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What it's really like behind the scenes at the chaotic and glamorous Oscars

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Getty Images BTS

At the Oscars, there's so much to catch in the broadcaast, yet so many more wonderful details that the audience at home misses.

But thanks to the quickly evolving technology of covering the awards, we get some behind-the-scenes glimpses at some of those special moments.

Business Insider talked to Larry Busacca, Getty's chief entertainment photographer, about what it's like to be in the middle of the Oscars storm and try to find the perfect visuals. Luckily, not only Gett but also stars with phones and social-media accounts are able to give us some pretty great shots you won't see on TV — whether that's Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling looking on backstage with glee, Chrissy Teigen hitting the bar with elegance, or a hug between stars of "Moonlight."

"We're doing a job," Busacca, who's been a leading entertainment photographer for over 25 years, told Business Insider. "It's like a regular work day, but not really. You never get past the fact that it's the Oscars."

Here's what it was like behind the scenes at the 2017 Oscars:

SEE ALSO: How the Oscar-winning O.J. Simpson documentary got never-before-seen evidence from the case

"The technology and innovation we have today helps those watching from home to experience the event like you're there yourself."

This year, Getty placed remote cameras on the red carpet. Remote cameras are static and stay in one place, and are useful for capturing hundreds of arrivals.

The photo agency also recently started using robotic cameras, which can move up, down, from side to side, and can zoom in. A photographer operates the robotic cameras with a joystick at a computer. 

"It's like playing a video game," Busacca said.



"You never know if you're gonna get that magic photo."

Busacca told us that it's about being in the moment, and being at the right place at the right time. These moments pass by quickly, so photographers really have to be tuned in and fully aware of what's happening around them.



"During the show it's a foot race. It's unpredictable. You're running to catch the next big star who just arrived on the red carpet. These guys are in great shape."

This candid shot of "Moonlight" director Barry Jenkins, wearing a blue ribbon to represent the ACLU, was taken by a robotic camera.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The big change HBO’s ‘Insecure’ made to find the heart of the show

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HBO’s “Insecure” was a breakout hit of 2016, scoring a 100% on reviews aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, and a Golden Globe nod for its star, Issa Rae.

But the version of the show that HBO subscribers saw was very different from the initial version of the script, according to HBO EVP Amy Gravitt, who oversaw its development.

The big change was that “Insecure” initially revolved around the work life of Issa (the character), at “We Got Y’all,” a very white, though well-meaning, non-profit focused on education. That was the center the show was built around.

But over the course of development, the friendship between Issa and her best friend Molly just kept being referenced over and over, and eventually the team realized that was actually the heart of the show. They rewrote it around that.

“The friendship is really refreshing,” Gravitt told Business Insider. It has conflict but it's also "emotional, real, and supportive ... I miss my best friend from college when I watch the show,” Gravitt laughed. She contrasted it with many shows that simply portray "women taking swipes at each other." Issa and Molly's relationship is complicated, but ultimately successful.

"Insecure" is a big step for Rae, who rose to prominence in 2011 with her hit YouTube series, “The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl,” but had a few frustrating years in Hollywood trying to get a TV show made. She had a potential ABC show with Shonda Rhimes killed before eventually teaming up with TV comedy veteran Larry Wilmore and HBO to write (and star in) “Insecure.”

For more on that, see our full look at how "Insecure" transformed a YouTube series into an HBO hit.

SEE ALSO: Netflix's future could be making entertainment for non-humans, according to CEO Reed Hastings

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NOW WATCH: 'I think he is behind it': Trump suggests Obama is organizing protests against him

'Horizon Zero Dawn' is an incredible, must-play game that's reason enough to buy a PlayStation 4

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Often, while playing through "Horizon Zero Dawn," I was stopped in my tracks by how beautiful it is.

Horizon Zero Dawn

I mean that literally. Over and over, I'd be walking — more likely running — through the massive open world and be overwhelmed by how gorgeous it is; so much so, in fact, that I would literally stop walking and just marvel at the incredible virtual world on my PlayStation 4. 

And that's before we even start discussing the giant metal dinosaurs.

Horizon Zero Dawn

But let's back up: "Horizon Zero Dawn" is a brand new game for the PlayStation 4, available as of February 28. If you own a PlayStation 4, it's a must-play. If you don't, it's a worthy reason — unto itself — to buy a PlayStation 4. No caveats — seriously!

Here's why.

SEE ALSO: 5 hidden PlayStation 4 features only power users know about

"Horizon Zero Dawn" is a third-person action-adventure game. Think: "Assassin's Creed," or "Batman."



The main character, who you play as, is named Aloy. She's an outcast of a tribal culture (the "Nora" tribe). She's been an outcast since birth.



The story of "Horizon Zero Dawn" is Aloy's journey. Where is she from? Who is her mother? Why was she shunned at birth, doomed to be an outcast of her own culture?



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Seth Meyers: What you should really expect from Trump's next big speech

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Seth Meyers Trump Congress Hulu final

President Donald Trump will be addressing Congress on Tuesday, marking his first major speech since Inauguration Day.

It could be a moment when Trump finally give some clear details about his legislative ideas. But Seth Meyers pointed out in his "Closer Look" segment on Monday's "Late Night" that when Trump has tried that in the past, he's gotten hung up on his thoughts about the media.

Meyers showed a clip from the recent Conservative Political Action Conference, where Trump went on about how he couldn't believe that a recent story on his administration had nine sources.

“He’s so sure it’s not nine people,” Meyers said, then in his Trump voice: "There can’t be nine sources because we haven’t even hired nine people yet."

