain vs. Critics

$55 million est. production budget

$

other nominees

68% favorable critic reviews

88% favorable audience reviews

$335.0 million domestic box office

$896,848 ‘Oscar bump’*

73,630 social mentions†

For this chart and others in the story:
*Domestic box office since nomination   †Number of mentions on Twitter, YouTube and public Facebook pages and groups, Jan. 1-30
Note: Box office through Feb. 2. Because ‘The Irishman’ was released on Netflix, it has no box office or Oscar bump.

Sources: Gracenote, a Nielsen company (budget); Rotten Tomatoes (reviews); Comscore (box office); Storyful (mentions)

Comic-book characters have crashed the Academy Awards before, as when “Black Panther” competed for best picture in 2019. “Joker,” with 11 nominations, more than any other movie this year, signifies something different—and more divisive—than just the clout these franchises have in Hollywood.

“Joker” is about a man who spirals into psychosis and, with a pistol and spasms of violence, ignites the resentments simmering in his city. This supervillain origin story drew negative reviews from many film critics who called the movie everything from derivative to dangerous. At the same time, the hit was embraced by members of the movie industry. Awards voters showered nominations on the film and its star Joaquin Phoenix, who is widely expected to win the Oscar for best actor.

The clash of opinions about “Joker” shows how pop-culture wars have become as tense as the political fights roiling the country. “I thought it was just Trump, but now it’s come down to movie reviews,” said actress Cindie Haynie after a recent “Joker” screening for awards voters in Los Angeles, where she praised the “amount of work and incredible artistry” that went into the movie.

The box-office gross of more than $1 billion worldwide (a record for an R-rated release) said more about the support “Joker” received than its 11 Oscar nominations, director and co-writer Todd Phillips said during a Q&A after the screening. “I would say we felt vindicated when we had the audience’s response.”

‘Once Upon a Time...In Hollywood’: Nostalgia Trip

$90 million est. production budget

$

85% favorable critic reviews

70% favorable audience reviews

$142.0 million domestic box office

$905,787 ‘Oscar bump’

73,380 social mentions

The plot of Quentin Tarantino’s latest film revised the facts related to the Manson Family killings of 1969. However, in his depiction of the industry, place and era evoked in the title, the writer and director of “Once Upon a Time...in Hollywood” was lovingly faithful to history.

In addition to the period locations seen as characters drive around (and around) Los Angeles, including showbiz hangouts like Musso & Frank Grill, the movie focuses on the fluctuating hierarchies of Hollywood. That’s captured in the codependent relationship between Leonardo DiCaprio’s character, a star actor facing a career slide, and his driver and stunt double, portrayed by Brad Pitt.

In Hollywood, nostalgia for a bygone chapter in the industry has helped sustain support for the movie. For example, Mr. Pitt’s character, though fictional, nodded to the unsung hero status of utility players such as stunt people, a profession that started with “cowboys who were good at falling off horses and hitting the ground hard,” says Katie Rowe, president of the Stuntwomen’s Association of Motion Pictures. “That’s our heritage and a source of pride for us.”

“Seeing an A-lister playing one of us was neat to me,” Ms. Rowe said, though she added it also seemed a little ironic given the so-far unsuccessful effort by groups like hers to have an Oscar award created for stunt work.

‘Parasite’: The Upstart Import

$11 million est. production budget

$

99% favorable critic reviews

93% favorable audience reviews

$33.2 million domestic box office

$7.9 million ‘Oscar bump’

57,560 social mentions

When Hollywood executives think about foreign audiences, they’re mostly considering the films they send abroad, not the ones that come to the U.S. This small movie from South Korea took those executives by surprise and underscored the global power of today’s movie industry.

At the Golden Globes, where “Parasite” director Bong Joon Ho picked up the trophy for best foreign-language film, he urged audiences to look past the “one-inch-tall barrier” of subtitles and discover new movies made abroad. That speech and the Oscar nomination that followed helped boost the film, whose scalding take on wealth disparity resonated with American viewers.

The movie reinforces the idea that a U.S. studio system driven by superhero pictures couldn't sustain the genre-defying work by many foreign directors. “It’s not the same pressure you would have if you were working for an American studio,” says Steve Ross, a historian specializing in Hollywood and politics. “Many foreign films aren’t going through the elaborate bureaucracy you’re going through in Hollywood.”

‘The Irishman’: Classic Film, Netflix -Style

$160 million est. production budget

$

96% favorable critic reviews

86% favorable audience reviews

N/A domestic box office

N/A ‘Oscar bump’

91,440 social mentions

Like a greatest hits album of Martin Scorsese movies, the film was studded with the director’s hallmarks—a mob-world character study laced with bursts of violence and unexpected moments of reflection. Audiences viewed it with a sense of history, wondering if this could be the last time they watched some of the most celebrated artists of a generation working together.

