Tag: Entertainment-HollywoodReporter

  • Clavicular Speaks Out After Being Hospitalized for Overdose: “That Was Brutal”

    Clavicular Speaks Out After Being Hospitalized for Overdose: “That Was Brutal”

    “Looksmaxxing” influencer and streamer Clavicular is speaking out after being hospitalized on Tuesday for a suspected overdose.

    “Just got home, that was brutal. All of the substances are just a cope trying to feel neurotypical while being in public, but obviously that isn’t a real solution. The worst part of tonight was my face descending from the life support mask,” he tweeted alongside a photo of himself.

    The “looksmaxxing” influencer and online streamer, whose real name is Braden Peters, was taken to the hospital on Tuesday. Earlier in the day, the influencer was livestreaming on Kick while he was at a mall and restaurant with two other influencers, when it abruptly cut off, sparking concern among fans. In the livestream, the 20-year-old influencer was seen slurring his words, repeating phrases while talking with a young woman and passing out. Video later shared on X showed the streamer being carried by several people to a black car as an ambulance arrived at the scene.

    Influencer Androgenic, who was with Clavicular at the time of the incident, addressed the situation on X writing, “I hadn’t seen him in this state before and he went from speaking to being fairly unresponsive in mere seconds. Within a minute we all realized the situation, turned the stream off, picked him up and rushed him to the hospital.”

    Clavicular has gained recognition for promoting extreme “looksmaxxing” due to a self-obsession with being aesthetically pleasing. “Looksmaxxing” is known as an online trend, popular among young men, that focuses on maximizing physical attractiveness. The strive to maximize their attractiveness is done in often extreme ways that ranges from healthy grooming to dangerous practices, such as bone-smashing using a hammer to enhance facial features, which Clavicular has advocated.

    When one follower replied to the content creator’s recent message, “Just autistmaxx in public, who gives af what others think,” he responded, “If i wasnt a livestreamer id agree with you.”

    The controversial streamer’s hospitalization follows his recent headlines after he walked out of a 60 Minutes Australia interview after correspondent Adam Hegarty asked him if he identifies as an incel and about his connection to Andrew Tate. Clavicular is also reportedly being investigated by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission for a video appearing to show him shooting an alligator. He was also arrested last month in Florida on misdemeanor battery charges after authorities issued a warrant for his arrest. The New York Times reported that the influencer provoked a fight between two women and exploited them by posting it online.

  • Katy Perry Under Investigation by Australian Police Following Ruby Rose Sexual Assault Allegations

    Katy Perry Under Investigation by Australian Police Following Ruby Rose Sexual Assault Allegations

    Katy Perry is under investigation by Australian police following graphic sexual assault claims from Orange Is the New Black star Ruby Rose.

    The Victoria Police have confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter: “Melbourne Sexual Offenses and Child Abuse Investigation Team (SOCIT) detectives are investigating [an alleged] historical sexual assault that occurred in Melbourne in 2010. Police have been told the incident occurred at a licensed premises in Melbourne’s [Central Business District]. As the investigation remains ongoing, it would be inappropriate to comment further at this stage.”

    Earlier this week, Rose wrote online that she’d “just left the police station” after alleging on Threads that Perry sexually assaulted her at a nightclub in Melbourne some years ago.

    On Sunday, the Australian Batgirl actress wrote in response to a comment about Perry being at Coachella: “I was only in my early 20s. I’m now 40. It has taken almost 2 decades to say this publicly … I told the story publicly but changed it to be a ‘funny little drunk story’ because I didn’t know how else to handle it. Later she agreed to help me get my US visa. So I kept it a secret. But I DID tell yall she wasn’t a good person. Instead I got attacked by.. everyone.”

    After a fan, referencing Perry’s 2008 hit “I Kissed a Girl,” said: “She kissed a girl and you didn’t like it?” Rose responded: “She didn’t kiss me. She saw me ‘resting’ on my best friends lap to avoid her and bent down, pulled her underwear to the side and rubbed her disgusting vagina on my face until my eyes snapped open and I projectile vomited on her.”

    Rose initially said she was “not interested in filing a [police] report over this,” but said in a Tuesday Threads post that she’d “finalized all of my reports” and would no longer be able to “comment, repost, or talk publicly about any of those cases, or the individuals involved.”

