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Elon Musk has a grand time roasting s'mores and drinking whiskey while lip syncing Johnny Cash

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Elon Musk

  • Elon Musk posted a late-night Instagram video of himself around a campfire. 
  • An earlier photo showed that the campfire was on top of the Gigafactory roof.

Just because he's a billionaire CEO with dreams of colonizing Mars doesn't mean Elon Musk doesn't like to party.

Last night, at around 2:44 a.m., Musk posted an Instagram video of himself  sitting by a campfire roasting a marshmallow, a glass of whiskey in hand while he rocked out to Johnny Cash's "Ring of Fire." For a 46-year-old father of five, his performance was rather impressive. 

Earlier in the evening, he posted a photo of a group of eight people huddled around a campfire on the Gigafactory roof. The factory is located on 3,000 acres near Sparks, Nevada and it's likely a mean spot for stargazing. 

Rather esoterically, his video caption included "Also, hotdog or not hotdog?" It's hard to tell whether he was referring to his curiously long marshmallow or asking his followers whether or not he should roast one next. We will never know. 

Whiskey, fire, s’mores and JC Also, hotdog or not hotdog?

A post shared by Elon Musk (@elonmusk) on Oct 26, 2017 at 2:29am PDT on

 

 

SEE ALSO: Elon Musk was spotted at a beach party with Orlando Bloom and Leonardo DiCaprio

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Bill O'Reilly's literary agent has dropped him after news of his $32 million settlement

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bill o reilly

  • Bill O'Reilly's literary agency announced it will no longer be working with him.
  • The announcement follows a New York Times report that said O'Reilly paid $32 million to his former Fox News co-host in a sexual harassment settlement.


On Thursday, Bill O'Reilly was dropped by his literary agency William Morris Endeavor, CNN first reported and Business Insider confirmed.

The former Fox News anchor's literary agency cut ties with him following the publication of a New York Times article Saturday, which said O'Reilly paid $32 million to his former Fox News co-host Lis Wiehl in a sexual harassment settlement.

In a statement, William Morris Endeavor announced it would "no longer represent Bill O'Reilly for future deals."

"It is our fiduciary responsibility to service the existing deals under contract, but we will not be working with him moving forward,” the statement said.

O'Reilly was also dropped by his television agency UTA on Tuesday, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

While best known for his work as a Fox News anchor, O'Reilly has also had a successful writing career. Since 1998, he's written 23 books, many of which have been best sellers. O'Reilly's newest book, "Killing England" (the seventh in his "Killing" series), made it to the top of The New York Times' best seller list at the beginning of October.

Although O'Reilly didn't make it onto Forbes' 2017 highest-earning authors list, the publication has reported previously that, at one time, he earned tens of millions a year from books. 

O'Reilly was fired from Fox News in April, after a bombshell New York Times report said the anchor had paid millions of dollars in sexual harassment settlements over the years.  

William Morris Endeavor confirmed its statement to Business Insider, but declined to comment further.

Bill O'Reilly did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request to comment.

SEE ALSO: Ashley Judd on what she'd say to Harvey Weinstein: 'I love you and I understand that you are sick'

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Trump just wished the wrong Lee Greenwood a happy birthday on Twitter

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Lee Greenwood

President Donald Trump wished Lee Greenwood, the writer and singer of "God Bless the USA" a happy birthday, but initially tagged the wrong Lee Greenwood on Twitter.

Instead of tagging Melvin Lee Greenwood, who turned 75 on October 27 and goes by @TheLeeGreenwood on Twitter, Trump tagged @LeeGreenwood83, a lawyer and DC sports fan. The president later deleted the tweet and issued one tagging the musician.

The Lee Greenwood first tagged by Trump appears to have protested Trump's Muslim ban in late January and retweeted an article critical of Trump's firing of former FBI Director James Comey in May.

Lee Greenwood the artist performed his hit song at Trump's inauguration.

Here's Trump's Friday morning tweet tagging the wrong Lee Greenwood:

Donald Trump Lee Greenwood

And the updated one tagging the singer:

Watch Trump singing along to "God Bless the USA" at his inauguration:

SEE ALSO: Lee Harvey Oswald called the KGB department in charge of 'sabotage and assassination' before killing JFK

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The worst movie of every year since 2000, according to critics

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the emoji movie sonyEach year in film, one movie enrages critics enough to earn the title of "worst picture of the year."

To find out which movies of the 21st century critics have hated the most, we compiled the reviews aggregator Metacritic's annual lists of all movie releases, and we selected the lowest scoring film from each year since 2000. 

While 2017 has produced a number ofawfulfilms, none have topped the mind-bendingly bad concept and execution of "The Emoji Movie." But a number of movies from previous years have scored even lower with critics. 

Here are the worst films of every year since 2000, according to critics:

SEE ALSO: The best movie of every year since 2000, according to critics

2000: “Strippers”

Critic score: 5/100

User score: 4.3/10

Summary: "Alan is having an horrendous day... he loses his job, money is missing from his bank account, he is evicted from his apartment, misses a date with his girlfriend and much more."

What critics said: "Unbelievably awful celluloid-waster." — New York Post



2001: “Freddy Got Fingered”

Critic score: 13/100

User score: 5.7/10

Summary: "MTV icon Tom Green co-writes, directs and stars in 'Freddy Got Fingered,' a film he calls a 'touching story of a young man who desperately wants to make his daddy proud.'"

What critics said: "One of the most brutally awful comedies ever to emerge from a major studio." —Variety



2002: “Vulgar”

Critic score: 5/100

User score: 2.2/10

Summary: "A man who performs as a children's birthday party clown tries to piece his life back together after being gang-raped."

What critics said: "Sure to appear in everyone's worst-of lists at year's end, to say nothing of a few bad dreams, Bryan Johnson's Vulgar is an unclassifiably awful study in self- and audience-abuse." — Village Voice



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

I watched all of 'Stranger Things' season 2 — and the best thing about it is it never tries to top season 1

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Stranger Things 2

  • The second season of "Stranger Things" isn’t as seamless as season one, but it stays true to the characters and world everyone fell in love with last summer. 
  • The exciting, spooky new season gives other characters the spotlight, like Lucas, Dustin and Steve, but a plotline focusing on Eleven falls flat. 
  • The season's biggest strength is that it never tries to top season one.

