Tag: Entertainment-Variety

  • Influential Casting Director Bonnie Timmermann Set for Career Honor From Italy’s Biografilm Festival (EXCLUSIVE)

    Influential Casting Director Bonnie Timmermann Set for Career Honor From Italy’s Biografilm Festival (EXCLUSIVE)

    Pioneering U.S. casting director Bonnie Timmermann — known for changing the face of Hollywood film and television by imposing diversity and discovering a multitude of talents — will be honored by Italy’s Biografilm Festival, the unique event billed as a cinematic celebration of human lives.

    In the mid 1980s, Timmermann broke new ground with the diverse range of actors she cast in the Michael Mann-directed TV series “Miami Vice” and later worked with Mann on “Manhunter,” “Heat” and “The Insider.” Her long long list of casting credits also includes “Trading Places,” “The Karate Kid,” “Dirty Dancing,” “Bull Durham,” “Armageddon,” “Black Hawk Down” and, more recently, the Derek Cianfrance-directed “Roofman.”

    In a joint statement, Biografilm Festival artistic directors Chiara Liberti and Massimo Benvegnù called Timmermann “a visionary talent scout,” noting that she discovered stars such as Natalie Portman, Kate Winslet, Scarlett Johansson, Bruce Willis, Steve Buscemi, Viggo Mortensen, Benicio Del Toro and Mark Ruffalo.

    “For over 40 years, Bonnie Timmermann has been the one taking a leap of faith. She saw the icons of today when they were still unknowns in a rehearsal room, long before the world knew their names,” they said.

    “By awarding Bonnie the Celebration of Lives Award, we are not just honoring an extraordinary career; we are celebrating the intuition, the courage and the profound human connection that lies in the casting process, which often turns a script into an unforgettable film,” the Biografilm fest chiefs added.

    They also noted that the Biografilm award for Timmermann arrives “at a historic turning point for the industry,” as the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences officially introduces the new competitive category for best achievement in casting, the culmination of a campaign for recognition that has taken decades. 

    To mark the occasion, the fest will host a screening of the 2022 documentary “Bonnie,” directed by Simon Wallon, in which Timmermann reflects on her profession amid footage of global superstars during their very first auditions.

    Previous recipients of the Celebration of Lives Award award include Werner Herzog, Francis Ford Coppola, Radu Jude and Olivier Assayas.

    The 22nd edition of the Biografilm Festival will run in Bologna June 5-15.

  • Rickey Smiley Inks Deal With Urban One for New Video Podcast, 5-Year Extension of His Morning Radio Show

    Rickey Smiley Inks Deal With Urban One for New Video Podcast, 5-Year Extension of His Morning Radio Show

    Radio personality, comedian and author Rickey Smiley is expanding his partnership with media company Urban One.

    The centerpieces of the pact are a five-year extension of the nationally syndicated “The Rickey Smiley Morning Show,” distributed to over 89 affiliate stations across the U.S., and “Rickey Smiley on the Spot,” an original video podcast series launching March 24 on the company’s Urban One Podcast Network.

    The expanded deal is part of Urban One’s “video-first” pivot. “Rickey Smiley on the Spot,” building on his successful morning show, blends his signature wit with meaningful explorations of life, faith, and family. The video podcast will allow both Smiley and his guests “to let their guard down for “all real talk,” per Urban One. The initial guest lineup includes Da Brat, Keisha Lance Bottoms, Tye Tribbett and Tiny Harris.

    Each episode of “Rickey Smiley on the Spot” will run about 35 minutes. The show is launching through the Urban One Podcast Network and will be available on all major audio platforms, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify and Pandora.

    “I am so excited to continue my partnership with Urban One and Reach Media,” Smiley said in a statement. “I’m eternally grateful to Ms. Hughes, Alfred Liggins, Deon Levingston and Colby Colb for believing in me all these years. I could not do any of this without the most amazing team of talented people I am blessed to work with every day who keep it real, keep it fresh and keep our fans informed and laughing every day. The future is bright with the best yet to come.”

    Deon Levingston, co-president of Urban One’s Audio Division, said: “Rickey is a cornerstone of the Urban One brand, and we are thrilled to expand his footprint with a show that captures his natural comedic rhythm in such an intimate way. By expanding on Rickey’s popularity with our listeners and creating a new programming opportunity, we are providing a platform that not only uplifts Black voices but also creates a premium, culturally resonant environment for our listeners and brand partners alike.”

    “Rickey Smiley on the Spot” is executive produced by Smiley and Tiffany Ryland, with Tonya Clackum and Taylor Green serving as producers. The podcast is distributed through the Urban One Podcast Network, led by senior director of podcast operations Dre Smith.

    The new deal between Smiley and Urban One was brokered by Paul Anderson of Workhouse Media. Smiley is repped by Levity and UTA.

    Urban One is diversified media company primarily targeting Black Americans and urban audiences in the U.S., claiming to reach 80 million unique consumers monthly. Its assets include TV One and CLEO TV, collectively available in 40 million households, Radio One, with 74 broadcast stations in 13 top African American markets; and Reach Media, with 312 affiliates over 94 markets and home to nationally syndicated shows including “The Rickey Smiley Morning Show,” “The D.L. Hughley Show,” “Get Up! Mornings With Erica Campbell” and “The Morning Hustle.”

