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  • Canadian PM Carney heads to India on ‘significant’ trip to consolidate ties

    Canadian PM Carney heads to India on ‘significant’ trip to consolidate ties

    Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney is heading to India for what experts say is a “very significant trip” as he tries to reset relations between the two countries and find new markets for Canadian exports.

    While the trip, which starts Friday, is expected to be heavy on diplomacy, experts question whether it will result in major economic deals to shore up Canada’s economy.

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    Carney has pledged to broaden the country’s trading partners as relations with its neighbour, the United States, fray. And India, with its 1.4 billion people, is a potentially large market for Canada’s vast petroleum and natural gas reserves, among other products.

    But to build those economic bonds will require Carney to overcome diplomatic tensions and hesitancy about the costs of its exports, according to analysts.

    “Canada domestically needs to figure out to what extent it wants to grow its oil and gas industry,” said Tarun Khanna, professor at the University of British Columbia who focuses on energy policy.

    “Improvement in the overall relationship can provide incentives to both nations.”

    Repairing a diplomatic rupture

    Part of the hurdle for Carney is repairing recent diplomatic strains between his country and India.

    The two countries engaged in a prolonged diplomatic freeze in September 2023, after Carney’s predecessor Justin Trudeau alleged that India was involved in the killing of a Sikh separatist activist on Canadian soil.

    India rejected the allegations as false, and both countries expelled each other’s diplomats.

    A breakthrough came last year when Carney invited Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Kananaskis, Alberta, to attend the Group of Seven (G7) leaders’ summit in June.

    Since then, relations have thawed. In September, both sides named new diplomats to serve as high commissioners to each other’s countries.

    In the lead-up to this week’s meeting, more bilateral collaboration has unfolded. Officials from India and Canada have engaged in senior ministerial and working-level engagements in areas such as artificial intelligence (AI), liquefied natural gas (LNG), critical minerals and supply chain resilience.

    “This is a very significant visit and allows Prime Minister Carney to consolidate a reset that began in the relationship last year,” said Vina Nadjibulla, vice president at the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada, a research institute.

    Finding alternative trading partners

    But the rapprochement with India also comes in a transition period for Canada.

    The US has long been its primary trading partner: It is the only country it shares a border with. But since the return of President Donald Trump to the White House, the US has taken an aggressive stance towards trade with Canada.

    Trump has stacked steep tariffs on key Canadian exports like steel, aluminium and automobile parts. He also suggested he would like Canada to cede its sovereignty and become a state within the US.

    Carney has resisted such efforts, including by imposing counter-tariffs on US goods.

    But in January, he gave a speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, where he outlined his vision for “middle-power” states to break from the superpowers that seek their “subordination”.

    “From the fracture, we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just,” Carney said.

    “This is the task of the middle powers: the countries that have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and the most to gain from genuine cooperation.”

    Carney’s trip to India, followed by Australia and Japan, is his first major trip to Asia following his Davos speech. Experts say the outing will give him a stage on which to spread his appeal for “genuine cooperation” among smaller economies.

    “It allows him to take that message of middle-power diplomacy to India, Australia and Japan, the three most significant for Canada in the Indo-Pacific region,” said Nadjibulla.

    The trip also comes at a time when, on the domestic front, Carney’s top priority is to strengthen economic resilience, make sure investments keep flowing into Canada, and protect industries that have been hit by Trump’s tariffs.

    As part of that push, Carney visited China last month, becoming the first Canadian prime minister to do so in almost a decade.

    A market for Canadian energy

    Carney’s latest trip is expected to yield announcements on Canadian exports of oil, natural gas, uranium and critical minerals, as well as cooperation with India on developing nuclear power as a clean energy source.

    The outreach effort is “part of Carney’s strategy” to diversify its economic trading partners and find new markets for its products, according to MV Ramana, an expert in energy and security at the University of British Columbia.

    Canada is the fourth-largest exporter of crude oil in the world, and the fifth-largest oil producer overall. Its crude exports were valued at more than $100.7bn in 2024 alone.

    But Ramana believes that negotiations will also centre on Canada’s uranium. The North American country is the world’s second-largest producer of the metal, which is key to nuclear power production.

    “Canada is trying to position itself as an exporter, a petro-state of sorts — not just for oil and gas, but also critical minerals and uranium,” Ramana said.