But for all the nostalgia viewers may have brought to the experience, the movie owes a debt to the modern streaming world. Netflix cleared the path for a winding epic nearly twice the length of a typical film, a movie that reached so far back in time it needed to apply reverse-aging technology to the faces of its stars. The picture played in limited theatrical release and hit Netflix soon after.

“The streaming aspect certainly worked for that three-and-a-half-hour film,” says Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for the box-office tracker Comscore. “If you didn’t have the time, you could watch the movie in chunks. I don’t know if that’s what any filmmaker ultimately wants, but of course every filmmaker wants their movie to be seen.”

‘1917’: Modern Take, Historic War

$90 million est. production budget

$

89% favorable critic reviews

88% favorable audience reviews

$119.1 million domestic box office

$79.4 million ‘Oscar bump’*

68,560 social mentions

*The movie went into wide release after the nominations were announced

Director Sam Mendes took the World War I movie out of the trenches and into real time with a technique aimed at making the film look like one continuous tracking shot of live action. The result was a big-screen spectacle that demanded to be seen in theaters.

Filming the drama was like making a stage play while running, its creators have said, with few chances for reshoots. In an era where movies are made in post-production, this one arrived in the editing room largely intact.

The movie’s insistence on real life over special effects had fans putting it in the same pantheon as Stanley Kubrick’s 1957 World War I classic “Paths of Glory” and Peter Jackson’s technically masterful 2018 documentary “They Shall Not Grow Old,” which restored and modernized archival war footage.

“A lot of times when I start on a movie, I’m given cut footage, but this was different,” says Thomas Newman, who composed the film’s music. “I was never going to be surprised by a different way of editing the material. The drama was never going to be different and the timing was never going to be different. The material was essentially going to be as it was when I first saw it.”

Write to Ellen Gamerman at ellen.gamerman@wsj.com and John Jurgensen at john.jurgensen@wsj.com

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

What movies did you see in the past year? What were your favorites? Join the conversation below.

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2020-02-05 15:16:00Z
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Disney+ Has Become a Serious Player in the Streaming Wars - The Ringer

A few months into 2020, the Streaming Wars are no longer a distant blip on the horizon—they’re raging all around us. Services are clamoring for our attention and vying for our viewing hours. HBO Max and Peacock are still waiting in the wings, but Disney+ and Apple TV+ are moving from noisy newcomers to established presences. Projects like The Mandalorian and The Morning Show are no longer hypotheticals; they’re spawning memes and picking up awards (and absorbing the buzz from viral moments at said awards shows). In other words, it’s time for a check-in.

Without a recent major launch, complete with a full slate of brand-establishing series to peruse and parse, the past few months have been marked less by singular events than a slow drip of news items adjusting observers to our new normal. To that end, we’re recapping the latest developments in our brave new world of mega-mergers and endless premieres as we actually experience them: one data point at a time, slowly but surely coalescing, Monet-like, into a larger picture.

Trouble in the Galaxy

Disney+’s The Mandalorian may well be the post-Netflix boom’s biggest success story to date. The Mandalorian, a neo-Western tracking the namesake bounty hunter’s quest to protect a 50-year-old infant from Werner Herzog, established a low-stakes, high-production-value style of Star Wars storytelling that serves as a critical counterpoint to the film saga’s struggles. Who has time to worry about Solo’s underperformance or The Rise of Skywalker’s disappointment when they’re busy cooing over Baby Yoda?

And yet The Mandalorian’s most direct follow-up—apart from Season 2, coming next fall—is currently on hold. A previously announced prequel series about Obi-Wan Kenobi, starring Ewan McGregor and helmed by Mandalorian alum Deborah Chow, was put on hiatus and likely downsized from six episodes to four as LucasFilm president Kathleen Kennedy oversees revisions to the scripts. This is a move that can be interpreted in opposite ways. Maybe Kennedy is micromanaging and undermining an auteur’s vision, which are the same tendencies widely blamed for Solo and Skywalker’s creative mediocrity; maybe Kennedy’s trying to avoid that mediocrity by taking time to deliver a worthy successor and not rushing the Kenobi series to meet audience demand. Either way, the hiccup is notable for a service that’s otherwise been almost frightening in its competence.

The Mandalorian serves the same function here as it does for the rest of Star Wars troubles: a temporary stay on true skepticism toward this franchise’s long-term sustainability. (Bob Iger has even started dangling the prospect of spinoffs after only eight episodes.) Eventually, though, Disney is going to have to prove the live-action TV flank of Star Wars is more than a single show. No wonder there’s so much pressure on its sophomore effort. You might even say Obi-Wan is … its only hope.

