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Oh, Great, Now Truther Trolls Are Telling Lies About The Titanic On TikTok

They're saying that the Titanic itself never sank and there was insurance fraud, or that J.P. Morgan or the Rothschilds or the Jesuits ordered it sunk. "It becomes kind of deflating to see a lot of this junk coming out," says one historian of the ship. - The New York Times

Remember When Cord Cutting Seemed Like A Great, Promising Thing For TV?

Those were the heady days. But now, "the initial promise of streaming has given way to frustration and fatigue for consumers and creators alike. Peak TV is in retreat and in its place is a new era of discontent." - Los Angeles Times

If You Don’t Love 3D Screenings, You’re Far From Alone

"One of the places 3D seems to persist is in animated kids' movies, which is the last place it belongs. Why would you want to watch an explosively colorful world unfold while wearing sunglasses?" - NPR

Why Did Spotify’s Big Bet On Meghan Markle Fizzle Out So Completely?

Times have changed. "Spotify chief executive Daniel Ek conceded the firm had made some mistakes during the more than $1bn spending spree that followed its 2019 push to establish itself as a key player in the industry." - BBC

The Hottest Venture Capital Money Burning Entertainment Weirdness Of The 2010s Is Back

But MoviePass is different this time. The old company was thrilling if you liked going to a film a day - and it also collapsed in public, exciting, terrible ways. "The new MoviePass is more boring, which might be good." - Slate

Horror Gaming, Oddly Enough, Can Be A Real Haven For Minoritized Gamers

"LGBT and black streamers say audiences who feel marginalised in other communities feel safest and happiest when they're playing horror games. And they believe the people who watch them online come for a sense of belonging they don't get anywhere else." - BBC

Online News: Fewer People Are Commenting On It, Or Even Reading It. They Prefer Video, Preferably Not Depressing.

"Facebook's exit from news tracks tracks with a move toward TikTok and YouTube, and a worldwide decrease in commenting on and sharing news articles. That's one of the findings from Oxford's Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism in its 2023 Digital News Report." - Nieman Lab

The Satirical War Film That Churchill Tried To Ban

As The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp turns 80, it's good that Prime Minister Winston Churchill didn't get his way after writing to his minister of information, "Pray propose to me the measures necessary to stop this foolish production before it gets any further." - BBC

Streaming Companies Spent 100s Of Millions Of Dollars On Content. Worth It?

In this country, nothing indicates cultural importance more than cash, and seeing this much of it handed out to creators of television said as much about the state of the art as it did about Rhimes’ and Murphy’s success within it. - Los Angeles Times

Asian Movie Theatre Box Office Is Down. So They’re Being Inventive

With movie ticket sales still lagging behind pre-pandemic highs, multiplex operators across Asia have begun deploying unconventional strategies to generate excitement and attract people back to the cinema. -

A Brief, Cradle-To-Grave History Of Children’s Radio

"During the height of the pandemic, the only real player (left) in the kid-centric terrestrial radio space, Radio Disney, quietly wound down. … Today's Tedium looks back at the many attempts to sell kids on radio — a market that has basically faded away by this point." - Tedium

Southern California Public Radio Is Laying Off More Than 10% Of Its Staff

SCPR, which operates the LAist website and LAist radio station (the NPR affiliate formerly called KPCC) as well as a podcasting studio, will eliminate 21 of its 175 staff positions due to a revenue shortfall attributed mainly to a cutback in advertising by Hollywood studios. - Yahoo! (Los Angeles Times)

The New Piracy: Movies And TV Chopped Into Tiny Pieces On TikTok

Those millions of people are contributing to the billions of views on movies and films chopped up to fit the app's restrictive post limits, parcelled up and delivered to users in completely random order on its homepage. - CBC

Fewer People Are Following The News — Because It’s Depressing: Global Study

"A report by Oxford University's Reuters Institute says 48% of people around the world are very or extremely interested in the news — down from 63% in 2017. … More than a third of people (36%) worldwide say they sometimes or often actively avoid the news." - BBC

Regulator Says Canadian Content Laws For Streamers Shouldn’t Apply to Social Media Users

The directive instructs the CRTC to ensure the regulations do not apply to social media users whose business model is their own content, even if they use commercial songs in their videos. - CBC

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