  • Naseeruddin Shah, Nana Patekar, Sanjay Kapoor Lead Indian Streamer Amazon MX Player’s Most Expansive Slate Yet, Topping 150 Shows for 2026

    Naseeruddin Shah, Nana Patekar, Sanjay Kapoor Lead Indian Streamer Amazon MX Player’s Most Expansive Slate Yet, Topping 150 Shows for 2026

    Amazon MX Player, India’s free streaming service with over 250 million monthly viewers, has unveiled its most ambitious content lineup to date, announcing more than 150 new and returning titles for 2026 spanning drama, action, reality and its homegrown microdrama format.

    Leading the scripted charge is “Made In India: The Titan Story,” an ambition-and-legacy drama featuring Naseeruddin Shah and Jim Sarbh. The marquee titles also include “Sankalp,” a socio-political thriller examining power and leadership that stars Nana Patekar, Sanjay Kapoor, Neeraj Kabi and Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub.

    Kapoor also appears in “Ab Hoga Hisaab,” a justice-and-retribution thriller alongside Shaheer Sheikh and Mouni Roy. Further rounding out the dramatic lineup are the administrative drama “The Bureaucrat” starring Amol Parashar; action entertainer “Kaptaan” with Saqib Saleem; survival thriller “Vimal Khanna” featuring Sunny Hindhuja; cop drama “Waiting Hai” with Divyenndu Sharma and Bhuvan Arora; and crime drama “Clean Up Crew,” which stars Ravi Kishan, Amey Wagh and Vishal Jethwa.

    The new slate follows on the heels of recent originals including the legal courtroom drama “Amar Vishwas,” starring Rajeev Khandelwal, Aamir Ali, Ravi Behl and Barkha Bisht, and “Psycho Saiyaan,” a romantic thriller with Tejasswi Prakash and Ravi Kishan that generated strong viewership.

    On the returning seasons front, the platform is bringing back crime saga “Raktanchal” for a third season alongside youth-skewing titles “Campus Beats” Season 6, “Campus Diaries” Season 2, “Heartbeats” Season 2 and “Who’s Your Gynac” Season 2.

    In unscripted, flagship reality competition “Rise & Fall” returns for a second season following a strong debut run. Fitness reality series “Battleground” also returns for Season 2, with Shikhar Dhawan reprising his role as lead mentor. The recently wrapped “Bharat Ke Super Founders,” fronted by Suniel Shetty, saw winning startups receive funding of INR100 crore ($10.8 million)

    A central plank of the 2026 strategy is the further build-out of MX Fatafat, the platform’s mobile-first microdrama vertical, alongside the expansion of MX Vdesi – its library of localized content from Korea, China and Turkey – and a curated anime slate available in the Japanese and Hindi languages.

    “Amazon MX Player is seeing strong momentum as more audiences embrace free, premium streaming,” said Karan Bedi, head of Amazon MX Player. “With our growing premium content slate and scale, we are uniquely positioned to drive the shift from linear television to streaming for millions of viewers across India.”

    Amogh Dusad, head of content, said the platform’s emphasis is on building “a diverse and inclusive content ecosystem that reflects the many voices, cultures, and experiences of audiences across the country.”

    Girish Prabhu, head of Amazon Ads India, framed the slate in commercial terms, noting the reach of 250 million users creates opportunities for brands to connect with viewers through content “powered by shopping and streaming signals” that generate measurable outcomes.

    All titles will be available to stream free of charge on Amazon MX Player across mobile, connected TVs, the Amazon shopping app, Prime Video, Fire TV, Jio TV and Airtel Xtreme.

  • Jane Fonda, Gwyneth Paltrow, Tracee Ellis Ross, Katy Perry, Demi Moore (and More!): Inside Diane von Furstenberg’s Starry Oscars Luncheon (PHOTOS)

    Jane Fonda, Gwyneth Paltrow, Tracee Ellis Ross, Katy Perry, Demi Moore (and More!): Inside Diane von Furstenberg’s Starry Oscars Luncheon (PHOTOS)

    Where can you find an Oscar-winning actress chatting up one of the world’s biggest pop stars?

    Well, during Oscars week in Los Angeles, that’s pretty much anywhere — but there’s no place quite like Diane von Furstenberg’s annual luncheon celebrating the year’s female Oscar nominees.

    This year’s garden party was particularly star-studded, with the likes of “Marty Supreme” star Gwyneth Paltrow (the aforementioned Oscar winner) catching up with Katy Perry, only to be interrupted by producer and philanthropist Nicole Avant Sarandos, then Demi Moore and finally Tracee Ellis Ross. Within minutes — and with the addition of posh jewelry designer Jennifer Meyer to the huddle — some of the industry’s most high-profile entertainers and entrepreneurs had assembled on the well-manicured lawn.

    Oh, and while this A-list group caught up with one another, von Furstenberg stood just around the corner posing with legendary actress and activist Jane Fonda.