Meyers said that Trump is obsessed with the leaks coming out of his administration. In one example the host cites, press secretary Sean Spicer gathered his communications team and had them hand over their phones to show they weren't the leakers. That story was then leaked to the press.

"It’s like they are trying to bail out a sinking rowboat with spaghetti strainer," Meyers said.

"Tomorrow is a huge opportunity for Trump," Meyers said of Trump's address to congress. "He has the chance to sell Americans on his agenda rather than whine about the free press."

Watch Meyers' entire "Closer Look" segment below:

 

SEE ALSO: Jimmy Kimmel reveals what the "mass confusion" was like during the biggest Oscars mistake ever

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NOW WATCH: Here's the 'Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2' trailer Marvel dropped during the Super Bowl

YouTube's cable-killing live TV streaming service is coming this week (GOOG, GOOGL)

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Susan Wojcicki - Sun Valley

YouTube is getting ready to take on traditional cable companies.

The online video service plans to announce Unplugged, a live TV service streamed over the internet, according to The New York Post. YouTube is holding a press event Tuesday afternoon to unveil the details.

Unplugged, which has been rumored for months, will be similar to Dish's Sling TV and AT&T's DirecTV Now, allowing you to subscribe to a so-called "skinny bundle" of popular pay TV channels. The New York Post's report says Unplugged will cost $30 to $40 per month.

A YouTube spokesperson was not immediately available for comment.

SEE ALSO: Samsung will announce the Galaxy S8 on March 29

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NOW WATCH: A father-son team is creating the next viral YouTube channel by melting things

FX is already renewing Ryan Murphy's new show 'Feud' for a second season about Charles and Diana

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FX proved it has nothing but love for prolific producer Ryan Murphy on Tuesday by renewing his anthology series, "Feud," before it has even aired an episode.

The network gave the show a 10-episode order for a second season and announced its very revealing title: "Feud: Charles and Diana." 

The newly greenlit season two will follow the turbulent marriage of Britain's Prince Charles and his ex-wife, the late Princess Diana. It's scheduled to air in 2018

The first eight-episode season of the anthology show, "Feud: Bette and Joan," chronicles Joan Crawford and Bette Davis' notorious rivalry behind the scenes of their 1962 film "What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?" It premieres Sunday, March 5, at 10 p.m.

"Feud" is the latest from Murphy for FX, after popular and critically acclaimed series "American Horror Story" and "American Crime Story," the latter of which followed the murder trial of O.J. Simpson in its first season.

SEE ALSO: Watch the first trailer for FX's new show about one of Hollywood's most notorious feuds

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NOW WATCH: An actor from 'The League' has been telling this bogus 9/11 story for the past 14 years

GameStop shares are tanking after Microsoft unveils a new attack on the used game business (GME, MSFT)

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Today, Microsoft announced Xbox Game Pass— a Netflix-like service that will bring Xbox One gamers unlimited access to a selection of over 100 games, including hits like "Halo 5: Guardians," for $9.99 per month, when it launches in the Spring.

Following the announcement, shares in nationwide video game retail chain GameStop sunk around 5% to $25.11 per share. 

The sale of pre-owned and "value" (cheaper, older games) titles has long been a cornerstone of GameStop's business, accounting for about 25% of the chain's revenue and about 47% of its gross profit in 2015. With Xbox Game Pass, Microsoft stands to take a hefty chunk of that budget-conscious market for itself. 

The video game industry has long been critical of GameStop in particular and the pre-owned games market in particular. When a brand new game is sold, the title's publisher takes a hefty cut of the proceeds, but once it gets sold back to GameStop, Amazon, or Walmart and becomes a pre-owned title, the original creators never see another dime.

Microsoft itself has tried to take a bite out of the used game market before, with an aborted plan that would have tied a game to the Xbox One console on which it's played forever — effectively destroying the market for used games on the Xbox One forever. Amid a massive backlash, Microsoft scuttled that plan ahead of the Xbox One's 2013 launch. 

xbox game pass

Now, it seems that Microsoft is trying again. But instead of limiting the Xbox One hardware, Microsoft is trying to entice gamers away with a better deal. And while $9.99 a month is fairly cheap for the number of games involved, it's better than the zero dollars the publishers would get from the sale of used games. 

GameStop did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

SEE ALSO: Bill Gates' wicked sense of humor really shines on Reddit — see for yourself

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NOW WATCH: 5 hidden features to get the most out of your Xbox One

How the Oscars could sue the company that handed out the wrong best-picture card

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Martha L Ruiz Brian Cullinan PricewaterhouseCoopers Christpher Polk Getty final

Following the biggest blunder in Oscar history during Sunday's awards, when presenters Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway presented best picture to the wrong movie, you would think heads would roll. But that could turn out to be complex.

The misstep happened because a person in charge of holding winning envelopes handed Beatty the wrong card.

The accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers, which audits the voting for the Oscars and handles its ballots and envelopes, and the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences have been working together for 83 years. As The Hollywood Reporter points out, the firm does more than oversee Oscar voting tabulations. PwC is also in charge of many accounting duties for the Academy.

And according to lawyers who spoke to THR, the Academy likely won't be suing PwC, though they could argue that the firm breached a duty of care.

Oscars best picture 2017 Kevin Winter Getty final“They’ve been doing this so long, they might have developed a contract that’s really detailed," Devin McRae, a litigator at Early Sullivan, told the publication. "The Academy might attempt to get a price break, telling PwC, 'You have to take a hit. This is the worst possible error you can make.'"

The only way this scenario would likely go to court is if both parties couldn't agree on financial compensation, according to THR's reporting.