    India has a long history of nuclear cooperation with Canada, which provided it with a research reactor in the 1950s for its nascent nuclear programme.

    It has continued to import uranium from Canada, and the two countries are in the midst of finalising a 10-year, $2.8bn deal that would ensure a supply of the metal to India.

    Given that backdrop, Ramana said he expects to see announcements on small modular reactors for nuclear energy, even though there are currently only a few operating in Russia and China.

    The first in North America — the Darlington New Nuclear Project — is in the works in Ontario, and Carney appears to be angling for Canada to become a leader in such small-scale reactors. But it won’t be easy, warned Ramana.

    “These are supposed to be cheaper, but they also produce far less power. As a result, the cost per unit of power generation will be much higher,” he said.

    Another complication is the fact that the licence for the modular reactor design is owned by a US company.

    That means the US will need to be involved, said Ramana, a tricky balance as Carney continues to be in the crosshairs of Trump.

    ‘Combination of price and strategic decision’

    With the largest population in the world, India’s already-huge energy demands are expected to keep increasing.

    Khanna, the energy policy expert, said that means there is likely to be negotiation about fossil fuels as well during Carney’s trip.

    “We don’t know what will materialise, but given the Indian energy situation, oil and gas is one thing that will be on the table,” said Khanna.

    But India has also faced backlash under Trump about where it sources its energy supply from.

    In August, the US president slapped an additional 25 percent tariff on India, doubling his tariffs on the South Asian nation to 50 percent, as a penalty for its import of Russian oil.

    That was finally rolled back this month, and US tariffs on India were brought down to 18 percent, though that rate, among others, was overturned by a decision from the US Supreme Court.

    Now, the current US tariffs on Indian imports sit at 10 percent. But experts have warned that Trump’s tariff policies have sown uncertainty among the US’s trading partners, including India.

    So New Delhi is looking to secure its oil supplies, and Canada is looking for new buyers, Khanna said. But price will ultimately be the key.

    “India is a price-sensitive market, so the Indian side will be looking for deals that secure supplies but at a reasonable price,” he pointed out.

    If Ottawa seeks to increase its market, “then it’s up to them to see what kind of incentives they can hand out”, Khanna added.

    For India to sign a deal, “it will have to be a combination of price and strategic decision”.

  • ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Airs McSteamy Tribute After Eric Dane’s Death; Emotional Video Montage Is Set to ‘Chasing Cars’

    ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Airs McSteamy Tribute After Eric Dane’s Death; Emotional Video Montage Is Set to ‘Chasing Cars’

    Former “Grey’s Anatomy” star Eric Dane died on Feb. 19, one week ago — and in Thurday’s episode of the long-running ABC drama, the show paid tribute to him and to his character, Dr. Mark Sloan, in a video at the end of the episode. The 65-second-long McSteamy montage was set to Tommee Profitt & Fleuries’ cover of Snow Patrol’s “Chasing Cars,” a song that was made iconic after being used in the show’s Season 2 finale when Denny (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) died and Izzie (Katherine Heigl) wouldn’t let go of him. Different versions of “Chasing Cars” have been used on “Grey’s” and in its promos ever since to great effect, always to underscore an emotional event. (The full video is below.)

    Dane joined the cast of “Grey’s Anatomy” in Season 2, playing a plastic surgeon and a ladies’ man — Mark, nicknamed McSteamy, was the best friend of Derek Shepherd (Patrick Dempsey) whose affair with Derek’s wife Addison (Kate Walsh) had broken up that marriage. Mark Sloan proved to be a popular character, and Dane became a series regular in Season 3. He died during Season 8, after a bunch of the hospital’s doctors were in a plane crash. Nevertheless, Dane appeared in a few more times on the show, including with Meredith (Ellen Pompeo) in Season 19 when she was in a hallucinatory state from COVID, and characters who had died on the show visited her.

    Dane was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in 2025; despite his terminal illness, he played an ALS patient on NBC’s “Brilliant Minds” in the fall, and completed filming Season 3 of “Euphoria,” on which he played Cal Jacobs. “Euphoria” will premiere on HBO on April 12.

    Dane’s death prompted an outpouring of grief from his colleagues at “Grey’s Anatomy,” from creator Shonda Rhimes to Heigl to Walsh and beyond, all of whom wrote loving tributes to him on social media.