Warning: very minor spoilers for "Stranger Things" season 2 ahead.  

When "Stranger Things" came out last summer, it was a quiet surprise that quickly gained enough buzz to convince me to watch it. I usually don’t take TV recommendations from people I don’t know, but I heard so much about this new Netflix show from creators Matt and Ross Duffer, described as “Spielberg in the 80s,” that I watched it all in one night and loved it.

Fans loved the first season partly due to its obsession with '80s movies like “E.T.” and “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.” It’s a formula that Steven Spielberg perfected: outcasts in suburban America encounter something of a different world, and there’s some family and teenage drama mixed in to make it more dramatic and relatable.

The second season of "Stranger Things," available on Netflix now, is likewise filled with nostalgia, and it follows a similar structure to the first season, with plenty of call backs to it. Joyce (Winona Ryder) covers her home in something in an attempt to solve the mystery of her son Will (Noah Schnapp). I’m not telling you what is, but it’s not Christmas lights. Nancy (Natalia Dyer), once again, has boy drama. The boys encounter another bully in newcomer Billy (Dacre Montgomery). Will and newcomer Dr. Owens (Paul Reiser) have Upside Down drama. And Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown) continues her journey of discovery and identity.

Stranger Things 2

But "Stranger Things" season 2 also gives other characters the spotlight. Compared to the first season, Dustin (Gaten Matarazzo), Lucas (Caleb McLaughlin), and Steve (Joe Keery) are given more screentime, and the space needed to introduce new characters like Bob (Sean Astin) and Max (Sadie Sink) comes at the expense of other characters like Hopper (David Harbour), Joyce, and Mike (Finn Wolfhard). Tragically, there is not much Mike, though every second he is on screen is a treasure.

And as much screen time as Will gets, we still don’t get to know him more than we did by the end of season one. His personality still feels empty, his only connection to the audience being his connection to the Upside Down.

Stranger Things 2

With nine episodes — one more than season 1 — “Stranger Things" season 2 isn’t as seamless and tight. A season-long plotline involving Eleven’s self discovery starts off strong, but takes up way too much screen time when viewed in light of its ultimate impact. In an attempt to remind us once again that it is the '80s, this plotline introduces a team of forgettable crust punks that we will hopefully never see again.

By the end of season 2, it doesn’t feel like we’ve discovered that much new information. Eleven could’ve come to these conclusions on her own. The writers underestimate Eleven’s intelligence and understanding here, and the character is at her best when she's in Hawkins. But I do admire the writers for taking a risk with a focused episode, one that takes place entirely outside of Hawkins, even if the final result does lack the impact of similarly focused episodes of "You’re the Worst," which is currently leading the pack in character-focused TV.

Stranger Things 2

All flaws set aside, the best thing about the second season is that it never tries to top season one. Like Steve’s hair, it’s doing something similar but exploring new possibilities — for both the world and its characters, who we fell in love with so easily last summer.

Another thing “Stranger Things" season 2 does so well is fighting its own predictability.  We always know that all of the kids are gonna be alright, and that the season will end with a classic 80s song. But so much happens along the way that you forget that the ending is exactly what you were expecting.

“Stranger Things" season 2 has a lot of heart. It heightens the scares, the laughs, the teenage drama, and its synthetic score, making season two well worth your time — though you might not be as surprised as you were when the show came out of seemingly nowhere last summer.

SEE ALSO: How Netflix prepares to unleash a monster like 'Stranger Things 2' to its 'north of 300 million' potential viewers

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The 27 best scary movies on Netflix

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The Bad Batch Netflix

It’s time to dive into the best horror movies currently on Netflix.

With Halloween around the corner, we’ve come up with the best on the streaming giant so you can enjoy the rest of the month scaring the heck out of yourself and your friends.

Check out the 27 scary movies below.

Note: Numerous Netflix titles drop off the streaming service monthly so the availability of titles below may change.

Brett Arnold contributed to an earlier version of this story.

SEE ALSO: 100 movies on Netflix that everyone needs to watch in their lifetime

1. "The ABCs of Death" (2012)

26 horror directors are each given a letter of the alphabet as a starting point to create a scary short.



2. "The Babadook" (2014)

A single mother struggling to keep up with her rambunctious son begins to lose it after a strange children's book comes to her doorstep.



3. "The Bad Batch" (2016)

Set in a dystopian future where the bad are thrown into a cannibal-filled wasteland in Texas, a girl (Suki Waterhouse) tries to survive. Movie stars Jason Momoa, Keanu Reeves, and an unrecognizable Jim Carrey. 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Netflix is running a Snapchat lens that serves as a portal into the 'Stranger Things' living room to promote the show's second season

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ST Portal Still 3

  • Netflix is running a first-of-its-kind 3D World Lens on Snapchat that serves as a portal into its show "Stranger Things."
  • The augmented reality experience is timed with the release of the show's second season, releasing today. 
  • The Snapchat lens lets users interact with various easter eggs, which are brought to life using augmented reality. The series' theme song plays in the background.

You don't have to be Will or Joyce Byers to be a part of Netflix's "Stranger Things." Thanks to Snapchat, now anyone can take a virtual walk around Joyce's memorable living room from the show.

To promote the second season of the hit sci-fi thriller series, Netflix is unveiling a first-of-its-kind 3D World Lens on Snapchat that serves as a portal into the show and all its horrors — literally.

Fans can tap the lens to experience the various elements of the room, from the floral wallpaper and striped couch to the painted alphabets and colored fairy lights. They can also walk around the room to find and interact with various easter eggs, which are brought to life using augmented reality. The series' theme song plays in the background.

For example, if you tap the fairy lights on your mobile screen, they will light up. Or if you touch the bookshelf, the books will wall off. And if you dare to tap the hole in the wall, a Demogorgon arm will come dangling out. The series' theme song continually plays in the background.

Here's what it looks like:

The experience is available to Snapchatters today, October 27, across over 10 global markets including the US and the UK. There are two versions of the experience depending on the market. 

Users can either access the experience by literally walking in and out of an actual portal door that appears in front of them once they unlock the lens, or directly be transported into the living room through a gyroscope lens. 

