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  • Block Stock Pops as Jack Dorsey’s Bitcoin, Payments Company Dumps 4,000 Jobs

    Block Stock Pops as Jack Dorsey’s Bitcoin, Payments Company Dumps 4,000 Jobs

    In brief

    • Block expects most restructuring charges to land in the first quarter, driven by severance and share-based compensation costs.
    • The company employed just over 10,200 workers at the end of 2025, highlighting the scale of the workforce reduction.
    • Block’s business spans consumer and merchant payments through Cash App and Square, alongside a growing Bitcoin operation tied to trading and payments.

    Jack Dorsey’s Block Inc said it will cut more than 4,000 jobs, over 40% of its workforce, as part of a broad restructuring unveiled alongside its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 earnings.

    Shares of the New York Stock Exchange-listed payments company jumped more than 23% in after-hours trading, Yahoo Finance data shows.

    The scale of the layoffs places Block among the companies carrying out the largest workforce reductions in the fintech sector so far this year, as payments and financial technology firms grapple with slower growth, tighter capital conditions, and increased scrutiny of operating costs.

    In a 8-K filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday, Block said the workforce reduction is intended to better align its organizational structure with its “operating model and strategic priorities.”

    Block said it expects to record between $450 million and $500 million in restructuring charges, largely related to severance, notice-period pay, employee benefits, and other cash costs, as well as non-cash expenses tied to the vesting of share-based awards. 

    Most of the charges are expected to be recognized in the first quarter of fiscal 2026, with the restructuring largely completed by the end of the second quarter.

    The company cautioned that the estimates are based on assumptions and that actual costs could differ materially.

    As of the end of 2025, Block employed just over 10,200 full-time workers globally, according to its 10-K annual filing with the regulator, underscoring the scale of the cuts.

    Cash App had 59 million monthly transacting users in the U.S. at year-end, bringing in $316 billion of customer inflows during 2025.

    Block’s core business spans consumer and merchant payments through Cash App and Square, alongside a long-running push into Bitcoin products, including trading, self-custody, and merchant payments.

    Block now reports its business across three revenue categories: commerce enablement, financial services, and its Bitcoin ecosystem, which together generated $10.4 billion in gross profit in 2025, per its annual filing.

    Block said it would hold an earnings conference call and webcast later Thursday to discuss its results for the quarter and year ended December 31, 2025.

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  • ‘Love Story’ Star Sarah Pidgeon on Recreating JFK Jr. and Carolyn Bessette’s Infamous Battery Park Fight

    [This story contains spoilers from Love Story, episode five, “Battery Park.”]

    While Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. & Carolyn Bessette is, at its core, a romance, it doesn’t shy away from the couple’s most painful moments.

    Thursday night’s episode, “Battery Park,” revisits one of their most infamous: the heated 1996 argument after they left their Tribeca apartment at 20 N. Moore St. and walked to Battery Park. Though the time period was before smartphones and viral TikTok videos, paparazzi captured the fight on camera, and the footage was featured on tabloid front pages.

    In Love Story, the episode imagines what may have led to that very public unraveling. Over the Fourth of July weekend in 1995, John (Paul Anthony Kelly) proposes to Carolyn (Sarah Pidgeon) during a fishing trip on Martha’s Vineyard. She doesn’t immediately accept. Unsure whether she’s prepared to become Mrs. JFK Jr., Carolyn asks for time.

    Her hesitation, exacerbated by relentless tabloid scrutiny and the pressures of sudden public attention, and her belief that John lets people walk all over him, begin to strain their relationship. When John issues a statement denying that he proposed, it worsens. The episode suggests that mistrust ultimately erupts into the now-famous Battery Park fight, where the pair are shown screaming at one another and John appearing to yank off Carolyn’s engagement ring before she lunges toward him — all of it caught on video.

    Still, Pidgeon acknowledges that viewers should take the recreated dialogue with a grain of salt.

    “You know, who knows what they really said in these moments,” Pidgeon tells The Hollywood Reporter. “That certainly was a private moment that, unfortunately, was captured on film.”

    Regardless of the scene’s exact accuracy, Pidgeon describes filming it as a rewarding challenge.

    “It was quite exciting as an actor, especially approaching Carolyn, where there is so much mystery in how she sounds and how she walks when she knows she’s not being filmed in the photos taken by a friend versus a paparazzo,” she says. “Having a few moments where we actually had video footage — whether it be Battery Park or their first public photo as a couple when they come out of North Moore [Street] — it was really exciting to come at the scene through her physicality.”

