Tag Archives: reporter

Governor of Missouri Accuses Reporter of Hacking State Website

A reporter at The St. Louis Post-Dispatch this week alerted Missouri education officials that a state website that lists teachers’ names and certification status had a flaw: The page made the teachers’ Social Security numbers easily available.

The Post-Dispatch also notified the teachers’ union and waited two days until the state had fixed the problem before publishing an article on Thursday revealing the security problem.

To many, it looked like the type of watchdog reporting that many news organizations consider the hallmark of responsible journalism. But Gov. Mike Parson of Missouri had a different view.

At a news conference on Thursday, he said that he had asked prosecutors and the State Highway Patrol to investigate the reporter, whom he accused of carrying out a “hack” of teachers’ private information.

“This individual is not a victim,” Mr. Parson said at the news conference, without identifying the reporter or The Post-Dispatch. “They were acting against a state agency to compromise teachers’ personal information in an attempt to embarrass the state and sell headlines for their news outlet.”

He added, “We will not let this crime against Missouri teachers go unpunished.”

The announcement infuriated reporters, other news organizations and media rights groups, who said the reporter was being threatened with a criminal investigation for doing his job.

“The newspaper and the reporter did nothing wrong,” said Mark Maassen, executive director of the Missouri Press Association. “It’s not uncommon for elected officials to blame the media for instances like this. But, in this case, The Post-Dispatch and their reporter should be applauded for uncovering a serious flaw and then alerting the state agency.”

Captain John Hotz, a spokesman for the Missouri State Highway Patrol, said the agency was “investigating the potential unauthorized access to Department of Elementary and Secondary Education data.” He declined to comment further.

Locke Thompson, the prosecuting attorney for Cole County, said that his office would examine the findings of the State Highway Patrol.

“Once the investigation is complete, I will review the evidence and determine whether criminal charges are appropriate,” he said.

In a statement, Ian Caso, the president and publisher of The Post-Dispatch, said that he was “grateful” for the work of Josh Renaud, a news designer and developer who broke the story about the problems with the website, which is run by the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education.

“I think he should be commended for his work and sense of duty,” Mr. Caso said. “We are surprised and disappointed at the governor’s response and deflection.”

Joe Martineau, a lawyer for the newspaper, said it was “unfounded” for education officials to deflect the failures of their computer system by painting Mr. Renaud’s reporting as a hack.

“A hacker is someone who subverts computer security with malicious or criminal intent,” he said. “Here, there was no breach of any firewall or security and certainly no malicious intent.”

The Post-Dispatch said the Social Security numbers for teachers, administrators and counselors were “present” in the HTML source code of the publicly available pages of the website. The source code for a web page can typically be found by right-clicking on it and scrolling down to “view page source.”

Mr. Parson, a Republican, said that it was “unlawful to access encoded data and systems in order to examine other people’s personal information.”

He cited a state law that said a hacker was anyone who gained unauthorized access to information or content. He said the reporter had no authorization to “convert or decode” the information on the website.

“This was clearly a hack,” Mr. Parson said, adding that the state would investigate the flaws that were uncovered in the system.

Legal observers said they were perplexed by Mr. Parson’s interpretation of what constituted a hack.

Frank Bowman, a professor of law at the University of Missouri School of Law, said that it was difficult to imagine the prosecution of a reporter who alerted state officials to information he discovered by examining a publicly available website.

The chances of prosecutors going after Mr. Renaud, the reporter, “are between zero and zero,” Professor Bowman said. “They’re not going to embarrass themselves like this.”

Tony Lovasco, a Republican state representative with a professional background in computers, said the governor’s announcement showed “a fundamental misunderstanding of both web technology and industry standard procedures for reporting security vulnerabilities.”

“Journalists responsibly sounding an alarm on data privacy is not criminal hacking,” he said on Twitter.

Teachers in the state were upset to learn about the flaws in the system, said Byron Clemens, a spokesman for the local chapter of the American Federation of Teachers, St. Louis Local 420, adding that they have been advised to get a copy of their credit reports to make sure their information has not been compromised.

“It’s a shame that the governor is trying to politicize what was a public service,” Mr. Clemens said, referring to The Post-Dispatch story.

Sandra Davidson, a professor at the Missouri School of Journalism, said that while she was unnerved by the governor’s aggressive response, she said it might lead to more dogged reporting.

“Would it so infuriate reporters, editors and publishers that the governor would make this kind of threat that it would, in fact, embolden the journalists?” Professor Davidson asked.

On Friday, The Post-Dispatch continued to follow the story.

It published another piece on the subject — this one examining the “massive computer shortcomings” plaguing the State of Missouri.



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Billie Eilish Playfully Confronts Jimmy Kimmel Over Past Interview – The Hollywood Reporter

While appearing on Jimmy Kimmel Live! Wednesday night, Billie Eilish wanted to clear up any confusion about her previous interview on the show. 

During her conversation with Kimmel, Eilish switched topics and asked, “Wait, really quick, do you remember last time I was here?” After Kimmel confirmed, she added, “And you made me look a little stupid,” referring to her 2019 interview where she struggled to answer 1980s trivia questions. 

The host responded, “Well, yeah, accidentally. I didn’t do it on purpose.”

Eilish, who was 17 at the time, said, “I thought it was funny because I was playing along, and everybody thought I was actually serious and didn’t know anything.” Kimmel recalled the singer not being familiar with Van Halen. “I did know [them]. Yes, there was a lot things you asked, and I was like, ‘I don’t know,’” she said jokingly.

Kimmel told Eilish people “jumped down your throat” for lack of knowledge about the group. 

“It was funny,” she said. “I didn’t really care.”

The pair also discussed Eilish recently attending the London premiere for No Time to Die. The singer co-wrote the film’s theme song with her brother, Finneas O’Connell, which earned them a Grammy earlier this year for best song written for visual media. Eilish spoke about meeting the royals during the James Bond event and said, “There was a whole list of things I had to follow.” She admitted she planned on adhering to the rules, but “they were just so normal.”

She explained, “They didn’t make me feel like, ‘Oh, I’m scared I can’t talk to them.’ They [were] just complementary and they had all these questions for me. They were just very friendly and funny and sweet. I can’t complain. It was amazing.”

The interview ended with Eilish and Kimmel transitioning to another part of the stage labeled “Billie’s Bucket List.” Kimmel read off items from a list she compiled in 2014  that she had yet to complete, like cutting someone’s hair and getting a mouse. One of her remaining to-dos was “punch someone.”

Kimmel said, “I think you should punch me because I’m probably the strongest person here. And don’t hold back. You just go ahead. I’m like a seal.”

After confirming he was serious, Eilish said, “The goal is for the face but I’m not gonna do that to you,” before winding up and hitting him. 

Watch the interview below.



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‘Hamilton’ Producers Deny Trans Actor’s Discrimination Allegations – The Hollywood Reporter

Suni Reid, a Black non-binary and transgender actor who starred in Hamilton on Broadway, is alleging they experienced gender-based harassment while employed by the production, including that they were terminated for their social posts about the treatment and for later requesting gender-neutral dressing rooms.

