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This is the perfect year to buy a PlayStation 4 or Xbox One — they're both dropping to their lowest prices ever

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Xbox vs Playstation

Holding out for a PlayStation 4 this holiday? Perhaps you're waiting on a killer Xbox One X deal? Or maybe you just want to complete your set of both major game consoles from Sony and Microsoft?

No matter who you are, there are great deals to be found on every model of PlayStation 4 and Xbox One this holiday — from the base level PlayStation 4 "Slim" and Xbox One S to the super-powerful/super-expensive Xbox One X. 

Here's everything you need to know to be ready for this year's biggest Black Friday video game console deals:

SEE ALSO: Xbox announced a bunch of new stuff over the weekend — here are the 8 things to get excited about

1. The PlayStation 4 with a free copy of "Spider-Man" is maybe the best deal of all this holiday.

The PlayStation 4 usually costs somewhere in the ballpark of $300. You can find them with games included for a slightly better deal, and you can buy used PS4 consoles that cost less — but the general price for a new PlayStation 4 is about $300.

During the week of November 18 to November 26, that price is dropping by $100 outright. 

To be clear: You can buy a PlayStation 4 for just $200 during the week of Black Friday

That alone is a super good deal; that it comes with one of the best games of 2018 is a huge bonus. "Spider-Man" on PlayStation 4 is excellent— a game that anyone with a PlayStation 4 should play regardless of their interest in the comic books/movies of the same name. 



There are a bunch of other great deals from Sony, from game discounts to PlayStation VR bundle discounts. Check out the full video from Sony right here:

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2. The Xbox One X for $400 is the first major discount on the most powerful home game console available.

The Xbox One X — the beefed-up version of the Xbox One released just last year — is a powerhouse. It's whisper quiet, capable of producing 4K visuals, and shockingly tiny. It's also very expensive, starting at $500 without any games included.

But during Microsoft's Black Friday sales week, November 18 to November 26, the console is getting its first major price drop: You can snag the Xbox One X for just $400.

Still expensive? Yes! But significantly less expensive than it once was.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

How 'Venom' scored one of the biggest superhero movie openings ever in China

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Venom 2 Sony

  • "Venom" scored the third-biggest opening for a superhero movie ever in China, only behind "Avengers: Infinity War" and "Avengers: Age of Ultron."
  • It continues "Venom's" impressive box-office run, which could top $700 million globally.
  • Exhibitor Relations senior box-office analyst Jeff Bock told Business Insider that China responds well to monster movies, and that it had an "advantageous" release date.

 

"Venom" continued its shocking box-office dominance over the weekend in China, where it opened to a huge $102 million. That's the third-biggest opening ever for a superhero movie there after "Avengers: Infinity War," which opened to $191 million, and "Avengers: Age of Ultron," according to Box Office Mojo.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, it was Imax's biggest opening in the region, as well, with $10 million of the movie's China box office coming from Imax screens.

This puts "Venom's" total worldwide gross at $673 million, which means it could top $700 million globally now that Chinese audiences are responding well to the movie. Its production budget was $100 million, and it's even more impressive considering the movie's lackluster 29% Rotten Tomatoes critic score.

"It seems that the disconnect between critics and audiences has taken on an international flair with audiences around the world and most recently China giving 'Venom' a resounding thumbs up in the face of mixed reviews at best for the film," Comscore analyst Paul Dergarabedian told Business Insider.

It's good news for Sony after its "Girl in the Spider's Web" bombed at the US box office this weekend. "Venom" has exceeded all expectations, and has rejuvenated Sony's "Spider-Man" plans after they looked dead just a few years ago. Now, a "Venom" sequel is more than likely, and Sony can go all in on its other planned spin-offs.

READ MORE:  'Venom' gives Sony an edge over Disney in its fight to keep Spider-Man, according to industry experts

Exhibitor Relations senior box-office analyst Jeff Bock told Business Insider that the success of "Venom" in China comes down to the country's interest in monster movies, which "Venom" is maybe even more so than a superhero movie.

"Monster movies are bonafide box office gold in China and 'Venom' is about as monstrous as it gets in the superhero universe," Bock said.

This year's hit giant-shark movie, "The Meg," grossed $527 million worldwide, helped largely by the $153 million it made in China. John Krasinski's "A Quiet Place," about a family hiding from alien creatures that hunt by sound, received a rare extension on its release in China this year and scored $34 million there. And Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson's giant-monster movie, "Rampage," made $156 million in China after a sluggish start in the US.

Bock also attributes an "advantageous" release date to "Venom's" success in China. According to THR, a Japanese animated film, "Detective Conan: Zero the Enforcer," opened second with just $10.6 million, and in third, a Chinese romance, "Last Letter," opened with $5.4 million.

Dergarabedian views international audiences as responding to the same things that moviegoers in the US are "as it continues to confound analysts."

"The film's unique style, Marvel branding, and above all Tom Hardy as the anti-hero at the heart of the story [are] proving to be an irresistible combination," he said.

SEE ALSO: What you need to know about the Spider-Man villain who appears in the 'Venom' after-credits scene

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The inside story behind the Marvel movie you were never supposed to see

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  • Marvel comic book, "The Fantastic Four," was adapted into a movie in 1993 with a $1 million budget, but  was never officially released. 
  • German producer, Bernd Eichinger, failed to get Hollywood backing, but he risked losing his rights to the comic if he didn't start production by the end of 1992. 
  • In the video above, legendary "King of the B-Movies" Roger Corman, who worked on the film, tells one of the most bizarre Hollywood tales you'll ever hear. 

In 1993, a German producer teamed up with legendary "King of the B-Movies" Roger Corman to produce a low-budget, feature-length adaptation of the popular Marvel comic book "The Fantastic Four." The movie was never officially released. 

Producer Bernd Eichinger owned the film rights to the comic, but a clause in his contract stated that he would lose the rights if he didn't go into production on a "Fantastic Four" movie by December 31, 1992. Up to that point, Eichinger had failed to convince a Hollywood studio to commit to a big-budget version of the story. 

The producer crafted a clever way to hold onto the rights so that he could later make a big-budget version of "The Fantastic Four." He called on Roger Corman, a legendary producer famous for his ability to crank out movies with low budgets and short schedules. 

It turns out that Eichinger never had any intention of releasing this low-budget version of the comic — a fact that he withheld for the movie's cast and crew. After Corman announced plans to release the film theatrically, Eichinger paid Corman $1 million to stand down, and all available prints were reportedly destroyed by then-Marvel chief Avi Arad. 

Arad didn't respond to our request for a comment for this story. 

Thanks to bootlegged copies that surfaced online, the unreleased "Fantastic Four" movie has become a cult classic.

In 2017, Business Insider sat down with Corman at his office in Los Angeles to talk about his most recent project, "Death Race 2050,"  a sequel to the cult hit "Death Race 2000," which Corman produced in 1975. 

We also talked to the director of "The Fantastic Four," Oley Sassone. Corman and Sassone give an enlightening account of one of the most bizarre Hollywood tales you'll ever hear. 

EDITOR'S NOTE: This video was originally published on March 18, 2017.

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Stan Lee spent a lifetime condemning racism, most prominently through the heroes in his comic books

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Stan Lee

  • Stan Lee, the founder of Marvel Comics, died at the age of 95 on Monday. 
  • Lee spent a lifetime condemning racism, most prominently via the heroes in his comic books. 
  • "I always felt the X-Men, in a subtle way, often touched upon the subject of racism and inequality, and I believe that subject has come up in other titles, too," Lee said in a 2016 interview. 

Stan Lee spent a lifetime condemning racism and hatred, including via the heroes in his comic books. 

Lee, the founder of Marvel Comics, died at the age of 95 on Monday. 

The iconic characters he created — including Spider-Man and the X-Men — have enchanted multiple generations of Americans while offering subtle rebukes of discrimination and prejudice. 

Read more: Stan Lee, Marvel legend, reportedly dead at 95

Throughout his life and career, Lee often spoke out against bigotry, making references to the ways in which he attempted to fight it with his stories. 