In addition, people in the US and Canada also have automatic access to a face lens that mimics the supernatural character Eleven’s nosebleed in their Snapchat apps. And if they swap their cameras, they will be transported directly to the living room through the gyroscope Lens. 

What's more, for the first time ever, users can also unlock the lenses using Shazam in Snapchat when the show's theme song plays, for instance, while watching the opening credits. Otherwise the 'Stranger Things' AR experience can be found alongside Snapchat's roster of other lenses.

Netflix will also enable people to unlock the lenses via Snapcodes, Snapchat's own version of QR codes that can be used to access branded filters, lenses, custom websites and even Snapchat-specific mobile games. Netflix will be sharing these Snapcodes on its social channels. Unlock the lens using this Snapcode below:

 1a. Snapcode for portal Lens   OK TO PUBLISH

While Snapchat has always been ahead of the curve on augmented reality with its famous face filters and lenses, these digital products are getting increasingly more interactive. For example, the company recently unveiled sponsored 3D World Lenses, which let brands allow users to play around with 3D experiences in their surroundings via the app. Brands including Bud Light and Warner Bros. have used 3D World Lenses. 

They also seem to be driving results for advertisers. According to Snapchat in-app polling by Nielsen, ad campaigns with lenses typically drive a 19.7 percentage point lift in ad awareness, a 6.4 point lift in brand awareness, and a 3.4 point lift in a person's intent to take an action, like make a purchase. 

For its part, Netflix has also been pushing the envelope this year with its marketing efforts. Apart from the Snapchat push, the streaming giant has partnered with Lyft to let riders in Philadelphia and Los Angeles take an immersive "Stranger Things" ride — featuring static sounds, slugs, lights turning on and off and people in hazmat suits — today if they opt for “Strange Mode” on the app.

It also went all out promoting the third season of Narcos earlier this year, hiding ads for the show in all the places it thought people did cocaine in the '90s.  

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Critics are trashing George Clooney's 'strikingly bad' new movie 'Suburbicon' — here are the most brutal reviews

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suburbicon matt damon f

George Clooney's latest directorial effort, "Suburbicon," is a misguided mess, according to the vast majority of film critics. 

"Suburbicon" currently sits at 29% on Rotten Tomatoes and opens on Friday.

It stars Matt Damon, Julianne Moore, and Oscar Isaac in a black comedy about the disturbance of an idyllic 1950s suburb by a home invasion, and the presence of an underground mafia. 

The movie originates from a lost, 1986 screenplay by Joel and Ethan Coen that probably should have stayed unfilmed.

Clooney decided to bring the project to life by adding his own layer of "topical" social commentary to the script, and most critics have described the resulting mix of themes as an epic misfire. 

Here are the most brutal reviews of "Suburbicon":

SEE ALSO: George Clooney’s latest directing effort is embarrassingly awful

DON'T MISS: The worst movie of every year since 2000, according to critics

"A misguided mix of nasty comedy and civil rights drama."

Rafer Guzmán, Newsday



"'Suburbicon' might be the biggest embarrassment to pious Hollywood liberalism since 'Crash' won best picture in 2006."

Chris Klimek, NPR



"It feels like broad farce madly in search of a cohesive center, and a soul."

Leah Greenblatt, Entertainment Weekly



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Simon Cowell has reportedly been hospitalized after a bad fall at his home

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Simon Cowell Getty final

  • Simon Cowell suffered a bad fall at his home on Friday morning.
  • He's reportedly in a hospital and in stable condition.

 

Simon Cowell has been hospitalized after suffering a bad fall at his London home, according to numerous reports.

The judge on shows like "America's Got Talent" and "X Factor UK" was seen wearing a neck brace when he was put into an ambulance and taken to the hospital on Friday morning, according to People.

“It’s been a scary morning," a source close to Cowell told The Sun. "It was very early and Simon was going down his stairs to get some hot milk because he couldn’t sleep."

Cowell, 58, is in stable condition, according to People. 

Business Insider contacted Cowell's representative for comment but did not receive an immediate response.  

SEE ALSO: The 14 most disturbing documentaries on Netflix — just in time for Halloween

Join the conversation about this story »

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The 5 best new songs you can stream right now

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weezer pacific daydream

This week, Weezer and rapper Big K.R.I.T. released new albums, and Drake collaborator Majid Jordan put out a new project.

SEE ALSO: The 5 best songs you can stream from last week — MGMT, Mitski, and more

Majid Jordan — "Not Ashamed"

"Not Ashamed" is a pitch-shifted and immersive highlight from "The Space Between," the sophomore LP from Canadian R&B duo Majid Jordan of Drake's OVO Sound label. 



Big K.R.I.T. — "Everlasting"

Mississippi rapper Big K.R.I.T. seeks out "Everlasting" relationship chemistry on a soulful and dynamic track from his third studio album, "4eva Is a Mighty Long Time."

 



First Aid Kit — "Postcard"

Swedish folk duo First Aid Kit whips out the pedal steel guitars on "Postcard," a moving and well-executed country ballad with an old-school vibe.

 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

This weekend The Weinstein Company's first movie since the scandal hits theaters

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amityville the awakening dimension films final

  • Following the Harvey Weinstein scandal, "Amityville: The Awakening" is The Weinstein Company's first release.
  • It's only playing in 10 theaters.
  • The movie is as cursed as the topic it's based on.

 

You probably didn't hear about it, but this weekend The Weinstein Company is releasing its first movie since the Harvey Weinstein scandal.

"Amityville: The Awakening," is a release through the company's genre arm, Dimension Films, which is run by Bob Weinstein. It's only going to be released on 10 screens, according to Exhibitor Relations, and is opening on Saturday. 

Saturday is a very peculiar release date as almost all movies open in theaters on Fridays and often have preview screenings late Thursday nights. (Business Insider contacted The Weinstein Company and the movie's production company, Blumhouse, to comment on why it's opening on a Saturday, but didn't get a response.)

But that's just the start of what looks to be a cursed project.

The movie, produced by Jason Blum and his Blumhouse Productions (behind "Get Out" and "Split"), was originally announced in 2011 to be a found-footage horror titled "Amityville: The Lost Tapes." However, after a few years of delays, the movie was completely rewritten by the current director Franck Khalfoun and titled just "Amityville." In 2014, it was announced Bella Thorne and Jennifer Jason Leigh would star in it.    