    A lineup of talent like this — plus Anita Hill, Quinta Brunson, Tig Notaro, Fran Drescher, Lisa Ann Walter, Grace van Patten, Sabrina Impacciatore, Rachel Zoe, Elaine Welteroth, Rita Wilson, Diane Warren, Luna Blaise, Maggie Baird, Rozzi and “Sinners” Oscar nominees Ruth E. Carter and Autumn Durald Arkapaw — really gives new meaning to the term “power lunch.”

    For the last 13 years, von Furstenberg has hosted the celebration at her Beverly Hills mansion. This year, she noted, all of the nominees got a gold sticker upon arrival to wear as a badge of honor. It was a last-minute idea, but a key one.

    “It’s very important that you know who everybody is, because then you make new friends,” von Furstenberg said, taking the microphone as the crowd sat down for lunch, curated by chef Jane Coxwell. “You are all in the same industry, an industry that is not necessarily pro-women.”

    That reality makes events like this one particularly key, the fashion designer explained, with Fonda — wearing her new signature “Resist” t-shirt — seated at her right hand. (Fonda was a co-host at this year’s luncheon alongside Moore, Avant Sarandos and Ross, and an audience with her was equally as coveted as a selfie with fellow attendee Paris Hilton.)

    “[I thought] being kind was always being stupid, but lately I discovered the power of [it],” she said. “Kindness is like a currency, and it compounds like money.”

    And women are uniquely positioned to make that currency count.

    “Women always have the solutions, but women always have the power of seduction. And seduction is not only about showing your legs — although if you have good ones, you can,” von Furstenberg quipped, as the crowd chuckled. “It is about making other people believe that your ideas and your solutions are theirs. And right now, we have to use all the tools,” she continued. “Because right now is a time that we need strength, we need belief, we need values, and the best way to pass on the message is by kindness.”

    Scroll below for an inside look at the star-studded event.

     

  • ‘The Masked Singer’ Reveals the Identity of High Voltage: Here Is the Celebrity Under the Costume

    ‘The Masked Singer’ Reveals the Identity of High Voltage: Here Is the Celebrity Under the Costume

    SPOILER ALERT: Details follow for Season 14, Episode 9  of “The Masked Singer,” “Care Bears Night,” which aired March 11 on Fox.

    Well, some of the crowd are on the pitch. They think it’s all over. Well, it is now! Former soccer player-turned-Fox Sports analyst Alexi Lalas was the latest celebrity to be unmasked on Season 14 of the Fox singing reality competition, as High Voltage.

    Among the panelists, no one got it right — although Robin Thicke was closest, with another Fox Sports analyst covering another kind of football, Tom Brady. Ken Jeong  guessed Travis Kelce. Jenny McCarthy-Wahlberg went with Julian Edelman. Rita Ora thought it was Jason Sudeikis.

    Lalas ended his run by performing “Bad Day,” by Daniel Powter. His previous songs included “Everybody Wants to Rule the World,” by Tears for Fears; “Miles On It,” Kane Brown and Marshmello; and “Paranoid,” by Black Sabbath

    Here’s what Lalas, as High Voltage, said in his first appearance of this season: “When I first began my career, the idea of blending in was my biggest fear. I was always more interested in being a leader in my field. Sometimes you gotta get a little crazy to draw a lot of attention. So I listened to my gut and billions took notice. Suddenly, people were plugged in. I’ve been called a patriot, a revolutionary, changing the fabric of American culture. And my Masked Singer mission is taking home that trophy.”

    In his second appearance, he added: “I had my own band of brothers. We went through everything together. The practice, the victories and the defeats. But, I knew if I wanted higher stakes in the game, I’d have to do more than play it. So, I cut the cord. And went out on my own. It could have been a huge disaster. But, I crushed it. I run businesses, bands, podcasts, anything to stay current.”

    Contestants Pangolin, Pugcasso, High Voltage and Crane opened the show by singing “Walking on Sunshine,” by Katrina and the Waves.

    On this week’s episode, the bottom two were Pangolin and High Voltage (who was also in the bottom two last week). They battled by both performing their own versions of “I’m So Excited,” by the Pointer Sisters. Pangolin was saved, leaving High Voltage to be unmasked as Lalas.

    Before he was unmasked, High Voltage gave one more clue: Cleats. “The right shoes can carry you through any game in life.”

    With High Voltage gone, that leaves Pangolin, Galaxy Girl, Stingray, Cat Witch, Pugcasso and Crane left in the competition.

    Alexi Lalas (High Voltage) joins Jack Wagner (Eggplant), Heidi Montag (Snow Cone), Billy Ray Cyrus (Owl), Teddi Mellencamp (Calla Lily), Claudia Oshry (Queen Corgi), Taraji P. Henson (Scarab), Tone Loc (Handyman), Tiffany Haddish (Le Who Who), Todd and Julie Chrisley (Croissants) and David “Big Papi” Ortiz (Googly Eyes) as the celebrities unmasked so far on “The Masked Singer” Season 14.