During an interview in 2016, for example, Lee said that he "always felt the X-Men, in a subtle way, often touched upon the subject of racism and inequality, and I believe that subject has come up in other titles, too."

"But we would never pound hard on the subject, which must be handled with care and intelligence," he added.

stan lee

'If we could only learn that the world is big enough for all of us...'

Here are some of Lee's most powerful quotes about discrimination and prejudice: 

  • In 1968, the year Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy were assassinated, Lee wrote: "Let’s lay it right on the line. Racism and bigotry are among the deadliest social ills plaguing the world today. But, unlike a team of costumed supervillains, they can’t be halted with a punch in the snoot or a zap from a ray gun. The only way to destroy them, is to expose them – to reveal from the insidious evil they really are."
  • "The bigot is an unreasoning hater – one who hates blindly, fanatically, indiscriminately... He hates people he's never seen – people he's never known – with equal intensity – with equal venom... It's totally irrational, patently insane to condemn an entire race – to despise an entire nation – to vilify an entire religion," Lee added at the time.
  • Lee also wrote: "Sooner or later, we must learn to judge each other on our own merits. Sooner or later if man is ever to be worth of his destiny, we must fill our hearts with tolerance. For then, and only then, will we be truly worthy of the concept that man was created in the image of God – a God who calls us ALL – His children."
  • During a 1971 interview with Rolling Stone, Lee said: "I think the only message I have ever tried to get across is for Christsake, don't be bigoted. Don't be intolerant. If you're a radical, don't think that all of the conservatives have horns... I think most people want the same thing. They want to live a happy family life, they want to be at peace, they want no physical violence, nobody to hurt them, and they want the good things that life has to offer. But I think everybody sees us reaching that nirvana by a different path."
  • In the same 1971 interview, Lee added: "I think one of the terrible things in the world is that we are so inclined to think in black and white, hero and villain, good and bad, if you don't agree with me I've got to destroy you. If we could only learn that the world is big enough for all of us. For a guy who wants to wear his hair long, and a guy who wants to be a skinhead. Neither of 'em has to be bad."
  • During an interview in 2016, Lee said: "America is made of different races and different religions, but [that] we’re all co-travelers on the spaceship Earth and must respect and help each other along the way."

Lee, a World War II veteran and proud native New Yorker, died on Veterans Day. 

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NOW WATCH: Megyn Kelly in 2017: 'I regret a lot' of the controversial stuff I've said on live television

These are the top 10 games for your new PlayStation 4, according to critics (SNE)

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PlayStation 4 Pro

At just over five years old, the PlayStation 4 has a surprisingly long list of incredible games.

And, in 2018, the wildly successful PlayStation 4 is on the verge of being the lowest price it's ever been: Just $200 during the week of Black Friday — with a copy of the superlative newest "Spider-Man" game right in the box. It's quite a deal!

With all that in mind, it's harder than ever to know where to begin with Sony's latest major game console. So we put together exactly that list: The top 10 games for Sony's PlayStation 4 — at least according to the critics, as compiled by Metacritic

Here's what we found:

SEE ALSO: The 50 best video games of all time, according to critics

10. "Undertale"

Critic score: 92/100

User score: 6.5/10

Plot summary (from Metacritic): "Welcome to 'Undertale.' In this RPG, you control a human who falls underground into the world of monsters. Now you must find your way out... or stay trapped forever."



9. "Bloodborne"

Critic score: 92/100

User score: 8.9/10

Plot summary (from Metacritic): "'Bloodborne' is an action RPG in which you hunt for answers in the ancient city of Yharnam, now cursed with a strange endemic illness spreading through the streets like a disease. Peril, death and madness infest this dark world, and you're tasked with uncovering its darkest secrets which will be necessary for you to survive. Armed with a singular arsenal of weaponry, including guns and saw cleavers, you'll require wits, strategy and reflexes to dispatch the agile and intelligent enemies that guard the city's underbelly."



8. "Journey"

Critic score: 92/100

User score: 8.4/10

Plot summary (from Metacritic): "Awakening in an unknown world, the player walks, glides, and flies through a vast and awe-inspiring landscape, while discovering the history of an ancient, mysterious civilization along the way. "



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Netflix reportedly had an internal debate after its testing favored 'Grace and Frankie' promos without Jane Fonda

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  • According to The Wall Street Journal, Netflix tests showed that users were more likely to click on images for "Grace and Frankie" that didn't include actress Jane Fonda.
  • This prompted a debate between its content and tech teams, the Journal reported.

 

Netflix's algorithm reportedly put the streaming giant between a rock and a hard place when it came to its original series, "Grace and Frankie." 

The show stars Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin as two women who find out their husbands are having an affair with one another. According to The Wall Street Journal, which cited anonymous sources close to the discussions, Netflix's tech side found that users were more likely to click on promotion for the show that didn't include Fonda.

The Journal reported that this finding prompted an internal debate within the company between Netflix's content team, which didn't want to anger Fonda and argued that it could be a violation of her contract, and its tech team, which stressed the importance of the data.

Netflix ultimately decided to include images of Fonda, according to the Journal, but it shows how Netflix's Hollywood side and its Silicon Valley side can come into conflict as the streamer leans more into original shows and movies that include top talent.

“We’ve been honored to have a groundbreaking collaboration with Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin that is going on six seasons," Netflix said in a statement to Business Insider. "While we always test various creative images for every show on our service, both Jane and Lily have been part of our promotion of the show from the beginning.”

"Grace and Frankie" returns in 2019 for its fifth season.

SEE ALSO: Wall Street analysts expect Netflix to raise prices soon — and say US subscribers would be willing to pay a lot more

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This new video shows how the world's most popular gamer turned his basement into a mind blowing state-of-the-art studio

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Ninja Tyler Blevins in Studio

  • Tyler "Ninja" Blevins is the most popular professional video game player in the world, streaming "Fortnite: Battle Royale" for millions of followers every day.
  • Portland based creative agency Roundhouse recently partnered with Ninja's sponsor, Red Bull, to redesign his home streaming studio, outfitting it with more than $20,000 worth of new equipment and custom features.
  • Red Bull documented the process and their new video reveals how Roundhouse transformed Ninja's basement into a full-fledged command center.
  • Business Insider spoke with Roundhouse Creative Director Robert Medkeff about designing the state-of-the-art studio.

In the era of YouTube and Twitch, professional video gamers rely on home studio setups to broadcast their gameplay to the millions of viewers around the world. Most home studios have humble beginnings, in a basement or in a kitchen. But if a streamer becomes successful, they soon need a set-up capable of an increasingly high level of production to serve a growing audience.

The world's most popular gamer, Tyler "Ninja" Blevins, has nearly 20 million subscribers on YouTube and became the first Twitch streamer to reach 10 million followers earlier this year. Ninja spends about 12 hours a day playing live on Twitch from his basement studio and has brought home as much as $500,000 a month through subscription fees and donations. His meteoric rise to the top of the video game world with "Fortnite: Battle Royale" has earned him a number of valuable opportunities, including commercials with Samsung, an ESPN the Magazine cover story, and an ongoing sponsorship from Red Bull.

Red Bull recently partnered with Portland-based creative agency Roundhouse to help Ninja redesign his home streaming setup, his primary base of operations. Roundhouse Creative Director Robert Medkeff flew to meet Ninja in Chicago where they discussed how to upgrade the studio and maintain his personal flair. The agency has worked on major gaming-related projects with Red Bull and Twitch in the past, but designing a state-of-the-art studio brought forth a new set of challenges. Roundhouse presented Ninja with a number of potential plans for the studio; once the gamer chose his favorite, they began fleshing the design out with the best possible technology and lighting options.

Ninja Tyler Blevins in Studio 2

"His new studio needed to inspire creativity and support multiple types of content, and stand out as the first gaming studio of its kind," Medkeff told Business Insider in an interview. 