The complaint was filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s Los Angeles district office against Hamilton the Musical, Adventureland LLC and Eliza Tour LLC. It alleges that the production and its creative management team began looking for reasons to cut ties with Reid after the actor maintained the production’s suggestion of cordoning off a section of the main male dressing area with a curtain or sheet was not a sufficient solution to their dressing room request.

In a statement confirmed by The Hollywood Reporter, Hamilton‘s producers and creative management deny the allegations made by Reid. “Suni Reid was a valued cast member for more than three years. We offered them a contract to return to Hamilton with terms responsive to their requests. We deny the allegations in the charge,” it states. “We have not discriminated or retaliated against Suni. Since the shutdown, our organization has taken care of our community.”

It goes on to assert that Reid was treated with “the same respect and consideration as all the company members of Hamilton” and was given “direct financial support, paid for their health insurance and paid for their housing.”

According to Reid’s complaint, while working on Hamilton — which included runs with the company’s New York, Chicago and Los Angeles productions — they were physically threatened in addition to being intentionally and repeatedly misgendered. And while “the company failed to act,” the complaint states, “the vast majority of [Reid’s] fellow cast and crew are wonderful colleagues.”

“Unfortunately, during Mx. Reid’s years with the show, which purports to be an icon of diversity, they have experienced frequent incidents of discrimination and harassment from cast members and management of Hamilton based upon their race, sexual orientation/LGBTQ+ status, gender and gender identity,” part of the complaint reads.

“Much of this harassment occurred in the dressing spaces for male performers that Mx. Reid had to use as a member of the cast in New York and Chicago,” it continues.

Reid appeared in ensemble roles during the show’s Broadway run between October 2017 and March 2019 as George Washington, Aaron Burr and Hercules Mulligan/James Madison. During the Chicago production, they served as a standby lead between March 2019 and January 2020 for the same roles with the addition of Marquis de Lafayette/Thomas Jefferson.

Wigdor LLP, a firm that has represented victims in high-profile discrimination and harassment cases in the media and entertainment industry including cases against Harvey Weinstein, Fox News and the Recording Academy, filed the complaint on Reid’s behalf. In a statement provided to THR, Reid’s lawyers Lawrence M. Pearson and Linsday M. Goldbrum said they “hope this is a wake-up call for the theater industry about the systemic inequities that persist even at its greatest heights.”

“Publicly, Hamilton is a beacon of diversity and appears committed to causes seeking social justice and harmony. Behind the curtain, however, the Company’s management will force out a Black, transgender cast member simply because they stood up for themselves and advocated for a more equitable workplace, and therefore called that public image into question.”

The complaint documents that Reid raised concerns around their mistreatment — including those physical threats and misgendering — several times, but that the company showed “indifference.” That response “drove” Reid to post about the issue on social media on more than one occasion, in attempts to spur action within the company.

The request that a gender-neutral dressing room be instituted by the company at the Pantages Theater during the Los Angeles production of Hamilton was made around the May and June 2021 negotiations for the renewal of Reid’s contract. It was at this point, the complaint alleges, Reid’s contract was suspended due to their “problematic” media posts.

While their negotiations were suspended, Reid did not participate in several weeks of rehearsals as well as preview performances, the opening night and beyond. During this time, the complaint states several cast members “pushed back” against the handling of the dressing room request, with one actor offering up and eventually having their dressing room turned into a gender-neutral space. Despite the change, Hamilton still terminated its contract discussions with Reid and did not bring them back.

“The only explanation is that Mx. Reid was punished for making legally protected complaints and requests to the Company,” the complaint states. “Though the Company did what it needed to in order to meet legal obligations and quell unrest among the cast, it would no longer tolerate or trust Mx. Reid as an employee who dared question the supposed ‘wokeness’ of the Company as a business.”



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Disney+ Unveils Bumper Slate of 18 Originals From Asia-Pacific Region – The Hollywood Reporter

The Walt Disney Co. unveiled an impressive array of content firepower Thursday to drive subscriber growth for Disney+ as the streaming wars heat up in the vast Asia-Pacific region.

At a splashy online showcase event hosted out of its Asia offices, Disney announced 18 local-language Originals to be produced over the coming year in territories including Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, greater China and Australia. The titles span both series and film, and feature a diversity of genres, ranging from scripted drama to anime, comedy, fantasy, romance, science-fiction, crime, horror, variety shows and documentaries.

Highlights from the Disney+ APAC slate include a strong selection of Korean titles, such as a documentary about K-pop super group BLACKPINK; Moving, a tentpole Korean action series about teens with mysterious powers; and a pair of anticipated K-drama romances, Snowdrop and Rookies. Predictably, the regionally and globally popular content category of Japanese anime also features prominently in Disney’s plans, with shows on the way like Summer Time Rendering, based on a best-selling manga of the same name. And from China, Disney has greenlit the food-themed period rom-com Delicacies Destiny, from Yu Zheng, the hitmaking producer behind period drama sensation Story of Yanxi Palace. (The complete list of Disney’s APAC originals slate is listed below.)

‘Grid’
Courtesy of Disney

Disney’s bold content expansion in APAC was long anticipated, and the splashy showcase comes at a time when the scramble for streaming subscribers and market share in Asia — home to half of the world’s top six largest economies— is only accelerating. Disney said the slate shared Thursday is a first step towards the company’s goal of greenlighting over 50 APAC originals by 2023. The importance of the region to U.S. streaming companies, both as a pillar source of subscribers and globally appealing content, has been underscored in recent weeks by the smash success of Korean thriller Squid Game, which is on its way to becoming Netflix’s most-watched piece of content ever.

“For many decades, The Walt Disney Company has been entertaining consumers and has been an integral part of the local creative ecosystem,” said Luke Kang, Disney’s president in Asia Pacific. “Today, we are making another commitment by combining the global resources of the company with the best content creators from Asia Pacific to develop and produce original stories on Disney+. With over-the-top services going mainstream, emergence of world-class content from Asia Pacific and rising consumer sophistication, we believe that this is the right time for us to deepen our collaboration with the region’s best content creators to deliver unparalleled storytelling to global audiences.”

Disney+ is a little over midway through its rollout in the region, with the service already available in Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Singapore, India, Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand, with upcoming launches set for South Korea, Hong Kong and Taiwan in November. In its most recent earnings statement in mid-August, Disney reported that Disney+ had added 13 million subscribers for a global total of 116 million, narrowly beating Wall Street forecasts of 115 million.

‘Summer Time Rendering’
Courtesy of Disney

During the presentation, Disney also showcased its Star streaming bundle — which includes a larger library of content from Disney Television Studios, FX, 20th Century Studios, 20th Television and Touchstone — as brand is set to bolster the Disney+ content offering in key Asia markets, such as Japan, in the weeks ahead.

“Our production strategy is centered on working with the best local storytellers in the region, leveraging our brand power, scale and dedication to creative excellence,” said Jessica Kam-Engle, Disney’s APAC Head of Content & Development, who talked through company’s new APAC content slate in detail. “We look forward to collaborating with award-winning and emerging creative talent in Asia Pacific and sharing authentic stories that reflect the unique cultural and social dynamics from this region to global audiences.”

