Tag: Entertainment-Variety

  • Critical Role Taps Hallmark Media Alum Alyssa Zeisler as General Manager of Streamer Beacon (EXCLUSIVE)

    Critical Role Taps Hallmark Media Alum Alyssa Zeisler as General Manager of Streamer Beacon (EXCLUSIVE)

    Critical Role has hired Hallmark Media alum Alyssa Zeisler as general manager of its paid streaming service Beacon.

    Launch in May 2024 by the Critical Role team, Beacon offers exclusive and early access content for fans of the D&D-inspired brand, as well as live event pre-sales, instant access to VODs and podcasts, discounts on merchandise

    In her new role, Zeisler will oversee Beacon’s product roadmap, business performance, content and platform strategy, as well as the continued evolution of Beacon as a community hub, creator-led ecosystem, and a central destination for all things Critical Role and table-top, role-playing games. Under Zeisler, Critical Role’s mission is to continue to grow Beacon “as a fan-first membership experience while supporting Critical Role’s long-term vision for sustainable, meaningful expansion across relevant formats, platforms, and markets.”

    Most recently, Zeisler was Hallmark Media’s vice president of product, where she helped lead the relaunch of streamer Hallmark+. Prior to her time at Hallmark, Zeisler worked for Dow Jones, where she served as vice president of subscription and strategic products and research development chief at The Wall Street Journal. Previously, Zeisler was audience managing editor at Barron’s.

    “Beacon is central to how we think about the future of Critical Role, and it’s time for it to level up and evolve,” Critical Role CEO and co-founder Travis Willingham said. “Alyssa brings exactly the kind of leadership this next phase requires. She understands how to build lasting, audience-first platforms at scale, and her experience leading subscription and direct-to-consumer businesses makes her a perfect fit to help Beacon grow while staying true to the unique authenticity that makes Critical Role what it is.”

    Zeisler added: “My goal for Beacon is to make it the gold standard for direct-to-consumer platforms. It’s a place where we can experiment with new formats in the TTRPG space while creating a seamless experience for fans. We’re building the blueprint for how a community-led brand transitions into a sustainable, global media company, and I’m excited to be at the helm as we evolve this ecosystem into something truly industry-defining.”

  • Sundance Film Festival Sets 2027 Dates for First Boulder Edition

    Sundance Film Festival Sets 2027 Dates for First Boulder Edition

    Sundance Film Festival has announced the dates for its 2027 edition, which will be the first edition in Boulder, Colo. after a decades-long run in Park City, Utah.

    Next year’s Sundance will take place from Jan. 21-31. Programming won’t be announced until much closer to the festival’s debut.

    “Working closely with the Colorado community, the 2027 Sundance Film Festival is already in our sights as we build towards an exciting debut in Boulder where our programming will meet audiences next January,” said Sundance Film Festival’s director Eugene Hernandez. “Nestled at the base of Colorado’s iconic Flatirons, venues across the city and CU Boulder’s campus provide an ideal setting for festivalgoers from across the world to come together, revel in art, spark conversation, and create unforgettable memories. Boulder offers a renowned creative arts and tech scene, paired with the vibrant CU Boulder students, faculty, and staff. We’ll share more details in the coming months and hope you’ll join us on our journey to Boulder as we build the Sundance Film Festival’s new home.”

    Sundance Institute, which hosts the annual film festival, also revealed the venues that’ll screen the newest offerings in independent cinema. They include a mix of high school auditoriums, University of Colorado Boulder concert halls and local movie theaters.

