Category: Entertainment

  • CBS Wins Nielsen’s Fall Multiplatform Ratings Among Broadcast, Led by ‘Tracker’ — but Netflix’s ‘Stranger Things’ Dominates Overall (EXCLUSIVE)

    CBS Wins Nielsen’s Fall Multiplatform Ratings Among Broadcast, Led by ‘Tracker’ — but Netflix’s ‘Stranger Things’ Dominates Overall (EXCLUSIVE)

    The final numbers are in for fall, and CBS’ “Tracker” continues its winning streak — leading the Eye’s dominance among broadcast networks when both linear and 35 days of streaming viewership of non-sports series fare is tallied.

    Of course, add the streamers to the mix, and the final season of “Stranger Things” was no match for the competition: The Netflix series dominated the fall, with an average of 32.86 million viewers. That was followed by Netflix’s blockbuster docuseries “Sean Combs: The Reckoning” (20.64 million) and Paramount+’s surging “Landman” (19.64 million). “Tracker” was next, with 16.65 million — making it tops among broadcast series — followed closely by ABC’s “High Potential” (16.07 million).

    CBS, which returns its schedule with new originals this week (now that the Olympics competition has wrapped on NBC), led the fall top ten among broadcast with eight shows (“Tracker,” “Matlock,” “Sheriff Country,” “Ghosts,” “60 Minutes,” “Boston Blue,” “NCIS,” “Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage”) — with “Sheriff Country” and “Boston Blue” as the fall’s top two most-watched new series in broadcast. The Eye net also boasted nine of the top 20 series among both linear and streaming.

    Streaming is continuing to help expand eyeballs for broadcast fare: “Tracker,” for example, averaged 11.4 million viewers on linear, then another 5.2 million in streaming. “High Potential” was nearly a 50/50 split: 8.3 million viewers on linear, and 7.8 million on streaming. “Abbott Elementary” actually attracts more viewers in streaming on Hulu (4.4 million) than on ABC linear (3.8 million).

    These lists don’t include sports, of course, which would add even more broadcast heft to the rankers. But even without sports, the broadcast networks did quite well in the fall. Now, on to midseason — where several additional high performers, like ABC’s “Will Trent” and “The Rookie,” will be added to the mix too.

    Here are the fall 2025 rankers:

    Fall 2025 Multiplatform 35-Day Ranker: Broadcast+Streaming Originals

    Rank Title (Network/SVOD) Total 35-Day Viewing
    1. Stranger Things (Netflix) 32.86 million
    2. Sean Combs: The Reckoning (Netflix) 20.64 million
    3. Landman (Paramount+) 19.64 million
    4. Tracker (CBS) 16.65 million
    5. High Potential (ABC) 16.07 million
    6. Fallout (Prime Video) 14.85 million
    7. Monster: The Ed Gein Story (Netflix) 13.36 million
    8. The Beast in Me (Netflix) 12.74 million
    9. Matlock (CBS) 12.21 million
    10. Sheriff Country (CBS) 11.09 million
    11. Ghosts (CBS) 10.59 million
    12. 60 Minutes (CBS) 10.27 million
    13. Boston Blue (CBS) 10.26 million
    14. NCIS (CBS) 10.12 million
    15. Chicago Fire (NBC) 10.07 million
    16. Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage (CBS) 9.89 million
    17. Dancing With the Stars (ABC) 9.81 million
    18. Wayward (Netflix) 9.74 million
    19. Elsbeth (CBS) 9.50 million
    20. Nobody Wants This (Netflix) 9.40 million

    Source: Source: Nielsen Panel+ Big Data P2+ Prime AA, L+35, 9/14/2025-1/04/2026 + Nielsen SCR, 35-Day Total Flight for streaming. Does not include specials, finales, or sports that fall within FSD. Does not include series or specials with less than 4 telecasts.


    Fall 2025 Multiplatform 35-Day Ranker: Broadcast Originals

    Rank Title (Network) Broadcast+Streaming
    Average Viewers Per Episode
    1. Tracker (CBS) 16.7 million
    2. High Potential (ABC) 16.1 million
    3. Matlock (CBS) 12.2 million
    4. Sheriff Country (CBS) 11.1 million
    5. Ghosts (CBS) 10.6 million
    6. 60 Minutes (CBS) 10.3 million
    tie Boston Blue (CBS) 10.3 million
    8. NCIS (CBS) 10.1 million
    tie Chicago Fire (NBC) 10.1 million
    10. Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage (CBS) 9.9 million
    11. Dancing With the Stars (ABC) 9.8 million
    12. Elsbeth (CBS) 9.5 million
    13. 9-1-1 (ABC) 9.3 million
    tie Best Medicine (Fox) 9.3 million
    tie Chicago Med (NBC) 9.3 million
    tie Chicago PD (NBC) 9.7 million
    17. Law & Order: SVU (NBC) 8.8 million
    tie FBI (CBS) 8.8 million
    19. 9-1-1: Nashville (ABC) 8.5 million
    20. Abbott Elementary (ABC) 8.3 million

    Source: Source: Nielsen Panel+ Big Data P2+ Prime AA, L+35, 9/14/2025-1/04/2026 + Nielsen SCR, 35-Day Total Flight for streaming.

  • Taylor Swift’s ‘Opalite’ Reaches No. 1, Putting Her in a Tie for Third Place for the Most Hot 100 Leaders Ever

    Taylor Swift’s ‘Opalite’ Reaches No. 1, Putting Her in a Tie for Third Place for the Most Hot 100 Leaders Ever

    Taylor Swift fans kept “hope-alite” alive that “Opalite” would become her 14th No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100, even though it faced some competitive headwinds in reaching the summit. The infectious bop came through, reaching the top in this, its 20th week on the chart, and moving Swift just a little bit closer to an all-time record.

    Thirteen has traditionally been Swift’s lucky number, but so is 14. (And so will be 15, and so on.) With 14 career No. 1s, she now ties Rihanna for the most Hot 100 leaders in the history of the chart. Who’s ahead of her? Only the Beatles, with 20 No. 1s, and Mariah Carey, with 19 — neither of those presenting anything like an insurmountable mark for someone as prolific as Swift.

    “Opalite” follows “The Fate of Ophelia” as her second No. 1 from the album “The Life of a Showgirl.” “Ophelia” spent 10 weeks at No. 1. “Opalite” previously debuted at No. 2, during the week of the album’s release, and was always destined to register as the album’s second-most-popular track. Since then, it had spent several weeks in the top 10 and was a mainstay of the top 20, based primarily on streaming demand. But it was not officially released as a single until the music video dropped on Feb. 6.