The Wall Street Journal broke the news that PwC partner Brian Cullinan was the one who handed Beatty the incorrect envelope for the best picture category. The story points out that he may have been distracted, as minutes before Beatty presented, he tweeted a photo from backstage of Emma Stone clutching her best-actress Oscar for her performance in "La La Land."

Beatty and Dunaway went onstage with a duplicate copy of the best-actress envelope and announced that "La La Land" was the best-picture winner, instead of the rightful winner, "Moonlight." A stage manager had to come out while the "La La Land" producers were already giving their acceptance speeches to hand off the correct card.

PwC issued a statement Monday night taking full responsibility for the mistake.

SEE ALSO: The "hero" "La La Land" producer who have the best-picture Oscar to "Moonlight" says the moment was "terrible"

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NOW WATCH: Here's what Johnny Depp reportedly spends $2M a month on


The best movies and TV shows coming to Amazon, iTunes, Hulu, and more in March

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It's time to check out what movies and TV shows are available for streaming in March.

The biggie is over at iTunes, where "Rogue One: A Star Wars Story" will be available to purchase at the end of the month.

Other standouts include "Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them," "Sing," and the Oscar-nominated "Lion," all coming to iTunes.

Amazon has its original movie "The Dressmaker" starring Kate Winslet, and season five of "The Americans."

And on HBO Go/Now you can catch up on your blockbusters with "X-Men: Apocalypse" and "Independence Day: Resurgence."  

Here's everything coming on your favorite streaming platforms. We've highlighted some standouts in bold:

SEE ALSO: One photo sums up the baffling audience reaction to the big Oscars best picture screw-up

iTunes

Available March 3

“Sing”

Available March 7

“Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them”
“Passengers”
“Assassin’s Creed”
“Live By Night”

Available March 14

“Patriots Day”
“Elle”
“Silence”
“20th Century Women”
“Miss Sloane”
“A Monster Calls”

Available March 21

“Office Christmas Party”

Available March 24

“Rogue One: A Star Wars Story” (to own, not rent)

Available March 28

“Lion”



Amazon Prime

Available March 1

“Nine Lives”
“Anthropoid” 
“What We Do in the Shadows”
“Chicago”
“Hannibal”
“Hoodwinked” 
“The Cutting Edge: Going for the Gold”     
“What’s Eating Gilbert Grape?” 
“The Gambler” 
“Charlie Bartlett”
“Vampire in Brooklyn” 

Available March 2

“The Dressmaker” (Amazon Original)
“Emma”                                                         

Available March 3

“Annedroids” (Season 4, Amazon Original)

Available March 8

“The Americans” (Season 5)   

Available March 10

“Hand of God” (Season 2, Amazon Original)

Available March 11

“W.” 
“Churchill’s Secret”    

Available March 14

“Patriot’s Day”    

Available March 16

“Orphan Black” (Season 4) 

Available March 17

“Everybody Wants Some!!”    
“You Are Wanted” (Amazon Original)  

Available March 23

“Gimme Danger” (Amazon Original) 

Available March 24

“An American Girl Story – Ivy & Julie 1976” (Season 3, Amazon Original)

Available March 29

“A Man Called Ove”



Hulu

Available March 1
 
“National Treasure” (4-part series, Hulu Original)
 “13 Going on 30”
 “52 Pick Up”
 “A Company Man”
 “A Simple Plan”
 “The Adventure of Buckaroo Banzai”
 “The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert”
“American Heart”
 “American Sasquatch Hunters: Bigfoot in America”
 “Ancient Aliens Origins”
 “And While We Were Here”
 “Badges of Fury”
 “Battle Ground”
 “The Big Kahuna”
 “Born to be Blue”
 “Carrie”
 “The Rage: Carrie 2”
 “Cavemen”
 “Charlie Bartlett”
 “Clueless”
 “Code 46”
 “Commitment”
 “Confession of Murder”
 “The Courier”
 “Curse of the Zodiac”
 “The Cutting Edge”
 “The Cutting Edge: Going for the Gold”
 “Dead Man’s Bounty”
 “Doomsday Book”
 “Dummy”
 “Eastern Bandits”
 “Enemy at the Gates”
 “The Final Cut”
 “Flash Point”
 “Floating City”
 “The Fog”
 “The Four”
 “The Gambler”
 “Gang Related”
 “The Ghost Writer”
 “The Guillotines”
 “Hannibal”
 “I Love You Phillip Morris”
 “Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport”
 “The Karate Kid”
 “The Karate Kid 3”
 “The Karate Kid: Part 2”
 “Kid Cannabis”
 “Killer Klowns from Outer Space”
 “King of the Mountain”
 “The Kings of the Streets”
 “The Last Tycoon”
 “Legend of Kung Fu Rabbit”
 “Little Big Soldier”
 “Lost Highway”
 “Lost in Thailand”
 “The Man from Nowhere”
 “Miami Vice”
 “Mr. Majestyk”
 “Mystery Road”
 “New World”
 “Ninja Masters”
 “Not Suitable for Children”
 “On the Job”
 “Ordinary People”
 “The Phantom of the Opera”
 “Pele: Birth of a Legend”
 “Penelope”
 “Possums”
 “Radio Days”
 “Requiem for a Dream”
 “Saving General Yang”
 “Shaolin”
 “Shark Babes”
 “Slightly Single in LA”
 “Special ID”
 “Staying Alive”
 “The Substitute 2: Schools Out”
 “The Substitute 3: Winner Takes All”
 “The Substitute 4: Failure is not an Option”
 “The Substitute”
 “Surf’s Up”
 “The Taking of Pelham 1, 2, 3”
 “Tai Chi Hero”
 “Tai Chi Zero”
 “Terminator 2: Judgment Day”
 “The Thieves”
 “Things You Can Tell Just by Looking at Her”
 “Top Gun”
 “Up in the Air”
 “Vampire in Brooklyn”
 “A Viking Saga: The Darkest Days”
 “War of the Arrows”
 “What’s Eating Gilbert Grape?”
 “The Wrath of Vajra”
 “Young Detective Dee”
 