    The video, with “Chasing Cars” playing, begins with Mark’s earliest appearances, when he referred to himself and Meredith as the “dirty mistresses” through his becoming a father. Mark’s advice to Jackson (Jesse Williams) from his deathbed plays over a montage: “If you love someone, you tell ’em, even if you’re scared that it’s not the right thing. Even if you’re scared that it will burn your life to the ground, you say it. You say it loud.”

    Watch the “Grey’s Anatomy” tribute to Eric Dane below.

  • ‘Sesame Street,’ ‘Formula 1: Drive to Survive’ Win Early PGA Awards

    ‘Sesame Street,’ ‘Formula 1: Drive to Survive’ Win Early PGA Awards

    Sesame Street,” “Formula 1: Drive to Survive” and “Adolescence: The Making of Adolescence” are among early winners as the Producers Guild of America held its west coast PGA Awards nominee celebration on Thursday.

    The majority of awards will be announced on Saturday at the annual Producers Guild Awards. But for Thursday’s event at The Aster in Hollywood, four awards were announced. The Children’s and Sports award winners were originally scheduled to be announced on Monday at an event in New York, until it was canceled due to the weather.

    Here are the 2026 Producers Guild Awards winners in the sports, children’s, and short-form:

    Outstanding Sports Program

    WINNER: “Formula 1: Drive to Survive”
    “100 Foot Wave”
    “Big Dreams: The Little League World Series 2024”
    “Hard Knocks: Training Camp with the Buffalo Bills”
    “Surf Girls: International”

    Outstanding Children’s Program

    WINNER: “Sesame Street”
    “Lego Star Wars: Rebuild the Galaxy – Pieces of the Past”
    “Phineas and Ferb”
    “Snoopy Presents: A Summer Musical”
    “SpongeBob SquarePants”

    Outstanding Short-Form Program

    WINNER: “Adolescence: The Making of Adolescence”
    “The Daily Show: Desi Lydic Foxsplains”
    “Hacks: Bit By Bit”
    “Overtime with Bill Maher”
    “The White Lotus: Unpacking the Episode”

    Also, the producing team for “The Wizard of Oz at Sphere” have received the PGA Innovation Award, “which celebrates outstanding entertainment endeavors across VR, AR, experiential and other emerging media.” The juried award was chosen by a jury led by AGBO chief creative officer Angela Russo-Otsot, Laurel Beach CEO Joanna Popper and Baobab Studios co-founder/CEO Maureen Fan.

    And Lydia Dean Pilcher (“Queen of Katwe,” “Radium Girls”) has received the Vance Van Petten Entrepreneurial Spirit Producing Award, “for her nearly two decades of work championing sustainability in film and television, including chairing the PGA’s Sustainability Task Force,” presented by Tendo Nagenda; NYU MBA/MFA grad Jessica Li recieved the Debra Hill Fellowship supporting emerging producers, presented by Selection Chairs Deniese Davis and Lucienne Papon.

    The 2026 Producers Guild Awards event chairs are Mike Farah and Joe Farrell; and the ceremony is produced by Anchor Street Collective. Branden Chapman is executive producer, and Carleen Cappelletti is co-executive producer.

  • iFi’s new GO Link 2 DAC is a cheap way to reap the lossless benefits of your Spotify plan

    iFi’s new GO Link 2 DAC is a cheap way to reap the lossless benefits of your Spotify plan

    Audio company iFi just introduced a new DAC (digital-to-analogue converter) that’s both smaller and lighter than its previous model, and only costs $59. The iFi GO Link 2 connects to a smartphone or other audio-playing device over USB-C and can instantly improve the listening experience on wired headphones.

    Wireless earbuds and music streaming services have normalized listening to your favorite songs at a lower quality. For anyone who doesn’t consider themselves an audiophile, that might not matter, but now that several streaming services offer higher sample rates and lossless audio, you might consider other ways of listening. In order to experience all the benefits of high-res or lossless audio, you need wired headphones, something that’s increasingly difficult when most smartphones only have a USB-C port. That’s where the iFi GO Link 2 comes in. The dongle plugs into a USB-C port and lets you connect a pair of wired earbuds while preserving your high quality audio at the same time.

