Author: rb809rb

  • ‘Real Housewives of New Jersey’: Teresa Giudice, Melissa Gorga and Dolores Catania Returning for Season 15

    Teresa GiudiceMelissa Gorga and Dolores Catania are returning to The Real Housewives of New Jersey for season 15.

    The return of the three longtime Housewives arrived amid a pause in production on the series. The latest episode of RHONJ, the disastrous season 14 finale, aired in August 2024, with no official news about the show being announced since then.

    Teresa, Melissa and Dolores will be joined by a slate of fresh faces, who have not been announced yet, marking a mini RHONJ revamp. Production on the upcoming installment will begin filming later this spring.

    In the year since RHONJ‘s absence on the network, Bravo boss Andy Cohen has given mere updates on the status of the series, though no official announcements have been unveiled until Tuesday.

    The New Jersey-based Real Housewives franchise went on a hiatus after a disjointed 14th season, with the cast completely divided by the show’s final episode. Bravo forgoed a season 14 reunion due to the distance among the cast, which included Giudice, Gorga, Catania, Margaret Josephs, Jennifer Aydin, Danielle Cabral and Rachel Fuda, plus non-fulltime cast members Jackie Goldschneider and Jennifer Fessler. 

    Tabloids have since suggested that the New Jersey-based Real Housewives series was planning to undergo a mini cast exodus, with the news seemingly confirming suspicions. 

    In the time since RHONJ‘s 14th season, Teresa and Melissa’s families have reconciled; Melissa appeared on Wife Swap: The Real Housewives Edition; Dolores won season three of The Traitors; and Teresa filmed for Bravo’s upcoming Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip: Roaring 20th, the upcoming series in celebration of the franchise’s landmark 20th anniversary. 

    When discussing her return to the network for Wife Swap, Melissa told The Hollywood Reporter she was “ready to go back” to the show. 

    “I will say I appreciated the two years to be able to focus a little bit more on my projects and my businesses, but I’m ready to go back. I’m ready,” Gorga said. “I had a breather. I’m ready to go back to work whenever they want me.”

    More to come.

  • Nielsen’s Gauge Delay is ‘Indefensible,’ Says TV Trade Group

    Nielsen’s Gauge Delay is ‘Indefensible,’ Says TV Trade Group

    The whole TV business is grappling with Gauge Rage.

    Nielsen’s recent decision to delay its popular “Gauge” snapshot of viewing across linear and digital platforms has incensed a trade group that represents the nation’s TV networks to advertisers.

    Nielsen last week said it would delay the release of the February results of its popular tabulation after some clients became alarmed by a downturn in streaming audiences following a decision by the measurement giant to add new data to its mix.

    “Nielsen’s announcements to delay their February Gauge report (with its anticipated spike in TV audience totals), and also revert Gauge’s math to a method now proven to undercount all TV forms throughout the upfront season, are both indefensible manipulations that run completely counter to the role of a fair and neutral measurement and currency data provider,” said Sean Cunningham, CEO of the Video Advertising Bureau, a veteran trade group that acts as a proxy for the TV networks in dealings with Madison Avenue, in a prepared statement.

    At issue was the implementation earlier this year of new data that shows how U.S. households connect to and consume TV, use video-capable digital devices, and interact with and share streaming media and ecommerce accounts. The research, known as DASH, is a syndicated study fielded in partnership with NORC at the University of Chicago, a polling firm. Nielsen had previously informed clients that its use of the data could result in a one-time expansion of the number of households, or “universe,” watching cable and broadcast TV, and a potential diminution of the overall audience watching streaming.

    But the uptick in linear viewing across cable and broadcast– spurred by February telecasts of the Super Bowl and the Winter Olympics on NBC and Peacock — has alarmed many streamers, all of whom have seen their fortunes soar as they reel in scads of new broadband viewers. The behind-the-scenes push and pull over the Gauge shows Nielsen having to cater to a new generation of customers — companies like Amazon, Roku and Netflix — that can be just as challenging as traditional clients like CBS, Fox and NBC.