    Last week would have seemed like a prime time for “Opalite” to top the chart, based on all those immediate video streams. But it was kept out of a top position by the huge resurgence of Bad Bunny’s catalog following his Super Bowl halftime appearance, among other factors. Perhaps seeing the Bad Bunny tsunami coming during that time frame, the biggest push for singles sales was held back a week and came during this latest chart period.

    Ubiquitous for four months now among fans, the song had already peaked some time ago on Billboard’s streaming chart; it falls to No. 17 on that register this week. So making it to No. 1 on the Hot 100 this week was much more reliant on increased radio play as well as singles sales.

    The radio airplay impressions for “Opalite” were up 17% this week, to 58.9 million, after already taking a leap last week. The most substantial gain, though, was in sales. The single sold 168,00 copies this week, up 2,290%. Of those 168,000, Billboard and Luminate report, 144,000 were physical copies, representing a mix of one vinyl and six CD variants. Some of those editions had gone on sale in January but did not count toward her tally till they shipped during this mid-February time frame.

    The sales tally for the single was impressive enough that Billboard reported it was the highly weekly sales for any song since Jason Aldean’s “Try That in a Small Town” went viral and sold 175,000 downloads in a single week in August 2023.

    The number of streams for “Opalite” in this time frame was 11.4 million, down 20% from the week before.

    Swift probably would have had an easier path to hitting No. 1 a week earlier if Billboard had not recently instituted a rule change. The publication altered its playbook so that free YouTube streams no longer count in the calculation of a hit. That was presumably one reason why Swift gave Apple Music and Spotify Premium a two-day exclusive on the “Opalite” video, to redirect fans to paid services whose totals still count toward the charts. Regardless, it all worked out for her, even if there was a week of delayed gratification for Swifties to enjoy their heroine getting her latest chart triumph.

    Nashville has a very strong presence at the top of the Hot 100 this week, if you count Swift, and you should, as a longtime mainstay and still a part-time resident. Following the former country queen at No. 1 is current country star Ella Langley at No. 2, as her smash “Choosin’ Texas” — which recently peaked at the top of the chart, then took a dip — rose two spots from its No. 4 position last week.

    Following those two songs are Olivia Dean’s “Man I Need” at No. 3, and Bad Bunny’s “DtMF” (last week’s leader) dipping a few spots to No. 4. Bad Bunny also has two other songs remaining in the top 10 for a total of three, after landing four there last week. “Tití Me Preguntó” is at No. 7 and “Baile Inolvidable” is at No. 10. 

    The No. 5 song is Alex Warren’s “Ordinary,” followed by “Golden” at No. 7 and Swift’s “Ophelia” still affording her a second spot in the top 10 at No. 8.

    Over on the Billboard 200 album chart, Bad Bunny was a holdover at No. 1 with “DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS,” the second consecutive and fifth nonconsecutive time that album reached the top.

    There were two new entries in the top 10, both from artists debuting more modestly with their current projects than they did with their previous albums.

    Brent Faiyaz debuted at No. 6 with “Icon,” collecting 58,000 equivalent album units. His previous album, 2022’s “Wasteland,” bowed at No. 2 with 88,000 as its first-week tally.

    Charli xcx‘s soundtrack album for “Wuthering Heights” entered at No. 8, with 51,000 units. Even with an association with a hit movie, this more eclectic project was not exepected to match debut numbers for her last album, the culturally phenomenal “Brat,” which bowed at No. 3 in 2024 with 77,000 units.

  • Ryan Coogler’s ‘X-Files’ Reboot Lands Hulu Pilot Order, Danielle Deadwyler to Star

    Ryan Coogler’s ‘X-Files’ Reboot Lands Hulu Pilot Order, Danielle Deadwyler to Star

    The truth is right here: Ryan Coogler‘s reboot of “The X-Files” is officially moving forward with a pilot order at Hulu.

    In addition, Danielle Deadwyler is officially set to play one of the lead roles in the pilot, while the other lead role has yet to be cast. The official logline for the pilot states, “Two highly decorated but vastly different FBI agents form an unlikely bond when they are assigned to a long-shuttered division devoted to cases involving unexplained phenomena.”

    Coogler will write, direct, and executive produce the pilot under his Proximity Media banner. Sev Ohanian and Zinzi Coogler of Proximity will also executive produce along with original “X-Files” creator Chris Carter. Simone Harris of Proximity will co-executive produce. The pilot hails from Onyx Collective and 20th Television. Coogler and Proximity are currently under a TV overall deal with Disney.

    News of Coogler’s take on the beloved sci-fi procedural first emerged in 2023, when Carter revealed that Coogler had contacted him about rebooting the series with a diverse cast. There has been no official news on the project since, though Coogler has teased work on the series in interviews since.

    “Like my relationship with ‘Rocky’ with my dad, ‘The X-Files’ is one of those things with my mom,” Coogler told Variety in October 2025. “My mom means the world to me…so this is a big one for me. I want to do right by her and the fans. My mom has read some of the stuff I wrote for it. She’s fired up.”

    This will be the first ever reboot of “The X-Files” but not the first time that the show has returned since it originally went off the air in 2001 after nine seasons. Fox revived the series for two more seasons in 2016 and 2018 with Carter and original series stars Gillian Anderson and David Duchovny returning in their roles as Dr. Dana Scully and Fox Mulder. There have also been two “X-Files” movies — 1998’s “The X-Files,” followed by “The X-Files: I Want to Believe” in 2008.

    At this time, neither Anderson nor Duchovny are attached to Coogler’s pilot.

    Deadwyler is best known for her roles in films like “The Harder They Fall,” “Till,” and “Carry-On.” She has also played memorable parts in shows like “Atlanta,” “The Bear,” and “Station Eleven,” with appearances in other series like “P-Valley,” “From Scratch,” and “Greenleaf.”

    Coogler has established himself as one of the most in-demand and celebrated filmmakers of his time. He is currently making the awards show rounds with “Sinners,” which he wrote, directed, and produced. The film recently set a new Oscars record with 16 nominations, the most for any single film in one year. Coogler is up for best director and best original screenplay, while the film itself is up for best picture. Coogler most recently made history by becoming the first Black person to win a BAFTA Award for best original screenplay.