    The alleged offence was swiftly refuted by the popstar’s team on Monday. They called the claims “reckless lies.”

    “The allegations being circulated on social media by Ruby Rose about Katy Perry are not only categorically false, they are dangerous, reckless lies. Ms. Rose has a well-documented history of making serious public allegations on social media against various individuals, claims that have repeatedly been denied by those named,” said a rep for Perry.

    The Hollywood Reporter did not immediately hear back from reps for Perry or Rose about the police investigation on Wednesday.

  • Researchers May Have Found the Antidote to Social Media Brain Rot: Experimental Film

    Researchers May Have Found the Antidote to Social Media Brain Rot: Experimental Film

    When Jonathan Schooler and Madeleine Gross were designing an experiment on creativity, they needed a type of media to contrast with the empty-calorie content of cat videos and the like on YouTube

    The scientists settled on challenging animated shorts. “We wanted to push the poles as far apart as possible,” Gross — who like Schooler conducts her research at the University of California, Santa Barbara — said in an interview.

    The results after doing so were eye-opening even to them:  among a totally random population, levels of creativity for the people watching the experimental films were immediately higher compared to those watching YouTube videos, which didn’t move much at all. So was openness to seeing the world in new ways.

    For years many people have had the sense that the kind of low-nutrition, algorithmically driven videos that flash across our feeds and brainscapes dozens of times per day are bad for us. Schooler and Gross have a new column of scientific evidence.  Even more important (and encouraging): they have a prescription for what to do about it. 

    Just watching a few minutes of an ambiguous or challenging video — the kind of shorts shown at film festivals or on the indie-minded Short of the Week — can make the difference. It’s a kind of “even mild exercise can add years to your life” discovery, only for the brain.

    “What we found is that even small doses of it can have real value,” Schooler, a distinguished professor at UCSB and well-known researcher, said in his own interview. The results will be published in the academic journal Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts.

    Traditional experiments on the cognitive value of the arts tend to focus on more intensive, ongoing programs, like arts education for kids. But the new findings suggest that even something quick can make a difference. And they can happen in minds already long developed. These traits of openness and creativity, Gross says, are not fixed based on previous experiences, let alone birth.

    While the results sound like they were sponsored by A24, the experiment was designed with plenty of scientific rigor. Researchers split nearly 500 random participants into two groups: those who watched the animated shorts (which came from the Sugar 23-backed platform Short of the Week) and those who watched the viral-video content (“home-video-style domestic antics”).

    They then asked subjects to devise a five-sentence short story and also sought to measure subjects “openness” and “conceptual expansion” —  the researchers’ terms for a flexible, multimodal sort of thinking — by asking them to note connections between seemingly different concepts. The subjects who watched the challenging films scored much higher on both metrics. This despite (or because) of the fact that the participants actually reported liking the viral videos more.

    “What it said to us is that we enjoy these kinds of [social-media] videos but they aren’t doing much for our brains. And the challenging shorts were having an immediate positive impact,” Gross said.

    The researchers say this may have happened because the ambiguities force our brains to consider alternate and original possibilities instead of simply falling into well-worn mental ruts. Think of it as a salad vs. a cheeseburger: it may not taste as good, but it’s going to do a lot more for your quality of life.

    In one way, literally — the particular trait of openness can even be correlated, Gross says, to a longer life.

    A trend has been developing in recent years toward considering the effects of social-media platforms and their algorithms optimized for engagement, and limiting intake in-kind. As people start considering their media diets as much as as their food-based ones, then, studies like the UCSB report could be key to that effort.

    The movement could gain even more steam in the age of AI content, with its likely wave of slop instantly generated to fit personal wants in a way that more blindly produced social-media content never could.

    Schooler and Gross say that their results should be taken with some caveats. But, they add, this doesn’t mean the benefits aren’t tangible.

    “I wouldn’t want to suggest everyone can turn into John Updike with exposure to seven-minute films,” Schooler said. “But there’s a range of capacity that we each have, and almost all of us are not at the top of that range. We can all get closer by doing something like this.”

  • ‘Legend of Zelda’ Movie’s Team Celebrates as Production Wraps Ahead of 2027 Release

    ‘Legend of Zelda’ Movie’s Team Celebrates as Production Wraps Ahead of 2027 Release

    The Legend of Zelda touched down in Sin City on Monday, with Sony teasing the upcoming video game adaptation during the studio’s CinemaCon presentation.