See below for Disney’s complete Disney+ APAC originals slate.

SOUTH KOREA

BLACKPINK: The Movie
Documentary
Director: Oh Yoon-dong, Jung Su-yee
Starring: Jisoo, Jennie, Rosé and Lisa
Summary: A film specially created to celebrate the chart-topping Korean pop group BLACKPINK’s fifth anniversary. BLACKPINK: The Movie includes never-seen-before interviews and over 10 sets of live performances including BLACKPINK’s recent concerts “The Show” in 2021 and “In Your Area” in 2018.

Moving
Drama
Director: Park In-je
Writer: Kang Full
Starring: Ryu Seung-ryong, Han Hyo-joo and Zo In-sung
Summary: Moving is the ultimate tent-pole show based on the webtoon that has generated over 200 million views. An action hero thriller, Moving is a great story of three teenagers concealing their superpowers and their parents who have lived with painful secrets facing great danger over generations.

Rookies
Drama
Director: Kim Byung-soo
Writer: Lee Ha-na
Starring: Kang Daniel and Chae Soo-bin
Summary: A coming-of-age, romantic series set in Korea’s elite police academy, Rookies is full of stories with love and challenges that we all root for. This is K-pop idol Kang Daniel’s drama debut. Watch how a team of first-year police recruits come together to pursue their dreams as they learn what it takes to serve and protect the community.

Snowdrop
Drama
Director: Jo Hyun-tak
Writer: Yoo Hyun-mi
Starring: Jung Hae In and Jisoo
Top Korean actor Jung Have-in and BLACKPINK’s Jisoo team up on this Korean hit series, told by the creators behind the 2019 K-drama mega-hit Skycastle. Snowdrop is a romantic melodrama series and a heartwarming story of a young couple set in Seoul in the late 1980s. The two fall in love, and find themselves caught in a tangled web of intrigue and upheaval.

Grid
Drama
Director: Lee Khan
Writer: Lee Su-yeon
Starring: Seo Kang-jun, Kim A-joong and Si-young
Summary: Following the highly acclaimed series Stranger, award-winning writer Lee Su-yeon has a new tentpole series, Grid. A mysterious being, who saved mankind from a crisis suddenly reappears and helps a murderer. This mystery thriller follows a government official and a detective who tenaciously delve into many secrets and find the truth.

Kiss Sixth Sense
Romance/Fantasy
Director: Nam Ki-hoon
Writer: Jun You-lee
Starring: Kim Yoon-Kye-sang; Seo Ji-hye and Kim Ji-seok
A woman with the ability to see the future with a kiss, accidentally sees he future and that of her boss, whose she despised. This lighthearted and witty romantic drama has been adapted from a popular original web novel of the same title.

Outrun by Running Man
Variety Show
Starring: Kim Jon-kook, HAHA and Jee Seok-jin
Branded-new missions, more fun and relentless challenges! The original members who have been together for 11 years — Kim Kim Jon-kook, HAHA and Jee Seok-jin — take on the first official spin-off of SBS’s Running Man, one of the region’s most popular and long-loved variety shows.


JAPAN

Tokyo Mer Mobile Emergency Room
Drama
Director: Aya Matsuki
Writer: Tsutomu Kuroiwa
Starring: Ryohei Suzuki, Kento Kaku and Ayami Nakajyo
Set against the backdrop of a newly created MER unit, two doctors with opposing ideologies and beliefs find themselves unwittingly taking part in a much larger political game while saving their patients lives.

Lost Man Found
Drama
Director: Tsuyoshi Inoue
Writer: Shin Adachi
Starring: Taiga Nakano, Tsuyoshi Kusanagi and Sairi Ito
Based on a bestseller from publishing house Bungei Shunju, Lost Man Found is a real-life story of a popular sidekick actor in a hilarious yet true-to-life comedy, where we witness his struggles to achieve fame and meet the love of his life.

Gannibal
Drama
Starring: Yuya Yagira
A dark, modern-day horror set in the rural parts of Japan. A policeman, who has a wife and daughter, becomes Chuzai (residential police chief) at the Kyokamura village after the previous Chuzai goes missing. He slowly unravels a horrid rumor about cannibalism taking place in the village.

Black Rock Shooter Downfall 

Animation
Writer: Makoto Fukami
Black Rock Shooter is a media franchise based on an illustration by huke, a world-famous Japanese illustrator, that has spawned music, action figures and a video game. In this animation, Black Rock Shooter has been reborn as a completely new anime, with scriptwriter Makoto Fukami, best known for his work with Psycho-Pass and Resident Evil: Vendetta.

Summer Time Rendering
Animation
Based on a hit Japanese manga written and illustrated by Yasuki Tanaka. This suspense manga is one of the top performing titles on Jump+ with a viewership of more than 130 million. Something is brewing on the secluded summer island in Hyogashima — what mystery awaits Shinpei? You’ve got to find out.

Yojohan Time Machine Blues
Animation
A new animated series based on award-winning writer Tomohiko Morimi’s sequel to The Tatami Galaxy. It’s a mystery and a romantic comedy, set on a sweltering midsummer day where you get to travel back in time.

Twisted-Wonderland
Animation
A planned anime adaptation of Twisted-Wonderland, Disney’s highly popular mobile game on Aniplex.


INDONESIA

Susan Sinyal – The Series
Drama
Director: Bene Dion Rajagukguk
Starring: Asri Welas, Abdur Arsyad, Arie Kriting, Kevin Julio and Kiky Saputri
From the hit movie with the same title produced by Starvision, a comedic drama series about a group of hotel employees suddenly having to manage a classy resort hotel in West Java.

Virgin — The Series
Drama
Director: Monty Tiwa
From Starvision, a spinoff of the 2004 hit movie of the same name. This teen thriller-drama tells the story of a group of high-schoolers making an investigative documentary in the hopes of solving the mystery behind the death of a popular girl from school.

Wedding Agreement — The Series

Drama
Writer: Archie Hekagery
This series is based on the best-selling novel that was adapted into a movie by Starvision in 2019. The series revolves around Bian and Tara, following their arranged marriage.

Jurnal Risa
Drama
Creator: Risa Saraswati
Director: Ahi Suryadi
Risa and her cousins take something from an abandoned house which leads them to be haunted by something dangerous. Now they have to race against the clock to save themselves before it’s too late.

Teluh Darah
Drama
Director: Kimo Stamboel
From Rapi Films and the incredible mind of Kimo Stamboel comes this horror series about black magic. What would you do to protect your family against black magic, even when you discover deep dark secrets that will test your very soul.

Keluarga Camera — The Series
Drama
Director: Ismail Basbeth
A spinoff from the same TV series everyone knows from 1996 and the hit movie adaptation of 2019. A heartwarming show about a family from Jakarta now living in a small town in Indonesia. There will be lots of conflicts and lessons but the show ultimately shows how love from our friends and family makes us reach our full potential.

Tira
Series Creator: Joko Anwar
The frist series developed from a Disney partnership with Bumilangit, a leading character-based entertainment company in Indonesia, with a deep library of superheroes. Tira is about a young woman who gets superpowers after accidentally stumbling upon an ancient force.