Available March 2
 
“Last Girl Standing”

Available March 3
 
“Young Ones”
 
Available March 4

“Out of the Furnace”
 “House of D”

Available March 5
 
“The Adventures of Dr. Buckeye Bottom” (Season 1 Premiere)
 “Food Chains”

Available March 6
 
“The Real Housewives of New York City” (Complete Season 8)
 “Time After Time” (Series Premiere)
 “ChickLit”
 “A Gamer’s Life”
 
Available March 10
 
“The Catch” (Season 2 Premiere)
 “Kicking & Screaming” (Series Premiere)
 “Steven Universe” (Complete Season 3)
 
Available March 11
 
“Angie Tribeca” (Complete Season 2)
 “American Jihad”
 
Available March 13
 
“Future Baby”
 
Available March 15
 
“Sheriff Callie’s Wild West” (Complete Season 2)
 “Romy and Michele’s High School Reunion”
 
Available March 16
 
“NHL Road to the Outdoor Classics Ep. 1”

Available March 17
 
“Counterfeit Cat” (Complete Season 1)
 “Fargo” (Complete Season 2)
 “Mr. Pickles” (Complete Season 2)
 “A Bronx Tale”
 “Everybody Wants Some!!”
 “The Truth about Emmanuel”
 
Available March 19
 
“Happy Birthday”
 “The Suspect”
 
Available March 20
 
“Fear Inc.”
 
Available March 21
 
“Dancing with the Stars” (Season 24 Premiere)
“Fear the Walking Dead” (Complete Season 2)
 “The Twins: Happily Ever After” (Series Premiere)
 “American Romance”
 
Available March 28
 
“Archer” (Complete Season 7)
 
Available March 29
 
“Harlots” (Season 1 premiere, Hulu Original)
“Star vs. The Forces of Evil” (Complete Season 2)



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

YouTube's new $35-a-month competitor to cable TV has some major holes (GOOG, GOOGL)

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better call saul bob odenkirk

On Tuesday, YouTube unveiled YouTube TV, its competitor to cable and satellite television that delivers a package of traditional TV channels over the internet for $35 a month.

There's a lot to like about YouTube TV, such as the low price point, cloud DVR, and integration with YouTube's other offering.

But the streaming-video service has a huge programming hole compared with traditional cable.

YouTube TV is primarily based on deals with the four big broadcast networks: CBS, Fox, ABC, and NBC. This means YouTube gets access to content from those networks plus about 35 of their affiliated cable channels, according to Bloomberg— that includes "ESPN, Disney Channel, MSNBC, National Geographic, and Fox News."

But YouTube hasn't struck deals with some marquee cable networks like Turner, Discovery, Viacom, AMC, and A&E. That means no CNN, TBS, TNT, History, AMC, A&E, Comedy Central, HBO, and so on.

Though its programming offering isn't as robust as its competitors — AT&T's DirecTV Now, Sony's Vue, and Dish's Sling — YouTube said that trying to replicate the traditional TV bundle would be too expensive. It's going after people, particularly younger ones, who don't want to pay for a big bundle.

Sports offerings, however, was something YouTube was eager to keep intact.

YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki told Bloomberg that YouTube TV is designed to be "great for sports lovers" and that it will include pro and college football, basketball, baseball, and other sports.

"YouTube TV includes major sports networks like ESPN and regional sports networks like Fox Sports Networks and Comcast SportsNet, so you can watch your favorite NBA or MLB teams," YouTube said in a press release. "We've also partnered with local TV stations, so you'll also get sports and local news based on where you live."

Still, YouTube is missing the rights from Turner, for instance, which shows a ton of sports: NBA games, the NCAA basketball tournament, MLB, and others.

YouTube TV's programming could expand over the next few years, and there could be additional price tiers eventually, YouTube said.

Streaming rights are incredibly complicated, and YouTube TV is facing regional problems that have plagued competitors like DirecTV Now. That's why it will launch in "limited US markets, where it has full coverage," according to Recode's Peter Kafka (and why you won't be able to stream NFL games on your phone).

SEE ALSO: YouTube will now let you stream cable channels live for $35 per month

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NOW WATCH: Here’s what would happen if the Earth stopped rotating

Fox News viewers turned their backs on the Oscars this year, which saw its ratings drop

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Many Fox News viewers turned against the Hollywood elite on Sunday night, helping to drive down ratings for the Oscars, according to a report by analytics firm Samba TV.

Samba TV did an analysis of which heavy cable news watchers didn’t tune into the Oscars this year, after watching in 2016, and found that 48% were Fox News viewers, 30% were CNN viewers, and 15% were MSNBC viewers.

This changed the makeup of the Oscars audience, Samba TV found. The 2016 audience was 46% Fox News viewers, 32% CNN viewers, and 16% MSNBC viewers. But for 2017, it was 45% CNN, 23% MSNBC, and 30% Fox News.

In all, according to Nielsen ratings data, 32.9 million people watched the ABC broadcast. That's compared to the 34.4 million viewers who watched last year's broadcast. So total viewers dropped by 4%, but in the advertiser-coveted 18- to 49-year-old demographic, there was 14% drop in ratings year-over-year.