    See below for the official Sundance Film Festival venues:

    Theaters:

    • Boedecker Theater — Dairy Arts Center
    • Boulder High School Auditorium
    • Boulder Theater
    • Casey Middle School Auditorium
    • Chautauqua Auditorium
    • Cinemark Century Boulder
    • eTown Hall
    • Gordon Gamm Theater — Dairy Arts Center
    • Macky Auditorium Concert Hall — University of Colorado Boulder
    • Muenzinger Auditorium — University of Colorado Boulder
    • Roe Green Theatre — University of Colorado Boulder

    Talks and Festival Programming:

    • Canyon Theater, Boulder Public Library District
    • Dairy Arts Center
    • eTown Hall
    • Old Main — University of Colorado Boulder
  • Former Banijay Exec Unne Sormunen Named CEO of Finnish Creator Studio Tarinatalli: ‘We See This Moment as an Opportunity’ (EXCLUSIVE)

    Former Banijay Exec Unne Sormunen Named CEO of Finnish Creator Studio Tarinatalli: ‘We See This Moment as an Opportunity’ (EXCLUSIVE)

    Helsinki-based creator studio and production company Tarinatalli has appointed former Banijay executive Unne Sormunen as CEO and partner.

    “Tarinatalli is a talent-led creator studio built around the idea that the next generation of IP will be driven by personalities, communities and direct audience relationships. We see strong opportunities in Finland and in the Nordics as content trends, technology and distribution models are evolving rapidly,” he told Variety

    “Recent podcast and talent deals by global players such as Netflix, Spotify and Amazon Prime Video show that platforms are increasingly investing in personality-led IP and long-term creator partnerships. We believe this shift is only accelerating.” 

    He added: “Our ambition is to scale a creator-first model that combines premium storytelling with audience-driven formats, branded partnerships and multi-platform distribution. We want to build sustainable IP with talents across audio, video, social and TV and create new revenue streams beyond traditional commissioning.”

    Sormunen succeeds Jonna Linnanahde, who continues as COO and co-founder. Tarinatalli was founded in 2022 by TV personality, producer and podcaster Aki Linnanahde.

    According to Linnanahde, in its early years, the company focused on “premium podcasts and strong local talent.”

    “Recently, we have expanded into multi-platform storytelling, branded entertainment and strategic partnerships with platforms and brands. We see a clear shift toward personality-driven IP and long-term collaborations that creates exciting opportunities.”

    Sormunen added: “Tarinatalli has recently produced some of Finland’s biggest podcasts, videocasts and creator-led formats for both platforms and YouTube. Going forward, we will focus on three key areas: talent-led content and personality-driven IP, branded entertainment and long-term partnerships with brands and multi-platform storytelling across audio, video, social and television.” 

    The company is also building strategic partnerships with traditional production companies and distributors. 

    “Our digital-first approach allows us to develop IP in a more agile and cost-efficient way before scaling it into larger unscripted or scripted formats. In addition, we are actively exploring how AI and new technologies can support creative development, production workflows and audience insights while keeping human storytelling at the core.”

    Sormunen most recently served within Banijay Group as managing director of EndemolShine Finland and CEO of Jarowskij Finland, overseeing the likes of Finland’s first Netflix original series “Dance Brothers,” “MasterChef,” “Big Brother,” “LEGO Masters,” crime drama “Detective Maria Kallio” and Prime Video’s first Finnish-language original, “The Bridge Suomi.”

    Before joining Banijay, he spent five years as head of domestic programming at Finnish commercial broadcaster Nelonen. 

    “We currently work with many of Finland’s leading TV hosts, radio personalities and podcast creators. Our role is to help them build long-term 360 creator businesses, not just individual shows. Brands are also moving from short-term campaigns toward long-term storytelling partnerships. Instead of advertising around content, they want to be part of the narrative. We see opportunities in this area, particularly in sports, lifestyle and entertainment,” he said.

    While Finland experienced a peak TV boom during the early 2020s, he said – “especially during the pandemic” – over the past two years, the market has become more challenging for scripted series and feature films as both public and commercial broadcasters have reduced investments.

    “Non-scripted production has remained a bit more stable, and audio and podcast platforms have grown significantly. At the same time, international streamers have been relatively cautious with local investments, partly because a local levy system has not yet been implemented. This has created a reset in the market,” he noted. 

    “Producers and platforms are looking for more efficient development models, lower risk and stronger audience validation before making larger commitments.”