GREATER CHINA

Small & Mighty
Drama
Director: Xu Fu-Xiang
Writer: Xu Chen, Wang Hui Zhu
Starring Chen Bo-Lin and Puff Kuo
Co-presented with Bilibili and produced by Jason’s entertainment, the production company behind hit drama Someday or One Day, this is a lighthearted legal drama.

Delicacies Destiny
Drama
Director: Gun Hao
Writer: Yu Zheng
Starring: Wang Xing-Yue and He Rui-Xia
A delicious Chinese period drama combining food and romance. Following the success of Story of Yanxi Palace by veteran producer You Zheng, this is his newest endeavor into food rom-com.

Women in Taipei
Drama
Director: Robin Lee
Writer: Wang Qing-qing
Starring: Jacob Wang and Gwei Lun-mei
A spin-off from Women in Tokyo, this project is Golden Horse winner Gwei Lun-mei’s first return to a starring role in a series after 12 years.

Joy of Life 2
Drama
Writer: Wang Juan
The highly anticipated romantic period sequel to the No. 1 show in China, Joy of Life. Produced by Disney partner New Classic Media, the story continues from where it left off, following a man from the 21st century with knowledge of the modern world, who is reborn in a medieval land.

Min’s Family
Drama
Director: Wang Jun
Starring: Huang Lei and Zhou Xun
Produced by the same crew behind hit drama Nothing But Thirty, this is a captivating story on the struggles and challenges that come from getting divorced and remarried during different stages of life.


MALAYSIA

Ejen Ali Season 3
Animation
A continuation of the hit Southeast Asian animation franchise. The newest season travels to the futuristic city of Cyberaya with secret agents undertaking impossible missions. A co-production with Primeworks and Wau Animation.

AUSTRALIA/NEW ZEALAND

Shipwreck Hunters Australia
Documentary
Director: Brendan Hutchens
The first Disney+ documentary from Australia and New Zealand. Filming is taking place off Western Australia’s vast coastline, the resting place for an estimated 1,600 shipwrecks.



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The 20 Most Powerful Women in Global Entertainment – The Hollywood Reporter

“This decade [has] to be about women having each other’s backs,” said Kate Winslet in her Sept. 19 Emmy acceptance speech for HBO’s Mare of Easttown. Around the world, the international film and television industry’s most powerful women had already been hard at work with that mission. Female producers, studio executives and channel bosses are seeing a historic opportunity to capitalize on the seismic changes wrought by the #MeToo movement to push for true inclusion and diversity across the entertainment business.

But impressive advances in onscreen representation have not been matched by gains in corporate power structures, where, at least at the very top and particularly outside the United States, it is still very much a man’s world. “A lot of work needs to be done in the C-suite, where serious decisions are made,” notes Mo Abudu, CEO of pan-African TV conglomerate EbonyLife Media.

Nevertheless, the glass ceiling smashers on The Hollywood Reporter‘s annual list of the world’s most powerful female entertainment execs are united in their passion to continue to fight for systemic industry changes and to inspire younger women to, as Rola Bauer, president of MGM International TV Productions, puts it, “seek acknowledgment and credit for their work [and] not get left out of the narrative.”

Mo Abudu
Courtesy of Subject

Mo Abudu
Founder, EbonyLife Media (Nigeria)
Nigerian producer and television pioneer Abudu made history in 2020 when her pan-African entertainment banner EbonyLife Media signed a multi-title deal with Netflix, making it the first African production company to enter into such an agreement with the global streamer. Earlier this year, Sony Pictures Television’s international production division extended its exclusive deal with EbonyLife, giving the studio first pick of the scripted television projects intended for global audiences that have been created, originated or developed by Abudu’s company. The first project between Sony and EbonyLife is a series inspired by the story of the elite female West African fighters known as the Dahomey Warriors. EbonyLife also has a co-production deal with AMC Networks for a slate of projects including the Afrofuturistic crime-drama Nigeria 2099. Abudu, who is often called “Africa’s Oprah,” says she’s accustomed to being underestimated and hopes her against-the-odds success will encourage the next generation of female executives to “dream big and be bold with your vision.” Ever the nuts-and-bolts producer, however, Abudu’s first piece of advice for newcomers is to “focus on production quality — find the best technicians and negotiate!”

Rola Bauer
Courtesy of Subject

Rola Bauer
President, International Television Productions at MGM (Germany)
When French giant StudioCanal exercised its option in 2020 to take full control of Bauer’s Munich-based Tandem Productions shingle, the pioneering, two-time Emmy-nominated international producer moved on to the next challenge. Stepping down as co-head of Tandem and managing director at StudioCanal, Bauer joined MGM as president of international television productions and, in the midst of a global pandemic, built up the studio’s global drama slate. In just over a year, the Canadian-born Bauer has shepherded six series to greenlight, including Amazon’s Argentine dramedy El Fin del Amor, the adaptation of Harlan Coben’s Shelter and the environmental-themed thriller series Last Light starring Matthew Fox. A self-confessed “news junkie,” Bauer looks to the wider world to guide projects that her team develops for a global audience, always with an eye for “stories still untold” and an ear for underrepresented voices: “The fact is, global audiences want and need their emotions and lives reflected onscreen more than ever, and it’s our responsibility as storytellers to give them that diversity … whether through fiction or reality.”

Valerie Creighton
George Pimentel/WireImage

Valerie Creighton
President and CEO, Canada Media Fund (Canada)
As head of the biggest financier of Canadian TV, Creighton played a key role in keeping the lights on during the COVID-19 lockdown for the roughly 1,500 local productions the fund supports. A 30-year veteran of the industry, Creighton has also been instrumental in pushing through gender balance measures in Canada — women now make up just over half of the country’s working writers and producers, as well as 36 percent of directors on CMF-funded TV projects — and promoting diversity with schemes that work directly with underrepresented communities. Her advice to young women entering the business? “Stay on your own ground and no matter what, hang on like hell to your authentic self.”

Christa Dickenson
Dominik Magdziak/Getty Images

Christa Dickenson
Executive Director and CEO, Telefilm Canada (Canada)
After two decades of cutting her hair short to “give me an edge” and be taken more seriously in the male-dominated world of Canadian entertainment, Dickenson, head of leading indie film financier Telefilm, changed her look by “swapping [my] signature crew cut for naturally gray shoulder-length hair. This may sound superficial to some. It isn’t. Image matters.” To change the image, and impact, of Telefilm, which invests around $100 million in Canadian film annually, Dickenson has shifted the focus of the government funding body to backing projects from underrepresented filmmakers, particularly people of color. Achieving gender parity in the Canadian film industry, she says, “is simply a first step. [I wish] to see a Black, Indigenous or person of color succeed me in my role at the end of my term at Telefilm. It’s inherent for those of us in leadership roles to pass the baton, to ensure diversity of thinking.”

