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This Year’s New Hollywood A-Lister Is A Real Dog

That star is Messi - not the soccer player, but the border collie who won the Palme Dog at Cannes. - The Guardian (UK)

The BAFTAs, Including Da’Vine Joy Randolph’s British Acting Roots

Randolph started her career in London’s West End. After she won her BAFTA for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in The Holdovers, she said backstage, “You guys taught me the classics, and I'm obsessed with Pinter and all that stuff." - BBC

All Of The BAFTAs, As They Happen

A live feed mixing fashion commentary and media reporting, the way the internet was intended to give us our awards news. - The Guardian (UK)

Turns Out Live TV Isn’t Dead

And it can thank streaming for that: "With streamers raising prices and adding commercials, maybe the urgency of watching something as it’s happening has the juice to bring people back to broadcast.” - Wired

The BAFTAs Have Never Awarded A Black Woman With The Best Actress Award

That seems unlikely to change this year either, despite the nominations of Vivian Oparah for the charming Rye Lane and Fantasia Barrino in the new musical movie version of The Color Purple. "The question of how to address the UK’s persistent issue with embracing diverse performers remains unanswered.” - Variety

Kansas Senate Cancels Public Broadcasting Funding Cut After Embarrassment

Republican senators objected to an LGBTQ documentary. - Current

A New Magazine For Art Criticism

"Our goal is to shift industry standards. Capitalism swallows its own critiques, and we really are dedicated to waiting to scale. We have ambitions for Jupiter, not only to be a magazine, but we want to grow an institution that really is a home for writers, a home for thinkers and a home for artists." - Chicago Tribune (MSN)

CNN’s New Boss’s “Revolution”: Smaller Budgets And Slashed Salaries For Stars

"CNN boss Mark Thompson is looking to fund his digital-first transformation by cutting anchor salaries — currently more than $50 million — as he seeks to remake the ailing cable network into a U.S. version of the BBC," where he was Director-General (2004-2012) before becoming New York Times Co. CEO (2012-2020). - TheWrap

And Who Has Swooped In To Buy Bankrupt Radio Giant Audacy? George Soros.

"(His) buyout of approximately $415 million of Audacy's debt would make his Soros Fund Management the largest stakeholder of the second-largest radio company in the U.S. when it emerges from chapter 11 reorganization." - Inside Radio

How Hard Is It To Make Animated Characters Cry? Let The Animators Tell You

"Heaving sobs and effervescent teardrops are the result of the exacting labor of artists who must precisely illustrate, iterate on, time, and log their work on a budget. Making all that controlled effort look spontaneous and, above all, natural is never an easy feat." - Vulture (MSN)

The Sports Industry Hasn’t Figured Out How Fans Should Watch

It’s never been more complicated (or expensive) for sports fans to watch their favorite teams. - Bloomberg

New York State’s $700 Million Film/TV Production Tax Credit Loses Money, Finds State Audit

"For every dollar the state gave in tax breaks from 2018 through 2022, the Film Tax Credit drew an estimated 15¢ in direct tax revenue. ... When adding indirect and induced jobs — employees who don’t work directly on production but whose employment stems from it — that return rises to 31¢." - Gothamist

It’s Official: “Peak” TV Is Over

The 14% year-over-year decline in the number of new scripted series across live television networks and streaming represented the steepest drop-off in at least a decade, per FX Research. - Axios

Universal Studios Hollywood Has A Poverty Problem — Among Its Underpaid Staff

"A new UCLA Labor Center study of (the theme park's) employees reveals that … 44% of the workers reported that they worried about being evicted from their homes, while more than half cut the size of their meals — or skipped them — because they didn’t have enough money for food." - The Hollywood Reporter

How, When, And Why The Orchestra Plays Winners Off The Stage At Awards Shows

First of all, it's something that nobody wants to do. Yet the show's director, who makes the decision, has to balance the interests of winners, the producers, the network, the audience, and the advertisers. (And it's the poor stage manager who gets yelled at by the winners cut short.) - Vulture

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