    The biggest challenge right now? “Financing and risk-sharing in a fragmented and rapidly changing ecosystem.” 

    “We see this moment as an opportunity. Lean operating models, strong talent relationships and closer collaboration between platforms, producers, brands and creators will be key. Companies that can build engaged communities and prove audience demand early will have an advantage,” assured Sormunen.

    “We believe the future belongs to producers that combine premium storytelling with creator-driven development and diversified revenue models. Our goal is to help talents and producers build sustainable IP and bring authentic local stories and formats to both Finnish and international audiences.”

  • Have I Got News for You: CNN Keeps Digging Deeper Into Comedy

    Have I Got News for You: CNN Keeps Digging Deeper Into Comedy

    Roy Wood Jr. doesn’t sound like Jake Tapper, Anderson Cooper or Erin Burnett. And yet, his importance to CNN could start approaching that of those popular anchors.

    Wood isn’t at CNN to deliver the news. His hosting duties at “Have I Got News For You,” a comedic panel show that analyzes and laughs at some of the biggest events of the week — as well as some of the silliest — has him doing that, anyway. Of a sort.

     During one recent  — and raucous — Friday-night taping, Wood tilted back and forth with his two regular panelists. Amber Ruffin and Michael Ian Black, as well as two guests, comic Hasan Minhaj and Senator Adam Schiff. The group considered everything from recent behavior by Rep. Nancy Mace of South Carolina to content in the Epstein Files. Some of the segments come in the form of games, and elements of the program might remind viewers of a combination of “The Daily Show” and “After Midnight.”

    While the show offers up a lot of laughs and silliness, it’s the sort of thing where if you aren’t careful, you just might learn something before it all comes to an end.

    Other CNN shows can grill newsmakers and experts, says Wood. “Have I Got News For You,” which is in its fourth cycle of running on ten Saturdays, offers something different — a “release” from the headlines. “We like to have on people who may not know s–t. Because that also matches the American voter to some degree,” he says while preparing for a recent show’s taping. “You don’t have to know everything about everything, but you know good versus bad. You know right from wrong. And if you know that, then I feel like we have a show that’s probably the most relatable. And you’re most likely to see someone who looks and even feels like you. I mean, we’re probably the closest thing you could get to, say, the man on the street.”

    CNN is betting on the appeal of “Have I Got News For You” — and, potentially, other programs that examine news and current events through a alternate lens. “It’s sort of a natural thing that you would cover stories all week and do the tough stuff that we have to do,” says Amy Entelis, CNN’s executive vice president for talent, CNN Originals and creative development. But viewers are also ready, she says, for the network “to show our ability to step back and look at things from an entirely different angle.”

    Increasingly, it’s a comic one. CNN has over the years tapped comics like W. Kamau Bell to lead an original series about American subcultures or enlisted D.L. Hughley to try this band a a Saturday-night program. There have in recent years been documentaries about TV comedy across the decades, and about single subjects including Gilda Radner and, in January, Chevy Chase. Both Fred Armisen, the former ”SNL” cast member and Craig Ferguson the former host of “The Late Late Show,” will both lead new CNN original series.

    “CNN’s foray into comedy-news is part of a bigger pivot to entertainment content by formerly ‘serious’ outlets to try to both stay afloat in linear and generate social media hits, especially with the dreariness of news under Trump 2,” says Nick Marx, a professor of film and media studies at Colorado State University who studies the cultural implications of comedy programs. CNN may have also noticed some of Fox News Channel’s recent weekend efforts with comedy content, he says, including shows from Jesse Watters, Greg Gutfeld and Jimmy Failia.

    CNN’s Saturday night schedule is where to find the laughs.  Repeats of Bill Maher’s HBO show “Real Time” kick off the primetime schedule and are often followed by the program executives call “HIGNFY.” Viewership has spiked for the series’ fourth season, in some weeks growing the audience from “Real Time.” The season debut on January 31 lured an average of nearly 1.04 million, its biggest audience since the series debuted in 2024 and a doubling of its audience from the third-season premiere. The fourth season debut beat other cable-news outlets among viewers between 25 and 54, the demographic coveted most by advertisers in news programs.