Finally going with the title "Amityville: The Awakening," it was shot in May of 2015 and was originally to be released in January 2015. Following more release date changes, negative test screenings, and reshoots, the movie was set for release in June 2017.

But that never happened.

And in September, it was announced that the movie would be released for free on Google Play from October 12 to November 8 and open in theaters on October 28.

TheAmityvilleHorrorAmericanInternationalPicturesThe movie was a plan for The Weinstein Company/Dimension/Blumhouse to reboot the classic 1979 original movie, "The Amityville Horror," which was based on the true story of newlyweds who moved into a house where a mass murder occurred and began to experience strange happenings. A previous reboot was done in 2005 starring Ryan Reynolds.

The "Amityville: The Awakening" saga is just the latest roller-coaster journey for a movie released by TWC.

The most recent happened to "Tulip Fever," the 17th century period drama starring Alicia Vikander and Christoph Waltz, which was finally released in September after countless release date changes since 2015.

But "Amityville" also has to deal with the Harvey Weinstein scandal as well. The movie is TWC's first release since it was revealed over three weeks ago in stories, done by the New York Times and The New Yorker, that its founder allegedly sexually harassed and assaulted women for over three decades.

And it's hard to tell if TWC will have another release after "Amityville." 

While there are reports that the company may be sold to Colony Capital, the release date for its end-of-year awards contender "The Current War," starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Michael Shannon, has been pulled. While its other big upcoming title, "Paddington 2," is trying to get out of its distribution deal with TWC.   

SEE ALSO: The 14 most disturbing documentaries on Netflix — just in time for Halloween

Join the conversation about this story »

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A founder who sold his last startup for ~$50 million wants to make iconic TV for teens in the YouTube era

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rob fishman

For teens, YouTube and Netflix are already the new TV — and the race is on to see which entertainment companies will make a killing in that future.

In fall 2016, YouTube and Netflix both outstripped cable TV in daily video consumption among US teens for the first time, according to a survey by Piper Jaffray.

That is a shift that Rob Fishman is trying to capitalize on with his new entertainment startup, Brat.

Teenagers used to watch the WB all week, Fishman told Business Insider in a recent interview. “That’s all disappeared in the era of social media,” he said. “There’s no monoculture. No shows everyone watches.”

Netflix might have scored that type of hit with "13 Reasons Why." But Netflix aside, Fishman thinks there’s an opening in the free digital realm, particularly on YouTube, to make scripted shows with good production value, starring digital talent — some of whom bring their own built-in audiences and massive social media footprints to the table.

Fishman isn’t the only one to look in this direction. Early digital video powerhouses that focused on young people, like AwesomenessTV and Fullscreen, have moved in recent years more toward original show production and owning content (versus taking a percentage as a multi-channel network).

Fishman said he won't get anywhere near talent management. “We are studio, network, and channel,” he said. “We don’t sign or manage.”

The Brat Pack

Right now, Brat is focused on creating YouTube shows for its channel (which since the summer has grown to around 635,000 subscribers). The first shows center around a fictional high school called “Attaway High,” the location for which was an actual high school that Brat originally rented for three weeks to shoot.

“Everything has nostalgic, aspirational quality,” Fishman said. Brat shows include technology like smartphones, but aren’t hyper focused on it. The themes are meant to have a timeless quality, like the 80s “Brat Pack” movies that the company cribs its name from. The stars of those iconic films were not just the jock or cheerleaders, but those who marched to their own beat, Fishman said.

Brat’s breakout hit is “Chicken Girls,” about three girl friends who “have been dancing together forever,” which has gotten over 5 million views an episode on YouTube in its first season, and will be getting longer episodes starting on Halloween.

“All these kids live vicariously through those characters,” Motoki Maxted, who performs in another Brat show about a high school newspaper, said of “Chicken Girls.”

brat filming

'Second-class citizens'

Stars like Maxted — who has over a million YouTube subscribers and 3.6 million Facebook likes— are a key to Brat’s strategy.

“They have bigger individual audiences than an entire TV network,” Fishman said. And yet Fishman said traditional entertainment companies often treat digital media talent as “second-class citizens.”

Fishman should know. His last company, Niche, helped social-media stars make money from brands, and sold for around $50 million to Twitter. (Fishman's partner in Niche, Darren Lachtman, recently joined Brat.)

But that doesn’t mean all YouTube stars can make it as traditional actors. “There’s no secret algorithm,” Fishman said. You can’t just plug in numbers and get a hit.

Being a YouTube “personality is completely different than getting a script and acting,” Maxted said.

Motoki Maxted

Smart money

The big question when anyone is launching a venture in the digital entertainment space is, "How the heck are you going to make money?" Teen audiences might be shifting away from TV, but that doesn't mean the money is.

Fishman said he wants Brat to be smart about how and when it makes money — and he has a bit of runway, having raised $2.5 million from investors.

“We are not talking about programmatic ad dollars,” Fishman said. “We need to make big brand [deals].” He could also see licensing to platforms like Netflix, or Facebook, or Snapchat, and so on. ("It’s not about being dogmatic about format," he said.)

But that's in the future. First he has to make Brat into something that young people love and keep returning to.

The sentiment of careful brand building is echoed by Maxted when he talks about his personal goals. “YouTube is my baby, I don’t bother too much with sponsors," he said. "Facebook I do brand deals.” You can’t try to grab optimum monetization at any cost.

“I think a lot of people are more focused on attention, versus longevity,” Maxted said. “They don't care about the end goals.”

brat filming

SEE ALSO: Netflix says it now has over 300 million 'viewers'

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14 documentaries on Netflix that are scarier than fiction

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the thin blue line road final

When you think of scary movies, images of monsters and unstoppable killers come to mind. But documentaries can also tell some horrific stories, too.

With Halloween around the corner, we delved into Netflix to highlight some of the most chilling non-fiction movies and TV series. We found everything from Errol Morris' classic that looked inside the mind of a killer, to a UK series that explores nurses who kill their patients.

Here are 14 documentaries that we dare you to binge late at night.