    After moving from the park to a bench and eventually to a nearby street curb, the episode shows the couple talking through the fractures in their relationship. An emotional John pleads, “Why can’t we just love each other? Why does it have to be so hard?”

    They ultimately confront what each needs to make the relationship work. Carolyn struggles to adjust to life in the public eye, while John insists he doesn’t want to change her.

    “I don’t want to bring you into my world. I want you to pull me out of it. I want you to be my family,” he tells her.

    When Carolyn receives reassurance that John has no desire to follow in his father’s footsteps and pursue the presidency, she experiences a breakthrough. Though she never imagined herself as someone’s wife, she realizes she wants that future — because it’s with him. The episode ends with Carolyn accepting his proposal and crying in his arms, mirroring another iconic image of the couple.

    Speaking with THR ahead of the series premiere, Pidgeon reflected on filming both the emotional lows — like the Battery Park argument — and the joyful highs, including the wedding depicted in next week’s episode.

    “I think high, energetic, joyful scenes can be just as difficult as the emotionally taxing crying — the lowest points,” she says. “The extremes of emotion can be hard. It’s quite vulnerable to be completely joyous. Because when you’re joyous, you’re not watching yourself when you really smile. It’s different from when you’re putting on a smile.”

    Executive producer Brad Simpson also noted an unexpected parallel between the actors’ experience and the real-life scrutiny Carolyn and John faced. Even during filming, paparazzi surrounded the production.

    “It was really hard on our actors, because they were in a situation where we were being stalked by paparazzi, just like Carolyn was. We had 17 paparazzi out in front of us,” he says. “When you see a scene of their first date in the first episode, you should know that seven feet away, there are photographers outside our barrier, snapping pictures like crazy. It was a lot for her to go through, and, weirdly, it mirrored Carolyn Bessette’s journey — from being unknown to suddenly being criticized for her every move.”

    ***

    The first five episodes of Love Story are now streaming on Hulu and Disney+, with new episodes of the nine-episode series to premiere on Thursdays at 6 p.m. PT/9 p.m. ET on FX/Hulu. Read THR‘s interviews with the stars and creatives hereSarah Pidgeon‘s Next Big Thing feature, Paul Anthony Kelly’s episode three postmortem and more coverage here.

  • 2026 PGA Awards: ‘The Making of Adolescence’ Wins Shortform Prize While ‘Wizard of Oz at Sphere’ Wins Innovation Award

    2026 PGA Awards: ‘The Making of Adolescence’ Wins Shortform Prize While ‘Wizard of Oz at Sphere’ Wins Innovation Award

    Formula 1: Drive to Survive, Sesame Street, Adolescence: The Making of Adolescence and The Wizard of Oz at Sphere have won the first four honors of 2026 Producers Guild of America Awards.

    Formula 1: Drive to Survive was recognized best sports program; Sesame Street for best children’s program; The Making of Adolescence for best shortform program; and The Wizard of Oz at Sphere (Sphere Entertainment Co.) received the PGA Innovation Award. The awards were handed out Thursday night at The Aster in Hollywood.

    Due to inclement weather in New York City, the categories were all announced Thursday night instead the two planned separate ceremonies (the first was initially scheduled for Monday, to announce the children’s and sports categories; and Thursday’s event to announce the shortform and PGA Innovation Award).

    Also on Thursday night, Lydia Dean Pilcher was recognized with the Vance Van Petten Entrepreneurial Spirit Producing Award. Jessica Li was additionally announced as the recipient of the Debra Hill Fellowship supporting emerging producers.

    The full slate of 2026 PGA Awards winners will be announced on Saturday at the Fairmont Century Plaza in Los Angeles. The nominees for the, Darryl F. Zanuck award for outstanding producer of theatrical motion pictures, which has historically mostly corresponded with the Oscars’ best picture winner, include Bugonia, F1, Frankenstein, Hamnet, Marty Supreme, One Battle After Another, Sentimental Value, Sinners, Train Dreams and Weapons. (Last year, Anora won the award before dominating the 2025 Academy Awards.)

    See below for the winners in the four PGA Awards categories announced on Thursday night.