    CNN is helped by the fact that “Have I Got News For You” isn’t exactly an unknown property. The show has run in the U.K. since 1990, and is a TV staple in that nation. So much so that U.S. TV executives have tried on at least four different occasions to launch the show for American audiences, according to Jim Biederman, the program’s executive producer, who spent time developing TV programs with Lorne Michaels’ Broadway Video.

    “I’ve done pilots of it over 20 years,” he says, recalling efforts to get the series on NBC, Bravo, TBS and ABC. “Each time we did it, we got a little bit more American.” CNN, with multiple news shows featuring panels or roundtables, offers a natural habitat for the show, he suggests. “CNN is a network that kind of has panel shows in its DNA,” he says, which means “HIGNFY” is “not so foreign that you’re talking a different language to your network.”

    Wood believes the show has broader appeal than many of its late-night contemporaries. “The true measurement of whether or not you’re reaching people is blue collar,” he says.  “. “Because that guy doesn’t have a lot of time to watch TV.” When he started hearing remarks about the program from baggage handlers and sanitation workers in the Midwest and New York he says,   “that’s when I really started feeling like we had found some degree of a stride.”

    “Have I Got News For You” isn’t put together like other programs. While it’s only an hour on CNN, the tapings can last more than two, because producers like to give the assemblage room to find a real conversation. Biederman and Jodi Lennon, the show’s co-executive producer, often spend hours on Friday nights and Saturdays editing the proceedings into something that shows off the panel’s ability to come together in real time. “There’s no script. you know, it’s just kind of playing along in this kind of improvised moment,” says Biederman.

    Part of the appeal is found in Wood’s teammates. Amber Ruffin and Michael Ian Black offer a sort of sweet-and-sour mix. Ruffin, who many people know form her appearances on “Late Night with Seth Meyers” sometimes plays innocent, as if she hasn’t read any news for weeks, only to surprise the audience with a hilarious remark in the end. Black, meanwhile, seems as if he’ s read every story on every subject.

    “I’m annoying. That’s my role. My role is to be annoying. Amber’s role is to be funny and delightful,” says Black. “We’re very rowdy, and I think we’re rowdier than what they bargain for, but it turns out it’s fun,” says Ruffin.

    Now that the program has been able to book members of Congress, there’s hope for other luminaries. Wood would love to get sports figures to visit the show. “There’s a lot of athletes that are a lot smarter than you presume them to be. Many of them might not even come on the show yet, because they still have brands to protect,”  he says. “But when you look at the influx of athlete led podcasts, they all like to run their mouths.”

    All the participants are surprised that CNN hasn’t been more heavy-handed with the program. “We’ve been sequestered from the rest of the CNN, which I think is for the best. For both parties,” says Black. “They don’t want clowns running up and down their hallways squirting seltzer bottles. And I think we would like to avoid this sort of serious newsy vibe that’s going on over there.”

    That separation can be a good thing. “This becomes the show that has an opportunity to stand out because it’s on the news network,” says Wood. “We’re not like anything else.”

  • 5 Takeaways From the Ampere Analysis at Mip London: Broadcasters More Important Than Ever, YouTube as a Growing Destination for Factual, Sports Boost

    5 Takeaways From the Ampere Analysis at Mip London: Broadcasters More Important Than Ever, YouTube as a Growing Destination for Factual, Sports Boost

    At a presentation at this year’s Mip London, Ampere Analysis’ executive director Guy Bisson drilled down on the current state of factual television, looking into the booming effect of sports commissioning, the impact of YouTube as a destination for factual content and shifting differences between streamers and broadcasters. 