Note: Numerous Netflix titles drop off the streaming service monthly so the availability of titles below may change.

SEE ALSO: The 27 best scary movies on Netflix

1. “Amanda Knox” (2016)

Believe her or not, the murder surrounding Amanda Knox is a chilling piece of modern-day pop culture. This documentary takes a deep dive into all the people surrounding the murder.



2. “Blackfish” (2013)

It’s the documentary that ended the orca whale shows at SeaWorld. We follow the horrific capture of the whales and how they lashed out over the years while being captive performers at the amusement park.



3. “The Confessions of Thomas Quick” (2015)

This documentary looks at Sweden’s most infamous serial killer who confessed to more than 30 murders then shockingly recanted.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Rose McGowan says it's time for Hollywood to 'clean house' in first speech since Harvey Weinstein rape allegations

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rose mcgowan

  • Rose McGowan called for change in a passionate speech at the Women's Convention Friday.
  • This was McGowan's first public appearance since she alleged that "HW" (presumably Harvey Weinstein) raped her.
  • McGowan brought attention to the fact that the Directors' Guild of America is 96% male, and has been since 1946.


Rose McGowan delivered a passionate speech about sexual assault at the Women's Convention Friday, in her first public appearance since the allegations against Harvey Weinstein surfaced.

McGowan opened her speech by saying that she had been "silenced for 20 years," "slut-shamed," "harassed," and "maligned."   

"I’m just like you," the actress declared to the audience. "Because what happened to me, happens to all of us in society, and that cannot stand, and it will not stand."

McGowan then turned her attention to the multiple sexual assault and harassment allegations in Hollywood that have been made public recently.

“Hollywood may seem like it’s an isolated thing, but it is not. It is the messaging system for your mind. It is the mirror that you’re given to look into," McGowan said.

The actress brought attention to the fact that men have a substantial amount of control in Hollywood, and pointed out that 96% of the Directors Guild of America is male.

"That statistic has not changed since 1946, so we are given one view," McGowan said. "And I know the men behind that view. And they should not be in your mind and they should not be in mine. It's time to clean house.”

McGowan recently alleged that "HW" — no doubt a reference to Harvey Weinstein — raped her, and has been rallying for change since then.

It was revealed in the bombshell New York Times report, which exposed numerous sexual assault and harassment allegations against Weinstein, that McGowan had received a $100,000 settlement from the producer in 1997 for "an episode in a hotel room during the Sundance Film Festival."

"For all of us who have been grabbed by the motherf---ing p---y, no more," McGowan said. "Name it, shame it, and call it out. Join me,” McGowan said.

You can watch McGowan's full speech here.

SEE ALSO: Rose McGowan is calling for people to sign a petition to dissolve The Weinstein Company's board

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Robert Rodriguez says he cast Rose McGowan in 'Grindhouse' to get back at Harvey Weinstein

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  • Director Robert Rodriguez told Variety that he cast Rose McGowan in his film "Grindhouse" to get back at Harvey Weinstein for his alleged sexual assault against her. 
  • Rodriguez described confronting Weinstein with McGowan over the role at a party.
  • He said Weinstein subsequently tried to "bury" the film, which had a tepid box office performance for Dimension Films, a branch of The Weinstein Company.

 

Robert Rodriguez, the director of "Grindhouse" and "Sin City," said he knew about the alleged sexual assault by Harvey Weinstein of Rose McGowan, and decided to cast McGowan in "Grindhouse" to get back at Weinstein for the incident.

In an extended statement for Variety, Rodriguez detailed his meeting McGowan for the first time in 2005, when she told him Weinstein sexually assaulted her in 1997, and said he blacklisted her from working on, or auditioning for, any Weinstein-produced film.

McGowan signed a non-disclosure agreement with Weinstein in 1997 and received a $100,000 settlement from the movie mogul following the alleged assault, according to The New York Times. 

Rodriguez and McGowan dated from 2006 to 2009.  

When Rodriguez was gearing up to make "Grindhouse," his double-feature film with Quentin Tarantino (released in 2007 by Dimension Films, Bob Weinstein's arm of The Weinstein Company), he said he wrote a "bad a--" lead role for McGowan, in order to "take her off the blacklist" on a film Harvey Weinstein would have to pay for. 

Rodriguez then described how he and McGowan confronted Weinstein about the role at a party:

"I called Harvey over to our table, and as soon as he got close enough to see that I was sitting with Rose, his face dropped and went ghostly white. I said, 'Hey Harvey, this is Rose McGowan. I think she’s amazing and really talented and I’m going to cast her in my next movie.' Harvey then dribbled all over himself in the most over the top performance I’d ever seen as he gushed, 'Oh she’s wonderful, oh she’s amazing, oh she’s fantastic, oh she’s so talented … You two should definitely work together.' And then he skittered off. I knew right then that every word Rose told me was true, you could see it all over his face."

Rodriguez wrote that Weinstein subsequently tried to "bury" the film in its promotional phase. "Grindhouse" did not perform well at the box office. 

Rodriguez has since released a number of other films for Dimension Films, including sequels to "Spy Kids" and "Sin City," which were Dimension-produced. 

Read his whole statement for Variety.

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George Clooney’s latest directing effort is embarrassingly awful

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On paper, a movie directed by George Clooney, with a script written by Joel and Ethan Coen, and starring Matt Damon and Julian Moore looks like a hit. But after seeing “Suburbicon” you’re left with only disappointment as all these talents couldn’t pull off a good movie.

A major reason for the disappointing outcome is that the movie tries to be a dark satire on suburban culture and a commentary on racism. Yes, that part of the movie will be a surprise, especially if you’ve seen the trailer.

According to a profile on Clooney done recently by The Hollywood Reporter, the Coens originally wrote their script back in the 1990s and approached Clooney to star in it. That story, set in the 1950s, follows a white family looking to be living a carefree life in the suburbs until a home invasion leaves the father unhinged. Recently when Clooney took the project on as something for him to direct — with racial tension bubbling to the surface during Donald Trump’s race for the presidency — he and his writing partner Grant Heslov decided to also include a real-life incident that took place in Levittown, Pennsylvania in 1957 where a white suburban neighborhood erupted in violence after an African-American family moved in.