    Coogler’s other film credits the two “Black Panther” films for Marvel, the “Creed” franchise, and “Fruitvale Station.” Coogler was also a producer on the Oscar-winning film “Judas and the Black Messiah.”

    Coogler is repped by WME, M88, The Lede Company, and Cohen & Gardner. Deadwyler is repped by Paradigm Talent Agency, Play Management, and Ziffren Brittenham. Carter is repped by CAA and Gang Tyre.

  • Inside Blizzard Entertainment’s Lofty Goal to Wow the Gaming World Again

    Inside Blizzard Entertainment’s Lofty Goal to Wow the Gaming World Again

    The iconic orc statue that lives at the center of Blizzard Entertainment’s Irvine campus is standing a little taller these days as the brand behind “World of Warcraft,” “Diablo,” “Hearthstone” and “Overwatch” builds to its 35th anniversary.

    Sitting in her office above the Microsoft-owned brand’s campus on Jan. 20, Blizzard Entertainment president Johanna Faries told Variety that the slew of announcements that would be revealed the following week in Blizzard’s big “Showcase” presentations were “the amalgamation of so much hard work and collaboration across everyone at Blizzard.” “And to me, that, in and of itself, is such a point of pride,” Faries said.

    It’s a moment of hard-fought-for pride for Blizzard, a video game publisher that’s managed to maintain its beloved status with exuberant fans despite multiple controversial changes in leadership, a $35 million settlement over misconduct accusations, and a reputation for a “frat boy” workplace culture.

    Courtesy of Blizzard Entertainment

    Courtesy of Blizzard Entertainment

    “The way that the game teams have come together to ladder up into something bigger that reflects the power of Blizzard — it’s easy to say, it’s incredibly hard to do,” said Faries, who joined Blizzard as president in 2024, following two years as general manager of the “Call of Duty” franchise at sister company Activision and more than 10 years in business and marketing exec roles at the NFL. “And the way that the simple symphony orchestra that is Blizzard has come together, it’s a showcase of an immense amount of work, an immense amount of creative collaboration. And it just makes me so excited to come to work every day, to be able to do this together in that way.”

    But the major news revealed out of Blizzard’s showcase presentations — including the rebranding of “Overwatch 2” to “Overwatch” as it debuts a year-long narrative arc, “World of Warcraft’s” deep expansion into in-game housing, “Diablo’s” 30th-anniversary expansion plans — is not the peak of the anniversary celebration, but the start of the climb. What Faries and her team are really building toward is the triumphant return for BlizzCon this September, which will mark the first version of the event under Microsoft ownership after more than two years off.

    “I’ve heard this from many of the teams that what we’re going to announce across ‘WoW,’ ‘Diablo,’ ‘Overwatch,’ even ‘Hearthstone’ and many others, just in this moment in time for Showcase, much of that would have been what we would have put on the main stage as an announcement at BlizzCon, at something of that caliber,” Faries said. “So I’m hopeful that not only do we drum up an enormous amount of excitement in the here and now, but that also signals how confident we are in the belief that 2026 represents a huge, banner year for Blizzard — because Blizzcon only has more behind the curtain that we’re excited to share. So hopefully players really see that and recognize, wow, if Blizzard’s coming this big in this moment of time, imagine what they might be also staging for us in September.”

    While Faries hypes up just how much she’s not overhyping BlizzCon 2026, she’s also focused on what comes after that big in-person experience and what the next 35 years are supposed to look like. A big part of that is decided on the ground in Irvine, where Blizzard is cultivating its existing, homegrown talent. It’s a mission Faries is charged with just as longtime Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer exits and CoreAI exec Asha Sharma takes over and concerns about consistency arise.

    “Diablo IV”/Blizzard

    Blizzard

    “If you go into my office and look at the art on the walls, you’ll see how much it helps that we have real icons and leaders in the artist community,” Faries said. “We have, I would argue, the greatest artists in all of gaming and entertainment. And so their network gives us the leg up. They’re constantly thinking about, how do we recruit? How do we train up upcoming talent to continue to maintain the high-standard bar that we’re known for? Our players know there’s a Blizzard polish. There’s a Blizzard caliber for our artistry that stands out among all the rest, and we’re going to continue to make sure that that’s something we prioritize.”

    With the artist legacy a firm part of its past, Faries wants to make expanding the mediums that art is showcased in part of Blizzard’s future.

    “We talk a lot about this. We’re not Blizzard Games, we’re Blizzard Entertainment. We want to be able to show up on every screen imaginable,” Faries said. “We want to be able to create new fans who may not have been with us for the past 35 years. How we continue to engage Hollywood or film and TV in bigger ways is going to be, in the near term, probably a big part of that recipe. We also play in music. We also play in non-traditional spaces, beyond gaming, certainly.”

    Faries added: “I would confidently say that every one of our IPs could be some of the greatest linear media experiences that the world could experience. So more to come on the specifics. What I will say is that there are highly generative, proactive, near-term discussions across almost every one of our worlds right now, with respect to what can we do, what format works, who’s the right team to take that to new audiences in a high caliber way.”

    Among the announcements made during Blizzard’s series of “Showcase” presentations was a revamp for the nearly 10-year-old “Overwatch” franchise with a big narrative expansion. That move came just as Wildlight Entertainment was set to debut its “Overwatch 2” competitor, “Highguard.” In the weeks since, “Highguard” has struggled significantly, while “Overwatch 2” fans have had widely positive reactions to the ambitious roadmap for “Overwatch,” despite a few jokes poked at the rebranding.

    “Overwatch”/Blizzard

    Blizzard

    “It’s coming to fruition after a couple of years of a strong conversation about, what is a real pivot going to look like?” Faries said. “And how are we going to make sure that it feels genuine, it feels deep, it feels rich, in all the ways that our players are going to want to experience these new characters? I will also say, and I hope that the team would say it as well, competition is a good thing. It keeps us on our toes. It keeps us adapting. It forces us sometimes to adapt and go quicker in spaces.”

    “Overwatch’s” new update kicked off with an intense cinematic trailer that the team already knows has once again stirred up conversations about that IP in particular being adapted for TV or film.

    “It’s something that we see signaled to us very consistently,” “Overwatch” general manager Walter Kong told Variety. “So whenever we put out any type of lore, including a cinematic thesis, there is a very common expression of, I wish we could have more of this, I wish that we could enjoy these stories. So when I took on the role of franchise GM, these future opportunities and possibilities were something that pushed me to say yes, yes, yes, because I think we have delivered on the game, but there’s still so much on the broader franchise experience that I wanted to bring to players and fans.”