    Bisson gave Variety a comprehensive look into his research, compiled into a presentation titled “10 Factual Facts to Flourish in the Future.” The exec mentioned his previously coined 75% Peak TV as a point of reference, which refers to the 25% decrease in scripted commissioning since the peak of TV, around 2022. Conversely, factual commissioning is down only 15%, with Bisson calling it “one of the areas of opportunity.” Below is a breakdown of the main takeaways from Bisson’s analysis on the current moment for factual commissioning:

    Good news for once

    As mentioned above, documentary commissioning is only down 15%, compared to the 25% decrease in scripted commissioning. Some subgenres within documentary, like biography and military and war, have “hardly dropped,” added Bisson. 

    The exec also highlighted how Western Europe is a “bit of a hotbed for documentary.” “If we look at the first six months of 2025, you can see that Europe has been stable while other regions have declined a bit. The majority of commissioning is going to Western Europe, and that is across four key genres: cultural, crime, biographical and historical.”

    “Western Europe and North America are going into recovery after a minor dip in the first half of 2025,” he noted. “A year earlier, we were in a bit of a mini-peak for documentary commissioning in North America and Western Europe. We’re now going back to levels we saw in 2024. Again, a positive story.”

    The sports effect

    One of the reasons for the steady numbers in factual is the rise of sports content commissioning. “As streamers move into live sports, they are commissioning content that is sports-related, like Netflix’s ‘Drive to Survive,’” said Bisson. “Within the areas that have benefited from that upswing in sports commissioning, documentary is the one that has benefited most.”

    Other major events, such as the Winter Olympics and the FIFA World Cup, help drive this demand. Original sports streaming series orders by the Global 6 streamers increased exponentially in 2024 before a small dip in 2025, which would signal a peak in commissioning tied to both major sports events taking place in 2026. 

    Getty

    YouTube impact

    While factual subgenres like crime are still majorly important commissioning drivers, with Bisson emphasizing it remains “the most important genre” and “has not declined since peak,” the truth is that streamers are pulling back “pretty much across the board” when it comes to greenlighting factual content. “Even crime has dropped a bit but, crucially, it remains 40% of their commissioning activity. That drop is very small.”

    “One reason that might be, and this is circumstantial evidence rather than numerical, is YouTube,” the exec pointed out. “I made a similar point around children’s content recently, where commercial players are pulling back from it, and even more so with documentary. Is it because children go to YouTube now? If adults are now going to YouTube for documentaries, is that one of the drivers for that pullback we are seeing from the commercially-driven players?”

    Bisson noted how we are also seeing broadcasters “increasingly putting full-length content on YouTube.” “We are also seeing shorter windows between the two,” he said. “Basically 70% of documentary content is now dropping on a broadcaster’s YouTube channel within 30 days or less of its on-air premiere.”

    Public broadcasters are more important than ever

    “The commercially-driven operator — that would include streamers, commercial broadcasters and traditional legacy pay TV players — is generally pulling back from documentary. Which means that public broadcasters, the most important commissioners anyway in documentary, have become ever more important. Public broadcasters are generally very news-driven, so when it comes to war-related content, culture, and what would fall into medical and health like mental health issues and the impact of social media on children’s mental health, these are all topics that are growing and that public broadcasters can move very quickly on, while streamers are a little less able to address. Broadcasters also have a lot of content they can adapt and repurpose very quickly to keep it topical.”

    “When we look at where streamers are pulling back, it is pretty much across the board. Even crime has dropped a bit but, crucially, it remains 40% of their commissioning activity. That drop is very small.”

    What do commissioners want?

    Based on the data gathered, Bisson neatly wrapped up commissioning trends for streamers and broadcasters. The exec emphasized there is “overlap,” but approached from different angles. “While broadcasters are also interested in crime, they’re after a social angle and often want to tie it to a historical perspective,” he offered as an example. “If you can work in some collective trauma, that helps, as well as connecting historical legacy to contemporary social challenge.”

    Looking at commissions by streamers, Bisson singled out content that offers “a new or untold angle, focus on personal cost and sacrifice, leverage infamy, expose institutional secrets and look for gendered or archetypal protagonists.” “If you can bring in the personal cost of sacrifice in sports performance or music, that’s going to help,” he noted.

  • Ana Navarro Goes Uncensored in Podcast Called ‘Bleep!’