While most of Ninja's streams consist of him playing at his desk, the new studio encompasses the full basement room. The space was given a custom acoustic treatment and has been fully outfitted with controllable, color changing LED lighting. Once wall includes eight different monitors for Ninja to host graphics or playback video from his dedicated video server. Another portion of the room has a dedicated analyst desk in place for when Ninja hosts friends or steps away from the action for a bit. Four different Blackmagic Design URSA 4K 60 fps broadcast cameras in the room are able to see the action from every angle while a mixture of Electrovoice and Shure broadcast microphones capture audio.

Ninja Tyler Blevins in Studio 3

Red Bull declined to share the budget for the studio design, but the equipment alone is worth more than $20,000. The goal of the studio is to be a one-stop shop for any type of gaming broadcast and everything in the room can be controlled from a digital switch board on Ninja's desk. Despite the big time studio upgrades, Ninja will still be using the same custom built NZXT computer and the free Open Broadcaster Software to stream. 

Roundhouse also worked to ensure that Ninja's personality was preserved within the studio. Medkeff said the partnership between Ninja and Red Bull was balanced and stress-free. The room was designed with Ninja's personal branding in mind but the space isn't dominated by sponsor logos.

Dozens of his personal trinkets line the room, including trophies, Funko POP figures, a "Fortnite" pickaxe, and a signed Detroit Lions football helmet. Medkeff said the look of the trophy wall will evolve as Ninja adds more personal effects. Roundhouse filled the studio with a fair share of secret features too, for example, Ninja's dogs have access to a small Murphy bed that pops out of one of the studio's walls.

Ninja Tyler Blevins in Studio 4

"I don't want to give away too many things, because there are a lot of nice little hidden things that Ninja will reveal when he streams," Medkeff said.

While playing "Fortnite: Battle Royale" alongside superstar artists like Drake and Travis Scott and winning major tournaments has helped Ninja gain a celebrity profile during the last year, he began competitive gaming with "Halo 3" in 2009. In August, Business Insider spoke with his wife and manager, Jessica Blevins, about how they have handled his skyrocketing career.

SEE ALSO: Meet Jessica Blevins, the 26-year-old wife and manager of the most popular video-game player in the world right now

SEE ALSO: Here's every part you'll need to build Ninja's gaming PC where he plays and streams 'Fortnite'

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Stan Lee's famous Marvel cameos started out as a joke in the comics

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With the passing of Stan Lee on Monday at the age of 95, we don't just say goodbye to the face of the Marvel brand, but also the man of 1,000 cameos.

The former president and chairman of Marvel Comics is known by many Marvel Cinematic Universe fans as the guy who shows up in the majority of the movies released by Marvel Studios since 2008’s “Iron Man.” But he started doing cameos long before there were superhero movies.

Going as far back as the 1960s, Lee’s likeness would be inserted occasionally in covers and inside the pages of the Marvel comics he was overseeing. And from what Lee told Business Insider back in 2015
, it was never his intention to pop up in all things Marvel.

“The artists back then would draw me in as a joke or just to have fun,” Lee told Business Insider then. “And I would put some dialogue balloons there and it looked as if I intended it. I didn’t try to do cameos in those days.”

Here’s Lee and fellow iconic Marvel artist Jack Kirby showing up on the cover of a “Fantastic Four” comic in the 1960s.
Stan Lee fantastic four wikipedia marvel
And Lee shows up in this edition of the “Nova” comics in the 1990s.nova 05 stan lee
“Anything that seemed fun and anything that the readers seemed to enjoy we kept doing and those things brought in a lot of fan mail,” Lee recalled. “And we weren’t doing movies or television, our whole existence depended on comic books, so if you see that something is interesting to the fans you stay with it.”

Marvel definitely stayed with it, making Lee the face of the company. Over the decades, he also appeared in countless cartoons, TV shows, and movies ranging from Fox's '90s cartoon “Spider-Man” to 1995 comedy “Mallrats" where Kevin Smith used him as a voice of reason. stan lee cartoonLee said he particularly liked his cameo in 2015's “Avengers: Age of Ultron” because “it’s so funny.”

That's primarily why he also has a fondness for his appearance in 2007’s “Fantastic 4: Rise of the Silver Surfer,” in which he can’t get into the wedding of Reed Richards and Susan Storm because the bouncer doesn’t think he’s really Stan Lee. “I like any of them that seem a little bit funny,” he added.

stan lee fantastic fourYou will next see Lee on the big screen for Sony's "Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse," where he makes a cameo in animation form. 

This story has been updated from its original version.

SEE ALSO: Stan Lee's original cameo was cut from "Guardians of the Galaxy" because it was too edgy

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MoviePass competitor Sinemia is being sued by angry customers who say it ripped them off with new fees

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The Grinch post credits ending

  • On Friday, the law firm Chimicles & Tikellis LLP filed a class action lawsuit in Delaware on behalf of two plaintiffs, alleging that MoviePass competitor Sinemia “essentially became a bait-and-switch scheme.”
  • The crux of the suit is a new $1.80 per-movie "processing fee" introduced by Sinemia in mid-October, even to subscribers who had already prepaid for a yearly subscription.
  • Over 40 Sinemia subscribers contacted Business Insider with negative stories about the company, many of whom expressed anger and frustration with its fees and lack customer service.

When MoviePass was forced to drastically change its business model in the face of mounting losses in August, competitor Sinemia stepped into the spotlight.

The movie-ticket subscription startup was founded in Turkey in 2015 and had operated overseas, but in early 2018 it capitalized on the hype around MoviePass to launch in the US. Despite their similarities, Sinemia CEO Rifat Oguz positioned his company as the anti-MoviePass, focused on “profit” and “sustainability” where MoviePass was focused on hypergrowth.

But as MoviePass began to introduce unpopular new restrictions, Sinemia went for the jugular, introducing a plan at the same price as MoviePass (around $10 per month), with the same number of movies (three per month), but with no restrictions on movies or showtimes — and with the ability to book tickets in advance.

For some movie fans, including myself, it seemed we had finally found a subscription service we could rely on. That feeling didn't last for many.

On Friday, the law firm Chimicles & Tikellis LLP filed a class action lawsuit in Delaware on behalf of two plaintiffs, alleging that Sinemia “essentially became a bait-and-switch scheme.”

“It lures consumers in by convincing them to purchase a purportedly cheaper movie subscription, and then adds undisclosed fees that make such purchases no bargain at all,” the lawsuit claims. “Sinemia fleeces consumers with an undisclosed, unexpected, and not-bargained-for processing fee each time a plan subscriber goes to the movies using Sinemia's service.”

I, too, encountered Sinemia’s sneaky fees and wrote about them in a piece published last week. In the piece, I urged the company to be more transparent with customers about its pricing structure. After the article published, I was contacted by over 40 Sinemia subscribers, many of whom expressed anger and frustration with its fees and lack of customer service.

On Sunday, less than a week after my story, Sinemia deactivated by personal account without explanation. A button to “reactivate” my subscription didn’t function and my email to customer support hasn’t been answered. Despite paying a $20 activation fee, my account was only active for two months before Sinemia shut it off.

I saw one movie, “A Star Is Born,” which I highly recommend.

How did it all go so wrong so quickly?

Fees upon fees

The crux of the class action lawsuit against Sinemia is a new $1.80 “processing fee” that the company began to roll out in mid-October.

To understand how the new fee changes the value proposition of the service, it’s helpful to look at one of the lawsuit plaintiffs: Paul Early of California.

Early signed up for Sinemia in August and paid $191.88 for a year plan of two movies per month for two people, plus $9.99 for early activation, according to the suit. All in he paid over $200. The first five times Early used Sinemia, he incurred a $1.50 third-party “convenience fee” (from using ticketing sites like Fandango). Sinemia had disclosed before he’d bought the subscription that he’d have to pay that fee.

But then when Early went to use the app on October 22, he was charged a further $1.80 “processing fee” per ticket, according to the suit.

After getting hit with this new fee a few more times, Early contacted customer support asking to cancel his plan and get a refund for the remainder. He never heard anything, according to the suit.

