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MEDIA

Why Do So Many New Movies Look Like Crap On The Big Screen?

As a practical matter, turning out movies that look worse in a theater than they might on a TV screen is a real problem for an industry that desperately needs box office revenue to survive. - Washington Post

Inside The Fight To Save The Unauthorized Trans Joker Movie

The director "was certain that viewers would never mistake her absurdist, autobiographical ... queer coming-of-age film, in which the titular heroine battles gender dysphoria and a toxic romance with a fellow comedian, for an official DC Comics movie." Warner Bros. disagreed. - Los Angeles Times

The New ‘Black Panther’ Movie Sets A Box Office Record

"The highly anticipated sequel to Disney and Marvel Studios’ 2018 blockbuster Black Panther shattered the domestic opening weekend record for the month of November," despite the pandemic and a generally sluggish box office. - Los Angeles Times

Britain Is Somewhat Into The Factually Iffy Fifth Season Of The Crown

More than a million watched the first episode on launch day - and about 100 TVs (laptops, mobile phones, and tablets weren't counted) went the distance through episode 10. - BBC

Disney Orders A Hiring Freeze, Plans Layoffs

Despite huge new subscriber numbers at Disney+, the company is also planning to "limit travel to essential business trips only." - Los Angeles Times

Even Marvel Can’t Save Movie Theatres

But they can be saved, with some creative planning. "Theaters balance the immersive spectacle of art and technology with the emotional network of a crowd. When we sit in a theater, the art is actually shaped by the location." - Fast Company

Watching The Decline Of Social Media

"Mark Zuckerberg's empire has lost hundreds of billions of dollars in value and laid off 11,000 people. ... Elon Musk's takeover of Twitter has caused advertisers to pull spending and power users to shun the platform. It's never felt more plausible that the age of social media might end." - MSN (The Atlantic)

Film Production Soars To Record In Australia

Spend on Australian features reached a record A$786M ($508M) during the period, an increase of 59% on the previous year, even though the overall number of productions declined. - Deadline

“Whatever Happened To Baby Jane?” And The Age Of “Hagsploitation” Cinema

"In the years following its release, Hollywood started producing a string of (movies) which, like Baby Jane, provided veteran actresses including Barbara Stanwyck, Tallulah Bankhead, Shelley Winters and Debbie Reynolds with villainous, yet deliriously camp roles within horror that ensured their careers could keep on rolling." - BBC

Moderation And Censorship Are Not The Same

A minimum viable product for moderation without censorship is for a platform to do exactly the same thing they’re doing now - remove all the same posts, ban all the same accounts - but have an opt-in setting, “see banned posts”. - Astral Codex Ten

Growing Concerns About The Environmental Impact Of New Zealand’s Movie Business

“If people knew how destructive the whole business is, they would think twice.” - The Guardian

At Disney+, Subscribers Pour In And Cash Pours Out

"Disney's direct-to-consumer division, which also includes Hulu and ESPN+, on Tuesday reported an operating loss of nearly $1.5 billion, more than doubling its loss of $630 million during the same quarter a year earlier" — even as it added 12.1 million subscribers for a total of 164.2 million. - Yahoo! (Los Angeles Times)

Creating DeepFakes For Good?

 Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab have been brainstorming ways of putting deepfakes to good use. Some of these are in healthcare and treatment. - The Conversation

As Everyone Pivots To Video, Life Is Turning Into TikTok

"No matter where you swipe or tap, video is there — a torrent of pixels, fury, and sound that is, if not literally infinite, effectively endless. The quality of our online lives now hinges on how these feeds are ordered and mediated, powers that are largely automated." - The Atlantic

Time To Get Rid Of Oscar’s Best Foreign Film Category?

Every year, the Academy tweaks the rules, trying to improve the controversial and oft-criticized process by which the international nominees are selected: But they won’t get it right until the Academy rethinks the flawed logic behind the category. - Variety

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