It’s almost embarrassing to imagine that Clooney, Heslov, and others would think these two plot elements could work seamlessly in one movie.

Matt Damon plays the father, Gardner. Julianne Moore plays his wife and also her sister, Margaret. Gardner’s wife dies during the home invasion and it is soon revealed that it was Gardner who was involved in planning the invasion so he can ship his son to boarding school and run off to Aruba with Margaret. While all of this is going on, the African-American family living in the town are dealing with continued racist behavior from everyone in the neighborhood.

Suburbicon Paramount Pictures finalBeyond the fact that everything going on in the Gardner family plot of the movie is unoriginal, there is very little time given to the plight of the African-American family. Outside of a scene here and there of white angry men yelling at the family from the sidewalk and neighboring yards, there’s no scenes with dialogue of the family dealing with the harassment. It’s all done through the brief interaction between the sons of each family.

There are a few parts of the movie that seem to have a Coen brothers feel, from the opening scene that reveals the racial tension in the neighborhood to a shifty insurance investigator played by Oscar Isaac, but the movie, outside of being very violent, doesn’t have the bite of a Coen story. It’s also a far cry from the originality or style that Clooney has given us in previous directing work like “Confessions of a Dangerous Mind” and “Good Night, and Good Luck.”

Damon and Moore work hard with the material given, trying desperately to make a few comic moments hit the mark. But mostly they are stuck with really lousy material.

I can’t really say I’m even curious what the Coens' script on its own would have looked like because the kidnapping aspect of the plot in “Suburbicon” is so close to what happens in “Fargo,” the Coens-directed 1996 classic. I just can’t believe no one went to Clooney at the script stage and told him he was dancing very closely to what one of the Coen brothers’ classics already did. And why the Coens would write something so similar to what they did in “Fargo.” Rewrites may have been the culprit, however. 

Regardless, Clooney is so heavy-handed with both the satire and commentary on race, watching “Suburbicon” builds into a frustrating experience.

“Suburbicon” opens in theaters October 27.

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Nintendo's new Mario game is a great argument for buying a Nintendo Switch

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"Super Mario Odyssey" is excellent.

Surprise!

Super Mario Odyssey

It's so good, in fact, that you should seriously consider buying a Nintendo Switch just to play it. Really!

Here are just a few reasons why "Super Mario Odyssey" is so great:

  • It feels brand new, despite starring a decades-old character.
  • It looks far better than it should on the Switch, a console that's not as powerful as its rivals.
  • And it represents a fun evolution of the long-running franchise; where in the past you could play as only one of a handful of characters, you can now take over and play dozens. 

There's so much more to say about "Odyssey," so let's dive in.

SEE ALSO: The Nintendo Switch is having an incredible run so far, and the future looks even brighter

DON'T MISS: Here's what critics are saying about 'Super Mario Odyssey,' the newest hit game for the Nintendo Switch

WARNING: Spoilers ahead!

I'm going to speak explicitly about "Super Mario Odyssey," including about its story and gameplay — this is a review, after all. So, if you don't want anything spoiled, turn back!

 



"Super Mario Odyssey" doesn't waste your time with a bunch of needless backstory.

The premise of "Odyssey" is delightfully quick and simple.

Mario's chronic nemesis, Bowser, has kidnapped his longtime love interest, Princess Peach, and is forcing her into marriage. Mario's not into that, which is seemingly why Bowser's doing it in the first place. He shreds Mario's hat and takes off in an airship. Typical!

But also whatever, right? How much motivation do you need to take out a villainous turtle dressed like a pimp?

Super Mario Odyssey

Relax: All of this plot setup plays out quickly, and you can get on with the game in just a few minutes.



"Odyssey" jumps right into the action.

After falling from Bowser's airship, Mario lands in a world ruled by ghosts shaped like hats — a convenient twist given what Bowser just did to his cap. One such ghost hat, named Cappy, befriends Mario and offers to team up on a mission to save their respective significant others. Mario dons Cappy, and they go on their way.

Cappy is the key new element at the heart of "Odyssey." Mario can use Cappy to capture and control various things, both living and not.

You can start throwing around Cappy and controlling other characters and objects pretty much immediately. Before I fought a boss or even found the Odyssey, the all-important airship Mario uses to travel from kingdom to kingdom, I'd captured a frog and done some insane things.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

James Toback says allegations of sexual assault against him are 'too stupid' and 'not worth talking about'

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In the wake of the Harvey Weinstein scandal, many others have been hit with allegations of sexual harassment and assault within the fields of media, politics, and Hollywood.

One is director James Toback, who was the subject of a Los Angeles Times story last Sunday, in which 38 women accused him of sexual harassment. More than 200 women have since come out saying the director sexually harassed them as well.

In most instances, Toback would allegedly walk up to women on the street, introduce himself as a filmmaker, and offer them a role in his next movie. That would then lead to conversations about sex and often sexual harassment, accusers said.

But before the Times story broke, Rolling Stone reporter Hillel Aron reached out to Toback after speaking to nine women who said Toback sexually harassed them. In two instances, accusers said Toback met women and began discussing over months of talks and meetings potential roles for them to play in his movie projects, then on separate occasions turned the talk sexual and humped their legs.

Aron reached out to Toback through his agent at the time — the person no longer represents the director — and Toback called Aron back four days before the Times story published for an on-the-record conversation.

When Aron told Toback about the allegations he'd heard from women, Toback responded with the following:

"Lemme be really clear about this. I don't want to get a pat on the back, but I've struggled seriously to make movies with very little money, that I write, that I direct, that mean my life to me. The idea that I would offer a part to anyone for any other reason than that he or she was gonna be the best of anyone I could find is so disgusting to me. And anyone who says it is a lying c---sucker or c--t or both. Can I be any clearer than that?"

Toback went on to say that he had just done a movie with actress Sienna Miller and that "no one who's ever worked with me would ever say anything like that." According to Rolling Stone, he was actually sitting next to Miller at the time of the call and handed the phone to her to talk to Aron. An off-the-record conversation reportedly took place. (Miller was not immediately available to comment. Business Insider reached out to Toback's former agent in an attempt to get in contact with the director and ask for a comment on the statements made in the recording, but haven't heard back.)

Aron then told Toback about the two women who, on the record, said that the director sexually assaulted them.