But Look, a Flying Shield!

Being in, among many other things, the children’s toy business, Disney knows the best form of distraction is a shiny object. Soon after the Obi-Wan news cast aspersions on Disney+’s smooth ascent, the service aired a Super Bowl spot previewing its ace in the hole: not one, not two, but three additions to the Marvel Cinematic Universe, spinning off supporting characters from the films to anchor their own series. The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, Loki, and WandaVision were all previously announced, but none had produced any footage. The internet promptly lost its mind.

The earliest of these releases, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, isn’t out until August, while the trippy-looking, genre-blending WandaVision won’t hit until December. For now, however, Disney has reminded us that it still controls some of the most valuable IP in the world, and while some of its products may have a smoother path than others, the sight of Tom Hiddleston in a drab prison suit can still reduce millions to borderline hysterics. The Mandalorian was a strong opening, but Disney+ is far from finished wheeling out its biggest guns.

Synergy Has Its Perks

Disney+ may be the new platform on the block, but it’s not the only service in its parent company’s portfolio. The recent acquisition of Fox’s entertainment assets put Disney in control of two separate, but now related, properties: Hulu, the streaming service Disney now controls after buying out Comcast; and FX, the premium cable channel operating in the same tier as competitors like HBO, Showtime, and AMC. FX president John Landgraf is a longtime skeptic of Netflix, but circumstances have put him in business with one of Netflix’s primary peers.

In November, Disney announced “FX on Hulu,” a pairing that will make Hulu the official streaming home of future, current, and many past FX series. (The partnership will officially debut in March, though Hulu aired an ad during last month’s Golden Globes.) The combination is a savvy one, and it cements Hulu’s identity as the more adult-oriented service under Disney’s larger umbrella while also solving the perennial “but where can I stream it” problem for FX. It’s similar to Netflix’s previous partnership with the CW, but also more durable, because FX and Hulu are linked by ownership as well as convenience. Whether FX will survive as its own brand name or get subsumed into a more accessible hub remains an open question, as so does Disney’s intentions with the channel. In the short term, however, it’ll soon be very, very easy to stream Atlanta and The Americans.

The Guessing Games Continue

By now, everyone knows the rules: When it comes to the success of their online ventures, companies will remain as coy about hard metrics as possible for as long as possible, allowing them to selectively drop flattering figures and garner positive press accordingly. They learned from the best—i.e. Netflix’s notorious opacity—and the best are still fine-tuning their game. Netflix recently announced its metric for self-reported viewership numbers would become even more lenient than it was before, lowered to just two minutes of viewing an episode or film as opposed to 70 percent of either. (The change was apparently made to mirror YouTube’s measurement format, even though, uh, watching TV and watching YouTube are hardly the same.) The game is rigged, and Netflix is the referee.

To that end, Apple CEO Tim Cook’s only mention of TV+ on the company’s latest earnings call was that the product was off to a “rousing start”—no actual statistics necessary. A recent outside study suggests Apple’s internal promotion didn’t convert many hardware customers into subscribers (only 10 percent, to be precise), but “rousing start” is subjective enough that no one can say Cook was wrong, exactly. Disney, by contrast, is being relatively transparent, announcing exact subscriber numbers for Disney+ (26.5 million in 2019, 28.6 million to date) and Hulu (30.4 million in 2019, 30.7 million to date) in its own quarterly call. But the corporation isn’t immune from PR gamesmanship, and it boasted of raking in 10 million subscribers on day one despite the fact that everyone was lured in with a free trial. (The figure was never revised to clarify how many became paying customers.) As for individual series ratings? Forget about it.

Obscuring such metrics doesn’t have as obviously catastrophic potential consequences as, say, Facebook inflating its video plays to the point of rearranging an entire industry. The entire reason streaming services are able to pull maneuvers like this is that they often don’t report to traditional advertisers. But eroding the ability to gauge the success of a show contributes to an overall sense of house-of-cards unease. For years now, streaming has been the future. For the future to coalesce into a stable status quo, some level of certainty is a necessary precursor.

