Thursday, April 16, 2015

4.16.15

Entertainment:
·         Cinedigm has acquired North American theatrical, digital and home entertainment distribution rights to the documentary “A Brave Heart: The Lizzie Velasquez Story”
·         Universal Pictures stepped up to make the year’s biggest material deal in the 7 figure range to acquire the untitled musical comedy feature that “The Comedians”
·         With several virtual-reality companies expected to release consumer headsets this Christmas, Hollywood is developing projects to make sure new buyers have something to actually experience with them
·         AXS TV has renewed “The X Factor UK” for a second consecutive year.
·         Sony’s experience offering “The Interview” simultaneously online and in theaters following last year’s hacking imbroglio whetted Netflix appetite for doing the same with other films, execs said today in a conference call with Wall Street analysts
·         Universal Pictures has entered into a two-year, first-look production agreement with Robert Kirkman's Skybound Entertainment
·         “SMOSH: The Movie” the latest low-budget film stuffed with YouTube stars and set for a multi-platform distribution blitz, will premiere July 23 in Anaheim
·         Possibly former actor Paul Giamatti is one of six guest directors of National Geographic Channel’s new series “Breakthrough” which NGC is producing in partnership with General Electric and Ron Howard/Brian Grazer’s Imagine Entertainment and Asylum Entertainment
·         Warner Bros-based Gulfstream Pictures is making a formal foray into TV with the launch of Gulfstream Television, which has inked a two-year overall deal with Warner Bros. TV
·         Dreamworks Animation paid Jeffrey Katzenberg $6.4MM in 2014 – down 52.7%
·         Two weeks after its U.S. debut at the “Furious 7” premiere at the TCL Chinese Theater IMAX in Hollywood, the company behind the theater’s new razor-sharp laser projectors and overwhelming sound system gathered all its top brass to put the system through its paces before a critical group of media and exhibitors from as far away as Australia
·         See below for Cannes’ biggest snubs and no-shows
·         AwesomenessTV has lined up a three-stage release window for teen musical drama “Side Effects” season three, which will debut Friday on NBCUniversal’s E! Entertainment cable net as a 90-minute movie
·         Google’s YouTube is teaming with Earth Day Network and the Global Poverty Project to live-stream the Global Citizen 2015 Earth Day event in Washington, D.C., on Saturday, which is set to feature performances from Usher, Fall Out Boy, No Doubt, Coldplay’s Chris Martin, Mary J. Blige, Train and My Morning Jacket
·         Digital distribution companies TuneCore and Believe Digital have announced a partnership today (April 16) which they hope will improve the services they provide to their customers -- and give them increased leverage for negotiations with digital services like Spotify and Tidal
·         Vine superstar-turned-major label recording artist Shawn Mendes is aiming for a No. 1 debut on the Billboard 200 albums chart next week
·         In its first quarter earnings report of 2015, released on Wednesday, Netflix said that it now regrets the deals it made with Australian Internet providers, Optus and iiNet, to offer Aussie Netflix users unmetered data
·         Watch as J.J. Abrams talks “Star Wars: Episode VII” and (hopefully) reveals the first trailer
·         A year after acquiring the Spanish fibre-to-the-home (FTTH) and cable operator, ONO, Vodafone has finally presented a merged telecom offer, Vodafone One, which focuses on video-on-demand (VOD) services and advanced pay-TV through TiVo, marking a serious comeback for the British telco to the Spanish TV sector
Tech:
·         Andreessen Horowitz announced today that it’s launching a new policy and regulatory affairs unit, and that it has appointed Ted Ullyot, Facebook’s former general counsel, to lead the shop - Ullyot, who worked at both the White House and the Department of Justice before coming to the Valley, will be tasked with helping the firm’s portfolio companies see eye to eye with the government regulators
·         Microsoft and Yahoo today finally announced a renewed search alliance, which includes amendments to the two companies’ earlier partnership
·         Twitter has made changes to cut off Meerkat’s access to Twitter’s social graph, and even began pushing celebrities and publishers to stop using Meerkat
·         TechCrunch Disrupt is coming to New York May 2-6, and announced the full agenda.