    First-look images from director Wes Ball’s live-action film had been released in November, and at CinemaCon, president of Sony’s motion picture group Sanford Panitch announced that the movie had recently finished principal photography. Sony did not reveal new images or details about the feature that counts Nintendo legend Shigeru Miyamoto and Avi Arad as producers.

    “We just wrapped production on Nintendo’s The Legend of Zelda — based, perhaps, on the most beloved gaming franchise of all time that sold over 180 million copies in four decades,” Panitch said. “It has been produced by the creator himself, Miyamoto, along with Avi Arad, and it’s directed by Wes Ball, whose most recent Planet of the Apes movie was a box office hit.”

    The exec continued, “The film releases worldwide May 7th, 2027. We and the legion of fans everywhere cannot wait. And video game adaptations continue to be a significant focus for us.”

    This adaptation comes from a team-up between Sony and Nintendo and is set for release on May 7, 2027. Ball, the filmmaker behind Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes and the Maze Runner trilogy, is directing; young actors Bo Bragason (known for her roles in BBC One’s Three Girls and The Jetty) and Benjamin Evan Ainsworth (Pinocchio, The Haunting of Bly Manor) are starring as the magical Princess Zelda and the swordsman Link, respectively.

    Nintendo has been increasingly getting into the theatrical space in recent years, to quite successful results; 2023’s The Super Mario Bros. Movie reached $1.36 billion worldwide, while sequel The Super Mario Galaxy Movie, released earlier this month, is already at over $600,000 worldwide. Zelda is another one of Nintendo’s major franchises, and previous adaptations have been attempted over the years, but nothing solidified until Sony announced development of the film in 2023.

    CinemaCon, the annual gathering of cinema owners and Hollywood studios, is hosted in Las Vegas by Cinema United, formerly known as the National Association of Theatre Owners. This year’s edition runs from April 13-16.

  • How Portugal Has Become a Production Hub, From ‘House of the Dragon’ to Local Hit ‘Turn of the Tide’

    How Portugal Has Become a Production Hub, From ‘House of the Dragon’ to Local Hit ‘Turn of the Tide’

    It’s not just about the money when it comes to building a film and TV production hub, and Portugal knows it. That was one of the key messages of a panel of local representatives who discussed “Portugal on Screen: A High-Growth Market for Streamers & Global Content Players” during a session at the inaugural StreamTV Europe in Lisbon, which drew a crowd.

    Ana Marques, executive director of the Portugal Film Commission, highlighted the appealing mix of locations, financial incentives and a focus on sustainability as key to making the country attractive for foreign productions. Among the popular fare made in Portugal, she mentioned local Netflix hit drama Turn of the Tide, which has seen three seasons, House of the Dragon, which has featured the historic village of Monsanto as a location, Star Wars series The Acolyte, which was shot on the Portuguese island of Madeira, movie Heart of Stone, and Netflix’s Damsel.

    “We want to be aspirational because of our wonderful locations,” Marques said. “We also have our incentives, so we want to be attractive, and we want to be sustainable. Sustainability is really important for us.”

    She highlighted how in 2024, the country launched a new and “competitive” incentives scheme for bigger productions “in response to the demand.”

    Creating in concert with foreign partners is another key part of the puzzle. “We love to co-produce,” Susana Gato, executive president of APIT, the Association of Independent Television Producers, explained.

    A case in point that she pointed to is Cold Haven, a co-production with Iceland. The psychological thriller series, whose Portuguese title is Refúgio do Medo, was produced by SPi in Portugal and Glassriver in Iceland.

    The panel also highlighted that Portugal has more than 60 co-production agreements.

    Technology is also part of Portugal’s focus in ensuring it is an appealing and successful production hub in the age of digital media and AI. Gil Azevedo, executive director of the Unicorn Factory Lisboa, an initiative launched by Lisbon’s mayor to turn the city into a leading innovation hub. “It’s been about gaining scale, and Technology is also part of Portugal’s focus in ensuring it is an appealing and successful production hub in the age of digital media and AI. Gil Azevedo, executive director of the Unicorn Factory Lisboa, an initiative launched by Lisbon’s mayor to turn the city into a leading innovation hub. “It’s been about gaining scale, and [we see] AI as a lever to move faster,” he said. “It’s about democratizing access, and we have great technology companies in Portugal.”