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2020-02-05 15:15:30Z
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Jay-Z explains sitting during National Anthem at Super Bowl LIV - CNN

The couple received some criticism after TMZ posted video showing them and their 8-year-old daughter Blue Ivy sitting while Demi Lovato performed "The Star-Spangled Banner" at Super Bowl LIV.
On Tuesday TMZ posted video of Jay-Z addressing what happened during an appearance at Columbia University in New York City.
According to the mogul, the whole thing "was not premeditated at all," but was instead a case of him doing his job given that his Roc Nation corporation has a partnership with the NFL which includes producing the Super Bowl halftime show and other major performances.
He said his wife, who was a featured performer at the Super Bowl in 2013 and 2016, was offering him some insight about the experience and they were seated from the time Yolanda Adams sang "America the Beautiful" before Lovato sang the National Anthem.
"So, we get there, and we immediately jump into artist mode," he said. "So, I'm looking at the show. 'Did our mic start? Was it too low to start?' ... 'Is it too many speakers on the floor?'"
"So, the whole time we're sitting there and we're talking about the performance," he added.
He said he would never put his young daughter in the position of being part of a protest.
Instead Jay-Z said he believed a statement was being made by the diverse halftime show which was co-headlined by Latina superstars Jennifer Lopez and Shakira and included other Latin artists as well.
"We were making the biggest, loudest protest of all," Jay-Z said. "Given the context, I didn't have to make a silent protest."

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2020-02-05 13:30:00Z
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Why Jennifer Lopez and Shakira Didn't Get Paid for Super Bowl 2020 Performance - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

As the San Francisco 49ers and Kansas City Chiefs battled it out on the field, all eyes were on Jennifer Lopez and Shakira during the Pepsi halftime show for Super Bowl LIV. The Latin sensations wowed crowds with more backup dancers than ever seen before. Their combined 14-minute high energy performance would regularly earn them millions. The surprising part is that neither Shakira nor Lopez received any money for appearing at the biggest concert of 2020. 

Super Bowl 2020 had an iconic halftime performance

Known worldwide, the international superstars saluted their Latin heritage while paying homage to their successful careers.

Shakira had everyone at the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami on their feet as she opened the show with her top hit, “She Wolf.” Fireworks exploded as she belted out an electric guitar solo to her 2014 anthem, “Empire.” Shakira shook her way across the stage, collaborating with rapper Bad Bunny, before bursting into fan-favorite, “Hips Don’t Lie.”

At the end of her dynamic set, Lopez took the stage, much to the delight of the crowd, opening with her smash hit, “Jenny From The Block.” She performed a medley of her top songs, one hit after the other, wearing Vegas-style costuming and even bringing out her Hustlers stripper pole.

Her daughter, Emme, joined her on stage for a rousing rendition of “Let’s Get Loud.” This was the first time two women shared the stage for the Super Bowl Halftime Show, and it was the first all Latin musical performance. Fans in Miami loved every minute of it.

Why the NFL doesn’t pay half-time performers

The NFL has a long-standing policy of not paying a performance fee to artists that appear during halftime of the Super Bowl. They do, however, cover all performance-related production expenses.

According to the Wall Street Journal, previous half-time shows have cost the NFL more than $10 million for a show that lasts less than 15 minutes. This includes elaborate lighting, stage setup, costume changes, pyrotechnics, production crew, union dues, and travel.

The NFL has considered charging acts for the opportunity to perform, but as of yet, that has not come to fruition.

Why performers agree to not getting paid

Shakira and Jennifer Lopez perform  onstage during the Pepsi Super Bowl LIV Halftime Show.
Shakira and Jennifer Lopez | Kevin Mazur/WireImage

Performers put in extensive rehearsing for the opportunity to appear at the Super Bowl. Forbes reported that the halftime show “is the single biggest promotional vehicle for a music star on the planet.”

Artists forgo payment in exchange for the publicity. The Super Bowl has a televised audience of over 100 million people. There is no other outlet that can attract so many viewers, and the performers know it. 

Previous halftime performers have seen huge spikes in their sales following the Super Bowl.

In 2018, Justin Timberlake saw a 214% increase in Spotify streams within one hour of the conclusion of his Super Bowl halftime performance. The previous year, Lady Gaga jumped 60 spots on the Billboard charts to No. 2, within just a week of performing at halftime. After Beyonce performed in 2013, she saw an increase in concert ticket sales and a 100% increase in online searches.

Maroon 5 and Travis Scott performed during the halftime show in 2019. Since then, Maroon 5 has increased its per-city tour income from $200,000 to $1.7 million. Scott doubled his income since performing and is now earning close to $1 million for every stop on his current tour. He tripled his 2018 income, bringing in $58 million last year.

After Katy Perry performed in 2015, her career skyrocketed with countless opportunities for movie, television, and endorsement deals. 

Did Jennifer Lopez and Shakira see an increase in sales?

It looks like Lopez and Shakira made a good decision to perform at the Super Bowl. According to Nielsen Music, sales of the songs performed during the halftime performance experienced an astonishing 1,013% increase. There was a reported 16,000 digital downloads on Sunday, with Shakira receiving the biggest surge on Spotify, with more than a 2,135% jump for her hit single: “Empire.” 