“New viewers are showing up to the Oscars, but not enough to replace all the Fox News people who are tuning out the celebrities,” Samba TV CEO Ashwin Navin told Broadcasting & Cable.

Hollywood has had a contentious relationship with President Trump, and has often seemed to be in open war with him since he took office. Trump and acting legend Meryl Streep have exchanged barbs, with Trump declaring her "one of the most over-rated actresses" in a tweet, after Streep lambasted him in a Golden Globes speech.

At the Oscars, host Jimmy Kimmel took repeated shots at Trump, and even tweeted at him at one point during the broadcast.

It's good to note, however, that politics can't entirely explain the ratings drop. Not only has there been ratings pressure on many live TV "must-see" events, like the Olympics and the VMAs, but the Golden Globes, which felt equally antagonistic to Trump, saw an uptick in ratings this year.

Additional reporting by Jethro Nededog.

SEE ALSO: YouTube's new $35-a-month competitor to cable TV has some major holes

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NOW WATCH: 7 amazing technologies we'll see by 2030

Marvel just dropped the latest trailer for 'Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2' and it looks incredible

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Marvel just showed off the newest trailer for "Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2" and it looks amazing. The movie will see the return of Star-Lord and the rest of the Guardians, along with a few new faces. It's scheduled to hit U.S. theaters May 5th. 

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12 famous people who have zero interest in computers, social media, or the internet

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Jennifer Lawrence

While the rest of Hollywood is sparking and squashing Twitter beefs,  a small band of celebrities want no part of the social-media circus.

Some want nothing to do with technology at all.

Christopher Walken, for instance, told Newsweek last year that he's never had the temptation to do the "masochistic things" enabled by the computer, such as Googling himself.

Here's a group of Luddite celebs who are perfectly happy living in a simpler time.

SEE ALSO: Taylor Swift surpassed Adele to become the highest-paid musician — here are the other top artists

Louis C.K.

In a 2016 "Tonight Show" interview, Louis C.K. told Jimmy Fallon that he had sworn off the internet for a month and had no plans of stopping.

The comedian has previously voiced opposition to constant cellphone use, arguing in one 2013 interview on "Conan" that it erodes people's ability to empathize and feel sad.



Christopher Walken

In an interview with Newsweek about his movie, "The Family Fang," the actor said that it's "peaceful" not to use a computer.

"My wife always says to me, because she has a computer — apparently, you can look yourself up," he said. "You can do all sorts of masochistic things. I never have that temptation."

Whenever Walken shoots a movie, the producers reportedly give him a phone just for the shoot. Once filming ends, he gives it back.



Winona Ryder

In a 2010 interview, Ryder said that she never uses the internet. In a separate interview that year, she said that she almost never uses a computer.

"I have my email on my BlackBerry, and that's about it. I've never read a blog, ever," said the actress, who stars in "Stranger Things."

Now that BlackBerry is all but dead, we wonder how she's communicating with people. Christmas lights, maybe?



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Trump's win is making Oprah reconsider whether she could be president

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Oprah Winfrey was pretty sure she could never be president, and then along came Donald Trump.

In a conversation with David Rubenstein, the CEO of the private-equity giant Carlyle Group, Winfrey seemed to realize that Trump's win in November's election could make her own run for president feasible.

"I actually never thought that was ... I never considered the question even a possibility," Winfrey said during Rubenstein's Bloomberg TV interview show, "The David Rubenstein Show." "I just thought, 'Oh, oh.'"

While the statement relies a lot on inflection, it seems that the recent shift in the political atmosphere has made Winfrey believe that her lack of experience is no longer disqualifying.

"Right, because it's clear that you don't need government experience to be elected president of the United States," said Rubenstein, seemingly referring to Trump's lack of government experience before winning the presidency.

"That's what I thought — I thought, 'I don't have the experience, I don't know enough,'" Winfrey said. "And now I'm thinking, 'Oh. Oh.'"

It's no commitment that Winfrey will run — far from it — but given the unexpected political outcomes of the past year, you never know.

Winfrey is running her TV network, OWN, and is a major investor in Weight Watchers, which beat on its quarterly earnings on Tuesday.

Watch the clip via Bloomberg:

SEE ALSO: TRUMP: Repealing and replacing Obamacare is 'not a choice — it is a necessity'

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NOW WATCH: What happens to your brain and body if you use Adderall recreationally

Netflix just dropped the teaser for its new war movie starring Brad Pitt 'War Machine'

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War Machine 2 Netflix final

On Wednesday, Netflix revealed the teaser trailer for its upcoming satire on the war in Afghanistan starring Brad Pitt, "War Machine."

Based on the best-selling book “The Operators: The Wild and Terrifying Inside Story of America’s War in Afghanistan,” the movie follows Pitt as a four-star general who has been tasked with commanding the US war in Afghanistan, but the complexity of the job becomes overwhelming.

Netflix reportedly nabbed the movie, on which Pitt is also a producer, for $30 million. It also stars Tilda Swinton, Ben Kingsley, and Lakeith Stanfield.

Check out the teaser below, which shows off Pitt's classic dry humor. "War Machine" will be available on Netflix May 26.

 

SEE ALSO: 12 famous people who have zero interest in computers, social media, or the internet

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REVIEW: Nintendo's new game console is a fast, competent piece of hardware without enough software

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It's a big moment for Nintendo.

This Friday, the Japanese video game giant is launching its latest console, the Nintendo Switch. It's the company's first new console since 2012's Wii U — a console best known for being Nintendo's worst-selling of all time.