    Marques said at times, as in many countries, Portugal could be even more agile, but her team continues to work with the government and other key partners and stakeholders to continue fine-tuning the country’s appeal for productions. “Despite the film commission only working since 2019, being really recent, we have noticed big interest in Portugal and about the Portuguese conditions to film here,” she shared. “We are now launching a new program for the next four years, so until 2029, with 350 million euros ($412 million) with two different incentives.” And she and her team are ready for more film and TV productions to make the journey to Portugal.

  • Clavicular Hospitalized After Suspected Overdose While on Livestream

    Clavicular Hospitalized After Suspected Overdose While on Livestream

    ‘Looksmaxxing’ influencer and streamer Clavicular has been hospitalized after suffering a suspected overdose Tuesday evening, a source confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter.

    The “looksmaxxing” influencer and online streamer, whose real name is Braden Peters, was taken to the hospital, where he’s currently in “stable condition,” THR has learned. He was still in the hospital as of Tuesday night.

    Earlier in the day, Clavicular was livestreaming on Kick when it abruptly cut off, sparking concern among fans. Video was later shared on X of the streamer being carried by several people to a black car as an ambulance arrived at the scene.

    THR has also reached out to the Miami Police Department and Miami-Dade Fire Rescue Department for more information.

    Clavicular gained recognition for his self-obsession with being aesthetically pleasing and for promoting extreme “looksmaxxing” — an online trend, popular among young men, focused on maximizing physical attractiveness. The trend ranges from healthy grooming to dangerous practices, such as bone-smashing using a hammer to enhance facial features, which Clavicular has advocated.

    Earlier this week, the controversial streamer made headlines when he walked out of a 60 Minutes Australia interview after correspondent Adam Hegarty asked him if he identifies as an incel and about his connection to Andrew Tate. Clavicular clearly got defensive with the line of questioning, and in response, tried to suggest the interviewer was a cuckold.

    Clavicular has also found himself in some legal trouble, as he’s reportedly being investigated by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission for a video appearing to show him shooting an alligator. He was also arrested last month in Florida on misdemeanor battery charges after authorities issued a warrant for his arrest. They said the influencer provoked the fight between two women and exploited them by posting it online, The New York Times reported.

  • Kanye West Postpones France Concert Amid Possible Ban From Country

    Kanye West Postpones France Concert Amid Possible Ban From Country

    Kanye West has gone ahead and postponed his show in France as leadership continued to weigh banning the rapper from entering the country.

    “After much thought and consideration, it is my sole decision to postpone my show in Marseille, France until further notice,” West, who now goes by Ye, wrote on X Tuesday night. He was initially scheduled to perform on June 11 in Marseille at Stade Vélodrome as part of his 2026 comeback tour.

    The Hollywood Reporter reported earlier Tuesday that France was looking to potentially ban the “Flashing Lights” artist from performing in the country. Marseille Mayor Benoît Payan and French Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez argued that West has no place in the French country following his past antisemitic remarks and for releasing a song last year called “Heil Hitler.”

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    This came after the artist was barred from entering the United Kingdom shortly after being announced as the headliner for all three nights of Wireless Festival in July. Following his booking, several major sponsors pulled out of the music festival, and the event was later canceled.

    The “Heartless” artist has been widely condemned for his antisemitic rhetoric in recent years. In addition to his “Heil Hitler” song, he also used a Super Bowl ad in 2025 to direct viewers to his Yeezy website that had swastika-emblazoned t-shirts.

    West has since apologized for his antisemitic statements in an ad in the Wall Street Journal earlier this year, but hasn’t addressed the controversy any further.

    The rapper also hasn’t shared any details regarding whether the France show will be postponed to a later date.

  • ‘Weapons’ Filmmaker Zach Cregger Going Sci-Fi With ‘The Flood’ for New Line

    ‘Weapons’ Filmmaker Zach Cregger Going Sci-Fi With ‘The Flood’ for New Line

    Zach Cregger is reuniting with Warner Bros. Motion Picture Group’s New Line division for his next original feature.