·         The Wikimedia Foundation has been steadily rolling out updates to the Wikipedia mobile experience in recent months, and today that trend continues as the organization rolls out a brand-new iOS app
·         Yahoo is expanding its “caller-id” feature, allowing you to hook-up your contact’s Twitter and LinkedIn profiles to contact cards, making them more data rich
·         Today IAC’s five-year-old dating service HowAboutWe announced a new direction that’s centered around getting you on a date as soon as possible. They call it “on-demand dating”
·         Tinder, the developer of the immensely popular swipe-left or swipe-right dating app, has just released an update which connects the app directly with Instagram
·         Karlin Ventures is hoping to help develop rising, technology executives--particularly those at the VP level--with a new program it is launching today called Karlin Fellows
·         Spotify is gearing up for a streaming war, with the music services' new hire of four Washington, D.C. lobby firms Tuesday
·         See below for an interesting article on Y Combinator’s president, Sam Altman
·         See below for an article on why Waze is partnering with government entities
·         Apple Watch pre-orders surpassed 2.3 million units, claims new estimate
Deals:
·         Ola, the largest rival to Uber in India, has announced that it has raised a $400MM Series E round to fuel further expansion in India
·         Etsy began trading on the Nasdaq at $31.86 a share — a big pop from the $16 a share price the company set yesterday - the company is now being valued at more than $3.5B
Business:
·         Netflix reported its first quarter financial performance, including revenue of $1.57B and adjusted earnings per share of $0.77, with GAAP profit per share of $0.38. The market had expected the company to earn and $0.69 per share on revenue of $1.57B
·         Apple has teamed up with The Conservation Fund to purchase about 36,000 acres of private forestland in Maine and North Carolina, land that will be sustained and harvested for packaging future products
·         On Tuesday morning, the chief executives of 500 of the nation’s largest companies will receive a letter in the mail that will most likely surprise them - the sender of the letter is Laurence D. Fink, chief executive of BlackRock, the largest asset manager in the world
·         Brait, the South African investment firm, said on Thursday that it had agreed to acquire an 80 percent stake in Virgin Active, the health club chain that is partly owned by the billionaire Richard Branson’s Virgin Group
·         Goldman Sachs Group Inc. posted the highest earnings per share in more than five years as all of its major businesses topped analysts’ estimates and the firm paid out a smaller portion of revenue to compensate employees
·         Standard & Poor's has downgraded Greece's credit rating to CCC+ with a negative outlook, citing a substantial risk of a default due to the country's drawn out negotiations with its creditors
·         Target has agreed to reimburse about $19MM to financial institutions which had issued MasterCard-branded cards that were a part of its massive data breach in 2013
Exec Moves:
·         Carlyle Group has enlisted Mike Duke, former Chief Executive of Wal-Mart, to the executive team the asset management firm taps for advice on consumer products and retail deals
·         Devon Dolan will be leaving his post at ROAR to move to NYC – he will be joining Cinetic Media as a film finance associate
·         Ben Bernanke, the former Federal Reserve chairman and one of the world's most closely watched economic thinkers, is joining one of the most successful hedge funds as an advisor
·         Jim Amos, who spent about 30 years in distribution at Sony Pictures Entertainment, is joining STX Entertainment as senior VP of theatrical distribution
Startups:
·         Spring, the Instagram for shopping, has today closed $25MM in Series B funding led by Box Group, with participation by Yuri Millner, Groupe Arnault, Google Ventures, and Thrive Capital
·         A new company out of London, tray.io, has built a platform that it calls an “integration marketplace,” which wants to make costly IT integrations a thing of the past
Government:
·         Following a series of disappointing data releases, China reported its inbound FDI stayed robust in the first quarter of 2015, while outbound flows posted a milder rise. Foreign direct investment in the country rose 2.2% on year in March
·         Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu blamed the United States and its allies for the conflict in Ukraine, saying their drive to bring Kiev closer to the West was a threat to Moscow and had forced it to react
·         Presidential hopeful Marco Rubio would "of course" go to the gay wedding of someone he cared about, he told Univision's Jorge Ramos Wednesday, likening it to attending a wedding for someone who was previously divorced
·         Angry South African mobs went after foreigners and foreign-owned businesses in Durban this week, leaving five people dead
·         On Wednesday, the board of the Clinton Foundation voted to accept large donations from only a handful of foreign governments and to give regular updates on who is contributing to the foundation
Other:
·         British snowboarder Billy Morgan landed the world's first 1,800 quadruple cork on the slopes of Livigno, Italy, on Tuesday. Morgan competed for Great Britain at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, and finished 10th in the men's slopestyle final event


Wednesday, April 15, 2015

4.15.15

Entertainment:
·         Periscope, the Twitter-owned mobile video streaming app, is getting loads of good old-fashioned free publicity today via doddering news reports that some users of the app shared with their Twitter followers the first episode of HBO’s “Game of Thrones”
·         The Los Angeles Dodgers and R/GA said Tuesday afternoon that the two are setting up a new, startup accelerator in Los Angeles, called the LA Dodgers Accelerator
·         “Heads Up!” originally a game Ellen DeGeneres played with her talk show’s audience and later turned into a hot-selling mobile app, is taking the next logical step, becoming a game show on HLN
·         Two months after the California Film Commission board approved new regulations for the state’s film and television tax incentives, Sacramento has signed off - today, the Office of Administrative Law approved the new regs pretty much as the CFC submitted them back in February
·         WME/IMG acquired Australian music-booking powerhouse Artist Voice and Bull Riders, Inc.