    Ana Navarro is free, finally free, to say what she wants. And she wants listeners of her new podcast to know it right from the start.

    The title of the new show, “Bleep! with Ana Navarro,” lets audience members know they’re in for an unfiltered version of the popular commentator, who appears regularly on CNN and ABC’s “The View.” The program launched Monday.

    “I can’t cuss on TV,” she acknowledges in a recent interview. Even so, she adds, “there’s a lot of s–t in the world that requires, that merits a good cussing.”

    Navarro is one of a growing line of popular analysts and commentators keeping their feet in two different worlds. One is the traditional-media news sources and the other is the growing digital-media realm, where many are trying to set up new offerings in hopes of catering to a younger audience that tends to get more of its information from social outlets and streaming venues.

    Navarro says she is eager “to form a sense of community” among people who believe the current news cycle is “as insane as it’s ever been in my lifetime.” “People tell me they are sad. They can’t sleep. They feel helpless. They feel hopeless,” she says. She hopes her program will give people a new source of conversation. “A lot of people are feeling alone and overwhelmed,” she adds, “I think it’s important to have that feeling that there are more of us than we think, and we are in things together.”

    The weekly podcast is the latest project for Navarro, who has pivoted from working in and for Republican administrations to charting a more centrist positioning in her commentary and analysis work. “Bleep!” is the first new show to launch under iHeartMedia’s My Cultura Podcast Network and Hyphenate Media Group’s joint podcast slate, and is executive produced by Eva Longoria, who launched Hyphenate in 2023.

    “Eva is one of my best friends,” says Navarro. “We have conversations that are very truthful. We talk about politics. We talk about life. We talk about our families, our history and our heritage.” The idea for the podcast “grew out of those conversations.”

    Navarro will use “Bleep” to point out the courageous and cowardly, and to discuss things that offer the audience respite. “This last year has been hard on a lot of people and we have to give ourselves grace and the ability to find some joy,” she says. “Joy is most definitely a form of resistance” and can help “interrupt the barrage of s–t” that people grapple with every week.

  • David Begnaud Launches His Own Creator Business, but Keeps Connections to CBS News

    Most TV journalists who light out for digital territory leave an established outlet for a new frontier. Not David Begnaud.

    The longtime CBS News correspondent is keeping a contributor role with the Parmount Skydance unit even as he ramps up efforts to launch his own business, Do Good Crew, which is built around people sharing stories that inspire positive feelings and spur subscribers and listeners to act.

    “I’ve spent the last 25 years covering the worst stories. It was more massacres than I can remember, more mass shootings and knocking on doors of mothers whose kids had been killed at school than I can recall,” Begnaud explains. Covering the aftermath of disastrous hurricanes in Puerto Rico made him want to do something different. “I want to use the platform that I’ve been given to do something where when I call or when I knock on a door, I’m not greeted by someone in tears or someone looking to slam the door. I’m greeted by someone who wants to say, ‘I’d love to welcome you in.’”

    Do Good Crew will incorporate a weekly video and audio podcast, “The Person Who Believed in Me,” which features prominent figures telling stories about people who lent them support and ballast early in their lives. Among those are Oprah Winfrey Barry Diller, Nick Cannon, Charlie Puth, and Ava Duvernay. “The idea is big names are the guests, but the star of every episode is the everyday person who believed in our guests before the world,” Begnaud says.

    Begnaud will seek to build community with a newsletter that highlights some of the stories he has heard from readers and followers, and will branch out to live events and other elements.

    He will continue to appear on “CBS Mornings” with his Monday segment “Beg-Knows America,” which offers similar fare. “In the past, there was no one in the news division who was starting a company on the outside” Begnaud says.

    He’s correct. The creator economy hinges on media personnel who leave the familiar trappings of a newsroom and step out onto new terrain. In recent years, for example, ABC News parted ways with Dan B. Harris, a veteran, who wanted to expand work he had done on the value of meditation. His “10% Happier” business has gained traction since his exit in 2021.