    Back for Season 14 are host Nick Cannon, alongside panelists McCarthy Wahlberg, Jeong, Ora and Thicke.

    New this season is “America’s Insider,” in which singer, dancer and social media personality Kylie Cantrall will share behind-the-scenes hints and clues for viewers. The twist: Cantrall is in costume as Cat Witch, but will only unmask for viewers — so the audience knows who she is, but the panelists don’t.

    “The Masked Singer” Season 14 themed episodes include a tribute to “Star Trek,” the ‘90s comedy “Clueless,” the comic franchise “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” and the blockbuster “Twilight Saga” films. Also Fox’s new “Fear Factor” reboot will feature host Johnny Knoxville in a “Fear Factor: House of Fear Night,” and an “Ozzfest Night” honors late rocker Ozzy Osbourne, including a special tribute by “Masked Singer” alum Kelly Osbourne (Season 2’s Ladybug) saluting her father’s musical influence.

    The 18 Masked contestants in Season 14 include Eggplant, Pugcasso, Queen Corgi, the Croissants, Owl, 14 Karat Carrot, Snow Cone, Galaxy Girl, High Voltage, Googly Eyes, Scarab, Handyman, Crane, Le Who Who, Pangolin, Stingray, Cat Witch and Calla Lily.

    Per the show, the Season 14 contestants have sold a combined 94 million records, received 47 Teen Choice Award nominations, 12 Emmy nominations, two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, one Tony Award win and one Academy Award nomination.

    Here were the performances on Wednesday’s episode.

    Nick Cannon and Pangolin, “The Masked Singer”

    Trae Patton

    Pangolin

    Song: “What A Feeling (Flashdance)” by Irene Cara

    Clue: About Christina Perri: “Our girls nights together have truly been some of the most meaningful and fun of my career.”

    Panel guesses: Meghan Trainor, Jennifer Nettles, Sara Bareilles, Vanessa Carlton

    Previous songs: “Ironic,” by Alanis Morrisette; “Mama, I’m Coming Home,” by Ozzy Osbourne

    Previous panel guesses: Sara Bareilles, Christina Perri, Katy Perry, Vanessa Carlton, Michelle Branch

    Pangolin voiceover: “It’s Care Bears night and I am loving being here. But the Jenny, the way you’re guessing, it’s going to take you 1,000 years to get me. So, spoiler alert, I’ve got a friend here to bring you to your senses. Check out this colossal clue.” (Christina Perri: “You’ve got it all wrong. She’s not me, and I’m not her. But Pangolin and I do love a girls night out together and I can’t wait for the next one.”)

    High Voltage, “The Masked Singer”

    Trae Patton

    High Voltage

    Song: “Bad Day,” by Daniel Powter

    Clue: Cowboy on a horse. “I love me a little country. I know how to make an entrance. And I’ve been feeling 22 for a long time now.”

    Panel guesses: Dax Shepard, Travis Kelce, John Rich

    Previous songs: “Everybody Wants to Rule the World,” by Tears for Fears; “Miles On It,” Kane Brown and Marshmello; “Paranoid,” by Black Sabbath

    Previous panel guesses: Conan O’Brien, Julian Edelman, Jimmy Fallon, John Stamos, Billie Joe Armstrong, John Rzeznik, Tim Allen

    High Voltage voiceover: “Are we talking about feelings tonight? Well, I feel super charged. But panel, you’re still completely in the dark. So here’s something to shock you. And I’m talking to you, Rita. Because spoiler alert, the biggest clue has been right in your face the whole time. Don’t be grumpy, I’m just stating the obvious.”

    Pugcasso, “The Masked Singer”

    Trae Patton

    Pugcasso

    Song: “Dreams,” by the Cranberries

    Clue: Olympic torch. “Being a part of the Olympics, it changed my life forever. I never imagined I’d have the whole world’s attention.”

    Panel guesses: Gavin DeGraw, Jason Mraz, Pat Monahan

    Previous songs: “Ordinary,” by Alex Warren; “Fake Plastic Trees,” by Radiohead; “Too Much,” by Spice Girls

    Previous panel guesses: Dan Reynolds, Darren Criss, Ryan Tedder, Jack Johnson, Rob Thomas, Pat Monahan of Train; Vance Joy; Charlie Puth

    Pugcasso voiceover: “Just like those Care Bears, I have all the feelings from making it this far. But Ken, I’m tired of watching you throw paint at the wall. I mean, you’re the sports guy. So, spoiler alert: This isn’t my first competition. I’ve even taken the Olympics by storm. I’m just trying to help.”

    Crane, “The Masked Singer”

    Trae Patton

    Crane

    Song: “Good Luck, Babe!” by Chappell Roan

    Clue: Wedding proposal from a football player. “I just kicked off my next chapter with a major win. And I couldn’t be happier.”

    Panel guesses: Taylor Swift, Normani

    Previous songs: “It’s Not Right But It’s Okay,” by Whitney Houston; “Say You’ll Be There,” by Spice Girls

    Previous panel guesses: Misty Copeland, Mya, Ashanti, Keke Palmer, Ciara

    Crane voiceover: “I never thought I’d find myself at the bottom last time. It made me realize how lucky I am to be here. But you threw out the same wrong name twice. So, spoiler alert. Robin, I’m not Ashanti. Did that ruffle your feathers?”