It's not quite a make-or-break moment for Nintendo, but it's not far off. The company could sure use a hit.

Nintendo Switch

With the Switch, Nintendo has the foundations of a great game console.

I've spent dozens of hours with the console during the past week, both at home on my TV and out in the world as a portable system. I can happily report that, in my experience, it's a speedy, modern piece of hardware that is well worth its $300 price tag. In the same breath, a warning: The Nintendo Switch is woefully underserved by software.

This is the duality of the Switch in March 2017, at launch. It's a console worth owning, but you should probably wait a few months to buy one.

SEE ALSO: Thinking about buying Nintendo's new console? Consider waiting.

DON'T MISS: Here's everything we know about Nintendo's new $300 console coming this week, the Switch

A quick overview: The Nintendo Switch is a $300 video game console set to launch on Friday, March 3.

The console is a hybrid home console and portable console. The games you play at home are the same when you take them on the go — that's the whole sell point of the console: "Play games everywhere."

In this sense, the "console" is just a tablet that can be docked or taken on the go.



This is the Nintendo Switch, the 6.2-inch tablet in the middle. The controllers on either side are modular; they can be slid onto the tablet, thus turning it into a handheld game system.



The Switch seamlessly moves between home console and portable console. You simply slide the tablet into the dock, and it's on your TV.

Switching between TV mode and handheld mode works exactly as advertised — it's simple, intuitive, and brilliant. Being able to pause a game on my TV, snag the Switch out of the Dock, and keep playing is a convenience I didn't think I needed. Turns out it's a tremendously nice bonus. I've been playing "The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild" on my morning commute, picking up where I left off on my TV the night before, and it's a real delight.

Also, if we're being honest, being able to bring the Switch to the bathroom is something that millions of people are going to embrace. Kinda gross? Maybe. Logical? Certainly.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

How YouTube's new $35-a-month cable TV competitor could fix the biggest failure of its rivals (GOOG, GOOGL)

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Susan WojcickiOn Tuesday, YouTube unveiled YouTube TV, its $35-a-month competitor to cable TV, which delivers a package of streaming channels over the internet.

With YouTube TV, the company is jumping into an increasingly crowded market of services looking to lure cord-cutters and cord-nevers back to pay TV.

Dish’s Sling TV, AT&T’s DirecTV Now, and Sony’s Vue are already fighting it out, and Hulu will enter the fray in the next few months. Even Amazon is rumored to be working on its own TV package.

But one thing that could give YouTube an early edge is if it nails the technical aspects of YouTube TV, something that the current players have struggled with. I don't mean the interface — though that is a plus — but simply making sure the product actually works, especially during high-profile events with a lot of viewers. 

The idea of a live streaming TV service is new, and the reference point for most people on how TV is supposed to function is cable or satellite. Cable, while subject to the occasional glitch, largely functions as advertised. When you want to watch something, it’s there.

The same cannot be said for the early streaming TV services.

Since its launch in late November, AT&T’s DirecTV Now service has been repeatedly smacked with technical issues, from strange error messages to huge blackouts. And both Sling TV and Vue have had their share of tech snafus as well.

“Something that tends to be taken for granted, but is actually a pretty herculean effort, is the years of video-serving infrastructure that we’ve built up,” Neal Mohan, YouTube's head of product, told Bloomberg. “Every minute, on average, more than 400 hours of content are being uploaded on YouTube and ready to serve. There’s an enormous amount of learning that went into that, which we can apply to this new YouTube TV experience to make it reliable and flawless.”

YouTube has a ton of knowledge in this area already, not just in delivering online video, but also in “live” online video. If YouTube TV actually works 99% of the time on Day One, YouTube will have a huge opportunity to snag market share.

Last month, AT&T announced it had gotten 200,000 additional paying video subscribers in the quarter ending December 31, “entirely driven” by DirecTV Now. By the end of 2016, DirecTV Now had only been in business for about a month. 200,00 paying subscribers in a month is impressive, and it means there’s a demand for the product. But so far, DirecTV Now has delivered a frustrating experience for many of those early adopters, who have taken to forums and Twitter to rant against the service.

This is an opening for YouTube.

The holes

The problems for YouTube might not be the tech, but rather the content deals it has signed.

While YouTube is pricing YouTube TV at a low $35 a month, and includes a cloud DVR that lets you skip ads, it has some major programming holes, especially compared to traditional cable.

YouTube TV is primarily based on deals with the four big broadcast networks: CBS, Fox, ABC, and NBC. This means YouTube gets access to content from those networks and affiliated cable channels. It's around 40 in total, including ESPN, Fox News, MSNBC, and so on.

But YouTube hasn't struck deals with some marquee cable networks like Turner, Discovery, Viacom, AMC, and A&E. That means no CNN, TBS, TNT, History, AMC, A&E, Comedy Central, HBO, and more.

YouTube is, however, trying to keep the sports offering robust.

"YouTube TV includes major sports networks like ESPN and regional sports networks like Fox Sports Networks and Comcast SportsNet, so you can watch your favorite NBA or MLB teams," YouTube said in a press release. "We've also partnered with local TV stations, so you'll also get sports and local news based on where you live."

The thinking is that, while YouTube won't necessarily convince established customers to ditch their $100+ a month cable packages, they might convince young people to sign up for pay TV for the first time. It's a market YouTube is uniquely suited to chase, as 26% of teens watch YouTube every day, according to Piper Jaffray.

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The end of the rainbow

But even if YouTube succeeds in nailing the tech, and getting a leg up on its competition, that doesn’t mean the streaming TV market will be an instant goldmine.