In Lopez’s case, she also jumpstarted her daughter’s career by introducing her to the world on a very public platform.

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2020-02-05 12:01:57Z
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'The Bachelor': Peter Weber Loves Kelley Flanagan for Calling Him Out on Their One-On-One Date - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Peter Weber’s season of The Bachelor has been quite the ride — pun intended. Every week, the ABC reality series shows up with a new villain, giving viewers whiplash in regards to which castmates are worth rooting for. But then in the fifth episode, fans re-discovered Kelley Flanagan, the contestant in Weber’s season who called out the bachelor for “rewarding the drama” during their one-on-one date in Costa Rica. And although some fans thought Weber didn’t appreciate Kelley’s honesty, it seems he loved what the attorney had to say after re-watching the episode.

What happened between Kelley Flanagan and Peter Weber during their one-on-one in ‘The Bachelor’?

Sandwiched between the drama with other contestants, The Bachelor highlighted a one-on-one date between Kelley and Pilot Pete. First, the couple get in touch with their spiritual side. Then at the dinner portion of the date, Weber and Kelley discuss their current relationship. 

At the start of their conversation, Weber expresses his excitement over their meeting and initial spark. However, Weber wonders why they went from a “high” that was “constantly climbing” to a “lull.” Kelley agrees and she gets real with the bachelor.

“I kept wanting to say, yes I want to progress this,” Kelley says. “But I’ve had zero opportunity to progress it.”

Weber refutes Kelley’s experience. “I feel like you’ve have a complacency because you feel like we have a strong connection from the beginning,” he says. “This is a unique situation.”

Nevertheless, Kelley remains firm. The 27-year-old shares she “had a hard time figuring it out from the get-go.” However, she finally found her way and is trying to open up. This doesn’t seem to satisfy Weber and he presses her on what changed.

Kelley Flanagan and Peter Weber on The Bachelor Season 24
Kelley Flanagan and Peter Weber on ‘The Bachelor’ | ABC/Francisco Roman

“Literally, I was just sitting in Cleveland and I said to myself, ‘What am I doing? You could be having so much fun with Peter and this situation. Just be you and have fun with it,’” Kelley says.

Weber then wants to confirm Kelley is there for him. “It can be fun, but I’m not looking for fun,” he says. “I’m looking for someone to spend the rest of my life with. I need to know that you are on the same level, on the same page.”

In response, Kelley reveals she wonders whether Weber is on the same level. She confirms she is ready for the next step — marriage. However, she questions whether Weber is “ready for a wife.” And when Weber asks why, Kelley lays it out. 

“Rewarding the drama,” she says. “That just kind of irked me. I was like, ‘Why is he rewarding this drama?’ No person who should be in that stage [of life] would want to even put up with that. So I was just like, ‘Why does he keep rewarding this? He should just cut it in the butt and be done with it.’”

'The Bachelor' Season 24 Cast Episode 6
Madison Prewett, Sydney Hightower, Kelley Flanagan, Natasha Parker, Peter Weber, Kelsey Weier, Mykenna Dorn, Tammy Ly, and Victoria Paul on ‘The Bachelor’ | ABC/Francisco Roman

Meanwhile, Weber explains himself, revealing he wanted to feel 100 percent confident in his decisions. He also asks Kelley what she wants out of The Bachelor.

“At the end of it — if our relationship is strong enough — I could for sure be like engaged,” Kelley says. “The reason I say ‘like engaged’ is because right now, I clearly know our relationship isn’t in the place where I would be comfortable with that right now. I don’t necessarily know how the process goes from here.” 

She continues: “I want someone to be my other half. I want to be with someone and we’re a power couple. I want someone to challenge me on a day-to-day basis, and me challenge them, learn from them, and vice versa.”

Peter gives her a smile. Reassured, he gives her the one-on-one date rose.

Peter Weber explains his one-on-one date with Kelley Flanagan on ‘The Bachelor’

On Feb. 4, Weber stopped by BUILD Series and opened up about his season of The Bachelor. Midway through the interview, the Delta pilot was asked why he doubted Kelley’s intentions during their one-on-one date. 

“So I met Kelley about a month before filming,” Weber said. “She was very hesitant of even wanting to go on then. She didn’t know if this whole process would work for her, it would be suited for her personality. So I knew the whole time that she was never in her comfort zone.”

He continued: “I guess … there were a lot of moments up to that point — because it took us a while to have our one-on-one — I felt very strongly about her for a while. I’d been waiting a while to have that with her. But there are moments where she could’ve been trying a little harder.”

Weber then noted “trying” doesn’t necessarily mean being involved with the drama. “I know [Kelley’s] not a dramatic person,” Weber said. “She doesn’t want to get involved with all that stuff. But she could have tried to stick out a little bit more. And she acknowledged it.”