    Past “The Masked Singer” winners include T-Pain as Monster (Season 1), Wayne Brady as Fox (Season 2), Kandi Burruss as Night Angel (Season 3), LeAnn Rimes as Sun (Season 4), Nick Lachey as Piglet (Season 5), Jewel as Queen of Hearts (Season 6), Teyana Taylor as Firefly (Season 7), Amber Riley as Harp (Season 8), Bishop Briggs as Medusa (Season 9), Ne-Yo as Cow (Season 10), Vanessa Hudgens as Goldfish (Season 11), Boyz II Men as Buffalos (Season 12) and Gretchen Wilson as Pearl (Season 13).

    “The Masked Singer” comes from Fox Alternative Entertainment. Rosie Seitchik, Craig Plestis and Cannon are executive producers, while Seitchik serves as showrunner. The series is based on the South Korean format created by Mun Hwa Broadcasting Corp.

  • Jane Fonda, Gwyneth Paltrow, Tracee Ellis Ross, Katy Perry and More: Inside Diane von Furstenberg’s Star-Studded Oscars Luncheon (PHOTOS)

    Jane Fonda, Gwyneth Paltrow, Tracee Ellis Ross, Katy Perry and More: Inside Diane von Furstenberg’s Star-Studded Oscars Luncheon (PHOTOS)

    Where can you find an Oscar-winning actress chatting up one of the world’s biggest pop stars?

    Well, during Oscars week in Los Angeles, that’s pretty much anywhere — but there’s no place quite like Diane von Furstenberg’s annual luncheon celebrating the year’s female Oscar nominees.

    This year’s garden party was particularly star-studded, with the likes of “Marty Supreme” star Gwyneth Paltrow (the aforementioned Oscar winner) catching up with Katy Perry, only to be interrupted by producer and philanthropist Nicole Avant Sarandos, then Demi Moore and finally Tracee Ellis Ross. Within minutes — and with the addition of posh jewelry designer Jennifer Meyer to the huddle — some of the industry’s most high-profile entertainers and entrepreneurs had assembled on the well-manicured lawn.

    Oh, and while this A-list group caught up with one another, von Furstenberg stood just around the corner posing with legendary actress and activist Jane Fonda.

    A lineup of talent like this — plus Anita Hill, Quinta Brunson, Tig Notaro, Fran Drescher, Lisa Ann Walter, Grace van Patten, Sabrina Impacciatore, Rachel Zoe, Elaine Welteroth, Rita Wilson, Diane Warren, Luna Blaise, Maggie Baird, Rozzi and “Sinners” Oscar nominees Ruth E. Carter and Autumn Durald Arkapaw — really gives new meaning to the term “power lunch.”

    For the last 13 years, von Furstenberg has hosted the celebration at her Beverly Hills mansion. This year, she noted, all of the nominees got a gold sticker upon arrival to wear as a badge of honor. It was a last-minute idea, but a key one.

    “It’s very important that you know who everybody is, because then you make new friends,” von Furstenberg said, taking the microphone as the crowd sat down for lunch, curated by chef Jane Coxwell. “You are all in the same industry, an industry that is not necessarily pro-women.”

    That reality makes events like this one particularly key, the fashion designer explained, with Fonda — wearing her new signature “Resist” t-shirt — seated at her right hand. (Fonda was a co-host at this year’s luncheon alongside Moore, Avant Sarandos and Ross, and an audience with her was equally as coveted as a selfie with fellow attendee Paris Hilton.)

    “[I thought] being kind was always being stupid, but lately I discovered the power of [it],” she said. “Kindness is like a currency, and it compounds like money.”

    And women are uniquely positioned to make that currency count.

    “Women always have the solutions, but women always have the power of seduction. And seduction is not only about showing your legs — although if you have good ones, you can,” von Furstenberg quipped, as the crowd chuckled. “It is about making other people believe that your ideas and your solutions are theirs. And right now, we have to use all the tools,” she continued. “Because right now is a time that we need strength, we need belief, we need values, and the best way to pass on the message is by kindness.”

    Scroll below for an inside look at the star-studded event.

     

  • Only Half of Americans Went to a Movie Theater in 2025, According to Study

    Only Half of Americans Went to a Movie Theater in 2025, According to Study

    With the Academy Awards approaching to celebrate the year’s best films, a new survey offered a reality check about moviegoing: Just over half of Americans say they set foot in a movie theater over the course of a year.

    According to a Pew Research Center survey conducted in the summer of 2025, 53% of U.S. adults said they had seen a movie in theaters in the prior 12 months. A small but notable 7% said they had never seen a movie in a theater at all.

    The findings reflected a domestic box office still fighting to regain its footing since the COVID-19 pandemic, when ticket sales collapsed 81% in 2020 due to theater closures. In 2025, moviegoers in the U.S. and Canada bought 769.2 million tickets, less than half of the all-time peak of roughly 1.6 billion tickets sold in 2002, according to data from Nash Information Services.