The margins on the early streaming TV services appear to be razor-thin, and the price point YouTube is offering isn't going to change that.

But the crux of that opportunity doesn't lie in big initial margins, it comes from the potential to fundamentally shift how TV ads work. As it stands now, TV networks sell most of the ad inventory for their shows. And in the early days of a YouTube streaming TV service, that will continue, with YouTube itself selling only a few minutes of ads per hour on its own service.

But that will change, Pacific Crest analyst Andy Hargreaves wrote in a note last month.

“Google's vastly superior data should allow it to monetize its ad inventory at superior rates to networks,” he wrote. “Over time, this disparity should allow Google to capture a greater share of total ad inventory on its service. Played out over several years, we believe the natural evolution of a successful Google vMVPD service [YouTube TV] would be for the roles of content supply and ad selling (both currently done by TV networks) to split, with Google managing the ad selling and networks relegated to content suppliers.”

In a nutshell, YouTube will be better at selling ads than the networks, and eventually be in charge of selling all of them. And that’s the real potential for profit: taking a huge bite out of the $200 billion global TV ad budget.

SEE ALSO: Here are the 5 shows Amazon has canceled

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Facebook has a new app for the Apple TV — here's what it looks like (FB)

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Facebook is now available on your Apple TV.

The app, which the company first announced two weeks ago, lets you watch videos from your friends and pages you follow. Facebook will recommend videos based on what you watch and also show the top live videos on its network.

Facebook's TV app was released for Samsung smart TVs on Monday, and now Apple is promoting the app in the Apple TV's App Store.

This new app is the first time Facebook has made a standalone app for TVs, and it's part of the company's strategy to become more of a YouTube-like destination for watching longer videos. Facebook is reportedly talking to MLB about live streaming at least one baseball game per week, and it recently hired an executive from MTV to help produce original shows.

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SEE ALSO: Here are the strengths and weaknesses of Facebook's plan to grab TV's ad money

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How the company behind 2 of the year's biggest movies is blowing up the Hollywood playbook

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get out

Unless you own the rights to Marvel characters or you're a streaming giant with endless capital, the best way to make a buck in Hollywood these days is finding a niche but passionate audience for a particular subject, and make the content on the cheap.

Jason Blum and his company, Blumhouse Productions, have done just that, and now they're reaping the rewards.

Known for creating some of the most memorable horror franchises of the past decade, including "Paranormal Activity," "Insidious," and "The Purge," Blumhouse has performed at a profit level in 2017 that has major studios envious.

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How 'Split' and 'Get Out' became shockingly huge hits

Jordan Peele's new directorial debut, the racially charged horror movie "Get Out," gave Blumhouse (and the company's frequent partner in its releases, Universal) its second No. 1 movie at the domestic box office this year when it made $30.5 million in its opening weekend — on a $4.5 million budget.

"Split," the second M. Night Shyamalan movie produced by Blumhouse (the first was 2015's "The Visit"), spent three straight weeks at the top of the box office after opening in late January, and it has earned over $195 million worldwide on a relatively tiny $9 million budget and brought some much-needed cachet back to the director once hailed for his blockbusters.

"Split" is, as of this writing, the second-highest-grossing movie of the year in the US, and "Get Out," despite being out for less than a week, is also in the top 10.

"Blumhouse has been the Pixar of horror distribution for some time now," Jeff Bock, the senior box-office analyst at Exhibitor Relations, told Business Insider. "Most horror films take forever to get out of the red — Blumhouse's are usually in the black opening weekend, if not opening day."

Despite the success, Blum doesn't get caught up in his own hype. When Business Insider brought up the $20 million projection for "Get Out" in an interview last week, he lowered the expectations.

"We're projecting high teens," he said.

And yes, he's happy about how his recent releases are doing, but he's the first to acknowledge that good fortune can be a fickle thing in Hollywood.

Split Universal"I think the movie business is cyclical, and you have a few that work and a few that don't," Blum said. "For some reason they bunch up — I don't know why that is. That's the nature of the business, and it's a lot more fun when the movies are working."

But the truth is it's hard to find something at Blumhouse that's not working. Its genre titles have grossed over $2.2 billion to date (its first movie came out about a decade ago). That's all the more remarkable because the company works on a micro-budget model that shoots for the moon using a souped-up jet instead of a rocket ship.

Blumhouse generally keeps production budgets under $5 million (it goes up to about $10 million for sequels), and it almost never makes a distribution commitment for a project until it's completed and given a good once-over by Blum and his team. The company, with a staff of 45, has built an impressive catalog and fined-tuned development in a way that has nearly assured success across all of its titles.

What Blum learned from Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein

It's a by-the-bootstraps approach that was embedded into Blum early in his career. He was an executive in charge of acquisitions and coproductions for Miramax in the 1990s when it was owned by Harvey and Bob Weinstein. The company was at its zenith — owned by Disney and making blockbuster deals for movies out of Sundance while also producing Oscar winners left and right.

"They really taught me the movie business," Blum said of working with the Weinsteins, particularly Harvey. "There isn't a day that goes by when I don't think, 'What would Harvey do?' Not that I always do it. Sometimes I think, 'What would Harvey do? I'm going to do it differently.' I think if I got one thing from Harvey, it was to just keep busting down the door until you succeed. He really instilled that in me in a very profound way."

That was necessary when Blum went out on his own as an independent producer after leaving Miramax. He describes it as a low point in his career.