    And yet, traditional media companies have in recent months started to warm to doing more work with creators. Fox Corp. last year acquired Red Seat Ventures, a company that helps manage the business operations of various journalism entrepreneurs, including Megyn Kelly and Tucker Carlson. Fox News Channel last year struck a licensing deal with the principals of the popular conservative podcast “Ruthless” that has them contributing to programming. MS NOW last week unveiled plans to run podcasts from Crooked Media, a producer of podcasts that tilt liberal, to its schedule.

    And the traditional companies are proving more amenable to helping anchors launch new ventures. At CNN. Anderson Cooper leads a podcast about grief, and MS NOW has made a podcast led by Nicolle Wallace a frequent part of its cable schedule.

    Begnaud says he’s definitely aware of the business demands of his new venture “This is not a nonprofit. This is a for-profit business,” he acknowledges. But he thinks he can be profitable and positive all at once. “I’m doing it because it’s what I want to see in the world,” he adds.

  • BAFTA Says a ‘Comprehensive Review Is Underway’ Over Film Awards N-Word Incident in Letter to Members: ‘Our Intention to Be Inclusive in No Way Diminishes the Impact’

    BAFTA Says a ‘Comprehensive Review Is Underway’ Over Film Awards N-Word Incident in Letter to Members: ‘Our Intention to Be Inclusive in No Way Diminishes the Impact’

    The British Academy has further addressed Sunday night’s N-word controversy at the Film Awards.

    In a letter to members sent Tuesday, BAFTA Chair Sara Putt and CEO Jane Millichip discussed the incident, in which Tourette’s syndrome activist John Davidson involuntarily shouted the N-word while Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo were presenting on stage. In the letter, they said they wanted to “acknowledge the harm this has caused, address what happened and apologise to all.” They also said that a “comprehensive review” was now underway.

    The letters comes a day after BAFTA issued out a public statement in response to mounting anger over the situation, asserting that it took “full responsibility” for putting its “guests in a very difficult situation and we apologise to all.”

    The new review comes just six years after BAFTA underwent a major internal review aimed at addressing the lack of diversity in the film awards. The seven-month process resulted in more than 120 wide-ranging changes across its voting, membership and campaigning processes.

    See the full letter to members from Putt and Millichip below.

    We would like to address the situation that arose during the EE BAFTA Film Awards on Sunday night, in which highly offensive language that carries incomparable trauma and pain for so many was heard. We issued a statement last night, and we want members to hear from us directly, too. Please find our public statement here.

    We recognise this has impacted members in a multitude of ways – we want to acknowledge the harm this has caused, address what happened and apologise to all.

    One of our guests, John Davidson MBE has Tourette Syndrome and has devoted his life to educating and campaigning for better understanding of the condition. John is an executive producer of one of the nominated films, I Swear. The film highlights that Tourette Syndrome is a neurological disability that causes involuntary verbal tics, that the individual has no control over. Such tics are in no way a reflection of an individual’s beliefs and are not intentional.

    We take the duty of care to all our guests very seriously and prepared extensively in order for John to be able to be present in the room. We made those in attendance aware of the tics, announcing to the audience before the ceremony began, and throughout, that John was in the room and that they may hear involuntary strong and offensive language, noises or movements during the ceremony. We fully understand our intention to be inclusive in no way diminishes the impact of what happened.

    Early in the ceremony loud and involuntary tics, including one in the form of a profoundly offensive term, were heard by many people in the room. Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo were on stage at the time, and we have apologised unreservedly to them, and to all those impacted. We have also thanked Michael and Delroy for their incredible dignity and professionalism – and regret they were put in this position in the first place.

    During the ceremony, John chose to leave the auditorium and watch the rest of the ceremony from a screen, and we have also thanked him for his dignity and consideration of others, on what should have been a night of celebration for him.

    We are in contact with the studios involved and conversations are ongoing.

    We want to assure all our members that a comprehensive review is underway. You may have also seen the BBC have issued their own apology for the broadcast.