    Nielsen suggested the VAB’s furor might be misplaced. “The VAB membership includes Nielsen’s competitors and a subset of the ad-supported video industry. So it’s no surprise they are being misleading,” Nielsen said in a statement. “Let’s be clear: the change the VAB is fighting for is already a part of Nielsen currency. We’ve been using it in our TV ratings, which networks and advertisers buy and sell against, since February. The only methodology pause is happening to The Gauge, which is a free, monthly report. The ad industry at large does not use The Gauge to sell ads or guarantee ad buys. That is what our currency ratings are for.”

    In his statement Cunningham accused Nielsen of “obvious manipulation and sector bias,” because the decision holds back a look at robust performance by traditional TV in an era when streamers are steadily gaining audience.

    “Purposely delaying and suppressing TV’s February’s audience totals — which include both a Super Bowl and a primal American-lead Olympics — is more than just public kowtowing to Google, or an escalation of Nielsen’s thumb on the Gauge scale while cheerleading YouTube boom / TV gloom; this level of manipulation looks to me like obvious interference in markets,” Cunningham said.

    In a letter to clients issued last week, Nielsen Chief Client Officer Peter Naylor said Nielsen would hold back on the Gauge in order to integrate ” methodology updates” being made to its measuring technology.

    The measurement donnybrook is the latest fissure between Nielsen and its media client base. TV networks believe Nielsen’s recent move to update its long-running panels with data from interactive TV have created significant issues around tabulating cable networks, particularly when it comes to calculating critical viewership “demos” of people between 18 and 49 or 25 and 54. Advertisers watch these two groups closely — the former in entertainment programming and the latter in news programming.

     

  • How Caroline Fourest Shot Her Next Film ‘Broken Truth’ in War-Torn Ukraine With Tomer Sisley Alongside Local Cast and Crew (EXCLUSIVE)

    How Caroline Fourest Shot Her Next Film ‘Broken Truth’ in War-Torn Ukraine With Tomer Sisley Alongside Local Cast and Crew (EXCLUSIVE)

    After making her narrative feature debut with “Sisters in Arms,” a thriller about a battalion of Kurdish female warriors, Caroline Fourest, a prominent French journalist-turned-filmmaker, embarked on her boldest undertaking yet with her next project, “Broken Truth.”

     An English-language love story and road movie, “Broken Truth” is set during the first weeks of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Fourest shot it over seven weeks in Kyiv and across the war-torn country, almost entirely with a Ukrainian cast and crew, in the dead of winter, while missile and drone alerts continued to hit the Kyiv region. There were only a handful of French collaborators on set, including acclaimed cinematographer Thierry Arbogast, whose credits include Luc Besson’s “Léon: The Professional” and “The Fifth Element.”

    “We’ve been trying to make this film for three years now, right from the start of the war,” Fourest said in an interview after wrapping the shoot in Kyiv, where she said she planned to board an overnight train out of the country because commercial flights remain suspended.

    Penned by Allan Loeb (“Collateral Beauty”), “Broken Truth” centers on Julien, a cynical French disinformation strategist based in Kyiv who works in a bot farm and is in the process of selling his startup when the war breaks out. He unexpectedly falls for Katharina, a Ukrainian museum curator and single mother who distrusts him and the murky business he is involved in. As the invasion begins, the pair and Katharina’s 10-year-old daughter flee together, embarking on a road trip navigating the chaos of war.

    Fourest, who is a top specialist of counter-propaganda and is regularly invited on French political talk shows, says she was immediately drawn to the project after it was brought to her through producer Jean-Charles Lévy, who had deep ties to Ukraine after working there on several movies over the years, notably on “The Revenge of the Shiny Shrimps.”

    Lévy introduced Fourest to the script after American producer Robert Stein, who had initially sought a U.S. director, found that no American filmmaker was willing to shoot a feature in Ukraine during the war.

    “I’ve been very involved with Ukraine for over 10 years,” she says. “When our American producer Robert Stein brought the screenplay to my attention, it was impossible for me to not fight to direct it. It was exactly the movie I dreamed to craft about Ukraine and the ravages of propaganda : through a beautiful love story torn apart by distrust and lies,” she says.