Jane Featherstone
Courtesy of Subject

Jane Featherstone
Founder, Sister (U.K.)
In the space of just a few years, Sister has emerged as one of the most prolific, exciting and award-amassing TV production companies in the business. First founded as Sister Pictures by Featherstone after a lengthy stint at Brit indie Kudos and its owner Shine (where she oversaw hit dramas such as Broadchurch, Spooks and Utopia), it was relaunched as Sister in 2019, with the formidable duo of Stacey Snider and Elisabeth Murdoch joining the top exec team. But it has continued along the same groundbreaking path laid by Featherstone. High on the list of accomplishments is the HBO-Sky smash-hit miniseries Chernobyl, winner of more than 60 awards (including 10 Emmys); among its other hugely well-received shows are the BBC-Netflix thriller Giri/Haji and Sky-AMC’s Gangs of London (now heading into a second season). Sister has been landing some of the hottest IP around and top talent are clamoring to work with the growing studio, with an upcoming slate that includes Amazon’s The Power, adapted from Naomi Alderman’s best-seller with Reed Morano directing; BBC-AMC series This Is Going to Hurt, based on Adam Kay’s memoir and with Ben Whishaw in the lead; and Sky-HBO true crime drama Landscapers, starring Olivia Colman.

Teresa Fernandez-Valdes
Courtesy of Antonio Terron/Courtesy of Subject

Teresa Fernández-Valdés
Co-founder, Bambú Producciones (Spain)
As co-founder and co-head, with partner Ramón Campos, of prolific Spanish production company Bambú, Fernández-Valdés has been at the forefront of the international television revolution. Bambú’s period melodramas Grand Hotel (2010-2013) and Velvet (2013-2016) were among the first non-English-language series to break through worldwide, and the company has helped ignite the global streaming explosion by signing a first-look deal with Netflix (Bambú’s Cable Girls was Netflix’s first Spanish original) and inking with Apple TV+ for that company’s first Spanish original, the Miami-set thriller Now and Then. Bambú is currently producing its first Amazon original, called A Private Affair, a crime drama set in Spain and featuring French superstar Jean Reno. Four years after the #MeToo revolution shook the foundations of the male-dominated entertainment industry, Fernández-Valdés calls on female executives to take seriously their responsibility in shaping the role models of the future. “They have the power to focus on the stories that represent diversity and equality and make them accessible to the general public,” she notes. “As a producer, I can choose what stories to tell.”

Cecile Frot-Coutaz
Courtesy of Subject

Cécile Frot-Coutaz
CEO, Sky Studios (U.K.)
French industry veteran Frot-Coutaz made waves in May when Comcast’s European TV giant Sky named her CEO of its production arm Sky Studios (Gangs of London, A Discovery of Witches). “Sky is a company that I have always admired as a content maker, as a partner and as a consumer,” she explained in announcing her move. When it comes to female representation and equity, she tells THR, “we must acknowledge that we are never done,” but she is “encouraged that the industry is changing for the better.” In terms of diversity and equality, she argues COVID has allowed people “to truly see our colleagues as individuals with their own personal challenges,” meaning that “in some ways, it’s been a great leveler, and I hope that remains.”

Rose Garnett
Owen Hoffmann/Getty Images

Rose Garnett
Director, BBC Films (U.K.)
The past 24 months have truly helped showcase the impact of Garnett at BBC Films, the filmmaking arm of the BBC and one of U.K. independent cinema’s key financiers. Having joined in 2017 from Film4 (where she helped support the likes of American Honey and Room), she first rebuilt almost the entire creative team, led by commission executive Eva Yates and head of development Claudia Yusef, and then helped oversee a slate of bold and diverse features that have been widely celebrated across festivals and showered with awards, including Judy, which won Renée Zellweger an Oscar in 2020, Francis Lee’s Ammonite and more recently, Jane Campion’s The Power of the Dog. Asked what advice she’d give to women starting out in the industry, she says, “Find ‘your’ team — from colleagues, informal network, collaborators — whatever form it needs to take.”

Jay Hunt
Courtesy of Adam Lawrence

Jay Hunt
Creative Director, Worldwide Video, Europe for Apple (U.K.)
A much-admired TV exec having led a surge in successful commissions while at Brit network Channel 4, Hunt appeared to go quiet after being poached by Apple in 2017 to lead European commissioning. With Apple TV+ now making some noise, Hunt’s expertise, especially with talent, is starting to shine through. The upcoming Claire Danes- and Tom Hiddleston-fronted drama The Essex Serpent, from Top of the Lake and The Power of the Dog banner See-Saw Films, in 2020 marked her first order, while Hunt recently made Sharon Horgan — whose breakout Catastrophe she commissioned at Channel 4 — Apple TV+’s first big-name European signing, with a comedy-drama now in the works.

Christina Jennings
GP Images/WireImage

Christina Jennings
Chairman and CEO, Shaftesbury (Canada)
With a slate that includes Netflix’s Slasher, dog-and-cop family series Hudson & Rex and the long-running CBC period procedural Murdoch Mysteries, Toronto-based Shaftesbury, founded by Jennings in 1987, has established itself as a global leader in small-screen drama, something AMC Networks recognized when it invested in the company earlier this year through a production partnership that will see Jennings’ shingle develop content for the network. “It was a conscious decision on our part to continue to grow our company as a global content provider,” notes Jennings, who regards fellow female-led Canadian companies, like Jennifer Twiner-McCarron’s publicly traded Thunderbird Entertainment Group and the recently launched Cameron Pictures from Gemini Award-winning screenwriters Tassie and Amy Cameron, as prime examples of how female executives are taking the lead north of the border.

Minyoung Kim
Courtesy of Netflix

Minyoung Kim
VP Content for Asia Pacific, Netflix (South Korea)
Kim joined Netflix in 2016 after distinguished stints at Twitter, NBCUniversal and Korean entertainment giant CJ E&M. She was brought on by Netflix as one of the company’s first content executives based in Asia — and her rise since then has been nothing short of meteoric. From helping the streamer set up its first small Seoul office to hashing out a modest initial slate of acquired and self-produced Korean originals five years ago, Kim’s team is now spending more than half a billion dollars on Korean content in 2021 alone. Her remit has since been expanded steadily to comprise every other high-value growth market in the Asia-Pacific region except India. “When I think back to when I first started, I couldn’t have imagined in my wildest dreams the variety and quality of the slate we have all around APAC,” Kim says. “From Kingdom: Ashin of the North, Bangkok Breaking … [to] of course, Squid Game! We have come so far in just five years.”

Miky Lee
Courtesy of Miky Lee

Miky Lee
Vice Chair, CJ Group (South Korea)
For a symbolic example of Lee’s rising profile in Hollywood, look no further than her election in September 2020 as vice chair of the Academy Museum’s board of trustees, behind only Ted Sarandos. Since making Oscar history with Parasite nearly two years ago, Lee has continued to steer CJ’s vast dealings in entertainment worldwide, including local-language adaptations (TNT’s Snowpiercer) and original co-productions (road-trip movie K-Pop: Lost in America, in development with producer Lynda Obst). This is in addition to CJ’s ongoing film and TV production and distribution, its CGV cinema chain and Korean music festival KCON, which has already staged five weeklong virtual editions since the dawn of the pandemic.