    Among “Diablo’s” big teases, including the release of the first update for “Diablo II” in 25 years, “Diablo IV” executive producer and vice president Gavian Whishaw was particularly proud of how in the weeds his team is getting with the features in their upcoming “Lord of Hatred” update.

    “The paladin that we’re going to release with the expansion has an expanded skill tree,” Whishaw told Variety. “And this is one of the things that players have been asking us for for a while. It’s an extremely complex system. The joke is that we have a ‘skill twig,’ and they would like a tree, so we’re giving them a tree in the expansion and players have way more choices in the paladin skills. The thing that we’ve also done is we’ve gone back and we’ve done every other class as well. So we’re hoping we can be like — OK, you wanted the tree, here’s the tree for everybody.”

    And if deep updates to its current game are what “Diablo” had to share recently, is news on a new title coming at BlizzCon?

    “It’s kind of complicated when you’re talking about titles that have been around for 20 years and people are still dedicated to and still playing and still going to get excited about new content,” Whishaw said. “I’ll say at a high level, I think over 30 years of ‘Diablo,’ we’ve done five titles. So I would hope that over the next 30 years we do a few more than that, maybe we get some out faster.”

    The “World of Warcraft” team, led by executive producer and vice president Holly Longdale, prioritized the game’s long-awaited housing update in its Showcase, and the priority of making the game as accessible to the staple “WoW” player as to larger casual community.

    “There are many of us on the team that are fans of other games, and ‘The Sims’ being one of them, where we look at it and go, here’s some things the community finds frustrating, and if we can find a way to allow it and support it, then we will continually lower barriers for anybody who wants to do it and do it the way they want to do it,” Longdale said.

    “There’s two sides to this. One of the most fun ones was when, through a bug, players discovered that they could make their house float above the landscape. We had a fix in place, and we were about to patch it, and the team just went, like, why are we fixing this? They’re making awesome stuff, and isn’t that the purpose? And then there’s some things that we’re like, oh, no, you should not be able to. That is one of the beautiful things about user-generated content is that once it’s out there, just like ‘World of Warcraft’ in general, they own it, and then it’s our job to support it and put some guardrails where they’re needed.”

    Longdale says the journey to housing has been “iterative and involved a lot of deeper discussions from the beginning.” “And it got slowly over time less restrictive, less restrictive, less restrictive,” she said. “And then looking at problems like, well, why do we want raiders to care about housing? It’s like, yeah, we want them to care — but they’re not required to care. So making sure that every game loop and audience has some representation, but anyone can do it and participate.”

    Blizzard Entertainment as a whole is now trying to strike that balance between giving its 35-year-old brand the room to grow and introduce new things to draw in new audiences and keep the business thriving, while not pushing away its stalwarts.

    “We believe we have the best IP in entertainment,” Faries said. “We believe we have some of the greatest gaming talent the world’s ever known. We are going to be as good as our ability to collaborate across these functions and putting together the playbook internally to brainstorm as one, have strong strategic conversations and planning cycles as one, and to align against a big vision that we have for the whole company, in addition to our individual universes and games.”

  • Live Nation Seeks to Delay Monopoly Trial, Citing Appeal

    Live Nation is looking to delay its impending monopoly trial against the Department of Justice, according to documents the company filed on Sunday. The ticketing giant is arguing that the trial shouldn’t start until appeals it has filed over Feb. 18’s ruling to proceed with the trial are resolved.

    Live Nation filed a motion for an Interlocutory appeal on Sunday looking to reverse some of the initial rulings from last week’s hearing, which the company argues would “dramatically change and substantially narrow the upcoming jury trial.”

    Specifically, Live Nation is appealing regarding the court’s decision that the Justice Department and state plaintiffs “do not need evidence of actual price discrimination to prove their alleged targeted customer markets in this actual monopolization case.” The company is also seeking to address that the plaintiffs “can proceed with a tying claim without a properly defined market for the tied
    product.”

    “If either or both legal questions were decided the other way, the nature and scope of the
    upcoming trial would fundamentally change: Of the three sets of claims this Court identified as
    proceeding to trial after summary judgment, the first two would be effectively eliminated,” Live Nation said. “The Court should not empanel a jury to try a complex, month-long case when that trial (at least as
    currently envisioned) may well prove wholly unnecessary.”

    Live Nation concluded the court should “stay proceedings in this matter pending resolution of the appeal.”

    Live Nation’s motion comes a bit over a week before the trial is set to begin on March 2. Last week, the court dismissed Live Nation’s motion to dismiss the case outright, though Live Nation did manage to narrow the case as Judge Arun Subramanian decided to dismiss some claims that Live Nation monopolizes promotion and bookings.

    The DOJ first filed its much anticipated suit against Live Nation in 2024, calling to break up the eponymous concert promotion giant and Ticketmaster, the industry’s largest primary ticket provider, which would undo a merger the Justice Department itself had allowed over a decade ago. The DOJ argued that Live Nation uses its vertically-integrated business to crush competitors, further claiming that rival venue management business Oak View Group helped coerce venues into signing deals with Ticketmaster. Live Nation has consistently denied the allegations.

    The case’s status has been a subject of significant conversation in the industry in recent weeks after assistant attorney general Gail Slater stepped down from her post earlier this month following reports that Live Nation had been negotiating settlement talks with other Trump political allies. Slater tweeted a congratulatory message to the DOJ last week after the court’s ruling kept the case alive.

    The motion could also help Live Nation buy more time if it is still looking to reach a settlement. Even if the federal case ends in a settlement, the company would still have to face the case from the individual states. For now, the federal suit is still on the docket to go to trial.

  • Microdramas in MIP London Focus: Why They Don’t Cast Famous People, How Men Are Coming on Board and a Toilet Pitch

    Microdramas in MIP London Focus: Why They Don’t Cast Famous People, How Men Are Coming on Board and a Toilet Pitch

    The global rise of microdramas, shortform vertical storytelling for the mobile generation, was in focus during a crowded panel session at MIP London on Monday. Among the topics of debate was a lack of big stars among casts, the growth outlook and the benefit of being able to watch microdramas in one of the most private spaces.