    Fourest has indeed been involved with Ukraine for over a decade, dating back to a 2011 documentary on Ukrainian feminists for France 2, a couple years before the Maidan uprising. She later returned to report on Maidan for France Culture and served as a foreign observer during the first post-Maidan election in Odessa.

    She says the script appealed to her because it’s “at the heart of what’s happening in the United States, what’s happening here, and what Russia has done to Ukraine. It’s really all these factories churning out fake profiles and fake narratives, pushing false stories and flooding the web and social media with false narratives to sow confusion and, sometimes, to serve authoritarian states like Russia.”

    Despite Levy’s and Fourest’s experience and knowledge of Ukraine, “Broken Truth” proved a near mission impossible to pull together. It was originally conceived around an American lead but actors who balked at filming in Ukraine. She eventually turned to Sisley, who previously starred in the action franchise “Largo Winch.”

    “I need a French actor who speaks English really well and fits the role, and as it turned out, Tomer Sisley was a perfect fit for Julien,” she says.

    Fourest said audiences may be surprised by Sisley’s performance because “he’s not playing the savior at all.” “It’s not an action movie — it’s really a love story.”

    Katharina is played by Pustovit, a Ukrainian actress whose real-life story closely echoed that of her character. Fourest said she discovered after casting her that the actress had volunteered extensively during the war to the point of burnout, had a boyfriend fighting on the front lines in Zaporizhzhia and had even been held captive by Russian forces for several days.

    “She’s actually gone through experiences similar to Katharina’s in the film,” Fourest says.

    Fourest and her producers also decided to take on the risk to shoot the entire film in Ukraine despite the ongoing war and were able to enlist a brave french insurance broker, Hugo Rubini, who came on board. “Without him, if we’d had to pay for insurance like you do when filming in a war zone, we definitely couldn’t have made the film on a €2.6 million budget,” says Fourest.

    Operating in Kyiv meant coping with power outages, missile strikes and drone alerts. Fourest said the production relied on a military adviser equipped with software that could distinguish between alerts that posed a real threat to their location and those affecting the broader Kyiv region. That allowed the team to filter out many alarms and only seek shelter when it was absolutely necessary — it happened at least once during filming, when the cast and crew spent an hour in a shelter listening to drones explode overhead.

    “Jean-Charles and I are stubborn. For us, it made no sense to shoot this film in Latvia, as was suggested, or anywhere else. First of all, because the entire beginning of the film takes place in Kyiv, and we film Kyiv, Khreshchatyk, Maidan, St. Sophia, St. Andrew’s,” she says.

    “As you know, the Russians hit very hard this winter just to take advantage of the freezing temperatures, to really increase the losses and the impact. There were a lot of power outages, but Ukrainians know how to make do with anything. You have to figure it out, but they know how,” she reminisces.

    Lévy says there was “no other place where we could have shot this important movie.” “Our crew became family and it was so important for us to show the industry is still standing and it’s still possible to shoot upscale, international-level English speaking feature films in Ukraine, even during the war,” he continued.

    For the war sequences, Fourest also pursued authenticity. “All our Ukrainian soldiers are actual military actors. They’re all actors who joined the army and are fighting,” she says.

    One of the leading actors, for instance, came to set between tours on an active front and returned to combat immediately after shooting, while one crew member had lost a foot after stepping on a landmine. Another had a metal plate in his head after surviving an explosion on the front line. 

    “It was just like that. Everyone has related stories; everyone has family members who died because of the war or who are on the front lines,” she says.

    Ultimately, Fourest says the production became a source of collective purpose to the point that crew members told her the project had helped them “look forward again.”

    The film got supported by the Ukrainian State Foundation, as well as French pay TV channel Canal + and broadcaster France Television. Levy’s Forecast Pictures produced it with Pronto Films, Wild Tribe, Be Cool Produzioni, Ethic Scenarii and Saga Films.