·         Children’s app maker Toca Boca will translate those digital experiences into “TV You Can Touch,” interactive video offerings created by a just-launched New York production unit headed by Sesame Workshop veteran J Milligan
·         New Mexico Governor Susana has signed a second bill in seven days that boosts the state's film incentives program
·         Netflix has renewed “Orange is the New Black” for a fourth season, the streaming service announced Wednesday
·         Netflix is teaming with the World Wide Fund for “Nature” and the creators of “Planet Earth for Our Planet” an eight-part natural history series in 4k set to air in 2019
·         Hotel giant Marriott has checked into Hollywood with its Global Content Studio, producing films and shows with the aim of becoming the biggest travel brand in the world
·         Drake's Toronto-based hip hop festival OVO Fest received $300,000 last year from Canada's Ontario government but this year their grant application was denied
·         Al Jazeera's premium sports channel BeIN Sports will be launching in Spain this summer, following a distribution agreement between the Qatari media group and Mediapro
Tech:
·         Spotify, the popular music-streaming service, is soon expected to announce its latest round of funding, an anticipated $400MM from investors at a valuation of $8.4B
·         Tinder released an update today that integrates directly with Instagram, letting users scroll through the Instagram profiles of their potential matches within the app itself
·         Dormi allows you to re-use old Android smartphones or tablets in order to remotely monitor your baby’s room
·         Musicyou raises a Series A round for its private music sharing platform
·         JD.com, the second-largest e-commerce company in China after Alibaba, is taking on its bigger rival with the launch of JD Worldwide
·         Twitter confirmed that NTT Data, which resold Tweets and their metadata in Japan, will indeed no longer have firehose reselling rights come August
·         This weekend, Vine debuted a channel dedicated entirely to Coachella, but did so in a very different way - instead of opening it up to the masses of content about Coachella, they focused on a narrative created by two highly popular Vine users
·         More than a year ago, AOL executives Tim Armstrong and Bob Lord first publicly outlined their plans to unify AOL’s various ad products as a single platform called One - yesterday that platform launched
·         Sixense announced a partnership with SapientNitro and the availability of a VR shopping platform they call vRetail
·         Tumblr 4.0 comes to iOS with new video features, filtered search, and more
·         Samsung has pulled together a 200-person team dedicated to producing screens for Apple devices
Deals:
·         Nokia has announced that it plans to move ahead with the purchase of Alcatel-Lucent, less than one day after confirming that the two companies were discussing a deal - Nokia will pay $16.6B in shares for the rival telecom equipment maker
·         Menlo Ventures is announcing today that it has $400MM in fresh capital to invest in new startups, thanks to the close of its twelfth fund
·         In the latest tech M&A rumor, Yahoo is in talks to buy Foursquare
·         RetailNext, the leader in Applied Big Data for physical retail, delivering real-time analytics that enable retailers, shopping centers, and manufacturers to collect, analyze, and visualize in-store data, raised $125MM in its Series E
·         Hello Alfred, which provides the smart way to take care of weekly errands without actually doing them individually, raised $10.5MM in its Series A
·         New Enterprise Associates has raised the biggest venture capital fund in the industry- $2.8B on its 15th fund
·         Apple has acquired LinX Computational Imaging, an Israeli developer of multi-sensor mobile camera modules declared to deliver SLR-level image quality and superior low-light shots.