Now, Weber’s frustrations with Kelley may make more sense after hearing his take on the drama within The Bachelor mansion. When speaking with Good Morning America on Feb. 4, the 28-year-old seemed to believe all the animosity among the women meant they were more passionate about being with him.

“Obviously, you don’t like to see that as you’re going through the whole experience, but I kept looking back on it. That drama kind of showed that this is working,” Weber said. “And if all the women were getting along super well, they probably wouldn’t have been super into me. If it was too easy, that wouldn’t have been a good thing.”

But the drama aside, Kelley’s honesty is exactly what makes her a frontrunner on Weber’s season of The Bachelor. And in the interview with BUILD Series, Weber noted that he loved Kelley for calling him out on their one-on-one date so directly.

“What I love about Kelley is, like, I watched that back and her calling me out and stuff. That’s actually a quality that I really love about Kelley. She’s so real,” Weber said. “That’s definitely something that I’m looking for in my person one day. So I respect the hell out of her.”

Read more: ‘The Bachelor’: Will Hannah Brown and Peter Weber End Up Together? Becca Kufrin and Ben Higgins Don’t Think It’s in the Cards

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2020-02-05 07:50:57Z
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Selasa, 04 Februari 2020

Disney+ has surpassed 28 million subscribers since launch - The Verge

Disney+ amassed 28.6 million Disney+ subscribers in the first three months since it launched, far exceeding the 20 million estimate that analysts suggested Disney would make by the end of 2020. The company’s earnings report stated there were 26.5 million subscribers by the end of December, but CEO Bob Iger announced on the call that Disney+ hit 28.6 million as of Monday.

“We had a strong first quarter, highlighted by the launch of Disney+, which has exceeded even our greatest expectations,” CEO Bob Iger said in the release.

The subscriber growth helped Disney beat its overall earnings, coming in at $28.6 billion in revenue, above the projected. Disney’s direct-to-consumer division, which is where streaming exists, saw a growth of $0.9 billion to $4 billion in the quarter. Disney’s chief financial officer, Christine McCarthy, noted that Disney expects the majority of its growth going forward to come from international subscribers. The company is also expecting a bump in domestic subscribers around the premiere of highly anticipated series from Marvel and Lucasfilm. The Falcon and the Winter Soldier will premiere in August, WandaVision hits in December, and The Mandalorian returns for a second season in October.

Disney’s announcement comes just one week after Apple notably did not release numbers for its streaming service, Apple TV Plus, in its own earnings report. Apple CEO Tim Cook told investors the company was happy with TV Plus’ strong start, but a robust kickoff seems incomparable to Disney’s new figures.

To put it another way, Disney+ has made a good portion of Netflix’s total domestic subscriber base, and officially surpassed the number of HBO Now subscribers. Disney also recorded gains in subscribers for its two other streaming services, Hulu and ESPN+. Hulu went from 22.8 million subscribers at the end of December 2018 to 30.4 million by the end of 2019. ESPN+ went from 1.4 million at the end of December 2018 to 6.6 million at the end of 2019. These increases were largely driven by the $12.99-a-month bundle that Disney offered to its US subscribers.

Bottom line: it’s impressive. Disney is likely to adjust projections for Disney+ subscriber growth in the coming years. The company originally estimated it would earn between 60 and 90 million subscribers by 2024. With more than28 million subscribers subscribers, and bigger global expansion coming in the next few months, Disney is likely to fly past those original estimates much sooner than expected. Especially with the launch of Disney+ in Europe, where interest is high, in less than two months time.

The company has proven that it can bring subscribers to its streaming services like Disney+, but the bigger question that Iger and Disney’s head of the direct-to-consumer division, Kevin Mayer, will have to answer is how to keep those subscribers throughout the year. “Churn,” which refers to a symptom of the streaming war era, refers to the rapidity of subscribers signing up for and canceling plans. Since customers aren’t tied into long cable packages anymore, it’s easier for people to come and go.

Critics expressed frustration and concern for Disney+ in the wake of The Mandalorian’s finale, arguing that for customers without children, Disney+’s offerings were slim. The Simpsons has become a comfort show that teen and adult subscribers can throw on and watch, but Disney doesn’t have the type of diverse catalog that Netflix does. Disney+ does have a number of series from some of its biggest teen- and adult-oriented franchises being released this year that Iger and Mayer can point to, including Marvel’s WandaVision and Falcon and the Winter Soldier, plus a second season of The Mandalorian.

Disney also has a not-so-secret weapon when it comes to concerns about churn: Hulu. Disney+ isn’t a general entertainment platform. It’s a hub for Disney’s biggest franchises, but that isn’t enough to keep everyone satisfied every day of every month, all year round. Disney is trying to offset the churn in customers it loses from Disney+ by counter programming in an attempt to bring them over to Hulu.