    Fourest hopes to complete a first cut by September. The plan, she says, is for “Broken Truth” to premiere first in Ukraine before traveling internationally, with a festival launch hopefully in the cards.

  • Splitgate’s 1047 Games is starting work on a Titanfall-style movement shooter

    At the close of a video announcing the second season of Splitgate: Arena Reloaded, the company’s co-founder and CEO Ian Proulx revealed that “a small section of the team” has started work on a new game. He said that the next project will be a movement shooter in the style of Titanfall and Black Ops 3.

    Those two tidbits are really all that 1047 Games had to share. People can sign up to participate when playtesting begins, but considering the latest release is only just hitting its second season, it’s a safe bet that we’ll have a while before this project gets a title and a trailer, much less a release window.

    Splitgate is a well-made game with smart traversal and movement mechanics, so it’s likely that they’ll have good ideas to bring to this sliding and gliding subgenre of FPS. Whether players will continue supporting 1047 Games is a different question. The studio leadership bungled a lot of things in the past year, starting with Proulx’s questionable fashion choices and even more questionable handling of said choices. 1047 Games also pulled a bait-and-switch with the release of Splitgate 2, yanking it back to beta after release and cutting jobs before re-releasing and reimagining the sequel as Splitgate: Arena Reloaded in December.

  • Meta partners with Arm to develop new CPUs for AI deployments

    Meta partners with Arm to develop new CPUs for AI deployments

    Meta said Tuesday it is partnering with Arm to develop a new class of CPUs designed to support growing AI workloads and general-purpose computing across its expanding data center footprint.

    The first product, called the Arm AGI CPU, is being positioned as a more efficient alternative to legacy server processors for AI-optimized infrastructure.

    Meta said the chip is meant to improve performance per rack and support large gigawatt-scale AI deployments, which the company sees as central to its push toward more advanced AI systems. The Arm AGI CPU will work alongside Meta’s custom MTIA silicon, adding another layer to the company’s broader effort to build a diversified hardware stack for training and inference.

    The announcement adds to Meta’s recent flurry of infrastructure deals. In February, Meta signed a long-term agreement with AMD for up to 6 gigawatts of Instinct GPUs, and earlier this month Reuters reported that Meta laid out a roadmap for four new in-house AI chips as it scales its data centers.

    Reuters reported that the AGI CPU is Arm’s first major in-house data center chip effort, marking a notable departure from its traditional model of licensing designs to partners. Reuters also said Meta is the lead design partner, that TSMC is manufacturing the chip on a 3-nanometer process, and that volume production is expected in the second half of 2026.

    Arm said the AGI CPU is built for the agentic AI era, where CPUs are increasingly responsible for orchestrating accelerators, memory, storage, networking, and large numbers of distributed AI tasks. In its reference configuration, Arm says a standard air-cooled rack can hold 30 blades and deliver 8,160 cores, while a liquid-cooled design with Supermicro can scale to more than 45,000 cores per rack.

    Arm also claims the chip can deliver more than twice the performance per rack of current x86 systems and says that could translate into as much as $10 billion in capital expenditure savings per gigawatt of AI data center capacity.

    Arm said the AGI CPU will be available to other customers beyond Meta, with OpenAI, Cloudflare, SAP, SK Telecom, Cerebras, and others already named as launch partners. Meta also said it plans to release its board and rack designs for the CPU through the Open Compute Project later this year, which could help speed adoption across data center builders.

    As of Tuesday afternoon, Meta shares were trading around $595.20, down 1.5% on the day, while Arm shares were near $135.20, down 1.2% on the day.

    Disclosure: This article was edited by Estefano Gomez. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

  • AccuWeather is now available inside ChatGPT

    Who among us hasn’t tormented over the burden of having to exit an AI app to check the weather? Well, I haven’t, and I’m guessing you haven’t either. But AccuWeather has a solution regardless. On Tuesday, the company rolled out a ChatGPT app to spare… someone that pain.

    Snark aside, there may be a few niche situations where this provides a slight advantage. AccuWeather suggests asking ChatGPT, “When is the best time this afternoon to go for a run with the most comfortable weather conditions?” or “Will it rain on my planned vacation this weekend?” Of course, you could just read the dang forecast to get those same answers. But hey, to each their own.