"I wanted to be an independent producer when I worked for Harvey," Blum said. "I did it for three or four years and I did not like it. I decided at that time I wanted to build a company, and it took 10 years to do it, but this is absolutely my dream. I do not miss my days of making one or two movies a year. I thought I would love it, and I didn't like anything about it."

Blumhouse Productions' first release was the forgettable 2006 romantic comedy "Griffin & Phoenix," but then Blum came across "Paranormal Activity," a found-footage horror movie made for $15,000 by a video game designer named Oren Peli. After it wowed audiences at a couple of film festivals in 2007, Blum got DreamWorks interested in the movie for remake rights, but he had another plan.

paranormal activity dreamworks"I came onto the movie, I tried to sell it, everyone said it was a joke," Blum remembered. "But I knew anyone running a studio, if they saw the movie screened with an audience, would distribute the movie. My problem was I couldn't get anyone into a movie theater because I didn't have any clout — I was a nobody. The only thing I got was DreamWorks to agree to remake it, and of course we were never going to remake the movie, but I couldn't say that. So what I said was I will sell you the remake rights to the movie, but, and I put this in the contract: you guys set up and attending a test screening. And I said as long as you do that we'll sell the movie. And I said to Oren, 'I promise you you'll never remake the movie — you don't want to do it, I don't want to do it, it's never going to happen. But this is the only way I can get people who make a decision into a movie theater with people.' That's how we did it, and the rest is history."

The gamble worked. DreamWorks could not argue with the audience reaction and released Peli's original version in 2009. The movie went on to earn an astounding $193 million worldwide (it's one of the most profitable movies of all time, comparing budget to gross) and spawned five sequels.

Blumhouse's golden formula for movie success

Blum had found the formula to create a successful movie company: genre movies, made clever with up-and-coming directors, done with responsible spending.

"Insidious" and "Ouija" followed, and they too turned into profitable franchises. Then in 2014 the company signed a 10-year first-look deal with Universal, which has led to last year's hit "The Purge: Election Year" and the just-released, critically acclaimed "Get Out" — which marks Blumhouse's eighth movie to earn six times its budget on opening weekend — as well as "Split," which could lead to the company's most ambitious franchise yet.

"This is a transformative moment for Blumhouse," Blum put it bluntly. "I consider 'Split' a Blumhouse 2.0 — a new act in the company."

Though Blum would not comment on a sequel, Shyamalan has already hinted on Twitter that he's working on one (warning: spoilers ahead) that will focus on the surprise ending in "Split," which revealed that the James McAvoy character in the movie lives in the same cinematic universe as Bruce Willis' David Dunn from Shyamalan's 2000 movie, "Unbreakable." (Quite a feat seeing as "Unbreakable" is owned by Disney, which will most likely have to team with Blumhouse, along with Universal, on any sequel.)

Jason Blum Ethan Miller GettyThen there's the highly anticipated relaunch of the "Halloween" franchise, which Blumhouse is producing with the full support of the franchise's original creator, John Carpenter, who will be executive producing. Director David Gordon Green and actor Danny McBride joined the film, with Green directing and the two sharing screenwriting duties (the movie is set for release in October 2018, and McBride has hinted that it's a continuation of the first two movies in the franchise.)

Green and McBride aren't known for their horror chops, but as Blum showed with Peele's "Get Out," he thinks tweaking the preconceived notions of genres is a good thing.

"I think there's a real connection between scary and funny, and I think [Green and McBride] are incredibly talented," Blum said. "It's very shortsighted to think the only guy who is going to do a good horror movie is the guy who has done a good horror movie before. I think what 'Halloween' needs is an injection of different and present and edgy, and I think those guys are as good as anybody at delivering that."

In an industry that, according to Blum, doesn't change by the day but "by the minute," he believes the only way to survive is by taking calculated risks. He sees the success of "Get Out" as the perfect example of what Blumhouse does best, and it's miles away from the major studios' thinking.

"Jordan's script had been around for quite some time — no one wanted to make it, and I understand why: It's bananas," Blum said. "We did it because I read the script and I thought it would be amazing. If you make something on a respectable budget, you can make weird stuff. Did I know it would be a hit? I had no idea. But I loved how weird it was.

"At studios, filmmakers have to come into a room with comparisons. I don't want that," he continued. "If you can compare it to something, it's less interesting to me. The most excited I get is when someone says, 'I just read something and I've never read anything like it before.'"

SEE ALSO: One photo sums up the baffled audience reaction to the big Oscars best picture screw-up

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Take a look inside Gwyneth Paltrow's luxe New York loft, on the market for just shy of $10 million

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Pity Gwyneth Paltrow. The Goop founder and Academy Award winner has been trying to sell her Tribeca apartment for almost a year. And now, it’s just been re-listed with a new broker (Jay Glazer of Compass), a new price of $9.995 million and lots and lots of glorious photos.

Paltrow and her ex-husband, Chris Martin, had listed the apartment at 416 Washington Street for $14.25 million last April, and chopped the price to $12.85 million in November. The couple bought it in 2007 for a little more than $5.1 million.

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This is not the first time we have seen the interiors of Gwyn’s apartment; she had posted a select few photos on Goop last year. But these photos are more extensive and way more exciting. In them we see a white kitchen for preparing lots of gluten-free snacks, some sort of crouching table where you can eat those snacks, and tons of fluffy white rugs we want to nap on.

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The 3,892-square-foot condo has three bedrooms, three and a half bathrooms, 11-foot ceilings, a 500-square-foot decked terrace and French doors. The design duo Roman & Williams designed the apartment, and per the Goop story, the apartment "floats above the cobblestone streets like a pale, dreamy cloud."

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