“The movie plan Early is now stuck with has lost significant value with the imposition of the processing fees,” the suit argues.

Many Sinemia subscribers echoed these sentiments to Business Insider, saying they felt taken advantage of by the fees, especially when "processing fees" were added on top of "convenience fees." Multiple subscribers said they had requested refunds for the remainder of their yearly subscriptions and been told Sinemia was a “non-refundable service.”

Others simply never heard from Sinemia’s customer support despite multiple follow-ups (including myself).

Sinemia didn’t respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

If you have any information about Sinemia, or have a story about your experience with the service, contact the author at nmcalone@businessinsider.com.

SEE ALSO: 18% of MoviePass subscribers say they plan to cancel, but many loyalists are still happy despite unpopular new features

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Despite predictions and controversy, PewDiePie has yet to lose his spot as YouTube's 'biggest star'

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  • YouTube's biggest star is still PewDiePie, who just reached 70 million subscribers.
  • Researchers have predicted that PewDiePie, aka Felix Kjellberg, would be dethroned by the Indian music channel T-Series, but that has yet to happen.
  • Kjellberg has still seen support from fans and popularity in the YouTube community despite a long history of disparaging racist and anti-Semitic remarks.

The pundits predicted that a new content creator would be crowned YouTube's biggest star come November, but the title still belongs to the Swedish vlogger PewDiePie.

PewDiePie became the first YouTuber to reach the 70-million subscriber mark, beating out the Indian music channel T-Series who has been quickly gaining ground. Research firms predicted that T-Series would overtake PewDiePie — who real name is Felix Kjellberg — by the end of October, but the content creator still led Monday by almost half a million subscribers.

Kjellberg has managed to keep his spot atop YouTube despite a history of making offensive remarks in his videos. Most recently, Kjellberg landed in hot water this summer over a (since deleted) Twitter post. Following Demi Lovato's hospitalization for an apparent drug overdose, Kjellberg tweeted out a comic that depicted Lovato asking her mom for money to buy a burger, then instead using it to buy heroin.

Although his subscriber base has remained loyal throughout his controversial past, YouTube itself has punished the creator for his actions. News surfaced in February 2017 that nine videos published on PewDiePie's channel featured Kjellberg making anti-Semitic comments, and the video platform responded by cancelling the second season of Kjellberg's original series on YouTube Premium.

Read more:PewDiePie criticizes YouTube's 'inept' leadership, accuses the company of giving Logan Paul a lighter punishment for offensive video

This sordid history hasn't stopped other YouTube influencers from calling on their fans to support Kjellberg in securing his spot atop YouTube. Tubefilter reports that fellow YouTube creator MrBeast campaigned heartily for Kjellberg through stints on local radio and purchases of advertisements on TV, websites, and billboards.

It's worth nothing that this title of "YouTube's biggest star" is based on the number of subscribers. Based on viewership, PewDiePie sits down at No. 7 on a leaderboard from research firm Social Blade. T-Series, however, leads all of YouTube in terms of viewership with more than 53 billion all-time video views.

As of Monday, research firm Tubular Labs revised its estimates to predict that T-Series would overtake PewDiePie for the most subscribers on November 30.

Meanwhile, PewDiePie posted on Twitter that he's already eyeing 100 million subscribers.

 

SEE ALSO: Jack Dorsey says Twitter needs to fully understand the 'use cases' of an edit button and can’t just 'rush it out'

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We made a timeline showing the entire history of the Marvel Cinematic Universe

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MCU Timeline 4x3

It all started with 2008's "Iron Man," but the Marvel Cinematic Universe actually stretches back millions of years.

The history includes far more than what we see on the screen. Thankfully, there's plenty of context within the 20 movies so far to give us a sense of just how far back it goes and when important events not seen in the movies take place.

None of it would be possible, though, without Marvel Comics legend Stan Lee, who died on Monday at age 95. Lee helped revolutionize the comics industry in the 1960s, and co-created some of today's most recognizable superheroes, many of which star in the MCU. Those include Spider-Man, Iron Man, Black Panther, Thor, and others that have yet to appear in the franchise, like the X-Men and Fantastic Four.

We've put together a timeline that details the entirety of the MCU, based on the movies (we excluded events from television shows, like the Marvel Netflix series). The timeline can be confusing and isn't entirely concrete. We've included year ranges with each slide below to give a decent understanding of when events took place. Specific years that we know for sure are noted, as well.

From the birth of the Infinity Stones to the Thanos snap, the MCU has built an impressive timeline of events. We hope this timeline, which puts all major events (including ones you forgot about) together will help you better understand some characters' backstories and how specific events have shaped the universe so far.

Note: This timeline was originally published in August 2018.

Check out our in-depth MCU timeline below:

SEE ALSO: Amazon's Comixology has provoked a fierce debate in the comic-book world, but creators say it could help revitalize the industry

The icons in this key represent the movie that each event on the timeline occurs during or is mentioned in. The Infinity Stones are color coded to match the color they are in the movies.

 

 

 



Big Bang – 1939: Poignant events in the MCU, such as the birth of the Infinity Stones and vibranium landing on Earth, occur long before any of the movies in the MCU actually take place. But they have a lasting impact on overarching stories and events that take place in individual films.



1940 – 1950: Steve Rogers becomes Captain America, an event that jumpstarts the formation of the Strategic Homeland Intervention Enforcement and Logistics Division (S.H.I.E.L.D.) and, eventually, the Avengers.



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A 3-year-old shape-shifting startup founded by a Vice alum is betting on viral Asian hip-hop stars to be the future of the entertainment industry

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  • 88Rising is an innovative new entertainment company for the social-media age, combining a record label with a creative agency, a house for web-video production, and an artist-management agency.
  • The company, which features hip-hop stars such as Rich Brian, Joji, and the Higher Brothers, was founded by Sean Miyashiro to "celebrate Asian talent and Asian stories and Asian culture."
  • The company built its name early on with viral hits, but Miyashiro wants to turn his company into a "Vice or Disney for Asians."
  • The company's greatest asset might be Miyashiro's ability to work out savvy partnerships with brands including Guess and Sprite.

If you want to understand where the entertainment industry is going in the age of Instagram, SnapChat, and Soundcloud, look no further than 88Rising, the shape-shifting startup that not even 37-year-old founder Sean Miyashiro can find a tidy way to explain.

From the outside, it looks like a record label mixed with a creative agency, a web-video production house, and an artist-management company. But if you ask Miyashiro to explain what exactly 88Rising is, as I did recently, he tends to chuckle.

“Damn. It’s funny because I always answer this different,” Miyashiro told me. It's as if he knows his company is a Rorschach test for the media, his investors, and its fans.

“We're really focused on creating superstars and creating heroes and creating something that people can really believe in and be excited about. A global media company that focuses on celebrating Asian talent and Asian stories and Asian culture.”

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88Rising — "88" in Chinese means "double happiness" — launched three years ago. It has already fostered several stars. While its biggest names don’t yet rival name-brand artists like Taylor Swift or Justin Bieber, they have dedicated followings and a certain cachet with connected Gen Zers.

The biggest of the bunch include Brian Imanuel, a 19-year-old rapper and beatmaker who goes by the name Rich Brian; George Miller, a Japanese-born R&B singer who got his start as a YouTube star making outrageous comedy videos before turning to music full time under the moniker Joji; and the Higher Brothers, a quartet of rappers from Chengdu, China, who make high-energy, bouncy tunes about modern Chinese life, like the group’s 2017 single “WeChat,” about the titular Chinese messaging app.

When Miyashiro has been asked to explain it, he’s likened his company to a future Vice and Disney. It'd be easy to write off Miyashiro as having delusions of grandeur, but 88Rising and its fans are the kind of thing you need to see in action to really understand.

88Rising and its founder, Sean Miyashiro, have their fingers on the pulse

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On a warm September night, Miyashiro invited me to attend the New York date of the company’s 88 Degrees & Rising Tour.