    Sensor Tower’s annual report on the state of mobile recently highlighted that video streaming app downloads increased globally by nearly 39 percent in 2025, while their revenue increased nearly 18 percent. The gains were driven by short drama app downloads, which grew more than 100 percent over 2024, while traditional streaming app downloads fell by more than four percent.

    Panel moderator Maria Rua Aguete, head of media & entertainment at intelligence and data firm Omdia, also highlighted on Monday that microdramas already account for $11.1 billion in global revenue, including $3.5 billion in advertising revenue.

    Alex Montalvo, co-founder and chief content officer of GammaTime, a Hollywood-backed premium microdrama platform, was asked if vertical content wasn’t mostly bad. “I would beg to differ,” he replied. “This is a brand new medium,” and programming was continuously evolving. The firm’s genres and storytelling have continued to expand, he added.

    After showing a sizzle reel of key short series, he said: “You can see, we’re already offering a wider range of options for consumers: true crime, thrillers, romance stories. We’re also finding early success in partnering with some of the most successful people in, dare I say, traditional Hollywood and bringing them into our ecosystem. As you saw on the screen, four of our projects were created and written by Anthony E. Zuiker, who is the creator of CSI.” Indeed, the platform showcases his thriller The Temptress, sex-crime drama Lust Cop, romantic series The Road Between Us and thriller series Kill Switch.

    Concluded Montalvo: “We are adapting high-end IP, and it’s only just the beginning of the types of partnerships that we’re striking.”

    The former executive of Warner Bros. Discovery and Jeffrey Katzenberg’s shortform mobile content service Quibi, which abruptly shuttered in 2020, was also asked why Quibi failed. “We probably were early,” he offered.

    Anatolii Kasianov, co-founder and chief technology officer of Holywater Tech, the company previously known as Holywater until its recent acquisition of visual effects company Jeynixa, which specializes in facial animation, face replacement, de-aging and lip-sync work, also spoke on the panel. The European startup’s platforms include microdrama service My Drama and ad-supported streaming service Freebits.

    He said the Jeynixa deal was designed to help the firm “disrupt how content is made [and] not only in vertical.”

    Asked about how Holywater has attracted investment from the likes of Fox, Kasianov said: “We built this kind of IP incubation where we [take] hundreds of best performing, best selling books, then we transfer them into verticals and they already have an existing audience.”

    He added: “We also recently signed, exclusively, Dhar Mann. He’s one of the biggest creators, I think second after MrBeast.”

    Why have women been the core audience for microdramas? “I think that’s how the niche originated,” he offered. “It came from adaptations of books and performed very well, so it just started from this genre that was underrepresented, I think it’s already, on our platform, moving towards male as well.”

    Tim Oh, general manager of COL Group International, where he oversees the likes of international operations, IP licensing and global expansion of the company’s microdrama and shortform content businesses, was asked about opportunities in the space for owners of existing intellectual property (IP). He said they should look at extensions of their franchises and “tell them in the microdrama space.” In fact, has team has been in talks with IP owners for “microdrama versions” of their brands that would come in a “quite tactical” way.

    But Oh shared that so far, his firm has not looked to get Hollywood stars to act in its short dramas, sharing about acting talent: “We don’t cast famous actors at this point because [for audiences, watching is about] a fantasy.” And stars may distract from that.

    So, is microdrama a fad or the future, the MIP London panelists were asked. “Is it a hype? Is it a fad? Yes, but at the same time, it is here to stay,” Oh offered. “Candy Crush was the biggest game at one point. People are still playing it, but there are a million other mobile games that have come out.”

    He predicted a similar future for the microdrama space. “It is going to change, and it’s going to change very quickly,” Oh said. “The vertical format or short attention span is not going to change. You’re able to watch a microdrama on the way to work on the tube, walking back. It would be so hard to watch a full-length series of 40 minutes and finish it, but you get paid off and satisfied [with a microdrama].”

    Oh saved one key benefit of shortform mobile content for last, sharing: “I can watch this on the toilet.”

  • ‘Survivor 50’ Players Call Out Biggest Threats Going Into Premiere

    The players of Survivor 50 haven’t set foot on the beach yet, but many already know who they want out. As the landmark season approaches — with its Wednesday premiere date (8 p.m. on CBS/Paramount+) — returning contestants aren’t waiting to size each other up. They’re identifying threats, predicting alliances and comparing reputations. 

    The Hollywood Reporter spoke with all 24 castaways and posed one pointed question: Which player concerns you most because their game doesn’t align with yours? Their answers reveal the rivalries, suspicions and strategic fault lines forming long before the game begins.

    ***

    Christian Hubicki: I have a hypothesis as to how this cast was put together and what everyone’s role are on the season from a Survivor standpoint. I think there are basically four categories of players divided among the 24 people. That’s six people — three men, three women. What are those four roles and what does this mean in terms of who I’m targeting? 

    One role: challenge beasts. You can think of those off the top of your head: You got you Joe, your Ozzy, your Jonathan Young. Those are your three men. You got your Tiff, your Chrissy, and your Stephenie, those are your women. Chrissy got four immunity challenge wins. These are what people are known for, in part, from their seasons. 

    Another category: witty confessionalists who are reliable narrators to tell the story. You wonder, where do I fall in these categories? That’s me, Mike White, that’s Rick. You got Aubry, Kamilla and Emily Flippen for the women. So I’m seeing these trios. This season is cast in trios, three tribes of eight. 

    Another category: drama. You can imagine who is drama. That’s your Coach, that’s your Q, that’s your Angelina and, in my opinion, Jenna Lewis. And our two unknown mystery 49ers. That’s where they sit. I would go so far as to say while I don’t know why the Rizgod walks among us, I believe the reason is he’s cocky drama. I think that’s why he’s here. I don’t know much about Savannah, perhaps someone who will stir the pot and not take nonsense from people. 

    Which leaves the final category: the threats, the people who do not stand out in any of these other categories. They are relatable people who are very good at this game. That makes them the most dangerous and with me. Charlie is a Harvard educated lawyer who runs marathons who’s charming, handsome and delightful. I stand out way too much against that.

    These six — Charlie, Kyle, Colby, Genevieve, Dee, Cirie — are the people who are on this island because they are well-equipped to win.

    Cirie Fields from season 50.

    Robert Voets/CBS ©2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.

