- Apple plans on unveiling its streaming service on March 25 (Bloomberg)
- Europe considers new rules to force YouTube and Facebook to block copyright-protected material (The Hollywood Reporter)
- Roblox is the latest platform to ban internet-mega-star PewDiePie (Tube Filter)
- How two of the Oscar-nominated animated shorts weave similar stories about memories (IndieWire)
- Shortly after announcing its best-ever financial results, Activision Blizzard lays off nearly 800 (Variety)
- LEGO is launching a limited-edition clothing line that you can only buy through Snapchat (CNBC)
- A former Driver Digital and Frederator exec gets into how to develop original content for YouTube (Tube Filter)
- If Disney is launching its own streamer, why exactly is it building up Hulu’s Marvel content? (WIRED)
- The new head of content for WarnerMedia says it’s a bad idea to share content with third-party streamers (The Hollywood Reporter)
- The digital voice assistant market is expected to triple by 2023 (Advanced Television)
- You can breathe a sigh of relief, the Oscars announced both animation categories will still be broadcast (The Guardian)
- Despite it’s recent financial report, Hasbro says Toys “R” Us closure is only a brief disruption (CNBC)
- Former Disney CEO, Ron Miller, has died (Variety)
- The LEGO Movie 2 brought in half what the original did on opening weekend, but still came out on top (The Hollywood Reporter)
- The future of phones is all about the foldable 5G (Tech Crunch)
- Why big theaters are buying in to VR even when IMAX bowed out (WIRED)
- Another day, another streamer: MGM-owned Epix is diving in with EpixNow (The Verge)
- The Facebook “youth” team is being redirected to Messenger Kids and dropping that LOL app (The Guardian)
- How Nat Geo Kids is digging deeper into fiction and digital to reach a young audience (Variety)
- Why is it so hard to make a good movie from a toy-based IP? (The Hollywood Reporter)
- Apple lays down the law and tells apps to shape up on secret screen recording or ship out (Tech Crunch)
- Turns out Twitter actually has 60 million fewer daily active users than Snapchat (Recode)
- How Justin Thompson designed the animated game-changer Into the Spider-Verse (Indie Wire)
- Across the board, video game companies are getting clobbered by Fortnite (New York Times)
- A bunch of popular iPhone apps are secretly recording users without consent (Tech Crunch)
- This isn’t a game: eSports ad revenue reached US$805 million last year and is expected to keep growing (eMarketer)
- Snap was able to turn things around, with sales up 36% over last year (Recode)
- How eOne brought Peppa Pig back from the brink of Chinese cyberspace (Wall Street Journal)
- Fortnite is the future, but not for the reasons you might think (REDEF)
- Broadcaster FX slams Netflix for “inaccurate ratings” (CNN)
- We can all keep talking about it, but why does nobody ever really quit Facebook or Google? (Tech Crunch)
- More than 10 million people showed up to watch a DJ play a virtual concert in Fortnite (Tube Filter)
- Perhaps the magic of Sesame Street is just a really good contact list (Vanity Fair)
- Spider-Verse snagged seven wins at the Annie Awards, but it was Netflix’s Hilda that won big on the small screen (IndieWire)
- How to Train Your Dragon 3 flies to the top of the international box office ahead of North American premiere (Variety)
- Turns out Netflix’s dominance can still be challenged, as viewership drops 32% during the Super Bowl (Mashable)
- How exactly did Sesame Street manage to charm the whole world for so long? (BBC News)
- Why it’s important to let kids be bored (New York Times)
- Amazon’s sales and profits have topped estimates—driven largely by retail (Bloomberg)
- In some positive news, the number of harmful ads kids are seeing has declined (The Drum)
- In the year of streaming wars, battles are already heating up (Wall Street Journal)
- 32% of Gen Z would avoid websites that don’t anticipate what they want, ushering in an era of predictive entertainment (Information Age)
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