The 21-date road show comes on the heels of 88Rising’s inaugural Head in the Clouds music festival in Los Angeles, which brought together the company’s complete artist lineup, featuring artists from Indonesia, Korea, China, and LA, for the first time.

Held at Pier 17, a swanky rooftop at the southern tip of Manhattan, the concert started slow as the streetwear-clad attendees filed in and 88Rising’s newest artists ran through abbreviated set lists.

Those early sets, like much of 88Rising’s oeuvre, have a DIY quality. Like the first generation of YouTube stars, the artists feel talented, but unstudied and rough around the edges. The artists alternate between bleeding their hearts with unvarnished honesty and making the next irony-laden meme-inspired joke. In a way, each artist’s persona seems designed, intentionally or not, to make teenagers feel like they could be one of them.

In recent dates on the 88 Degrees and Rising Tour, Joji has taken to juggling between songs.

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During his set, August 08 — an LA-based African-American singer who traffics in melodic and atmospheric R&B — stops the music to egg on the crowd. “Everybody yell ‘F--k!’” he shouted mischievously. “F--k, f--k, f--k, f--k!”

At one point, he stops mid-song and directs the crowd to look at the sunset. “Everybody look at that skyline. It’s beautiful, man.”

At first I can’t tell if he’s trolling the crowd, but then everyone turns toward the Hudson River. The sunset is gorgeous, with pink, purple, and orange cotton-candy clouds.

Downstairs, in the green room, August introduced himself shyly before complaining that he wasn’t sure the crowd was feeling the set. He, like the rest of the 88Rising crew, is earnest in person. A few minutes later, Rich Brian, Joji, and others in 88Rising’s orbit debated the merits of Brockhampton, another of-the-moment hip-hop collective.

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Meanwhile, Miyashiro was in another room finishing up an interview with Vice. The budding mogul is nothing if not savvy. In the last year, he’s scored glowing features in Bloomberg, The New Yorker, and CNN.

After the interview wraps up, he starts talking shop with me. Wearing a rolled cuff skullcap pulled back over messy hair, a wispy beard, and a flamboyantly patterned button-down, Miyashiro has a mind that never seems to stray too far from work. Within minutes, he’s asking me if I shoot video, telling me Business Insider’s feature on 88Rising would work really well as a video, and offering pointers to Vice’s videographers on where they might get the best shots for the segment they’re producing. The funny part is, he’s totally right.

Miyashiro is prone, like his artists, to switch rapidly between impish trolling and wide-eyed earnestness. In the elevator up to the rooftop concert, I ask him about Thump, the now defunct electronic music site he cocreated at Vice, he looks at me deadpan and says, “What’s Thump?” He holds it for a moment before he starts cracking up: “I’m just f----ing with you, man.”

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It’s clear Miyashiro understands the digital-media game better than most — its need for headlines, hooks, and, above all, content — and he knows it.

To Miyashiro’s mind, 88Rising has four parts to its business: a digital-media and video-production business, a music label, a burgeoning arm looking into film and TV opportunities, and a “cultural agency business” working with like-minded brands.

When describing his strategy for helping Chinese megastar Kris Wu break into American hip-hop, Miyashiro told The New Yorker he discouraged Wu from appearing on “Good Morning America.” The morning show’s 4 million viewers aren’t who Wu needs. Miyashiro told Wu he needs the audiences who read hip-hop magazines like XXL and Complex and listens to Zane Lowe on Apple Music’s Beats 1.

Later, when I ask him where the idea for 88Rising started, he again turns to deadpan: “The idea started in my brain. Like, I was just chilling and I was, like, ‘I wanna do that.’” But then he pauses, as if recognizing that he needs to be earnest again.

“The whole genesis of 88Rising came from me and my friends hanging out," Miyashiro said. "I was fortunate enough to hang out with a lot of different creators and people doing cool things that happened to be Asian. They were all leaders in their respective fields, whether it was graphic design or acting or music.

“And I just thought that … if we all tried to combine [our skills] and do something with a real, concerted effort, it was gonna be something that's better than nothing because nothing existed.”

Early on, Miyashiro figured out how to turn viral hits into a career

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Miyashiro possesses a native’s understanding of media, virality, and, in a word, cool. His initial incarnation of the company was a DIY management firm called CXSHXNLY that he started in 2015 from the roof of a Bronx parking garage.

He would trawl the internet looking for up-and-coming rappers from Asia. Miyashiro’s first client was Jonathan Park, a Korean-American rapper who goes by the name Dumbfoundead.

His first big success came when Park showed him the video for the 2015 hit “IT G MA,” by Lee Dongheon, a South Korean rapper who goes by the name Keith Ape. Miyashiro and Park persuaded Ape to come to the US for the South by Southwest talent showcase in Austin, Texas. Miyashiro then persuaded Lee to become a client.

Shortly after, Miyashiro contacted Taiwanese-American music producer Josh Pan to create a remix of “IT G MA” with Waka Flocka, A$AP Ferg, Father, and Dumfoundead. The remix reportedly cost him less than $10,000 to pull off. It and the SXSW performance launched Ape’s US stardom.

Miyashiro’s stewardship of Ape’s career speaks to how 88Rising, even in its prototype stage, has positioned itself as different from the rest of the music industry and — if Miyashiro’s ambitions are realized — Hollywood too. Miyashiro didn’t simply release a new song for Ape; he strategically directed Ape’s entire entrance into the culture, from his media appearances and his early shows to his artistic direction. It was a creative, hands-on approach to get his artist the right looks from the right people.

“Our label exists because no major label or distributor or American music company's gonna know what to do with something like this,” Miyashiro said. “We're the only ones who are gonna know and it's not easy.”

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Miyashiro pulled a similar feat with Rich Brian.

In 2016, Rich Brian was 16 and going by the problematic moniker Rich Chigga, a portmanteau of Chinese and the N-word. He independently released the rap song “Dat $tick.” The accompanying video features the young Indonesian rapping hip-hop tropes like gunplay and fancy cars in his shockingly deep baritone as he struts in a pink polo shirt and fanny pack. The video went viral — it currently has 105 million views — likely because of the transgressive incongruity between Brian’s appearance, his voice, and his lyrics, and the spectacle of seeing hip-hop distorted in his irreverent and foreign lens. But it also courted controversy for Brian’s use of the N-word, his rap name, and, in some eyes, his cultural appropriation.

Miyashiro’s response was to bring together a number of up-and-coming and established hip-hop artists to film a series of videos at South by Southwest. The most successful of the bunch featured the artists reacting to “Dat $tick” and Rich Brian as they watched the video live. Among others, Cam’ron, 21Savage, the Flatbush Zombies, and Ghostface Killah feature in the video, which has more than 18 million views. For the most part, the artists respond positively, if incredulously, to Brian’s style and flow.

Later that year, Ghostface Killah recorded a remix of the track. It has more than 13 million views in its own right.

The video was a savvy move. By putting the question of “Dat $tick” directly to hip-hop’s artists, Miyashiro recontextualized the conversation around Brian’s cultural appropriation and get him rubber-stamped as an artist who could be taken seriously.

Brian dropped the Rich Chigga moniker in favor of Rich Brian at the beginning of this year, shortly before releasing his debut album “Amen.” The album, for the most part, eschews the gangster-rap and trap cosplay for songs both autobiographical and introspective about what it’s like to live Brian’s strange life. He began as an outcast and an introvert using Twitter and Vine as an outlet for his sometimes offensive humor before producing his own music and hip-hop.

Miyashiro maintained that Brian came to the decision to pursue more personal music on his own, adding that 88Rising’s artists are self-directed when it comes to their art. But it seems likely that Miyashiro — and by extension Brian — were influenced by the internet conversations around cultural appropriation. Other 88Rising artists have drawn similar criticism.

“He hasn't done anything remotely similar since. He's grown as a person and as an artist, and now has a much more global point of view,” Miyashiro said of “Dat $tick” and Rich Brian. “None of our artists are talking about anything that they don't do.”