    After you’ve connected the AccuWeather app to your ChatGPT account, your weather-related queries will be answered in an interactive weather module. Available info includes MinuteCast, RealFeel and RealFeel Shade.

    This isn’t the first time AccuWeather has adapted its service — perhaps questionably — to emerging technologies. In 2017, it pushed out a virtual reality app for Samsung’s Gear VR headset. Engadget noted at the time that it “sounds like one of the least exciting VR experiences imaginable.”

  • Today’s Top Story: The Clarity Act Has Been Amended as Banks Wanted—What Does This Mean?

    Today’s Top Story: The Clarity Act Has Been Amended as Banks Wanted—What Does This Mean?

    While regulatory efforts for the cryptocurrency market in the US continue unabated, a new draft prepared under the “Clarity Act” has brought a notable change to the forefront.

    According to the revised text, stablecoin users will be prohibited from earning yields simply for holding their assets. The draft aims to prevent the awarding of rewards tied to stablecoin balances, a step reportedly taken to prevent the formation of a structure similar to a banking system.

    It is stated that the regulation in question is particularly influenced by pressure from the traditional finance and banking sector. Coming at a time when discussions about the use case and economic role of stablecoins are intensifying, this step has raised significant questions about the future of the sector. While the draft prohibits returns directly tied to holding balances, rewards based on specific activities are not entirely excluded, although the framework regarding this is not yet clear.

    The developments also resonated in the markets. Analyst Joao Wedson noted a decline in the share performance of Circle, the company behind USDC, following the regulatory discussions. According to Wedson, the increasing limitations on stablecoin returns within the regulatory framework directly impact one of the most significant incentives for large-scale adoption of these assets.

    However, Wedson stated that these regulations would not eliminate stablecoins but would reshape their roles. He noted that stablecoins remain a fundamental liquidity layer in the crypto market, citing the systemic impact of the TerraUSD collapse in 2022 to highlight the sector’s vulnerability.

    According to experts, the relationship between crypto assets and governments will remain inherently tense.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • Armless cornhole pro accused of fatal shooting while he was driving

    A man who gained acclaim as a professional cornhole player despite having no arms or legs has been accused of fatally shooting an acquaintance during a dispute in a car.

    The body was found dumped in a stranger’s yard, said the sheriff’s office in Maryland’s Charles County.

    The shooting was reported by two people who flagged down a police car around 10:25 p.m. Sunday, March 22, in La Plata, Maryland. They said they had been in the back seat of a car when the driver, whom they identified as Dayton Webber, shot the front-seat passenger. When Webber pulled over and told them to remove the victim, they said, they got out and refused to help. He reportedly drove off with the other passenger.

    Nearly two hours later, a resident called 911 to report a dead person in a yard 11 miles away. It was the passenger, Bradrick Michael Wells, 27, the sheriff’s report said. A warrant was obtained for Webber’s arrest.

    Webber, 27, is a quadruple amputee; his forearms and lower legs were amputated when he suffered an infection as an infant, he said in a 2023 essay for the Today show’s website. He eschews prosthetics in American Cornhole League competitions, in which players throw beanbags through a hole. He told Today that he taught himself to drive, and a video titled “No Hands No Feet Shooting” on his YouTube channel shows him firing a 9-millimeter handgun.

    After the discovery of Wells’ body, Webber’s car was spotted Monday morning 100 miles away, in Charlottesville, Va., and he was found seeking treatment for an undisclosed condition at a hospital, the sheriff’s office said. He was arrested and held for extradition to Maryland, where he faces charges including first-degree murder.

  • French Sailors, Soviet Gangsters and Canadian Dancers Win Series Mania Forum Awards

    French Sailors, Soviet Gangsters and Canadian Dancers Win Series Mania Forum Awards

    A French navy thriller involving murder aboard a nuclear vessel, a Soviet-era gangster series and a Gen X dramedy about Latin dancing from Canada are the big winners at this year’s Series Mania Forum, the industry section of the international television festival, running in Lille, France, through Friday.