    Cregger, who directed last year’s acclaimed Oscar-winning horror hit Weapons for the company, has written, and will direct, The Flood, an original sci-fi thriller on which the studio is moving at full speed, scheduling an Aug. 11, 2028 release date.

    The project reunites him with his Weapons producers Roy Lee and Miri Yoon of Vertigo Entertainment and interestingly has him working with avowed Cregger fan Steven Spielberg. The latter’s Amblin Entertainment is also producing Flood.

    The announcement, by Warners’ Mike De Luca and Pam Abdy, came in the last few minutes of the studio’s presentation at CinemaCon in Las Vegas.

    And while reveal and subsequent PR release was light on detail, including keeping the plot on a distant space station, it is known that the project was originally set up at Netflix. And the filmmaker’s previous projects have been modern-set horror thriller freakouts, this one is described as being very much in the science fiction mold.

    “Zach is the rarest of filmmakers, fluent in every genre he touches, and we’re excited to continue our partnership” said New Line president Richard Brener in a statement.

    Cregger stated, “I’m incredibly excited to continue my partnership with Mike, Pam, Richard, and the teams at Warner Bros. and New Line. They are true champions of bold creativity, united by a shared ambition to deliver unforgettable theatrical experiences for audiences. That’s the dream for any filmmaker.”

    Weapons, which New Line/Warners won in a fierce bidding war, blew up last August’s box office, becoming an unexpected hit and sensation. It earned almost $270 million worldwide on a $38 million budget and introduced the character Aunt Gladys into the pop culture ecosphere.

    Amy Madigan was recognized with an Academy Award for her role. A prequel is now in the works. Cregger won’t direct, but is co-writing with Zach Shields. A Sept. 8, 2028 release date has been set, making it a very Cregger-heavy 2028 for New Line.

    Amongst Weapons‘ fans was Spielberg, who has been quietly working with Cregger for a while. In an interview with film magazine Empire, the filmmaking legend said Weapons was so good as a horror movie that it quelled his desire to make a movie in the genre.

    “When I see a great horror film like Weapons, I don’t have an itch I need to scratch,” he said. “I see Weapons, and it doesn’t make me want to make a horror film that’s as scary or scarier than Weapons. It satisfies me so completely, it actually arrests my desire to someday make a really, really scary movie.”

    Flood keeps Cregger in the New Line fold. Beyond Weapons, he was a producer on the division’s sci-fi thriller Companion, released in early 2025. His next feature, Resident Evil, based on the hit video game franchise, is coming from Sony in September and is already building buzz thanks to intense trailer previewed Monday at CinemaCon.

  • Timothée Chalamet and Zendaya Face Off as ‘Dune: Part Three’ Debuts Explosive First 7 Minutes

    Timothée Chalamet and Zendaya Face Off as ‘Dune: Part Three’ Debuts Explosive First 7 Minutes

    Dune: Part Three opens with no shortage of firepower, as the CinemaCon crowd learned Tuesday.

    Timothée Chalamet, Zendaya, Jason Momoa and director Denis Villeneuve took the stage at the Las Vegas event to discuss the sequel. They then unveiled the first seven minutes from the highly anticipated film during Warner Bros.‘ presentation.

    The footage featured Javier Bardem as Stilgar as he led his troops against a seemingly insurmountable enemy. The intense battle scenes featured an endless array of shots fired and plenty of actual fire.

    After those seven minutes, additional footage included Chalamet’s Paul Atreides confronting Zendaya’s Chani in a tense moment.

    “You’ve conquered the galaxy,” Momoa tells Chalamet in the new footage. “You’ve destroyed thousands of worlds.” This leads Chalamet to ask, “What are your thoughts on that?” to which Momoa replies, “I think you’re way beyond redemption.”

    Later, Zendaya asks Chalamet, “How does it feel to be human like everyone else, Paul Atreides?”

    In introducing the scenes, Villeneuve called the film a thriller and teased, “It’s more intense and definitely more emotional.”

    Chalamet said of Paul, “He’s become his worst vision,” and the star teased his character “becoming an all-powerful emperor of the dark universe.”

    Zendaya explained, “The years don’t seem to have been kind to anyone on Dune. It’s been an ungentle and unkind few years. There’s so much left to fight for.” She continued about Chani, “That youthful outlook is completely gone.”