    Cirie Fields: Joe and Kyle. My history has shown that alpha men are, for some reason, quick to target me and usually afraid of me. They don’t have to be, but it’s usually a certain type. Aras [Baskauskas] was an alpha man, but a warmer alpha man. When I played with Colby in Heroes vs Villains, he wouldn’t even look in my direction. I’m waving, doing back flips and everything. He would not look at me. 

    Mike White: It’s hard to know off the bat, you have to vibe people out. But I feel that some people might feel like, “What’s this guy doing here?” Or think of me as a wild card. Some people might be trophy hunting, and I’d be a good head to put on the mantle. So maybe a guy like Charlie, who seems like he thinks he’s the smartest guy in the room — I could see him trying to go for me.

    Charlie Davis: The people I’m most concerned about are the old schoolers who are more about honor and integrity — they keep it simple, build an alliance and never turn on players. I think they’ll be out here hunting anyone who gives them the vibe of a strategist or a nerd. People in that bunch might be Colby or Coach. Although I don’t know about Coach. He might be a different brand. 

    Charlie Davis for season 50.

    Robert Voets/CBS ©2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.

    Jonathan Young: I don’t know anything about Taylor Swift, I’m not a Swiftie and while I think Charlie’s a great game player, we don’t have a lot in common. Cirie scares me because she’s so good. She’s like a mom out here. Everybody respects Cirie, but I think everybody fears Cirie.

    Kyle Fraser: Charlie played a similar game to me in a lot of ways. He was a template for me and able to put his ego aside and hide in plain sight when he was clearly a great player. So he scares me because I think he can spot what I’m doing. Dee is scary; she can see BS really easily. The season 49 people concern me for a different reason, I just don’t have game tape on them.

    Tiffany Ervin: Charlie probably concerns me most only because he’s played with me. He’s seen me play and knows how my mind works, he has intel on me. But also he’s one of those people that’s not a big, flashy, neon sign threat who could go undetected for a while. Q also has that same intel but doesn’t approach things in the most rational way, so people may not take his word at face value the way they would Charlie’s. 

    Dee Valladares: Rick Devens is smirking at everybody. It’s too much for my liking. He co-hosted the On Fire podcast with Jeff, he was the first one. But there can only be one co-host. Bye Rick, bye Charlie. Q concerns me a little bit just because he’s so chaotic. It’s going to be interesting to play with him. I feel like he’s going to drive me crazy, but I feel like we’re going to have a lot of fun. He’s kinda goofy and I want to play this game with goofy people. 

    Rick Devens: I hope that Aubry isn’t spreading the gospel of “watch out for Rick.” It’s been long enough that I don’t think people are thinking about me. I wouldn’t be surprised if some people here hadn’t watched my season. I didn’t have anyone in mind coming in but there are people around Ponderosa I’m not getting much of a vibe from, like Q. I’m not sure Q wants to play with me or has any idea who I am. But I don’t care because I kinda want to play with Q, he’s my son’s favorite player so that’s my in. 

    Quintavius “Q” Burdette: If you’ve ever sat at the end, whether you’ve won, lost or whatever, if you’ve ever pleaded your case at the end, I don’t want to work with you long term. I want you out of the game. You’re not going to get a second shot at either winning or a shot at redemption. It’s not going to happen on my watch. 

    Colby Donaldson: I think Kamilla played an incredible game with Kyle. She could be a huge threat in this game. Angelina, without a question, is a big threat. And believe it or not, a guy that concerns me is Q and I can’t quite put my finger on it. I watched him play and there were some things he did during his season that I think make him a question mark. I’m going to enjoy competing with him because he’s clearly good at challenges, but I don’t trust Q at all. In fact, there’s no way in the world I would put myself in a position where I had to rely on him.

    Angelina Keeley: I’ve never met him and I could be wrong but I heard through the grapevine that Colby said, “Angelina, that girl seems like she’s chaotic.” Am I a little chaotic? Yeah, fair. But it’s not a good thing to say to someone else before we come out to Fiji. It’s season 50 — not season five. It’s been awhile for some of these folks. So we’ll see what happens.  

    Aubry Bracco: I’m a little worried about Genevieve. I want to play like Genevieve, I have so much respect for her as a player but she scares me. She can be a little savage in the game. I also think Chrissy can be a little bit savage, like smile and stab you in the back. I’m a little worried about both of them. 

    Jenna Lewis-Dougherty: Cirie is the biggest threat out here. Everybody in the world loves Cirie. I don’t know Cirie, but I know that I like Cirie when I watch Cirie. Take Cirie out, that’s gotta be number one. I would also say that Jonathan is a pretty big threat as is Joe and Kyle, who has won. Dee, another winner, is also a big threat but not as big as Kyle only because he has two people he worked with from his season. 

    Joe Hunter: Genevieve combined with Aubry and Emily. I’m just naming them because of how strategic they are. They’re brilliant players, and Charlie too. They’re all extremely strategic and that is dangerous as they know how to adapt to what’s in front of them. 

    Genevieve Mushaluk from season 50.

    Robert Voets/CBS ©2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.

    Genevieve Mushaluk: I just saw, like we all did, season 48 where Joe in particular ran a strength and integrity alliance. I’m not really known for my physical strength, and integrity is open to interpretation. Would you think of Genevieve and think, “Yeah, strength and integrity?” Probably not. You might think resilience, you might think calculated, you might think independent. Joe didn’t lead an alliance with any of those names in the title. So I’m worried about maybe not meshing with him or not being a part of his plans or how he wants to play the game.

    Emily Flippen: A lot of the big, burly dudes concern me a little bit. We’ve seen it in season 48 with the Joes of the world and the big, strong guy alliance. I look at somebody like Jonathan who’s obviously physically fit and is a physical asset to his tribe. These people tend to be protected early when I’m not and tend to want to keep other big threats around. So if I’m on a tribe with these big, buff guys I’m probably going to have a hard time not just associating with them on a physical level but on a personal level as well. I don’t know if we have a lot in common and that scares me a little bit.

    Ozzy Lusth: One of the people who concerns me the most is Joe. He seems like a really loyal standup guy, and he’s a huge challenge threat. You also have Q and Kyle, who won his season. And you have Jonathan, Tiffany and Stefanie LaGrossa. She was the original, amazing physical threat. I used to have a huge crush on her. It’s just insane to be playing with some of these legends, like Colby Donaldson, the original Survivor heartthrob. There are some big, big physical threats out there.