    Box office revenue peaked at an inflation-adjusted $16.4 billion in 2002, and annual ticket revenue held relatively steady through the 2000s and 2010s before falling to under $3 billion in 2020 when theaters closed for months. Last year, U.S. theaters sold just over $9 billion worth of tickets, per media analytics firm Comscore. The number represents a recovery, but nowhere near a full one, as ticket sales have been lagging around 20% below pre-pandemic levels.

    The data also highlighted generational and economic divides in who was buying tickets. Two-thirds of adults ages 18 to 29 said they had attended a movie in theaters in the past year, in contrast to just 39% of those 65 and older. Income told a similar story, as upper-income Americans reported going to the movies at the highest rate, at 64%, compared with 57% of those in the middle-income bracket and 43% of lower-income adults.

    Attendance also varied by race and ethnicity, with Hispanic adults the most likely to report going at 59%, followed by white adults at 53% and Black adults at 49%. Gender, by contrast, was not a significant factor — the survey found near parity, with 53% of men and 54% of women saying they had gone to a movie theater in the past year. Political affiliation showed a slightly wider but still modest gap, with Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents reporting attending at a higher rate of 58%, compared with 50% of Republicans and Republican-leaning respondents.

  • LISTEN: Oscars Rewind With Nicole Kidman as She Revisits Her 2003 Best Actress Win for ‘The Hours’

    LISTEN: Oscars Rewind With Nicole Kidman as She Revisits Her 2003 Best Actress Win for ‘The Hours’

    On today’s episode of “Daily Variety” podcast, in our Cover Story segment, Variety’s Matt Donnelly details his sit-down in Nashville with Nicole Kidman for Variety’s pre-Oscars issue, published today in print and online. Kidman revisits the whirlwind experience of her best actress Oscar win for “The Hours” in 2003.

    More to come

    Listen to Daily Variety on iHeartPodcastsApple Podcasts, Variety’s YouTube Podcast channel, Amazon MusicSpotify and other podcast platforms.

  • Woman Accused of Shooting at Rihanna’s Home Charged With Attempted Murder

    Woman Accused of Shooting at Rihanna’s Home Charged With Attempted Murder

    Ivana Lisette Ortiz, the 35-year-old Florida woman who was accused of targeting Rihanna‘s home in a shooting on Sunday, has been charged with attempted murder, 10 counts of assault with a semi-automatic firearem and three counts of shooting at an inhabited dwelling, Los Angeles district attorney Nathan Hochman announced on Tuesday.

    Hochman said that if convicted, Ortiz faces up to life in state prison. Her bail has been set at just under $1.9 million.

    Earlier in March, Rihanna’s Beverly Hills home was the target of a shooting. A law enforcement source told the Los Angeles Times that the singer was inside the home at the time of the shooting, which was reported at 1:15 p.m. PT on March 8. According to the news publication, a woman allegedly fired several shots at the house from her white Tesla across from the property’s gate; one round penetrated its wall. Bullet holes were also spotted in the gate to Rihanna’s home and an RV that was parked outside.

    There were no injuries, L.A. Police Department spokesperson Sgt. Jonathan de Vera said. After the incident was reported, police located the white Tesla, which had fled south on Coldwater Canyon Drive. A female suspect, eventually identified as 35-year-old Ivana Lisette Ortiz, was arrested at a Sherman Oaks shopping center 30 minutes after the 911 call was placed. LAPD spokesperson Armen Arias told the Times that they found “an assault rifle and seven casings” inside Ortiz’s vehicle. She was booked for attempted murder with bail set at over $10 million.

    Rihanna lives in the Beverly Hills home with her partner, rapper A$AP Rocky, and their three children, RZA, Riot and Rocki.

  • WGA to Seek Payment for AI Training on Scripts as Talks With Studios Set to Begin

    WGA to Seek Payment for AI Training on Scripts as Talks With Studios Set to Begin

    The Writers Guild of America went on strike three years ago in large part out of fears of writers being replaced by artificial intelligence. That has not happened — whether due to copyright issues, or because AI doesn’t write well, or because of protections the WGA won in the strike.

    But last fall, Disney allowed its characters to appear in user-generated Sora videos, showing that the issue is not going away. And as the guild prepares to sit down again with the studios next week, AI remains a top-of-mind concern.

    John August, co-chair of the WGA Negotiating Committee, said Tuesday that the union will seek to affirm the principle that writers should be paid for derivative uses of their work, including AI training. In the last go-round, the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers refused to accept any limitations on the use of scripts — which they own — to train AI models.

    “There has to be some payment for training and AI outputs based on our work,” August said.

    August sat for an interview along with Danielle Sanchez Witzel, the other negotiating co-chair; Michele Mulroney, the president of WGA West; and Ellen Stutzman, the guild’s chief negotiator.

    The overall mood heading into the talks seems less militant than it was in 2023, when writers warned of existential threats to their livelihoods if their demands were not met. Now, far fewer writers are working, contributing to eight-figure deficits in the union health fund. The focus of negotiations is on patching up the fund while addressing some unfinished business from 2023.