    French series R91 took top prize at the Series Mania Buyers Upfront, as the most promising title for international buyers. The six-part action thriller, which SND Groupe M6 is selling worldwide, imagines a horror scenario involving a mysterious murder aboard France’s nuclear aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle (R91). When a crew member is found dead and another goes missing, military investigators board the floating fortress, with its 2,000-strong crew and nuclear payload, to hunt for the truth before the murder becomes a global security crisis.

    The Series Mania prize for best project at this year’s Co-Pro Pitching Sessions, along with a €50,000 ($58,000) bursary, went to Red Pants, a series pitch from Kyrgyzstan. Erke Dzhumakmatova of Studio Oymo and Pavel Feldman and Alexander Seliverstov of Human Films won for their pitch for a 10-part action series set in 1970s Soviet Kyrgyzstan. The drama follows Aisha, a military officer’s daughter who, in the wake of her father’s death, forms the notorious “Red Pants,” an all-female criminal gang created to challenge the oppressive regime.

    The Canadian project Chachachá!, from writer/director Alison Fairweather Murray (Carny, Mouth to Mouth) and producer Jennifer Weiss of Toronto-based Nice Picture!, won this year’s SeriesMakers award, a prize designed to support theatrical filmmakers moving into small-screen fiction. The eight-part dramedy pitch centers on a Gen X woman who takes up Latin dancing in a bid to combat her sky-high blood pressure. The lifestyle change, however, ignites chaos in her family.

    Chachachá won us over with its light hearted, authentic, and sincere tone,” said Ferdinand Dohna, head of content and co-production at SeriesMakers sponsor Beta Film. “It tackles important universal themes of society with humor. We believe this is exactly the kind of story international audiences need right now.”

    The SeriesMakers winners will receive €50,000 ($58,000) award to develop the pitch into a pilot script and a full package.

  • Marcia Ann Burrs, Character Actress Who Played Mrs. Claus in Hallmark Telefilms, Dies at 85

    Marcia Ann Burrs, who appeared on dozens of TV shows including Mad Men, How I Met Your Mother and Grace and Frankie across three decades in Hollywood, died Sunday in Matthews, North Carolina, her family announced. She was 85.

    Burrs also was known for playing Mrs. Claus opposite Steve Guttenberg, Crystal Bernard and John Wheeler (as Santa) in two beloved Hallmark holiday films, 2004’s Single Santa Seeks Mrs. Claus and its 2005 sequel, Meet the Santas.

    Over the years, Burrs showed up in everything from The Slap Maxwell Story, Moonlighting, 7th Heaven, Will & Grace, Gilmore Girls, Frasier, Monk and It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia to The King of Queens, My Name Is Earl, Scrubs, Bones, Criminal Minds, Grey’s Anatomy, Angie Tribeca and Young Sheldon.

    She also worked in films including Rob Reiner’s Rumor Has It … (2005), Sofia Coppola’s The Bling Ring (2013) and Izzy Gets the Fuck Across Town (2017).

    Marcia Hoffman was born on Nov. 25, 1940, in Manila, the Philippines. After performing in school plays and studying drama at William & Mary, she moved to New York and worked in musical theater, commercials and soap operas before relocating to California.

    Survivors include her daughters, Jennifer and Diana; her sons-in-law, Douglas and James; her grandsons, Grant and Talon; her brothers, Fred (and wife Judy) and Greg (Jayne); and her sister, Toni.

    Her husband of 52 years, Joe Bures, who spent two decades as a business executive at NBC, died in January 2020 at age 83.

    They met in New York, and he taught her “how to play golf, which became a cornerstone of their relationship and a favorite way to spend time together with their daughters,” her family said. “Family lore says their perfect rhythm was simple and sacred: church, golf, lasagna, repeat — the way most Sundays were joyfully spent.”

    They added: “She never acknowledged an age older than 39.”

    A private family service is set for 11 a.m. on Friday at Salisbury National Cemetery in North Carolina. Online condolences may be made here.