·         DJI, a Chinese startup that makes consumer drones, is in funding talks for a round that would make the company worth $10B
Business:
·         On Wednesday the EU’s executive branch, the European Commission, announced it had served Google with a formal complaint known as a Statement of Objections
·         Hawthorne-based SpaceX has delivered another payload into space, successfully launching its sixth, commercial resupply mission to the International Space Station Tuesday afternoon
·         Apple on Tuesday announced that its annual developer conference, WWDC, would take place June 8-12
·         British regulators on Wednesday fined Bank of New York Mellon 126 million pounds, or about $185MM, for failing to comply with rules intended to protect client assets if the bank were ever to become insolvent
·         Intel met first-quarter profit expectations but fell slightly short of revenue estimates after the bell yesterday, citing sluggishness in its personal computer business but strong growth in the data center segment
·         With the FCC's new net neutrality rules published in the Federal Register, AT&T and three industry trade groups representing cablecos and wireless carriers have filed separate lawsuits challenging the rules, which subject firms to heavier "telecom services" regulations
·         Morgan Stanley has been offered more than $1B for its merchant oil trading business by Castleton Commodities International, a U.S.-based trading house
·         After months of negotiations, Target is close to a settlement with MasterCard that would reimburse banks with roughly $20M for costs they incurred from its massive data breach two years ago
·         A Tax Day strike by fast-food workers in more than 200 American cities is expected to be the largest of its kind - the employees demand a $15 per hour living wage for the workforce, more than half of whom rely on public assistance to supplement their incomes
Exec Moves:
·         Lionsgate’s Motion Picture Group just promoted Patricia Laucella, who has negotiated production and talent deals for some of the studio’s splashiest projects, to President of Business & Legal Affairs
·         STX Entertainment has staffed up its marketing department with a quartet of executive hires
·         Jonah Minton, an early member of the executive team at Fullscreen, has left the online-video giant for DigiTour Media, where he will be chief revenue officer
·         Univision Communications has hired Mark Lopez, formerly Google’s head of U.S. Hispanic audience sales, as executive VP and general manager of Univision Digital
Startups:
·         Kymeta, is a communications company that is making WiFi antennas (the size of an extra-large pizza) that will help connectivity on planes
·         Fleep, the team messaging app built and backed by a number of ex-Skype engineers, is another step further in its mission to help wean you off email
·         FightMe is a video challenge app similar that will create campaigns similar to the ice bucket challenge
·         U.K.-based serial gaming entrepreneur Tony Pearce has pulled in another tranche of early stage funding for gamesGRABR, his Pinterest style social network for gamers, bagging £450,000 ($665,000) in seed funding from ~220 investors in a second crowdfunding round, via Crowdcube
Government:
·         China grew at its slowest pace last quarter since the global financial crisis in 2009, official data showed on Wednesday, building the case for further stimulus from policymakers
·         Talks on resolving Greece's financial deadlock resumed on Wednesday amid growing creditor concern that Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras' government won't come up with the necessary overhauls to unfreeze aid by an April 24 deadline
·         Japan is set to overtake China as America's largest overseas creditor when the U.S. Treasury releases its February investment figures at 4 p.m. in Washington
·         The White House announced Tuesday that it is now prepared to sign a modified version of the Corker-Menendez Bipartisan Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act of 2015, a piece of legislation that in its original form at least was seen as a poison pill to kill the Iran deal
Other:
·         Police in Marana, Arizona released a graphic dash cam video Tuesday showing a police officer running over a robbery suspect in his patrol car
·         Former New England Patriots star Aaron Hernandez was found guilty Wednesday of first-degree murder in a deadly late-night shooting, sealing the downfall of an athlete who once had a $40MM contract and a standout career ahead of him
·         A headache-inducing logic problem from Singapore's Math Olympiad went viral this week, sparking online debates, a Twitter hashtag, and even a song that mimics the process of elimination that leads to the correct answer