88Rising’s big sell is that it can bring new brands to its audience and new audiences to its brand

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What makes 88Rising unique, aside from its focus on Asian stars and entertainment, is its business model.

While Miyashiro started his career with a number of music-related jobs, he made his first real mark at Vice. In 2013, electronic dance music was blowing up and he, along with several friends who managed EDM acts, persuaded Vice to let them set up a new media platform dedicated to the genre. By covering dance music and nightlife from an insider’s perspective, Thump quickly gained the respect of both established and up-and-coming artists and a dedicated following among the larger underground dance-music culture.

Miyashiro helped build Thump from the ground up. He said the experience helped shape his blueprint for how to launch a media property. Tom Punch, Vice’s chief commercial and creative director, told Bloomberg that Miyashiro had a talent for pulling in advertisers, like Anheuser-Busch InBev, that wanted to capitalize on the EDM boom.

It’s easy to see the parallels between 88Rising and Vice. Miyashiro doesn’t shy away from them.

“There are a lot of differences from our business to theirs, but the one core aspect that might be similar is that Vice has an incredibly strong brand,” Miyashiro said. “They've been able to take that brand and what it stands … and they've been able to expand their brand into all these different opportunities.”

As of right now, the music label is the most fully fledged and well known, thanks to Rich Brian, Joji, and the rest of 88Rising’s roster. But it’s hard not to think that it’s Miyashiro’s keen eye for working with big brands that persuaded global advertising firm WPP to invest a reported $4.5 million of a total $7 million that the company has raised so far.

In January, the company worked with the ad agency Ogilvy to come up with the concept for a Sprite commercial in China featuring MaSiWei, one of the members of Higher Brothers. The ad, which began airing just before the Lunar New Year, China’s biggest holiday, features MaSiWei visiting his family for the holidays. The family asks him the usual prying questions about his girlfriend and his salary, which MaSiWei deflects with an ice-cold Sprite and rhymes from his single “Refresh,” the video for which also doubles as a Sprite commercial.

“We were actually pitching against all of these legacy agencies in the market that have been there forever and we won,” Miyashiro said. “We've never even made a television commercial before.”

The ad and the song are the kind of intermingling of editorial and advertising that brands crave and Vice has often been criticized for. But whereas Vice must adhere to the standards of a news organization, 88Rising has no such obligations. It's an entertainment company committed to raising the profile of its artists and its own brand. The symbiotic leveraging of brands — using big-name ones to introduce 88Rising and its artists to more people and the use of 88Rising’s brand to confer street cred on those brands — is the point.

It’s more or less what Miyashiro has already done in music, partnering with the hip-hop press-approved artists that have been featured on 88Rising’s songs. Playboi Carti, Ghostface Killah, Famous Dex, and Wacka Flocka Flame — all of whom have been featured in 88Rising songs or remixes — give 88Rising’s artists credibility while 88Rising introduces those artists to its fan base.

Though the ad was successful, Miyashiro maintains that, nine months later, 88Rising is onto the next evolution of its business model. Whereas the Sprite commercial came out of a standard ad-industry process — brand produces brief, creative teams pitch ideas, brand selects winner — Miyashiro is after what he calls “true partnerships.” Miyashiro doesn’t want 88Rising to be subject to selling ad impressions against its audience or erecting content paywalls, like most digital-media companies, or responding to briefs like an advertising firm.

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Instead, he wants 88Rising to create projects that, by virtue of their premium nature, brands simply want to help fund and be associated with.

“When we get into any type of brand conversation or any type of partnership conversation, we already have the ideas for things that we, as 88Rising, want to make,” Miyashiro said. “We’re not looking to ask [brands] what they want and then make it for them.”

The first fruit of this approach is 88Rising’s upcoming collaboration with the clothing brand Guess, set to drop on November 8. The 14-piece collection features clothing pieces costing up to $148 and all designed in colorful, psychedelic tie-dye, a nod to the company’s recent compilation album, "Head in the Clouds."

Guess has a long history in hip-hop. Last year it worked with rapper and fashion icon A$AP Rocky on a clothing line. But, Miyashiro said, this is the first time Guess has collaborated with an Asian company.

Miyashiro maintains that the collaboration came out of creatives at 88Rising and those at Guess wanting to work together, not Guess asking them how to enter the Asian market.

“It's more like we're going to come together and our brand is going to be amplified through this and their brand is going to be amplified through this,” Miyashiro said. “When this comes out, this is another thing that elevates us.”

At the concert in New York, the 88Rising employees I met were already dressed in Guess x 88Rising T-shirts. The S’s are turned into 88s with an the company’s signature arrow. It’s likely only a matter of time before 88Rising’s artists are decked out in the swag too.

88Rising is already looking to get to the next level

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This year 88Rising nearly doubled in size, from 24 to 45 employees, and has opened new offices in Los Angeles and Shanghai. But as I visited its headquarters in Chelsea, it feels like 88Rising is notable for what it could be rather than what it is. And right now that’s a scrappy young company and CEO making it up as they go.

The way Miyashiro talks, I'd be forgiven for imagining the company’s headquarters akin to Vice’s now famous swanky Williamsburg hipster warehouse. In reality, it’s a workmanlike room with exposed brick walls on the fourth floor of a doormanless building that holds maybe a dozen or so people crowded around laptops and iMacs where video editors cut the brand’s latest YouTube videos.

Miyashiro’s office is in the back. Decorated with a glass table, a velvet sofa, and large neon sign featuring an 88 and the Chinese character for “rising,” it appears to double as a conference room. Framed album covers of 88Rising’s artists hang on the walls.  

As we wait to start the interview, Miyashiro seems a bit self-conscious about the office’s startup-standard wood tables and chairs and starts quizzing one of his employees about when she could upgrade the furniture to something more “dope.”

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Miyashiro’s eyes always seem set on the next evolution of his vision.

“You might look at us right now and say, ‘Hey, 88Rising is the leading Asian label. They have a great collective,’ Miyashiro said. “But in a year or two from now, we'd like to have films that have been made and brought to the world … Three years from now, we might have our own TV channel.”

Getting to that point will largely rely on 88Rising’s artists continuing to execute and Miyashiro and his team continuing to find ways to get its audience hooked on new artists. In a lot of ways, the team had it easy with 88Rising’s first generation of artists. Before Miyashiro began working with them, Keith Ape had already come out with his career-making single “IT G MA”; Rich Brian had already gone viral with “Dat $tick”; and Joji was already a bona fide star on YouTube, albeit for his comedic antics. He invented the “Harlem Shake” meme when three costumed friends danced along to the Baauer hit.

With artists like Indonesian singer Nikki and August 08, the company’s first African-American artist, Miyashiro is more or less starting from scratch. And that’s before you get into the difficulty of getting an Asian-led film or TV show made in Hollywood, with or without the box-office success of “Crazy Rich Asians.” But none of that scares Miyashiro.

“We like doing things that nobody else has done before,” Miyashiro said. “We want to be a part of that conversation.”

SEE ALSO: A 35-year-old who dropped out of high school had a vision of a utopian future for China, the US, and the world — and it's led her to the forefront of a tech startup worth $3 billion

DON'T MISS: Inside the Hong Kong billionaire enclave name-dropped in 'Crazy Rich Asians,' where Alibaba founder Jack Ma may have bought a $191 million mansion

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Get ready for Thanksgiving with the 10 best cooking channels on YouTube

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The biggest food holiday of the year is nearly upon us!

With just a handful of days to go until Thanksgiving, I've been observing my annual tradition of marathon-watching cooking shows as inspiration. Unlike years past where I might've tuned in to the Food Network or some such, these days all the best cooking shows are online. 

Whether you're Binging with Bab ish, watching Matty Matheson scream around a kitchen, or going traditional with Julia Child, there are plenty of great options on YouTube right now to get you ready for the big day.

These are the best of what's available:

SEE ALSO: The rise and fall of Black Friday — the American shopping holiday that once beckoned hordes of frenzied shoppers and is now dying

1. Food Wishes

Chef John's Food Wishes is my personal favorite YouTube channel about cooking. Not only does he have years of experience, but he's a hilariously quirky man. 