    Benjamin “Coach” Wade: I don’t get a good vibe from the two season 49 players. I don’t know them but I’m having flashbacks of Russell [Hantz] and how he came into Heroes vs Villains and nobody knew how he played and he lied to us. I have a fear of the two new players because they know all of us, and none of us know how they play. 

    Chrissy Hofbeck: Who concerns me because I think his game is a lot like mine is Christian. Not only is he charming and you want to be around him but darn it, he’s smart. He’s a person who I think will play a similar game to me, so that worries me. I have this feeling that Ozzy just won’t like me that much. Maybe that’s my season 35 fears coming back, he’s a cool kid and I’m not a cool kid. But maybe this season isn’t really full of cool kids anyway. 

    Kamilla Karthigesu: I think Genevieve’s game will clash with mine pretty badly. She’s a known flip flopper, she’s good at lying and she was part of so many blindsides on her season, which is scary. I don’t want another person out there good at lying because I could be lied to. Also, I’m pretty sure I saw her crush a puzzle in 47, and I don’t want puzzle competition. 

    Stephenie LaGrossa Kendrick: Kamilla concerns me a lot. She prides herself on lying and likes to lie. Although I loved Kamilla and Kyle as a viewer, great gameplay. She is one of those people that can be 20 minutes behind in a challenge and if there’s a puzzle in the end, she’s going to blow you away. She is going to be a huge threat.

    Rizo Velovic: There are a lot of people in their 50s, 40s and late 30s. I have to be more cognizant of older players like Stephenie, Cirie, Jenna Lewis. I want to make sure that I don’t come off as this bratty, young, cocky guy and be somebody more endearing who they want to work with because I remind them of their child. While I want to work with old school players, I think my personality fits better in the New Era and I want to make sure I don’t come across as something I’m not to these old school people. 

    Savannah Louie: A lot of these New Era people, especially the ones who are really social, are the ones who concern me the most. You have three people from season 48 here: Kyle, Joe and Kamilla. That’s a scary group. You have people like Dee and Emily and Genevieve who, while they didn’t all play together, probably bonded at Survivor events. Q, Tiffany and Charlie all played together. Who knows what’s going on in their DMs? A lot of the New Era people created these tight bonds, which may become alliances. I think maybe some of the old school players might be open to working with someone who’s a little less certain, being me.

    ***

    Survivor 50 aires new episodes Wednesday at 8 p.m. on CBS, streaming on Paramount+. See how the cast is divided into their tribes here.

  • NBC Sitcom ‘The Fall and Rise of Reggie Dinkins’ Is Tracy Morgan’s Best Star Vehicle Since ’30 Rock’: TV Review

    NBC Sitcom ‘The Fall and Rise of Reggie Dinkins’ Is Tracy Morgan’s Best Star Vehicle Since ’30 Rock’: TV Review

    Per its title, the NBC sitcom “The Fall and Rise of Reggie Dinkins” is a comeback story, but it’s also a reunion. Comedian Tracy Morgan has produced a wide-ranging body of work since his breakout on “Saturday Night Live” at the turn of the millennium — and, more dramatically, since sustaining severe injuries in a New Jersey traffic collision in 2014. But his most iconic role remains, if not himself, then a part directly adjacent to his own persona: Tracy Jordan, the chaotic yet lovable co-lead of Tina Fey’s meta entertainment satire “30 Rock.” For seven seasons, Morgan balanced deep-cut cultural references and cracks about corporate mergers with a needed dose of anarchy, while Fey and her writers formed a knack for channeling Morgan’s ebullient energy into absurd, instantly iconic bits like “Werewolf Bar Mitzvah” or the concept of an EGOT.

    “Reggie Dinkins” is co-created by Robert Carlock and Sam Means, two longtime staples of the broader universe one could call Feyworld. (Fey herself serves as an executive producer, as does Morgan.) Carlock has worked with Fey since their time at “SNL,” where they also overlapped with Morgan; Means did stints on “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” and “Great News” in addition to “30 Rock”; more familiar names, like “Girls5Eva” creator Meredith Scardino, pop up in the credits as the 10-episode first season moves briskly along. Although Fey’s TV adaptation of Alan Alda’s “The Four Seasons” broke from these shows’ otherwise consistent MO with decidedly mixed results, “Reggie Dinkins” is a return to form, both in style and quality. That’s great news for viewers, but also for Morgan, who finally gets a character equal to Tracy Jordan in channeling his particular charisma. And this time, his name — or rather, Reggie’s — is on the door.

    Like many single-camera network comedies, “Reggie Dinkins” is a mockumentary. But unlike many shows that use the framing device as a given in a post-“The Office” world without an in-text explanation of the project in progress, á la “Modern Family” or “Abbott Elementary,” “Reggie Dinkins” makes filmmaking part of the plot. (As well as the TV trend: one character says he’s been practicing his Jim Halpert face for mugging to the camera.) Morgan’s Reggie Dinkins is a former NFL star who ended his career — and lost the New York Jets the Super Bowl — by betting on his own games, an act he likens to working for tips. Thanks to Reggie’s ex-wife and current business manager Monica (Erika Alexander, a seasoned pro playing a seasoned pro), Reggie is just fine financially. But he wants his legacy to be more than his mistakes, so he hires Oscar-winning documentarian Arthur Tobin (Daniel Radcliffe, who seems to have taken a liking to TV comedy after “Miracle Workers”) to make a movie about his quest to join the league’s Hall of Fame.

    Arthur himself has fallen on hard times, taking a day job at the University of Maryland Center for Documentary, MMA and Pornography after a public meltdown on a commercial set and making Reggie’s story something he can relate to. In its premiere, “Reggie Dinkins” lightly pokes fun at the kind of feather-light, celebrity-commissioned films Arthur feels he’s demeaning himself to direct, with Reggie spouting platitudes like “a son is just a homie you make” while refusing to open up about his actual feelings. And to the extent that “Reggie Dinkins” is conceptually flawed, it’s that the show falls into this trap a bit itself. Emphasizing Reggie’s financial security, good relationship with his teenage son Carmelo (Jalyn Hall) and the mutual respect between Monica and Reggie’s young influencer fiancée Brina (Precious Way, hilarious) makes the setup gentle to a fault, sanding down potential edges and giving away opportunities to dig into topical issues like CTE, athletes’ post-retirement security and the new ubiquity of sports gambling. Based on “Reggie Dinkins,” you’d never know that Reggie’s life-altering scandal is now dangerously close to the new norm