Its investment in programming for Hulu isn’t secret. A big part of the reason Disney bought 21st Century Fox was for access to its catalog of content and IP franchises. FX, Fox’s cable network that produces prestigious TV series comparable to HBO, will now move a portion of its upcoming slate directly to Hulu.

The company is also lessening the number of movies that 20th Century Studios (formerly 20th Century Fox) releases theatrically, and is increasing the number of movies that will exist exclusively on Hulu. This — on top of other licensing deals Disney is working on for back catalog entertainment and originals — will become Disney’s ultimate general streaming play.

Hulu will remain key to Disney’s play for streaming dominance, which helps explain recent executive leadership changes. Randy Freer, Hulu’s CEO over the last two years, will step down from his role as Hulu leadership reports to Mayer and his team. Freer’s exit was just one part of ongoing changes Disney has made to bring Hulu into its folds entirely.

Hulu’s senior vice president of scripted content, Craig Erwich, stopped reporting to Freer and started reporting to Disney Television Studios chairperson Dana Walden. FX president John Landgraf was given a portion of Hulu’s original programming slate, reporting to Fox executives now within Disney. Many of Hulu’s Marvel shows were canceled as Marvel Studios took over Marvel Entertainment and its TV duties. Plus, Disney CEO Bob Iger confirmed that Hulu would soon run on the BAMTech platform, the same behind-the-scenes streaming tech that powers Disney+ and of which Disney acquired a majority stake in 2017.

To say Disney is doing exceptionally well on the streaming front would still be somewhat of an understatement, but Disney isn’t just streaming. The company’s first quarter results in other divisions were also impressive. Disney’s studio division saw some big grossing titles, mostly driven by Frozen 2 and Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker’s collective $2.5 billion revenue at the box office. The studio division’s revenue increased from $1.8 billion to $3.8 billion in the quarter.

Update February 4th, 4:42PM ET: The company’s earnings report stated there were 26.5 million subscribers by the end of the year, but CEO Bob Iger announced on the call that Disney+ hit 28.6 million subscribers as of Monday.

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2020-02-04 21:11:11Z
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Weinstein accuser Jessica Mann says she still considered him a 'friend' after alleged rape - USA TODAY

NEW YORK — After two days of intense cross-examination and emotional testimony from accuser Jessica Mann in the Harvey Weinstein sex-crimes trial, she returned to the stand Tuesday to face more grilling about why didn't tell her boyfriend about an alleged rape and why she continued to consider the movie mogul a "friend."

Why, she was asked, did she not tell her boyfriend, whom she has identified as "Eddie," about what she says happened to her in a New York hotel room in 2013? Weinstein is charged with raping her in that hotel room. 

"Jessica, you had multiple chances here to tell Eddie that Harvey was a bad guy. Why didn’t you?," asked defense lawyer Donna Rotunno.

"I couldn’t talk to Eddie." 

"He was your boyfriend," Rotunno said. "It wasn’t a healthy relationship, partly because he didn’t approve of your relationship with Harvey?"

"He felt I was stupid."

Rotunno asked her about multiple emails she sent to an online self-help platform called Relationship Reinvented, in which Mann described having drinks or dinner with Weinstein and having a friendly relationship with him after their New York encounter. 

"The friendship we had makes me want to catch up with him and see what’s going on,” she wrote in one message.

In another message she describes going to dinner with him. "I’m glad I did, because I talked to him about all I was going through. … He gave me good advice. … He has always extended his hand to help,” the message said.

"You didn’t tell Relationship Reinvented that Harvey Weinstein raped you in a New York hotel?" Rotunno asked.

"I was vague …the only answer I gave them about sexual assault was 'in my community,' " meaning Hollywood at the time, she said.   

"After breakups, the person who decided to reach out to was the person you say sexually assaulted you?" Rotunno asked.

"Yes."  

In February 2015, two years after the alleged rape, she sent Weinstein an email asking when he would be in Los Angeles and did he have time for dinner or drinks. He agrees and sends her invitations to two Oscar parties. 

“Wow! Of course! Looks like a fun week. See you there,” Mann responded.

It was one of multiple emails exchanged between Mann and Weinstein in which they both wrote friendly, even loving things to and about one another. Multiple emails between Mann and her friends about Weinstein showed she was in friendly contact with him for years after the alleged 2013 rape.  

Also in February 2015, she asked Weinstein for a referral for membership to Soho House, the members-only club and hotel where she intended to take business meetings. Weinstein responded, "Of course."

"You want the gentlemen and ladies of this jury to know that the man you asked to sponsor you was your rapist?," Rotunno asked.