    Momoa acknowledged that his role in the film is much different from the last time viewers saw him, given that Duncan Idaho died in the first one, and Momoa is back as a clone: “I’m sent as a gift to Paul to see how he handles someone that he hasn’t seen and see how he takes that.”

    Chalamet added, “It was deeply moving to be on a sci-fi trilogy on the scale of Lord of the Rings.”

    For Zendaya, the footage represents the actress appearing in two days in a row of major releases teased at CinemaCon, with the Euphoria star also having shown up in Sony’s Spider-Man: Brand New Day footage.

    The news comes a month after the first trailer dropped for the film, and limited seats for Imax 70mm screenings for the film quickly sold out.

    Dune: Part Three stars Chalamet, Zendaya, Robert Pattinson, Javier Bardem, Florence Pugh, Taylor-Joy, Rebecca Ferguson and Momoa. The film takes place 17 years after Part Two and follows Emperor Paul Atreides as he struggles with the consequences of his holy war, trapped in a cycle of violence while facing conspiracies from the Bene Gesserit, Tleilaxu, and his wife, Irulan.

    Warner Bros. and Legendary release Dune: Part Three on Dec. 18, which has been the source of plenty of eyebrow raising as Marvel’s Avengers: Doomsday is coming on the same date (an event that’s been dubbed “Dunesday”). Exhibitors are hoping to get an exclusive look at Dune‘s box office rival when Disney has its presentation on Thursday.

  • Delayed Nielsen Gauge Confirms the Olympics Were Great for NBCUniversal (and Versant)

    Delayed Nielsen Gauge Confirms the Olympics Were Great for NBCUniversal (and Versant)

    Thanks to the Super Bowl and Winter Olympics, NBCUniversal — with an assist from the recently spun off Versant — dethroned YouTube for the largest share of TV viewing in February.

    Nielsen released both its monthly Gauge summary of viewing by platform and its Media Distributor Gauge for the reach of TV use by company on Tuesday. The stats were held back for several weeks due to some Nielsen clients pushing back on a change in how the ratings provider assembled its Gauge data.

    Briefly: Nielsen was planning to supplement its data with that from a group called the Advertising Research Foundation that would likely have shown a dip in streaming’s share of total TV use. A number of clients balked at that idea, and in late March, Nielsen decided both to hold back on releasing the monthly numbers and not make any changes to its current Gauge methodology until the 2026-27 TV season, when it will more closely align with the company’s currency ratings products that are used to set ad rates across the industry.

    “The Gauge and Media Distributor Gauge (MDG) do not reflect Nielsen’s currency TV ratings,” a note with the February release reads. “Nielsen is working on updates to The Gauge and MDG reports to better reflect and include currency enhancements for the Fall TV season, at which time Nielsen will provide additional back data to clients to assist in the transition.”

    To those numbers for February: NBCUniversal and Versant combined for 13.1 percent of all TV use in the February reporting period (which covered Jan. 26-Feb. 22), with the Super Bowl and Olympics accounting for a huge portion of the spike from 8.5 percent in January (Nielsen reports the two companies together because NBCU sells ads for both.) NBCU had 10 percent on its own, while Versant accounted for 3.1 percent.

    The combined total ended a year-long streak for YouTube at the top of the media distributor charts, despite YouTube’s share of all viewing rising a little in February (12.7 percent, up from 12.5 percent in January).

    Streaming platforms had 48 percent of all viewing in February, with a big gain for NBCU’s Peacock accounting for much of the growth. Peacock had its highest monthly share in the five-year history of the Gauge, scoring 3 percent of all TV viewing thanks to the Super Bowl and Olympics. Aside from small upticks for YouTube, Disney (5 percent) and Tubi (2.2 percent), most streamers lost a bit of share compared to January.

    Broadcast viewing edged up to 21.7 percent (from 21.5 percent) in February, again likely attributable to the Super Bowl and Olympics. Outside of those, CBS’ Grammy Awards telecast was the most watched program of the month. With the NFL and college football seasons over, cable took a step back to just 20 percent of all viewing, despite an overall increase in cable news viewing and big, winter games-fueled growth for USA Network.

    The Gauge and Media Distributor Gauge numbers for February are below.