    An iFi GO Link 2 DAC laid flat on a white background.

    iFi

    iFi’s new DAC is eight percent smaller than the previous GO Link and 29 percent lighter, approaching the size of Apple’s USB-C to 3.5mm Headphone Jack dongle. The GO Link 2’s built-in ESS Sabre DAC chipset is supposed to add “6dB of dynamic range between the loudest and quietest moments” and reduce distortion for clearer sound by up to 62 percent when compared to the original GO Link.

    Via iFi’s companion Nexis app on Android, the GO Link 2 can also be updated on the go and further customized with digital filters. The GO Link 2 supports two digital filters — one hybrid and one linear — so that you can adjust things to your preferred sound profile. You can also use the Nexis app to set volume limits when you’re listening with the DAC attached.

    The previous GO Link made it on Engadget’s list of the best DACs for Apple Music Lossless, and at the same price, the GO Link 2 seems like it could, too. The iFi GO Link 2 is available to purchase now for $59.

  • Netflix backs out of Warner Bros. Discovery bidding war

    Netflix backs out of Warner Bros. Discovery bidding war

    For anyone who has been following the soap opera unfolding between Netflix and Paramount Skydance over the past few months in their financial brinksmanship to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery, the saga may be nearing its end. Today, WBD said its board of directors have determined that the latest offer from Paramount Skydance amounted to the better proposal. The media outfit gave Netflix four business days to match Paramount’s terms, but the streamer didn’t waste any time in declining to raise its own bid.

    “We believe we would have been strong stewards of Warner Bros.’ iconic brands, and that our deal would have strengthened the entertainment industry and preserved and created more production jobs in the US,” the statement from Netflix  co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters said. “But this transaction was always a ‘nice to have’ at the right price, not a ‘must have’ at any price.”

    In addition to the purchase price of $31 per WBD share, Paramount’s latest offer also included a provision that it would cover the $2.8 billion termination fee that WBD would owe to Netflix for dissolving the existing merger agreement between the businesses. So rather than paying $82.7 billion to acquire the Warner Bros. part of the operation, it appears Netflix may walk away with no new content but padding its coffers with an extra nearly $3 billion.

    After Netflix’s initial offer, Paramount Skydance swooped in with a hostile takeover attempt of the entire Warner Bros. Discovery business. WBD rejected it, Paramount tried again. Several additional volleys between the involved parties occurred over the past few weeks. While WBD has not yet formally accepted Paramount’s offer — which will be subject to long-winded regulatory approvals sure to spark more drama — it seems the dust will soon settle for this chapter.

  • LinkedIn Founder Reid Hoffman’s Cryptocurrency Portfolio Revealed – How Much Does He Hold of Each Asset?

    LinkedIn Founder Reid Hoffman’s Cryptocurrency Portfolio Revealed – How Much Does He Hold of Each Asset?

    LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman’s cryptocurrency portfolio is back in the spotlight. According to data from the on-chain data platform Arkham, Hoffman holds approximately 3,078 Ethereum ($ETH) in known addresses.

    Considering that Ethereum is priced at $2,028.89, the total value of these assets is approximately $6.25 million.

    Hoffman’s portfolio includes not only $ETH but also a CryptoPunk NFT that he purchased for 150 $ETH late last year.

    Hoffman’s former PayPal colleague, Elon Musk, prefers Bitcoin. Tesla, Inc., where Musk is CEO, and SpaceX have approximately $1.3 billion worth of $BTC on their balance sheets.

    According to the data, SpaceX holds 8,285 $BTC, with a current value of approximately $558 million. Tesla, on the other hand, holds 11,509 $BTC, a position worth around $775 million.

    Assuming Bitcoin is trading at $67,352, the two companies’ total $BTC holdings exceed $1.33 billion.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • SBI Holdings, Startale Group to issue first trust-based yen stablecoin JPYSC under Japan’s framework

    SBI Holdings, Startale Group to issue first trust-based yen stablecoin JPYSC under Japan’s framework

    Startale Group, a Tokyo-based blockchain infrastructure firm behind Japan’s largest public network Astar, and SBI Holdings, one of the country’s leading financial conglomerates, have unveiled JPYSC, a trust bank-backed Japanese yen stablecoin designed for institutional and cross-border applications, according to a Friday announcement.