    But there are also benefits to this trade-off, chief among them a cast with chemistry in spades and a proudly goofy, punchline-a-minute pace that’s like a balm to those of us who love the Fey-Carlock oeuvre, even deep cuts like the Peacock revival of “Saved by the Bell.” With his dweeby air, pretensions and position at the helm of an active production, Arthur is the Liz Lemon of this setup, but with the emphases reversed. “Reggie Dinkins” takes evident pleasure in tossing Radcliffe curveballs like belting out the Beatles, dressing in full camouflage so Arthur can embed himself and being insulted as an “Elijah Wood lookin’ ass bitch,” all of which the actor — now 15 years into building his post-Potter image as a game, adventurous performer — handles capably. As Arthur’s muse, Morgan naturally gives Reggie a sweetness and naiveté that makes his redemption easy to root for, even with questionable logic like “Fools run errands all the time; that’s why Wawa sells sushi!” He’s good enough to make you wish “Reggie Dinkins” would test its hero’s likability a bit more, if only because Morgan is clearly up to the challenge.

    Despite the long shadows of Tracy, Liz and even Michael Sheen’s stuffy Brit Wesley Snipes, “Reggie Dinkins” is not merely a collection of reheated tropes from its creative teams’ back catalog. (Though to call Brina, who happily plugs a Takis-Tampax collab and threatens to go on a trashy reality show called “Engagement Peninsula” when Reggie drags his feet on wedding planning, the show’s Jenna Maroney is to pay her the highest of compliments.) Alexander’s warmth and evident savvy make her a welcome addition to the repertory company, while Bobby Moynihan plays Reggie’s best friend, roommate and former teammate Rusty with full-body commitment to the gloriously stupid bit. Literally: the oafish Rusty gets himself stuck in a washing machine, a predicament in which the rigorously ethical Arthur refuses to intervene.

    Watching “Reggie Dinkins” cohere into an ensemble, you can feel the show swap out the trenchant questions about celebrity and storytelling raised by its pilot for the comforting consistency of a ragtag gang scrambling to stay afloat, but never at true risk of sinking. Should the show become a long-running concern, such points of emphasis will justify themselves. More seasons would also provide an opportunity to fill in the gaps. Once he’s risen from the ashes, maybe Reggie Dinkins can finally have it all. 

    The first two episodes of “The Fall and Rise of Reggie Dinkins” will air on NBC on Feb. 23 at 8 p.m. ET, with remaining episodes airing weekly on Mondays at 8:30pm ET and streaming the next day on Peacock.

  • Peter Attia Out at CBS News After Epstein Files Correspondence Disclosures (Exclusive)

    Peter Attia Out at CBS News After Epstein Files Correspondence Disclosures (Exclusive)

    Longevity guru Dr. Peter Attia is stepping aside as a contributor to CBS News, after correspondence between Jeffrey Epstein and the researcher and health media personality came to light in the release of the Epstein Files from the Department of Justice.

    CBS News staff were informed of the decision Monday in a note from the network’s booking department, The Hollywood Reporter has learned. Attia told CBS that he would be resigning effective immediately.

    Attia was one of a number of high-profile contributors that CBS News editor-in-chief Bari Weiss brought on as part of her planned overhaul of the network news division, seeking to bring more voices into CBS’ linear and digital coverage.

    Shortly after that announcement, however, the embarrassing exchanges were released by the DOJ, many of which contained crude banter. CBS subsequently pulled a rerun of a 60 Minutes segment that featured Attia.

    That said, Attia had been expected to remain a contributor to the network, with Weiss being a critic of so-called “cancel culture.” Of course, the Epstein emails damaged his reputation even if he personally did not engage in or know about any criminal activity, as Attia wrote in a note he sent to his team and his patients.

    “I apologize and regret putting myself in a position where emails, some of them embarrassing, tasteless, and indefensible, are now public, and that is on me,” Attia added. “I accept that reality and the humiliation that comes with it.”

    Attia’s name appears some 1,700 times in the 3 million Epstein documents released on Jan. 30. The bulk of the emails between Attia and Epstein are from the mid-2010s — after Epstein was convicted (in 2008) on a Florida charge of soliciting prostitution from someone under 18, but before a 2018 Miami Herald exposé on a host of allegations against Epstein and his second arrest in 2019.

    The health and longevity researcher and author is one of many people with connections to Hollywood and the media business who were found to have known Epstein.

  • Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Billionaire Former Running Mate Backing Crowdfunded Pandemic Comedy

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Billionaire Former Running Mate Backing Crowdfunded Pandemic Comedy

    Once the domain of film students and YouTubers, crowdfunding an independent movie has now reached the upper echelons of Silicon Valley and American politics.

    Nicole Shanahan, Robert F. Kennedy Jr’s running mate in the 2024 presidential campaign, is attached as an executive producer on a feature film project that is being billed as a COVID-set satirical comedy. The project, titled The Rash, will center on a character, a public-health professor, inspired by Jay Bhattacharya, the current National Institutes of Health Director under RFK Jr., who was an outspoken critic of the COVID-19 pandemic shutdown and later vaccination efforts.

    Leading the apparent financing efforts is The Brownstone Institute, the Texas-based nonprofit founded by libertarian thinker Jeffrey Tucker, which was itself founded in response to the government’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent policy decisions. For its part, Brownstone notes that it is “well-positioned to be a fiscal sponsor of this effort” because the project “exists squarely within the purview of our mission.”

    The announcement on Brownstone’s website says the story will take place during a health problem “that captures the public mind with contagious fear and loathing.” It continues: “This rash – real, imagined, or created – is viewed as a financial opportunity by dominant institutions on the cultural landscape. Among them is a pharmaceutical company with an off-the-shelf product called Zenvidia that seems to address the rash by making people forget all about it (with major side effects). Hilarity ensues as a Stanford public-health professor speaks out against the mania.”

    Walter Kirn — the novelist behind the book Up in the Air, which later became the George Clooney-starring movie — is writing the screenplay. Kirn, himself a COVID policy skeptic, has already spent hours with Bhattacharya for research. Shanahan, who became a reported billionaire following her divorce from Google’s Sergey Brin, will exec produce with her partner Jacob Strumwasser.

    There is a pitch deck and sizzle reel available via Brownstone’s announcement for interested investors. Wag the Dog, Thank You for Smoking and Dr. Strangelove are all listed as references for the project.

    According to the pitch deck, The Rash has a prospective budget of nearly $6 million.