Anna Marsh
Courtesy of Philippe Mazzoni/Anna Marsh

Anna Marsh
CEO, StudioCanal (France)
Since March 2019, the New Zealand-born Marsh has been head of StudioCanal, the international television production and distribution arm of French giant Canal+ and one of Europe’s leading small-screen producers. The global content boom has been good to StudioCanal, which, under Marsh’s leadership, now produces more than 200 hours of new drama programming every year through its network of award-winning production companies, including Germany’s Tandem (Shadowplay), Brit-based RED Production (Years and Years) and Spain’s Bambú Producciones (Cable Girls). Marsh says she rarely thinks about her gender as “being an obstacle” in her career. “No matter who you are these days, our industry presents an array of perpetual challenges that keep us all on our toes.” She adds, however, that for many in less-privileged industries, the COVID-19 crisis has been “catastrophic for progression of women in the workplace in some countries. Many have had to sacrifice their careers in favor of staying home to care for ill relatives, or home-school children during the lockdown, undoing decades of positive change. This puts a lot into perspective.”

Anne Mensah
Courtesy of Subject

Anne Mensah
VP Original Series, Netflix (U.K.)
In 2020, Netflix doubled the spend on its productions in the U.K. — its biggest market outside the U.S. — to $1 billion. Among the keepers of the keys to this sizable war chest is Mensah, the BBC and Sky drama veteran who was poached in 2018 as the streaming giant was dramatically beefing up its London operations. Alongside the ongoing success of Brit-made global hits such as The Crown, Sex Education and The Witcher, Netflix has rained money down on U.K. TV producers, signing an exclusive deal with The Crown creator Peter Morgan and investing in the new banner from Black Mirror‘s Charlie Brooker and Annabel Jones. The streamer has also backed scores of scripted shows, including seven commissioned in December from creatives and execs, numbering among them Rowan Atkinson, Pippa Harris, Andy Serkis, Joe Cornish and Tessa Ross. Mensah has also helped drive Netflix’s local diversity initiatives, such as a $480,000 investment that will go toward scholarships this year at the Identity School of Acting, the pioneering London school that counts John Boyega, Letitia Wright and Michaela Coel among its alums. “In the U.K. we need to change the power dynamic and promote inclusion at the highest levels,” Mensah says. “We must ensure diversity amongst those with financial and creative power.”

Charlotte Moore
Courtesy of Subject

Charlotte Moore
Chief Content Officer, BBC (U.K.)
In 2020, Moore was the only woman among four leading contenders vying for the top director-general job at the BBC. While she may not have gotten that position, Moore — then director of BBC content and head of the flagship BBC One channel — was soon upped to the BBC board and named chief content officer, a promotion that made the already highly regarded exec one of the most powerful figures in global TV, expanding her remit to include not just overseeing all of the BBC’s network TV channels, but radio, education and children’s content as well. Unafraid to take shots at the streamers that have poached BBC-nurtured talent such as Phoebe Waller-Bridge in recent years, Moore has also become a champion of the drive to increase diversity. “As an industry we’re getting there onscreen,” she says, “but now we need to focus our energy offscreen and challenge every production to do more to promote diversity and equality at every level.”

Jennifer Mullin
Courtesy of Subject

Jennifer Mullin
CEO, Fremantle (U.K.)
As CEO of indie production giant Fremantle, Mullin oversees a business that in 2020 accounted for $1.83 billion in revenue. Under her leadership as Fremantle’s first American head, the creative powerhouse behind the American Idol and America’s Got Talent franchises has continued its push into drama (The Mosquito Coast, The New Pope and No Man’s Land) to grow the company’s global footprint. In April, Fremantle made headlines with a deal that saw it take full control of Tel Aviv-based Abot Hameiri, the production company behind Netflix hit drama Shtisel. “We have an exciting and ambitious growth plan,” Mullin tells THR, but adds she is “equally focused on our [company] culture.” After all, “without a great culture, growth is stifled and we may lose what makes us special — our spirit of creativity and entrepreneurship.” Mullin has served as CEO since succeeding Cécile Frot-Coutaz in September 2018 after holding the same role at FremantleMedia North America. Before joining Fremantle, she worked as an executive producer at such companies as Paramount and Telepictures.

Cathy Payne
Courtesy of Subject

Cathy Payne
CEO, Banijay Rights (France)
As the boss of global television sales giant Banijay Rights, a job she took over in April 2020, the Australian-born Payne oversees a massive catalog of iconic TV brands and formats, from Survivor and MasterChef to Peaky Blinders and Black Mirror. Coming up through the ranks — she spent two decades at reality-TV pioneer Endemol Shine, starting at Australian division Southern Star and eventually taking over as CEO of Endemol Shine International — Payne says she often encountered an “old boys’ club” mentality along with “unwelcome, condescending behavior,” attitudes she says have “thankfully mostly disappeared” from today’s TV business. A firm believer in creating strong support networks for women in entertainment, Payne sees it as her corporate responsibility to ensure that Banijay has a “permanent focus” on improving diversity and equality and creating the “right paths for those underrepresented to find ways into our industry.” She says her working-class origins inform her approach. “Economic inequality is always a big concern,” she notes.

Christina Sulebakk
Courtesy of Subject

Christina Sulebakk
General Manager, HBO Max EMEA (Europe, Middle East and Africa) (U.K.)
Former freelance film journalist Sulebakk’s career trajectory has trended upward ever since she entered the marketing business at Canal+, becoming a seasoned executive with over 15 years of experience and a reputation for starting up businesses and building teams. After joining HBO Nordic and moving through the HBO ranks for more than eight years, including stints in Madrid, Budapest and New York, she was promoted in July 2020 to the role of general manager, HBO Europe and in January became general manager, HBO Max EMEA. Currently, she is focused on the streamer’s roll-out in the Nordics and Spain on Oct. 26 and more markets next year. As for increased equality in the industry, Sulebakk says her Danish roots give her unique perspective on the changes that still need to occur. “I’m fortunate to come from Denmark, where gender equality and inclusion are much more the norm,” she says. “Hopefully we are seeing that spread across geographical boundaries.”

Jane Tranter

Jane Tranter
Co-founder, Bad Wolf (U.K.)
Already a near-legendary figure in British TV after overseeing the hugely successful 2005 resurrection of Doctor Who while she was BBC drama chief, Tranter recently underlined her cult credentials by bringing the HBO-BBC adaptation of Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials to screens via her Bad Wolf banner, set up in 2015 alongside fellow BBC and Doctor Who alum Julie Gardner. One of the most ambitious TV shows to date, His Dark Materials — shot mostly in the vast Bad Wolf studio Tranter helped set up in South Wales, and recently renewed for a third and final season — isn’t the only project on the company’s books. Tranter’s slate also includes the recent HBO-BBC financial drama Industry and the HBO Max-Sky comedy I Hate Suzie, from Succession writer Lucy Prebble. Speaking of Succession, Tranter is an exec producer on that show, too. As for Doctor Who, Tranter is rejoining the show, with Bad Wolf recently announced as producer on the series when Russell T. Davies returns as showrunner in 2023.