    The JPYSC stablecoin will be issued by SBI Shinsei Trust Bank under Japan’s regulatory framework, making it the first trust bank-backed yen stablecoin in the market. SBI VC Trade will handle distribution while Startale oversees technical development.

    The partners are targeting a second-quarter launch, pending final regulatory clearances.

    Discussing the launch, Yoshitaka Kitao, Representative Director, Chairman, and President of SBI Holdings, said it is intended to support the expansion of digital financial services and strengthen the link between traditional finance and emerging digital infrastructure.

    “The transition to a ‘Token Economy’ where all real-world assets are tokenized and tokens permeate society as a means of settlement is now an irreversible societal trend,” Kitao stated.

    Sota Watanabe, CEO of Startale Group, said the company aims to bring more of the global economy onchain, positioning its yen-denominated stablecoin as a key component of the future digital infrastructure.

    “Our yen-denominated stablecoin is not just a means of everyday payment,” Watanabe added. “It will play a central role in a fully onchain world. In particular, we see enormous potential in enabling payments between AI agents and powering distributions for tokenized assets, both of which will soon become reality.”

    The move reinforces Japan’s position in regulated digital currency infrastructure as global stablecoin competition accelerates.

    As one of the few major jurisdictions with a clear legal pathway for stablecoin issuance, Japan is enabling domestic financial institutions to develop compliant digital assets.

    The project aims to challenge the dominance of dollar-pegged tokens by offering a regulated yen alternative suited for treasury operations, corporate payments, and international settlement.

    Startale operates Astar Network and jointly develops the Soneium blockchain through a partnership with Sony Group Corporation.

  • Punxsutawney Phil, Staten Island Chuck predict 6 more weeks of winter

    Punxsutawney Phil, Staten Island Chuck predict 6 more weeks of winter

    Odd News // 3 weeks ago

    Punxsutawney Phil, Staten Island Chuck predict 6 more weeks of winter

    Feb. 2 (UPI) — Famed Pennsylvania groundhog Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow Monday morning, predicting six more weeks of winter — as did Staten Island Chuck.

  • Ethan Hawke’s First Acting Award Was a Bong From ‘High Times’ Magazine. With ‘Blue Moon’ He’s Aiming Even Higher

    Ethan Hawke’s First Acting Award Was a Bong From ‘High Times’ Magazine. With ‘Blue Moon’ He’s Aiming Even Higher

    After getting an Oscar nomination for his role as famed Broadway composer Lorenz Hart in Blue Moon, Ethan Hawke couldn’t help but reminisce on his long-lasting friendship with the film’s director, Richard Linklater. “I have to express my gratitude to Linklater because my first acting award I ever won was a bong from High Times magazine for my performance in Tape as the best stoned performance of the year. And, Rick just keeps giving me these things, so I’m incredibly grateful,” Hawke says.

    In the indie film, Hawke transforms himself into the diminutive composer, who regales attendees at Sardi’s bar with anecdotes about his career highs in the theater and bemoans the loss of his former partnership with Richard Rodgers. Set during the opening-night party for Oklahoma!, the film almost always trains the camera on Hawke as he vacillates between charm and pleas for continued relevance in the theater world.

    Hawke, who calls the role one of the hardest he’s taken on in his long career, speaks about becoming Hart and why the physical transformation was akin to skiing down a hill that makes you think, “Holy shit, I’m going to die.”

    What keeps drawing you back to working with Richard Linklater?

    Oh, that’s totally uncomplicated. It’s just friendship. We met in ’93, I think, and we just started talking and talking. We’ve been talking for 30 years, and every now and then these movies grow out of that friendship.

    He pitched this movie to you more than a decade ago and waited for you to age into the role. But was there more that happened over that decades-plus process?

    I think his intuition was that we weren’t ready to make it. And I don’t know if he could have articulated exactly why. Part of it had to do with me getting older. Part of what happened in the last decade is that I’ve gotten more and more interested in what people call character acting, and I’ve gotten better at it, and so the time wasn’t wasted. We also knew what a razor’s edge the film walks. A movie set in real time, in one party. It’s a very difficult filmmaking accomplishment, and it needed a lot of meditation about how to pull something like that off.

    What made you become more interested in character acting?