    The Award for Outstanding Sports Program

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

    The Award for Outstanding Children’s Program

    LEGO Star Wars: Rebuild the Galaxy – Pieces of the Past
    Phineas and Ferb
    Sesame Street
    (WINNER)
    Snoopy Presents: A Summer Musical
    SpongeBob SquarePants

    The Award for Outstanding Shortform Program

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

    The PGA Innovation Award Finalists

    ASTEROID (Doug Liman’s 30 Ninjas / Google’s 100 Zeros) 
    Big Wave: No Room for Error (Cosm) 
    D-Day: The Camera Soldier (TARGO / TIME Studios) 
    territory (Double Eye Studios / Kinetic Light) 
    The Wizard of Oz at Sphere (Sphere Entertainment Co.) (WINNER)

  • US tax agency broke privacy law ‘approximately 42,695 times’, judge says

    US tax agency broke privacy law ‘approximately 42,695 times’, judge says

    A federal judge in the United States has ruled that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) broke the law by disclosing confidential taxpayer information “approximately 42,695 times” to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

    In a decision issued on Thursday, US District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly found that the IRS had erroneously shared the taxpayer information of thousands of people, in apparent violation of the Internal Revenue Code.

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    The ruling cited IRS Code 6103, one of the strictest confidentiality laws in federal statute, which largely prohibits the disclosure of tax return information without consent.

    Kollar-Kotelly said that the IRS violated that law “approximately 42,695 times by disclosing last known taxpayer addresses to ICE”.

    “The IRS not only failed to ensure that ICE’s request for confidential taxpayer address information met the statutory requirements, but this failure led the IRS to disclose confidential taxpayer addresses to ICE in situations where ICE’s request for that information was patently deficient,” she wrote.

    Her finding is based on a declaration filed earlier this month by Dottie Romo, the chief risk and control officer for the IRS, which revealed that the IRS had provided the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) with information on 47,000 of the 1.28 million people that ICE had requested.

    In most of those cases, Romo said, the tax agency gave ICE additional address information in violation of privacy rules created to protect taxpayer data.

    The government is appealing the case, but the Thursday ruling is significant because Romo’s declaration supports the decision on appeal.

    Kollar-Kotelly, meanwhile, called the Romo declaration “a significant development in this case”.

    What agreement does the IRS have with ICE?

    The case is the result of a growing effort under the administration of President Donald Trump to consolidate government data, alarming rights advocates who fear an erosion of taxpayer privacy.

    Part of that data has been used to carry out Trump’s campaign of mass deportation, a key pillar of his second-term agenda.

    On April 7, the IRS entered into a memorandum of understanding with the Department of Homeland Security to help with “non-tax criminal enforcement”.

    That agreement, however, was widely understood to be the groundwork for the identification and deportation of immigrants in the US through taxpayer data.

    The Center for Taxpayer Right sued the government over the disclosure, citing protections instituted after the 1972 Watergate scandal revealed how former President Richard Nixon misused tax data during his term.

    “This nation already once experienced a President who sought to collect tax information on his political allies and enemies in the White House for use for favor and punishment,” the centre wrote in an initial complaint.

    “Following the Watergate era, Congress clearly and unequivocally acted to protect the American people from these intrusions.”

    It argued that taxpayer data is uniquely sensitive and “in grave jeopardy” of being shared broadly across the government.

    Nina Olson, founder of the Center for Taxpayer Rights, said after Thursday’s ruling, “This confirms what we’ve been saying all along: that the IRS has an unlawful policy that violates the Internal Revenue Code’s protections by releasing these addresses in a way that violates the law’s requirements.”

    Representatives from the IRS and the Department of the Treasury did not respond to The Associated Press’s requests for comment.

    Currently, the data-sharing agreement allows ICE to submit names and addresses of immigrants inside the US illegally to the IRS for cross-verification against tax records.

    The deal, signed by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, led the then-acting commissioner of the IRS to resign.

    There are several ongoing cases that challenge the agreement between the IRS and immigration authorities.

    Earlier this week, a three-judge panel for the US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit declined to issue a preliminary injunction for the immigrants’ rights group Centro de Trabajadores Unidos and other nonprofits as they sue the federal government to stop implementation of the agreement.

    In declining the preliminary injunction request, Judge Harry T Edwards wrote that the nonprofit groups “are unlikely to succeed on the merits of their claim”, since the information the agencies are sharing isn’t covered by the IRS privacy statute.

    Still, two separate court orders have blocked the agencies from massive transfers of taxpayer information and blocked ICE from acting upon any IRS data in its possession. Those preliminary injunctions are still in place.

  • 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.