Kayo Washio
Courtesy of Wowow

Kayo Washio
Head of U.S. Operations, Wowow (Japan)
Early in her career at Japan’s leading pay TV broadcaster Wowow, Washio was an interviewer for the company’s movie channel, hosting sit-downs with A-list Hollywood stars as they introduced their projects to the Japanese market. In 2011, she was dispatched to Los Angeles to head up Wowow’s first U.S. office, tasked with maintaining and expanding the broadcaster’s output deals with the major Hollywood studios. As her relationships in the U.S. flourished, she arranged for Wowow to co-produce a number of prestigious documentary projects, such as Martin Scorsese’s The New York Review of Books: A 50 Year Argument and Robert Redford and Wim Wenders’ six-part TV series Cathedrals of Culture. In her most recent incarnation, as competition from U.S. streamers has begun to put pressure on Wowow’s model, Washio has headed up the company’s diversification into theatrical distribution, acquiring titles like pandemic drama Song Bird, produced by Michael Bay, and also arranging for Wowow to co-produce high-profile Hollywood series content, like HBO Max’s forthcoming Japan-set yakuza thriller Tokyo Vice, directed by Michael Mann. When it comes to increased diversity in the industry, Washio says there is still plenty of work to be done. “It has certainly been an illuminating year with anti-Asian prejudices in America under the microscope and disconcerting data and statistics related to Asian representation in Hollywood coming to light,” she says. “It’s clear there need to be more strident inclusion efforts across the entertainment ecosystem.”

This story first appeared in the Oct. 6 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe.



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Missouri reporter Linda Simmons fired for refusing COVID-19 vaccine

A veteran TV reporter at a Missouri news station was fired last week for refusing to get the COVID-19 vaccine.

Linda Simmons, who worked for 14 years at KY3 based in Springfield, wrote on Facebook that she requested a religious exemption to the vaccine mandate instituted by her station’s parent company — but it was denied.

“I value the freedom we all have to make our own informed decisions,” Simmons wrote in the Friday social media post.

“I’ve made a big decision and decided not to allow the company that owns KY3, Gray Television, to control my personal health choices. I did not comply with their vaccine mandate after my exemption request was denied,” her post continued.

Simmons was one of three station employees who were caned for not complying with the corporate mandate, according to The Kansas City Star.

The reporter said in a KSGF radio interview that she felt a “sinking feeling” upon learning that her exemption was denied, the newspaper reported.

Company executives during the summer unanimously agreed to mandate vaccines for all employees.

“The increasingly rapid spread of the coronavirus poses an unfair risk to fellow employees and their family members who are not eligible to get vaccinated,” the company memo to employees read.

Simmons told the newspaper her future plans are uncertain.

“I have confidence that I am doing God’s will for me. I trust that He has good plans in store!!” she concluded her Facebook post.

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Rami Malek Recalls Catching Kate Middleton “Off Guard” – The Hollywood Reporter

Rami Malek revealed a special moment he shared with Kate Middleton on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on Tuesday night.

Malek, who recently reunited with the Duchess of Cambridge when she attended the world premiere of upcoming Bond movie No Time to Die in London, told Kimmel he had some “familiarity” with Middleton and Prince William after their first interaction two years ago. 

Their initial meeting — which also took place at Royal Albert Hall, where the No Time to Die premiere was held — happened at the 2019 BAFTAs. The actor explained how “fascinating” it was to learn that the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge learn information about everyone they speak to. “You can see they’ve done their homework,” he said. “I just looked at Princess Kate at one point and I said, ‘This must be exhausting.’ She [said], ‘Why?’ I said, ‘You just had a baby, right?’”

The actor was referring to Middleton and Prince William welcoming their third child, Prince Louis, in 2018. Malek recalled Middleton’s reaction to the acknowledgment of royal duties, saying, “I think she was just taken aback.” He continued, “She said, ‘How are you doing?’ And I said, ‘No, how are you?’ In the most regal, elegant way she’s like, ‘Well,’ you know, gave me a look.”

He added, “It was so cool because I think I caught her off guard for a second.” Malek joked with her and said, “‘You know, if you ever need a day off, some time off, I’m backup for you.’ She’s like, ‘What do you mean?’ I go, ‘I can babysit. You guys go out. Have a good time.’”

“I think after seeing the movie, they’re not going to want you to babysit at all,” Kimmel quipped, in reference to Malek’s diabolical villain in No Time to Die.

“That’s so true,” Malek agreed.

Watch the interview below. 



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Letterman’s ‘Late Show’ Announcer Was 78 – The Hollywood Reporter

Alan Kalter, who served as the announcer and performed hilarious comic bits for David Letterman during his two-decade run on CBS’ Late Show, has died. He was 78.

Kalter died Monday at Stamford Hospital in Connecticut, his wife, Peggy, told The Hollywood Reporter.

The red-haired Kalter took over for the retired Bill Wendell as the Late Show announcer in September 1995 — about two years after Letterman moved from NBC to CBS — and remained through the host’s final program on May 20, 2015. On his first day on the job, Letterman tossed him into a pool.

With musical accompaniment from Paul Shaffer and the CBS Orchestra, Kalter announced the guests and cheekily introduced the host at the top of each show, then voiced the comic one-liner over the Worldwide Pants title card on the end credits.

In between, Kalter often acted in funny sketches that included hosting “Alan Kalter’s Celebrity Interview” after Letterman was finished with the guest and speaking from his announcer’s podium as the studio lights dimmed, trying to come on to lonely, divorced women as “Big Red” — much to the dismay of a “shocked” Letterman.

“I’ve had such a great 20 years, it’s been a blessing every single day,” Kalter said in an interview as the Letterman show was winding down.

“Every one of us goes through a terrible time once in a while, before 3 o’clock or before 4 o’clock. But no matter what my day is like, from 4:30 to 5:30 [when the Late Show taped], I laugh, I smile, every day.”

Alan Robert Kalter was born in Brooklyn on March 21, 1943, and raised in the New York communities of Little Neck and Cedarhurst.

In 1964, he graduated from Hobart College in Geneva, New York, then attended law school at NYU. He taught English and public speaking in high school on Long Island for about three years before beginning his broadcasting career at the radio station WHN.

Kalter also was the announcer on such game shows as To Tell the Truth, The $25,000 Pyramid — where he met Letterman, who was a guest, for the first time — and The Money Maze, some of which were taped at The Ed Sullivan Theater on Broadway, home of the Late Show; did voiceovers for hundreds of commercials (he was the voice of the Michelin Man); and voiced regular promos for USA Network.

“When I came home and said I was offered the job as the announcer on the Late Show, I told my wife I wasn’t sure if I really wanted it because it would really rock the boat on those commercials I was doing around the country,” he recalled in 2019. “I wouldn’t be able to go away for three or four days at a time whenever I wanted to, to do that work. And my kids, who were in high school at the time, sort of immediately in chorus said, ‘Dad this is the first cool thing you’ve ever done in your life. Take it!’”

In lieu of flowers or food baskets, Kalter wanted donations in his memory be made to Temple Beth El in Stamford.