"This is just too stupid," Toback said. "I mean, these are people I don't know, and it's things I never would have done. And it's just not worth talking about. It's idiotic."

Toback said that he has never offered a part to anyone who didn't deserve it, and that he's never told a woman on the street that he's a director and that, "I'll get you a film role."

"Anything like that is nauseating and disgusting," Toback said. "And I would never say anything like 'I'll get you a film role.' It's too stupid to dignify. It's pathetic lies. It's just too f---ing embarrassing and idiotic."

Listen to the entire exchange between Aron and Toback below:

SEE ALSO: This weekend The Weinstein Company's first movie since the scandal hits theaters

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The Hallmark Channel is defying every trend in media by owning Christmas

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  • Starting this weekend, the Hallmark Channel is rolling out 33 original Christmas movies. These movies have helped it defy industry trends that are hurting rival networks.
  • The company's formula allows it to crank out movies in three weeks for roughly $2 million each.
  • Most of the films are shot in the summer: "I’ve gotten used to being really hot and sweating in my boots," says Lacy Chabert, a recurring star.
  • Advertisers and viewers are drawn in because they know exactly what they're going to get.


Roger left his big New York City newspaper job to head back to his Vermont hometown to take over the family newspaper right smack in the middle of the Christmas season.

Once there, he and his high-school rival, Samantha, now the anchor for the local news station, wound up chasing the biggest story of the year: What will happen to the town's Christmas-tree farm, which is set to be razed by developers? Will they save the farm, get the big story, and keep from falling for each other? Find out on "Christmas Scoop," starring Mark-Paul Gosselaar and Jennie Garth.

OK, this isn't a real movie. But if you've ever heard of the Hallmark Channel, you can picture the whole thing.

The cable network is set to release the first of 33 original Christmas movies — most featuring a pair of recognizable TV stars meeting cute near the mistletoe — this weekend — before we're even done with Halloween.

Hallmark, it seems, has never stopped saying Merry Christmas, and it's how the network, owned by Crown Media, is defying every trend in the media business. It has milked the Christmas stories to consistently deliver strong live ratings (meaning people watch when the movies are broadcast, not later, say, over the internet), while its rivals grapple with cable cord-cutting and competition from streaming services.

If you aren't familiar, here are two examples of the kinds of films we're talking about:

  • 2015's "A Crown for Christmas" starring Danica McKellar ("The Wonder Years") as a recently fired New York exec who ends up working for, and falling for, a prince during Christmas.
  • 2016's "A Wish for Christmas" starring Lacey Chabert ("Mean Girls") as a woman granted a wish by Santa Claus, a wish that expires in 48 hours.

"Their movies are as comforting as programming can be. You can grab a blanket, enjoy a glass of wine, and know the movie will have a happy ending," said Brad Krevoy, a producer who has worked on theatrical movies such as "Dumb and Dumber" and "Threesome."

Very traditional media

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People are canceling cable subscriptions and ditching live TV for Netflix, Amazon, and other streaming apps.

Cable networks are striving to produce original prestige series at a time when there are upwards of 500 on the air. At the same time, mid-tier cable networks are struggling, and some, like Esquire, have disappeared. Everyone in media is trying to figure out where they fit on Facebook and Snapchat.

Not Hallmark.

"It's weird," said director Ron Oliver, who's worked on numerous Hallmark projects and logged time on Nickelodeon's "Goosebumps" in the 1990s. "With Hallmark, you actually turn on the TV at 8 p.m. and watch collectively. It speaks to a real need."

In 2016, Hallmark movies attracted over 2 million live viewers, though by November and December those numbers spiked to 4 million, according to Nielsen. The rating record was set by Candace Cameron Bure’s "Christmas Under Wraps," in 2014, and it actually just added a third cable network, Hallmark Drama, on top of its core network and Hallmark Movies and Mysteries – all part of the Crown Media Family Networks division of Hallmark Cards.

Crown Media president and CEO Bill Abbot chalks the success up to a commitment to the formula.

"The business has been so driven by trying to hit the home run, trying to replicate the success of 'The Walking Dead,'" he said. "Hits are very hard to find. That's a very risky strategy. And it's detrimental to the cable industry.

"People don’t know what they are going to get from original channels," Abbot added. "That’s what’s driving a lot of the decline in audience."

Taking back Christmas

The original cable Christmas movie wasn't Hallmark's baby. Rather in the mid-1990s, ABC Family kicked off the craze with its "25 Days of Christmas" franchise. That led to classics such as 2007's "Holiday in Handcuffs" featuring Melissa Joan Hart taking Mario Lopez hostage while he steals her heart— of course at Christmas time.

Though the Hallmark channel launched in 2001, Crown Media had made TV movies for decades for networks like CBS. But around 2011, as ABC Family (now called Freeform) leaned into targeting teens, Crown went after Christmas in a bigger way.

"We did look at what '25 Days of Christmas' had become in people's minds and said, 'Wait a minute. We have a brand and a hundred-year legacy,'" Michelle Vicary, EVP of programming & network program publicity, Crown Media Family Networks, said. "We should lean into that as much as we can and do more of it."

It started paying off immediately. Now Hallmark produces movies tied to Valentine's Day, fall harvest season, June weddings, and summer holidays. But starting October 27, it's pretty much all Christmas movies for the rest of the year.

"People started to say things to us, like, 'I turn in on right after Halloween and don’t turn it off until New Year's," Vicary said.

“In this day and age, with the multitude of programs, the notion of a strict adherence to one’s brand – that's friendly, inviting, and welcoming — is a huge plus," said Bruce Vinokour, a television agent at the Creative Artists Agency.

A feel-good Blumhouse

How exactly will Hallmark make 87 original movies this year, including 33 Christmas movies?

The company is known for being disciplined and deliberate. Hallmark typically shoots movies over about three weeks for $2 million — the price of some individual TV episodes or, as Oliver put it, "the catering budget for Transformers."

The network is almost like the Yuletide version of the much-admired low-budget horror studio Blumhouse.

Most movies are shot in Canada, where Hallmark gets tax breaks and other benefits from using local production crews. Vancouver is the biggest outlet, given its wintry milieu, though Hallmark has made movies in Toronto, Montreal, and, in some cases, Romania.