    For now, all the militancy has been supplied by the Writers Guild Staff Union, which is on strike and is picketing daily outside WGA West headquarters. The staff is demanding better wages and job protections, including — fittingly — protection against being replaced by AI.

    If no deal is reached between now and Monday, the WGA staff could end up picketing outside AMPTP headquarters while WGA leadership is inside at the bargaining table.

    We should just do the elephant in the room first, which is the staff union is on strike. Where does that stand? Obviously, it must be frustrating to have that going on. How do we resolve this so we can focus on the studios?

    Stutzman: I’ll just say, first contracts can be tough. We bargained a fair contract with the staff union, and we bargained in good faith. Our members can see the offer we made and we reached out to the WGSU today to talk and see if there’s a path forward. But I’ll just say, we’re here to talk about the (Minimum Basic Agreement) and the very important writer negotiation. So I think I’ll just leave it at that, versus saying more.

    Functionally, you are able to go ahead with those negotiations without the staff at full strength?

    Stutzman: Yes.

    In terms of the MBA negotiations, it feels like healthcare is the number one thing. The last time it was the number one thing was 2017 and that was resolved with a balance of increased contributions and cost reductions. I think it was $30 million of increased contributions and $7 million of cost reductions. Is that a fair way to think about what it might end up looking like this time?

    Mulroney: We’ve been very open that this will be a headline issue, and that we will be asking the companies to increase their contributions and put a significant amount of money into our health fund. It’s too early to talk about potential plan changes, because we have to see what we get from the companies first, and then we’ll figure things out after that. But if it comes to health plan changes, we’re always going to prioritize affordability and member choice and make sure that we are sensitive in that way.

    One thing I zeroed in on from the report that you put out was the extended coverage points, which is a system that has existed for 25 years. And basically you’re allowed to not work for a while and spend down your accrual of points and still get coverage. After a while, I’m sure that becomes expensive. So is that something you’re looking at in terms of a reform when you talk about plan changes?

    Mulroney: Again, not sure yet, but I’ll just say that the big pullback in spending that the companies chose to make since so-called Peak TV has meant less going into our fund, because fewer writers are working. So yes, some writers have had to lean on points during this period. So that’s also been a factor that has stressed out the fund. So again, once we see what the companies are going to do and what contributions they’re going to make, then we’ll have that discussion internally at the Health Fund and with our members after the fact.

    Stutzman: And I just wanted to add, the extended coverage program has been in effect since 2000 and it is a program that the companies agreed to as trustees. And it is really of great benefit to the industry that there is a health plan that works for a freelance industry of workers who the companies want to stay in this industry to come up with the next great hit and be available for work. And so the plan was designed with the idea that you can have periods of lack of work in your career, and you can earn points to help get you through that. And of course, in a contraction, you have sort of a crisis because of the pullback in spending. I think it’s just important to remember how critical a benefit this is and it’s something that the companies as management trustees of the fund designed together with the union.

    Just on the face of it, the numbers are quite severe and worse than it was in 2017.

    Stutzman: There is a need more for more money. Health care inflation is a thing. There’s more writers on the plan than at that time. So yes, we’re going to be looking for a larger amount of money from the companies than we were in 2017.

    Mulroney: And there are things that they can do, like for example, in the contribution caps — some of those have been in place for 20 years, and they’ve refused to move on those. And that’s obviously deprived the fund of millions of dollars every year. Their contributions on residuals is really important, too. In TV, they’ve been contributing for many decades on residuals. But they don’t contribute anything to the fund on features residuals. And that really needs to change.

    I wanted to move on to AI and bring and bring John into this. I know you were very early on this topic. The guild was early on this in terms of addressing it in 2023, but I think you were even earlier than that in terms of investing in this Sudowrite company. So I just wanted to get your overall sense from that starting point — How do you think AI has played out? It feels like it’s been kind of a disappointment in terms of it actually being useful to anything in screenwriting. But I’m curious what you make of it.

    August: In 2023 we were the first union to seek and ultimately win fundamental protections for our work when it comes to AI, and those protections have held up really well. We don’t see the companies trying to use AI systems to replace us. And we have no counterfactual — we can’t know what they would be trying to do if we hadn’t put in place those protections. But we’re happy to see those protections have held up well, and so we were the right union at the right time to take on this fight. And I’m glad we were able to win those protections.

    As far as you’re aware, does AI do something that writers find useful?

    August: As we talk to our members, we don’t see our members using AI to do their work. As we have our required meetings with the studios where we ask them questions about how they are using AI, we don’t find them using AI in ways that are a direct threat to our employment. Where we do see the companies using AI is largely in the things that are visible to everybody, like tile recommendations on their streaming services. We see them using it in post-production and visual effects, but not the kind of work that writers are doing.

    Disney had this deal with Sora that they announced last fall, and the union expressed some concern about that. Does any of that step on the WGA’s turf?

    August: Obviously it’s the studios who own the copyrights on this material. If they make our scripts into a movie or TV show, they own it, and they can license it. And the principle of our MBA is that when the work that we’ve created is exploited by our employers to make other things — when they’ve derived other work from it — we get a share of that. And one of our goals in this negotiation is to make sure that if employers are using material that guild members wrote to create AI-generated outputs, they must compensate us for that.