"I do want the jury to know he is my rapist, and I want to continue to explain the dynamic," Mann responded.

In a February 2017 email exchange, which was already made public before the trial by his then lawyer, Benjamin Brafman, Mann told Weinstein, "I love you, I always do, but I hate feeling like a booty call.” (Brafman argued the email was exculpatory and should have been shown to the grand jury that indicted Weinstein.)

On the stand, Mann testified he "yelled" back at her about this message in all capital letters. But Rotunno showed the jury a copy of his return message which showed he actually typed: “Dear jessica, please text me, at” (number): … “i know you were joking in your last note, but some people don’t think it’s a joke..” 

"Yes, I was joking," she answered back. "I know hollywood loves to harass you, unfortunately, and the stand-up comedian in me was just teasing you.”

The year before, in April 2016 she arranged to meet him at a Beverly Hills hotel, telling him, "Your input is always a blessing in my life.” In return, he gave her his hotel room number.

Four hours later, she emailed: "I feel so fabulous and beautiful. Thank you for everything!” 

He replied: “U r all of the above and more.”

As Rotunno brought up different emails, Mann began to cry again. 

Earlier on Tuesday, prosecutors called a new witness out of order so that she could make her flight to Los Angeles for an audition. 

Emanuela Postacchini, an Italian actress, took the stand as a witness to back up earlier testimony by Mann about a failed threesome allegedly arranged by Weinstein at a Los Angeles hotel in 2013. 

Postacchini testified that some sort of sexual encounter was proposed, and that she felt "tricked" into going to the room. But she said neither she nor Mann were forced to do anything, and that Mann ran away crying, as she earlier testified.

"You didn’t see him force Ms. Mann to do anything?" asked defense lawyer Damon Cheronis. "No," she said.

"He's never forced you to do anything?" Cheronis asked.

"No, no he didn't, he didn't force me," she responded. 

Postacchini, who said her English wasn't as good then as it is now, said she went willingly to Weinstein's room at the hotel and was surprised to find Mann there. She testified he "was telling us to do something" together.

"I can’t recall exactly what he was telling us to do," she said. "Me interacting with a female."

When Assistant District Attorney Joan Illuzzi asked her what kind of interaction, Postacchini said she couldn't remember specifically what he asked them to do. 

"Jessica left the room, ran away, crying. I ran after her. She was crying in fetal position on the ground, so I just tried to calm her down," Postacchini said. Did she leave the room after that? "I can’t remember."

Postacchini testified first thing Tuesday over objections from Weinstein's defense lawyers who had not finished cross-examining Mann.

“It’s absolutely premature to be putting on a corroborating witness to Ms. Mann while she’s on the witness stand," said Cheronis, who called for a mistrial. "To break up key testimony in this case for a bolstering witness violates Mr. Weinstein’s right to a fair trial and cross-examination.”

Illuzzi said Postacchini had to testify first because she needs to leave at 6 p.m. Tuesday to make an audition in Los Angeles.  

Judge James Burke allowed Postacchini to testify, saying he understood the defense's point of view but Mann was supposed to have been finished with direct testimony and cross examination by Friday. Instead, she spent all day on the stand Monday.

“Judge, we believe auditions can be moved,” protested defense lawyer Donna Rotunno. 

Mann collapsed in tears under questioning late Monday and Burke decided to end the trial for the day. On Tuesday, as Mann testified, she was calmer but her voice sometimes cracked and she seemed sullen and worn down.

Mann, 34, is a key accuser in the high-profile case: The embattled ex-producer is charged with raping her in a New York City hotel room in 2013, along with sexually assaulting another woman, Miriam "Mimi" Haleyi, in his apartment in 2006. 

During cross-examination, Rotunno grilled Mann about why she continued to send text and emails to the movie mogul years after the alleged attack, and accused her of "manipulating" Weinstein in order to get ahead in Hollywood.

Mann testified that she was merely trying to "protect" herself, and was scared of triggering his violent temper and hurting her career. 

Harvey Weinstein's lawyer: Accuser wanted him to meet her mother, sent loving emails

The prosecution is expected to call more witnesses, including so-called Tarale Wulff, who alleges Weinstein raped her in his Manhattan apartment in 2005 and will be brought in for additional testimony.

Although she cannot press charges due to the statute of limitations in New York, prosecution hopes she can show a pattern of predatory behavior with Weinstein. 

Weinstein, 67, is charged with five sex crimes, including rape and assault. He has pleaded not guilty and denies all allegations of nonconsensual sex. 

More: Weinstein accuser shocks court with graphic descriptions, says they had a 'real relationship'

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2020-02-04 16:36:13Z
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