The timing is often tight. Actress Lacey Chabert said she shot a movie last summer that aired four weeks later.

When Business Insider talked to director Ron Oliver in mid-October, he was in postproduction on "The Christmas Train" (Danny Glover, Dermot Mulroney), which is scheduled to run in late November. Oliver was still writing "Reindeer Games," which he's shooting in November for a December airdate.

"It's literally down to the wire," he said. "But I always remind people: They shot 'Casablanca' in 18 days."

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Christmas is good business

Kagan, a media-research group within S&P Global Market Intelligence, estimated that Hallmark reeled in $431.3 million in revenue between advertising and affiliate fees from cable distributors. That's up from less than $300 million in 2012.

To put that in context, Lifetime's revenue is roughly double that of Hallmark's, but net operating revenue from 2012 to 2016 has remained relatively flat, $876.4 million to $875.4 million, Kagan estimates.

Advertisers have noticed Hallmark's ascendancy.

"If you look at cable in general, there are ratings declines all over the place. And every fourth quarter they are growing. It's kind of incredible," said Keri Feeley, SVP and group partner of integrated investment at the ad-buying firm UM.

Marketers are particularly drawn to Hallmark because the content is considered safe. And for viewers, "They always find actors that remind you of your childhood," said Feeley.

Familiar faces

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There's something of a debate over who is the record holder for most Hallmark Christmas movie appearances — between Candace Cameron Bure (who became a star on "Full House"), Lori Loughlin (also from "Full House"), and Lacey Chabert ("Party of Five" and "Mean Girls"). Though Danica McKellar (Winnie Cooper from "The Wonder Years") is coming on strong, said Vicary.

"It's tough to say," Vicary said. "Lori Loughlin owned August."

Chabert did her first Hallmark movie in 2010: "Elevator Girl" (a guy and a girl get stuck in an elevator). Her first Christmas movie was "Matchmaker Santa," and she estimates she's done eight or nine since.

"The way their company works is a family and it mirrors their product," she told Business Insider. "They really care about what they’re putting out."

Still, Chabert said that the shooting schedule is like "boot camp" in that you "eat, breath, and sleep the movie."

"It's intense — it’s hard to make a movie in 15 days. They know what they are doing," she told Business Insider.

Chabert said that for whatever reason, most of her Christmas movies have been shot in the summer.

"That's fine by me," she said. "I’ve gotten used to being really hot and sweating in my boots."

Make it snow

One thing that can't be different: "You have to have snow," Vicary said. That's nonnegotiable.

Visual-effects expert Luc Benning has worked on several Hallmark projects. There are a few ways to make snow happen, even in August. Options include using:

  • snow blankets (which look like car-seat cushions, Benning says)
  • fire-retardant foam (increasingly popular)
  • a papier-mâché-like product called a Krendl (tough to clean up)
  • crushed limestone (increasingly popular out West)
  • ice shavings from ice blocks
  • snow from the machines that ski slopes use (extremely heavy)

"The past couple of years Hallmark’s really liked the look of the foam," said Benning, who often works on four and five Hallmark movies back to back. A snow budget might run a Christmas production about $50,000, he said.

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Then there's the snow needed for actor close-ups. Sometimes, that means soapy bubbles.

Oliver said he was shooting a scene with Candace Cameron Bure that was supposed to be during a blizzard. So he used a machine that blew soapy bubbles into the air that looked like snow during close-up shots. "He hair was literally concrete," said Oliver. "And she had soap in her mouth."

Plus, because of the noise that the machine made, the actress had to reshoot her dialogue later "with the same emotion and cadence," he said. Oliver has a way of helping his actors deal: stops at the Shameful Tiki Room bar in Vancouver.

Christmas future

As Hallmark pushes its original output to the limit, the question will become, how do you not run out of ideas?

One way to keep things moving is by doing sequels: "Finding Father Christmas" in 2016 has led to this year's "Engaging Father Christmas" (and eventually "Marrying Father Christmas").

"My biggest challenge is finding good scripts and good writers," Abbot added. To help, the company has launched a book division that will serve as something of a farm team for future movies.

Meanwhile, programming chief Vicary said she's already talking to her team about projects for Christmas 2018.

For his part, Oliver said he's often wondered if he'll ever end up Christmas'd out. But then he gets together with his family and gets right back into the spirit.

"I always have this huge meltdown on Christmas Eve," he said. "But I love it. It's really about the core idea of people getting together. Underneath it all, we do know the importance of it."

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Anthony Bourdain and Danny Bowien share the best way to cook steak

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We sat down with Anthony Bourdain of "Parts Unknown" and Danny Bowien of Mission Chinese to discuss Bourdain's new film, "Wasted!" and the ever-changing food landscape. They both told us their idea of a perfect steak, with two very different answers.  Following is a transcript of the video. 

Anthony Bourdain: In a perfect world, a big, fat rib steak, fatty rib steak, on the bone, seasoned just with sea salt and pepper, black pepper. Either grilled at a decent temperature over charcoal or pan-seared in a mix of not much butter and olive oil, and basted with butter throughout. Finished in the oven just a little bit. Pulled out of the oven just short of its desired temperature, and allowed to rest — super important. No. 1 mistake that everybody makes is they take the steak off the fire, perfectly good steak, and whack right into it and, by doing that, ruin the entire thing. If you just let it sit there for 10 minutes, magical stuff is going on there, important things, if people just let that happen. It’s really impossible, in my view, to improve on that. That is the way God intended us to cook steak.

Danny Bowien: My opinion ischanged over the years, ‘cause I was trained to be a chef, and, like, they’re taught all these ways. You got to, like, rest your meat, do all this stuff to it — sear it, butter-baste it, whatever. I really just enjoy Korean barbecue. I like thinly cut short ribs. Like, I mean a really tough piece of meat that you should probably braise, cut thinly and grilled quickly and just eaten with, like, pickles and condiments. To me, that’s a steak at this point. But I would eat that over going to eat, like, a big, massive — because also, like, when you Korean barbecue, it’s oftentimes eaten with a lot of vegetables and things like that. And then it’s also, like, very interactive and communal kind of dining.

Bourdain: I love that. That’s my go-to utility meal.

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