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Scarlett Johansson, Disney Lawsuit Settled Over ‘Black Widow’ – The Hollywood Reporter

Scarlett Johansson and Disney have settled a breach of contract lawsuit over the star’s Black Widow payday, The Hollywood Reporter has learned. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

“I am happy to have resolved our differences with Disney,” stated Johansson. “I’m incredibly proud of the work we’ve done together over the years and have greatly enjoyed my creative relationship with the team. I look forward to continuing our collaboration in years to come.”

Disney Studios chairman Alan Bergman added: “I’m very pleased that we have been able to come to a mutual agreement with Scarlett Johansson regarding Black Widow. We appreciate her contributions to the Marvel Cinematic Universe and look forward to working together on a number of upcoming projects, including Disney’s Tower of Terror.”

The explosive suit, filed by the actress in July in Los Angeles Superior Court, claimed that the studio sacrificed the film’s box office potential in order to grow its fledgling Disney+ streaming service. Disney countered that Johansson was paid $20 million for the film.

The settlement brings to a close a back-and-forth PR battle that pitted the CAA-repped star vs. the studio for the past two months and was poised to have dramatic implications for Hollywood’s major studios. Johansson’s cause received support in the industry as talent and executives — including Jamie Lee Curtis, Marvel’s WandaVision star Elizabeth Olsen and mogul Jason Blum — spoke out on her behalf.

At the time of the complaint, a Disney spokesperson said, in part, “The lawsuit is especially sad and distressing in its callous disregard for the horrific and prolonged global effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.” CAA co-chairman Bryan Lourd shot back that Disney “shamelessly and falsely accused Ms. Johansson of being insensitive to the global COVID pandemic, in an attempt to make her appear to be someone they and I know she isn’t.”

In her complaint, Johansson said the Marvel tentpole had been guaranteed an exclusive theatrical release when she signed her deal. She alleged that her contract was breached when the film was simultaneously released on Disney+.

As the coronavirus pandemic wreaked havoc on Hollywood over the past 18 months, Black Widow was one of many big-budget movies including Warner Bros.’ Wonder Woman and Disney’s Cruella and Jungle Cruise that bowed simultaneously on streaming and in theaters. But to date, Johansson is the only major movie star to sue. She claimed that Disney sacrificed Black Widow’s box office potential in order to grow its streaming service.

“Why would Disney forgo hundreds of millions of dollars in box office receipts by releasing the Picture in theatres at a time when it knew the theatrical market was ‘weak,’ rather than waiting a few months for that market to recover?” the complaint asked. “On information and belief, the decision to do so was made at least in part because Disney saw the opportunity to promote its flagship subscription service using the Picture and Ms. Johansson, thereby attracting new paying monthly subscribers, retaining existing ones, and establishing Disney+ as a must-have service in an increasingly competitive marketplace.”

Black Widow, which has earned $379 million at the worldwide box office to date, debuted at the same time in theaters and on Disney+ Premier Access for an additional $30. But in what was viewed by rival studio executives as a major miscalculation, Disney boasted on July 11 that Black Widow earned $60 million in purchases via Disney+’s Premier Access paywall, opening the door for a fierce clash. After all, Johansson had been considering litigation for several months, says a source familiar with the suit. Until the afternoon of July 28, she believed Disney would make an offer and that she wouldn’t have to file a suit. But Disney stayed in the mode of, “Let’s keep talking,” the source adds. Johansson was particularly incensed by the announcement, which pleased Wall Street but not the talent and representation community.

According to the complaint, Disney’s move “not only increased the value of Disney+, but it also intentionally saved Marvel (and thereby itself) what Marvel itself referred to as ‘very large box office bonuses’ that Marvel otherwise would have been obligated to pay Ms. Johansson.”

Johansson vs. Disney marked the latest iteration of a profit participation dispute that is all too common in Hollywood, with actors fighting with studios over their back-end compensation or the definition of net profit. Very few of these battles percolate to the surface because they often get worked out before lawyers get involved or the actor’s contract contains an arbitration provision in which the whole process remains confidential. (A source familiar with Johansson’s suit says her contract does have an arbitration provision, but her lawyers were willing to test it.)

“The exception is when there’s so much money involved or if there’s a level of acrimony that has reached a point of no return, and people are going to stand on principle,” attorney James Sammataro tells THR. “That statement by Disney confirmed the latter, but it still is a shocking statement to make — to paint someone as being insensitive and playing the whole, ‘You’re so out of touch’ card. You could probably make the same argument about Disney. ‘Yeah. You’ve been generating millions, if not billions, during the pandemic.’”

In the wake of Johansson’s suit, more than a handful of other A-listers were said to be considering filing similar suits. (Jungle Cruise star Dwayne Johnson was not one of them given that he has a different compensation structure than Johansson.) But that did not come to fruition yet. Cruella’s Emma Stone closed a deal two weeks after Johansson’s suit to star in a sequel of Disney’s live-action film, offering a sign that Disney was working to secure talent amid the charged atmosphere.

While Disney has faced criticism for its handling of talent deals during the pandemic, WarnerMedia took a different approach by proactively doling out as much as $200 million to pay a long list of stars whose Warner Bros. films were simultaneously opening in theaters and on its HBO Max, including Patty Jenkins, Gal Gadot and Will Smith.

Johansson is represented by Kasowitz partner John Berlinski, while Daniel Petrocelli has been repping Disney.



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Beck Bennett Leaving After 8 Seasons – The Hollywood Reporter

Long-time Saturday Night Live regular Beck Bennett is departing the NBC late night show — thought the rest of the core cast will return for SNL‘s 47th season.

Lauren Holt, who was a featured player last season, also isn’t returning.

The remainder of last season’s cast — regulars Aidy Bryant, Michael Che, Pete Davidson, Mikey Day, Chloe Fineman, Heidi Gardner, Colin Jost, Kate McKinnon, Alex Moffat, Kyle Mooney, Ego Nwodim, Chris Redd, Cecily Strong, Kenan Thompson, Melissa Villaseñor and Bowen Yang and featured players Andrew Dismukes and Punkie Johnson — are all set to return. Fineman and Yang have been upped to repertory players.

SNL has also added three new featured performers for the 2021-22 season in comedian Aristotle Athari, comic and actor James Austin Johnson — known for his viral impressions of Donald Trump — and writer and actress Sarah Sherman.

“Love you, SNL,” Bennett wrote on Instagram Monday. “Gonna miss you so much. Thank you for 8 years of remarkable people and incredible experiences that completely changed my life. I had so much fun.”

Despite Bennett’s and Holt’s departures, the coming season — which premieres Oct. 2 — will feature a largely intact cast for the second straight season. The 2020-21 season marked the first time since 2007 that the regular cast was unchanged from the prior year.

As was the case last season, several cast members who have other commitments will take time off during the season. Last year Bryant and Strong each missed several episodes while filming, respectively, Hulu’s Shrill  and Apple’s Schmigadoon! Thompson and Redd at times spent part of his week filming Kenan, their NBC primetime comedy, before returning to New York for SNL.

Bennett joined SNL as a featured player at the start of season 39 in 2013 and was promoted to the regular cast in 2015. Among his notable characters were Sen. Mitch McConnell, CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, former Vice President Mike Pence and Russian leader Vladimir Putin.



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