    It was a very complex situation and we understand you will have many questions – please rest assured how seriously we are taking this. If you’d like to contact us, please email membership@bafta.org.

    We take full responsibility for putting our guests and members of the academy in a very difficult situation and we will learn from this.

    We will keep inclusion at the core of all we do, maintaining our belief in film and storytelling as a critical conduit for compassion and empathy – as firmly demonstrated by this year’s nominated and winning films.

  • Aimee Lou Wood to Star in ‘Jane Eyre’ Series From Working Title

    Aimee Lou Wood to Star in ‘Jane Eyre’ Series From Working Title

    Brontë fever has officially hit Hollywood.

    Following the success of Emerald Fennell’s bodice-ripping take on Emily Brontë’s “Wuthering Heights,” Aimee Lou Wood is set to lead a series adaptation of Charlotte Brontë’s “Jane Eyre” from Working Title. “Succession” writer Miriam Battye is penning the script and a U.K. broadcaster is in advanced talks to board the project.

    The 1847 novel — which was considered revolutionary for its first-person narrative style and approach to class, sexuality and female independence — follows the titular heroine as she grows into adulthood and falls for the brooding Mr. Rochester. The last major TV adaptation of “Jane Eyre” was in 2006, starring Ruth Wilson, while Cary Joji Fukunaga last adapted it for the big screen in 2011 starring Mia Wasikowska and Michael Fassbender.

    English actress Wood broke out in the Netflix series “Sex Education” before starring in the last season of “The White Lotus” alongside Walton Goggins. That role earned her critical and commercial acclaim, resulting in nominations at the Emmys, Golden Globes and SAG’s Actor Awards.

    U.K. production powerhouse Working Title is currently working on a film adaptation of Jane Austen’s “Sense and Sensibility” starring Daisy Edgar-Jones. Its other credits are a rom-com hall of fame including “Love Actually,” the “Bridget Jones” films, “About Time,” 2005’s “Pride and Prejudice” starring Keira Knightley and 2020’s “Emma” with Anya Taylor-Joy. Working Title’s most recent TV production was Lena Dunham’s Netflix series “Too Much” starring Meg Stalter and Will Sharpe.

    Deadline Hollywood was the first to report Wood’s casting.

  • Donald Trump’s Latest Tariff Spat With Europe Prompts Legislative Impasse After Landmark U.S. Supreme Court Decision

    Donald Trump’s Latest Tariff Spat With Europe Prompts Legislative Impasse After Landmark U.S. Supreme Court Decision

    U.S. President Donald Trump’s latest spat with Europe over tariffs is prompting a legislative impasse regarding European exports to the U.S. On Monday, European Union lawmakers postponed a vote to ratify a long-gestating trade deal that had capped U.S. import tariffs at 15%. 

    Though the tariffs being discussed in the EU parliament apply only to physical goods and not film and TV, Trump recently reiterated his threat to slap hefty tariffs on films made overseas as part of the global trade war he has embarked on during his second term as president.

    Now, Trump’s legal authority to randomly impose tariffs is being concretely challenged by both the U.S. Supreme Court and the EU parliament.

    Over the weekend, Trump announced new additional international import tariffs “over and above our normal tariffs already being charged” after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down his previously implemented global tariffs policy in a landmark decision on Friday. This, in turn, has caused Europe to warn that the agreed trade deal is on hold.

    Trump has twice threatened to impose a 100% tariff on films made abroad, without explaining how that would work or what legal authority would allow it.

    “I’m going to be putting tariffs on movies from outside of the country — if they’re made in Canada, if they’re made in all these places, because Los Angeles has lost the movie industry,” Trump told the New York Post in late January.

    “It’s just hot air again,” a producer told Variety in September after Trump took to social media with a fresh wave of threats to impose tariffs on films made outside the U.S.

    Hollywood unions have praised Trump’s attention to the issue of runaway production, but sought to redirect his interest to a more limited goal of extending and reauthorizing U.S. federal tax deductions that assist American producers to shoot more movies locally.