Moreover, Chef John's been doing the YouTube thing longer than most in the game — his videos go back 10 years! Before that, he was doing the actual chef thing as John Mitzewich, working in kitchens for years and eventually teaching at the California Culinary Academy in San Francisco. 

His videos range from simple to complex, American comfort food to ancient Roman throwbacks. And yes, of course, he has a ton of Thanksgiving recipe ideas and techniques for you to gobble down.

Here's a direct link to Chef John's Thanksgiving side dishes playlist.



And here's Chef John's main turkey video, aimed directly at first-time turkey roasters:

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2. Matty Matheson (and Munchies in general)

Matty Matheson is abrasive and loud and he swears a lot, which is exactly what makes him so delightful. He's the punk rock chef the internet needs. 

Maybe you've seen him on his excellent, often ridiculous show, "Keep It Canada." Or maybe you've seen him on his newer show, "Dead Set On Life." Before he was doing any of that stuff, he was making excellent how-to videos for Vice's food publication, Munchies. 

Matty was a working chef for years before he became a food star on YouTube (and now, on TV, with Viceland). He brings years of professional experience to his lessons, and his presentation is unlike anyone else before him. 

Check out his how-to videos on Munchies right here.



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MoviePass' parent company has canceled a long-delayed shareholders vote, as it tries desperately to stay on the Nasdaq (HMNY)

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  • MoviePass parent company, Helios & Matheson Analytics (HMNY), announced Tuesday that it had canceled a special shareholders meeting regarding a vote on a proposed 1-for-500 reverse stock split.
  • The meeting was postponed twice and then canceled because the company said it "does not expect to have the requisite stockholder votes to approve the proposed reverse stock split," according to an SEC filing.
  • If the HMNY stock continues to trade below $1 after December 18, the Nasdaq could begin the process of delisting it.

 

MoviePass parent company, Helios & Matheson Analytics (HMNY), announced on Tuesday in an SEC filing that it had canceled a shareholders meeting regarding a crucial vote on a proposed 1-for-500 reverse stock split.

The meeting was originally scheduled for October 18, but two days before that date it was rescheduled to November 1. A day before that meeting was to take place, HMNY postponed the meeting once more to this Wednesday. Now, a day before the meeting, HMNY has canceled it.

Why? According to the filing, HMNY "does not expect to have the requisite stockholder votes to approve the proposed reverse stock split."

HMNY wants to enact the split in order to try and get back into compliance with Nasdaq listing rules. But Business Insider talked to numerous investors over the past month who said they would not approve a reverse stock split, and some even took to social media to push a "no" vote.

HMNY is trying desperately to stay on the Nasdaq, as it creeps closer to a potential delisting. If the stock, which was trading at around $0.02 Tuesday, stays below $1 after December 18, the process for delisting could begin.

Read more: 18% of MoviePass subscribers say they plan to cancel, but many loyalists are still happy despite unpopular new features

HMNY notes that the company may be given a second 180-calendar day period to regain compliance. To qualify, it would have to meet the listing requirement for market value of publicly held shares and Nasdaq listing standards, except for the minimum bid price requirement.

"The Company would be required to notify the Nasdaq Stock Market LLC of its intent to cure the deficiency during the second compliance period, which may include, if necessary, implementing a reverse stock split," the HMNY note says. "If the Company is afforded additional time to regain compliance (of which there can be no assurance), the Board plans to call a special meeting as soon as practicable with a new record date for the Company’s stockholders to vote on a reverse stock split in an effort to regain compliance."

Even if HMNY gets approval for the reverse split, it might not help stabilize the stock. In August, HMNY's 1-for-250 reverse stock split shot the stock up before it crashed back down below $1 again.

And if all this isn't enough for the company, HMNY also has a New York Attorney General's investigation hanging over its head.

Business Insider contacted HMNY for comment but did not get a response.

SEE ALSO: MoviePass competitor Sinemia is being sued by angry customers who say it ripped them off with new fees

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Netflix's 'The Haunting of Hill House' actor pointed out a disturbing clue about the fate of the show's characters

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  • "The Haunting of Hill House" ends on an uplifting note, but one clue could change that.
  • Oliver Jackson-Cohen, who plays Luke, told The Wrap that whenever a family member is having visions from the Red Room, something in the scene is red.
  • Jackson-Cohen pointed out that Luke's sobriety cake at the end of the series is red — suggesting that the family never made it out of the Red Room.

The secret of the Red Room is one of the biggest mysteries of Netflix's hit horror series, "The Haunting of Hill House." And Oliver Jackson-Cohen, who plays the adult Luke on the show, pointed out a clue suggesting the mystery still hasn't been solved.

Jackson-Cohen told The Wrap on Monday that throughout the series, when someone is having visions from the Red Room, "something in the fantasy is red." He pointed out that Luke wears red shoes in one fantasy. "It's so slight you can barely even see it," he said. "And I think Steven is wearing a red jumper."

Throughout the series, the children can never enter the Red Room while they live in Hill House. Years later, as adults, they return to the house and discover that the room was actually each person's personal space. They had each been in the room numerous times, but nobody else could unlock their space.

The season ends on an uplifting note, with the oldest sibling, Steven, being given the responsibility of keeping the house in the family. In one of the final scenes, the family is surrounding Luke, celebrating his sobriety with a cake.

But there's something about the cake that suggests the ending isn't as happy as viewers have been led to believe, according to Jackson-Cohen.

"And so there's something at the end — it was Kate [Siegel], who plays Theo, who kind of pointed it out to me — with Luke's sobriety cake," he told The Wrap. "She went, 'The cake is red.' And on set I went, 'Oh my God!' And she went, 'I don't know!' And I asked Mike [Flanagan, the director], and he went, 'I don't know.' And so I can't tell whether or not I'm just crazy with this, or whether or not it's something that could have legs."

Here's a look at the scene with the red cake:

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Flanagan told The Hollywood Reporter last month that the series' original ending was a lot darker, more comparable to what Jackson-Cohen suggested. Flanagan said that it featured the Red Room window in the background of the scene, but that he ultimately changed it because he felt it was "mean and unfair."

"We toyed with the idea for a little while that over that monologue, over the image of the family together, we would put the Red Room window in the background," Flanagan said. "For a while, that was the plan. Maybe they never really got out of that room."

It looks as though it's up to viewers to perceive the ending the way they want.

SEE ALSO: Netflix's 'The Haunting of Hill House' director explains how he kept the show's biggest mystery hidden

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Sebastian Stan told us the memory of Stan Lee he always thinks about with a smile

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  • Sebastian Stan, who plays Bucky Barnes in the Marvel movies, told Business Insider his fondest memories of Stan Lee, who died on Monday.
  • Lee, the former president and chairman of Marvel Comics, was a fixture in the Marvel movies for the last decade as he made cameos in most of them.


The entertainment world was sad to hear about the death of Stan Lee on Monday at the age of 95. The former president and chairman of Marvel Comics had become the beloved face of the Marvel universe, popping up in cameos for the last decade in many of the big-screen adaptations starring the characters he helped birth in comic book form.

Because of his attachment to the movies, Lee was a favorite of the cast that has made up the Marvel Cinematic Universe for the last 10 years. 

Business Insider spoke to Sebastian Stan — who plays Bucky Barnes (aka, the Winter Soldier) in the MCU franchise — hours after Lee's death hits the news, and he gave us some of his thoughts about the man.

Bucky Barnes Infinity War"I met him a few times and I knew he was really, really happy with the way the last 10 years had been able to really cater to his characters," Stan said while promoting his upcoming movie "Destroyer" (opening in theaters December 25). "How the filmmaking and technology kind of caught up to them and you got this amazing decade of filmmaking that is thanks to him. So I know he enjoyed that very much and being in them."