    On the copyright question, the studios and the guild, I think, are on the same page. They have gone after Google and other companies for training on their data. So it feels like you should be aligned to some degree on this.

    August: In many ways, our interests are aligned. We both publicly and privately, have urged the studios to protect their copyrights on the work that we created, and if they are able to do so and to license and make money off it, we believe that that some of that money needs to come back to us, just as with any other reuse of our material.

    In terms of being compensated for training, the pushback from the AI industry on that has been that it would be an administrative headache, and that any compensation would be pennies.

    August: I’ll say that if the companies are able to license their material to an AI company to create AI outputs, they clearly know that that material is going in there, and therefore they can also figure out how much of that should be going back to the writers who created that material the same way they did with DVDs and with other things we’ve classically gotten payments on. There’s ways to figure this out.

    I wanted to move on to free work. In 2023 you got the guaranteed second step — that’s for feature writers. That’s a big deal. Is the same problem cropping up in TV? And does it have the same sort of hurdles in resolving it, in that sometimes writers are open to doing additional drafts because they want to make it better, or they want to give it a better shot of actually being produced?

    Mulroney: The unfortunate reality is that a lot of the worst free work practices in features have now migrated into television.

    Sanchez-Witzel: It’s a major problem on the TV side, especially because development has no calendar anymore. So we need to protect writers working on pilots from being held exclusive and unable to find other work for long periods while these companies take their time making decisions.

    August: On the feature side of this, so often the free work is coming not from the studio, per se, but from the producer. And that’s why one of our proposals in this negotiation is that producers need to be designated as agents of the company, so that if they are requesting additional material, that material is paid.

    So in effect, if you turn the script into your producer, it’s as though you turned it into the studio and that is the end of the project.

    Mulroney: Correct.

    August: Absolutely. Delivery is delivery.

    This has been an issue for 35 years at least. Do you have a feeling like the guaranteed second step has solved some of that in features?

    Mulroney: Yes. For sure. I’ve gotten a lot of outreach from members since ’23 just saying how important that second step was for them in order to be able to avoid that free draft that they would inevitably be asked to do, and also just to give them a chance to collaborate with and impress their employer by showing more work. And you know, we’ll be looking to expand on the guaranteed second step provision in this negotiation, so it covers more writers.

    On streaming residuals and specifically the bonus system. That was sort of — ‘Let’s get the structure, and then we’ll see how it goes.’ So how did it go? Did did you get the money that you expected to get?

    Stutzman: It was a great outcome in 2023 to get the companies to factor in viewership in paying for some sort of measure of success for films and series made for streaming. And that was one of the holdouts at the end, and what took so long in the strike. Writers have always participated in the success of their work, and bringing the framework to streaming was so important. I think it’s been a very welcome addition for writers who’ve received the bonus and it’s grown year over year. But we’re going to come into this negotiation and look to improve it in different ways — increase the amount and increase the number of projects that would qualify for it.

    The representation that the studios made at the time was, ‘We think about 25% of these shows will qualify for this.’ You have the data now. So did it?

    Stutzman: I don’t know the percent off the top of my head, but it’s done well for writers, I will say, particularly on Netflix.

    It does feel like we almost need two different negotiations, because it’s like Netflix and then everybody else — in terms of who’s doing well and who’s not doing so great.

    Stutzman: I wouldn’t say that. But I would just say, they make a lot of streaming series and have a lot of viewers, and so they they’ve done well. But I wouldn’t say, across the platforms, it’s a tale of two starkly different industries.

    Big picture, it feels like the thing that people most want to talk about is just that there’s not a lot of work, right? And there’s not really a negotiating proposal you can make about that. But it does feel like it influences the atmosphere around the negotiation. It influences how much money is in the health fund. But also, do you not have as much leverage as you would have in a year when it was going gangbusters?

    Mulroney: Even with the contraction, all of the scripted entertainment in this business is written by our members. So that’s where our power lies. No matter what the number of shows or movies — we write them all. So that leverage is not diminished by the contraction numbers. And I think we’ve demonstrated over many, many cycles that we will fight when necessary. And we’re hoping the companies come to the table this time, willing to make a fair deal and realizing that’s in everyone’s best interest, especially in a time of contraction and transition to the industry, that stability would be great for everyone. But I think you know that we’re not a union that gives away our power.

    Sanchez-Witzel: This negotiation is coming after the 2023 strike, where it took the companies 148 days to realize that they could negotiate a fair deal that addressed the very real needs and concerns of the writers who make this industry possible. So, we sincerely hope that the lesson learned from 2023 is to come to the table to bargain a fair deal from the beginning.

    A spokesperson for the AMPTP issued a statement in response.

    “The AMPTP looks forward to engaging in a constructive and collaborative bargaining process with the WGA. Through continued good-faith dialogue, we are confident we can reach balanced solutions that support talented writers while sustaining the long-term success and stability of our industry and its workforce.”

    This interview has been edited for length and clarity.