    It’s just life’s relationship to this profession. I’d probably say my friendship with [Philip Seymour] Hoffman had a lot to do with it, but a lot of it was continuing to try to grow. You’ve got to figure out, “Well, all right, what if I did something totally different?” and you start pushing the boundaries of the box.

    You worked on this character during a series of workshops over several years. What did you learn through that process?

    It really all comes back to my friendship with Linklater. We would just read it and work on it. We would talk about Larry, about the people we know that were like this, or what the film is about, and what do we think he’s thinking about that? Then we’d send each other records and be like, “That’s an interesting line, where does that line come from?” And we started kind of seeing the movie as a Rodgers and Hart song, like, “What if we made a movie that was a 90-minute Rodgers and Hart song?” In a lot of ways, Rick’s job was to create the architecture and skeleton and musculature the way that Richard Rodgers would for the song, and my job was the lyrics to sit on top of it and dance and play. Because what’s so powerful about their music is that it has all the strength and gravitas and, at the same time, it’s completely silly. And when you can be silly and strike a note that’s profound, it’s a magic trick.

    Ethan Hawke in his Oscar-nominated role as Broadway composer Lorenz Hart in Blue Moon.

    Sabrina Lantos/Sony Pictures Classics

    You’ve called this the hardest role you’ve ever done. Why is that?

    There have been a handful that have been extremely challenging. It’s just one of the few jobs that’s used everything I’ve learned over the years, from the physical stuff, to the vocal work, to the movement work, to the verbiage, to the text, to the ideas that we’re trying to communicate. It was not a light lift.

    How did you find his voice?

    When you become a professional actor, there’s a great push to just always stay in the same box. You stop letting yourself play as much, and the play is where really good things happen. So in that way, I love that Rick was giving me a chance to really jump out of the normal sandbox … so I could really find a voice that matched his wit and his energy and his soul, for lack of a better word, and making all that language feel like it was my own.

    You also had a big physical transformation to become Lorenz Hart, including shaving your head, wearing a comb-over and adjusting your posture to help appear about a foot shorter. How did it feel taking that on?

    If you’ve ever skied, and you ski down a slope that’s way too difficult, while you’re doing it, you’re absolutely miserable. And when it’s over, you’re like, “Wow, that was fun.” Once you survive, you’re like, “That was pretty interesting. I love that.” But while you’re doing it, it’s like, “Holy shit, I’m going to die.”

    You’re a big theater person. Is that what drew you to this story?

    Absolutely. The legend of Broadway looms large in my psyche. So any time you get to touch those myths — and even some of the final shots of all the portraits of the artists on the Sardi’s wall — it’s like the way the baseball player feels about the Hall of Fame. You want to know what they were thinking, and what they were doing, and how did they do that? How did they feel about it? Trying to make all that come alive for the audience is a game I find thrilling.

    You have been doing a lot of campaigning for this movie. Do you now see this as the end of the campaign trail or is there more to come?

    Ask me in a couple of months. It was amazing to get the nomination, and it was even sweeter that [writer] Robert Kaplow was nominated because that makes me feel like people really saw the movie. Because if you see the movie, it’s one of the most staggering pieces of writing Rick and I’ve ever come across in 30 years of working, and it’s just an absolutely brilliant screenplay. I really feel my job is like an ambassador of independent film. I want movies like this to get made. I want there to be a future in my life and other people’s lives for movies like this to exist, so people have choices in what they’re seeing.

    This story appeared in the Feb. 23 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe.

  • Apple Strikes F1 Deal With Netflix: Will Share Canadian Grand Prix, New ‘Drive to Survive’ Season

    Apple Strikes F1 Deal With Netflix: Will Share Canadian Grand Prix, New ‘Drive to Survive’ Season

    In a surprise deal, Apple and Netflix are teaming up for select Formula 1 programming.

    The deal will include Netflix simulcasting the F1 Canadian Grand Prix May 22-24 (it will also be on Apple TV, of course), and with Apple TV getting streaming rights to season eight of Drive to Survive alongside Netflix.

    Drive to Survive will land on Apple TV at midnight tonight, the same day it debuts on Netflix.

    Eddy Cue, Apple’s senior VP of services, announced the deal in a conference call with reporters Thursday.

    More to come.