But Stan, who admits that though Lee was 95 he was still in shock to hear of his death, said what he'll always take with him are personal moments he had with the Marvel legend, who would always remind the actor of the importance of Bucky to the MCU.

"He always said to me, 'Bucky's one of the good guys, you have to remember that,' and I always smiled when I heard that. I still think about that."  

On Monday, Stan posted this touching photo on his Instagram account of he and Lee, with a caption that read, "Thank you great legend. You will be missed. I wouldn’t be here without you."

Thank you great legend. You will be missed. I wouldn’t be here without you. ❤️🙏🏻❤️

A post shared by Sebastian Stan (@imsebastianstan) on Nov 12, 2018 at 11:43am PST on

 

SEE ALSO: How "Venom" scored one of the biggest superhero-movie openings ever in China

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One of the top wedding dress designers in the world won't hesitate to tell a bride to rethink a wedding

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pnina tornai

  • Pnina Tornai, a designer on TLC show "Say Yes To The Dress" sees 90 to 120 brides a day at Kleinfeld Bridal, a world renowned bridal store in New York City.
  • If a bride comes to Tornai and expresses issues with a fiancé, she doesn't hesitate to tell them to postpone a wedding.
  • At a young age, Tornai was in an abusive marriage she has since left. Because of what she went through, Tornai is willing to put aside her wedding dresses to consult brides when needed.

Pnina Tornai, a designer on TLC's "Say Yes To The Dress" sees 90 to 120 brides a day at Kleinfeld, a world renowned bridal store in New York City.

If a bride discloses to Tornai that they have a rocky relationship, she doesn't hold back her advice, she said on an episode of Business Insider's podcast "This Is Success."

By the age of 23, she was married with child. "It was an abusive marriage," Tornai said. She has since divorced and remarried, but the experience has given her perspective that she thinks could be useful to other women.

"And you know, if a bride would come in and say to me that she's going through a very tough time with her fiancé and she's being disrespected or abused, I would always tell her the truth," Tornai said. "I would always tell her that these things do not get better, they only get worse, so maybe she should postpone, think about it."

While married, Tornai was pursuing a career in acting, but her then-husband put a stop to her dream job.

"At the time, I didn't have the luxury to really think twice whether I was doing the right thing or not. I became a mother at the age of 23, so everything happened in a way where I didn't think that pursuing my dream at the time was the most important thing," she said.

Now, if a bride comes to Tornai for a dress and expresses a similar experience with a fiancé, she doesn't hesitate to share her own story or advise a bride to postpone nuptials. 

Read more'Say Yes to the Dress' designer Pnina Tornai was rejected after flying 12 hours for a meeting, but soon after, she got the phone call that changed her career

"And every bride that would come to me with her story and tell me how she feels, sometimes also her hesitations and her hardships, I would always put aside the dress and make sure that I was giving her the right advice even if it meant to tell my bride to postpone a wedding," she said.

Still, those experiences with other brides can be triggering for Tornai.

"I remember moments where I heard a bride talking about her own story. I was strong for her, but I would go in the back of the store and burst in tears because it reminded me of my story," Tornai said.

She continued: "But you know what? Nobody promised us a rose garden, and the beauty in life is that if you are true to yourself and you walk your path, you can create quite a beautiful garden. We all have the abilities to do that."

SEE ALSO: 'Say Yes to the Dress' designer Pnina Tornai was rejected after flying 12 hours for a meeting, but soon after, she got the phone call that changed her career

DON'T MISS: 'Say Yes to the Dress' designer Pnina Tornai explains how she went from running a small shop in Israel to one of the world's most famous bridal labels

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The most and least trusted news anchors in the US, including a close race between Rachel Maddow and Sean Hannity

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Lester Holt

It feels like politics in the US is more polarized than ever, especially when it comes to how Americans consume their news.

A new Morning Consult survey, conducted for The Hollywood Reporter from November 6 to 7, questioned 2,202 people to find out who were the most and least trusted news anchors among Americans.

The takeaway: Broadcast networks are trusted while cable networks aren't, most likely because they are considered partisan. Six of the top 10 most trusted are network anchors from NBC or ABC, and the top 10 least trusted are a mix of anchors from Fox News, MSNBC, and CNN.

When broken down between Republicans and Democrats, the survey found that the top 13 most loved personalities among Republicans were Fox News hosts. Tucker Carlson was the most adored among the Fox News hosts, with 31 percentage points.

Democrats' tastes were more diverse, with ABC's Robin Roberts, NBC's Lester Holt, and CNN's Anderson Cooper being the top news anchors among them.

Below are the most and least trusted news anchors in the US (the percentages indicate the amount of people who said they trusted the anchor "a lot" and "not at all"):

SEE ALSO: John Oliver called out HBO's new owner, AT&T, for supporting 'racist' Steve King on 'Last Week Tonight'

MOST TRUSTED: 4. Robin Roberts (ABC) — 28%



3. David Muir (ABC) — 28%



2. Anderson Cooper (CNN) — 29%



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I played 'Red Dead Redemption 2' as a cowboy photographer — here are my favorite photos showing the insane level of detail in the game

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red dead camera 1

Rockstar Games' "Red Dead Redemption 2" is a universally-lauded video game that chronicles the end of the era of the gunslinging outlaw — and the bitter ending for those that thrived in that time. The narrative is compelling, the violence is omnipresent, and the game's world of the Wild West is generally cold and unforgiving. 

But it's also a beautiful game; one of the most beautiful games of 2018, and certainly the best looking game yet from Rockstar. It's one of the only games I've played in a while that rewards you for slowing down. There are moments of incredibly fast-paced violence and bloodshed, which are followed by eerie silence and calmness.

One portion of "Red Dead 2" that I feel often gets overlooked is the camera. Your character, Arthur, receives a handheld camera after you complete the introductory portion of the game. The camera can be used to take photos of the world around you, or you can place it on a tripod and take late-1800's-style selfies.

I've found plenty of enjoyment using the camera this game because of how it forces you to slow down and take in the insane amount of detail that Rockstar has packed into the game.

Here are some of my favorite in-game photos I've taken of the Wild West, edited to be something approaching period-appropriate:

 

I ended up developing the habit of taking and old-timey selfie with every cat I came across in the game. It's a bit difficult to get them to stand still long enough for a shot — a realistic detail, I guess.



Dutch van der Linde, the leader of the notorious Van der Linde Gang, enjoys a moment of solitude.



The women of the outlaw's camp didn't seem too pleased with my taking their picture.



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You will have 2 more chances to see Stan Lee cameos before the end of 2018

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Stan Lee

  • Stan Lee makes cameos in upcoming movies "Ralph Breaks the Internet" and "Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse."
  • And if you missed "Venom," he's in that, too. The movie is still in theaters.

Stan Lee died on Monday, but we'll still see a lot of the Marvel legend in theaters before the year is over. 

The king of the cameo will be showing up in two very different movies in the coming weeks. First, he'll appear in Disney's "Ralph Breaks the Internet" on November 21, followed by Sony's "Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse" on December 14.

Read more: Stan Lee, Marvel legend, dead at 95

In the animated "Ralph Breaks the Internet," Lee gives us the blink-and-you'll-miss-it cameo, as his legendary dark glasses and white mustache look shows up when Vanellope (Sarah Silverman) is inside an all-Disney section of the internet. As she runs from Stormtroopers, she accidentally bumps into Lee. Then, in "Into the Spider-Verse," also an animated movie, Lee gives a more traditional cameo as he delivers a few lines to Miles Morales.

Lee showing up in Marvel work goes all the way back to the comics in the 1960s, when he was overseeing the entire operation. He told Business Insider back in 2015 that it wasn't done on purpose.

"The artists back then would draw me in as a joke or just to have fun," Lee told Business Insider. "And I would put some dialogue balloons there and it looked as if I intended it. I didn't try to do cameos in those days."

If you are in a need for a Lee cameo right now, head to the theaters and see "Venom." He shows up at the very end of the movie. 

SEE ALSO: Sebastian Stan told us the memory of Stan Lee he always thinks about with a smile

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