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A horrific glitch in Nintendo's huge new 'Smash Bros.' game unleashes an infinite stream of Nintendo characters

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Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (glitch)

  • A hilarious and horrifying glitch in Nintendo's latest major game, "Super Smash Bros. Ultimate," enables players to produce an infinite number of "assist trophies."
  • Assist trophies are computer-controlled characters that act like assistants during battle. They spring forth from nowhere and repeatedly assault your enemies.
  • What that means for players is there's a way to produce an infinite number of Waluigis, or hammer bros, or any of the other assist characters.

It's been barely over a week since Nintendo's long-anticipated "Super Smash Bros. Ultimate" arrived on the Nintendo Switch, yet players have already found an absurd glitch.

This one must be seen to be believed. Behold, infinite Waluigi:

Horrifying, right?

Crazier still, it's surprisingly easy to reproduce in the copy of "Super Smash Bros. Ultimate" that you own, provided you follow a few very specific steps.

Here's how to do it:

  1. Play as Isabelle, the adorable Shih Tzu from "Animal Crossing."
  2. Compel someone else to also play as Isabelle, or simply choose her at the same time as a friend. 
  3. When an assist trophy shows up on the stage, position yourself on one side of it — ideally, the other Isabelle ends up in a similar position, albeit parallel to your position.
  4. Push the thumbstick toward the assist trophy at the same time as pushing B.
  5. When Isabelle retrieves the assist trophy, she'll proceed to unleash its power over and over and over — thus, creating infinite versions of whatever assist trophy she grabs.

That can mean infinite versions of Waluigi spawning, like the GIF above shows.

It can also mean infinite versions of the dragon known as Rathalos from the "Monster Hunter" series, seen here in his many-winged glory:

There are more than two dozen assist trophies in "Super Smash Bros. Ultimate," and all of them can be turned into the infinitely spawning nightmares seen above. 

Check out this video for even more:

Nintendo has yet to issue a statement about the glitch, and a representative didn't respond to a request for comment as of publishing. That said, it's pretty likely that an upcoming update will wipe out this glitch — so enjoy it while you can!

SEE ALSO: A major new 'core' Pokémon game is being made for Nintendo Switch, and it's set to arrive in 2019. Here's everything we know so far

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NOW WATCH: The incredible story of the 'Virtual Boy' — Nintendo's VR headset from 1995 that failed spectacularly


Jake Johnson was convinced he was going to get replaced on 'Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse' — even more than a year into production

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spiderman into the spiderverse

  • Jake Johnson worked on "Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse" as the voice of Peter Parker for a year and a half before he was allowed to say he was in the movie.
  • He was convinced he was going to be replaced.
  • A big reason for the paranoia, he told Business Insider, was because he'd been replaced on voiceover jobs in the past.

 

Jake Johnson does a stellar job voicing Peter Parker in "Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse," but he recently admitted that he thought he would be replaced.

Johnson said he had a wicked case of déjà vu when he noticed other cast members were getting their roles publicly announced in Sony's animated movie, while he still hadn't been given the okay to do so — despite having already worked on the movie for over a year and a half.

"I thought, 'C'mon man, I was born at night but not last night. I know what's happening here!'" Johnson told Business Insider. "I thought for sure I was getting replaced by some huge name that's in all the superhero movies."

And this wasn't a case of an actor with a fragile ego looking for some attention. Johnson had been replaced doing voiceover work in the past.

"I'm not going to name the names out of respect," Johnson said, "but I've done entire voiceovers for movies. Movies that have a voiceover throughout it. I've laid down the tracks with the directors, and then I found out later they were using that as a temp track. So that's part of the business. They hear the voice and something's not right and it's an easy fix. They have this rhythm and they are like, 'Now let's see if somebody else's voice sounds better.'"

Jake Johnson GettyJohnson said he was ecstatic when he got the role to voice Peter Parker in "Spider-Verse," and soon after began recording dialogue for the movie. He breathed a big sigh of relief a year and a half into the job when the studio announced to the public he was in the movie. But he wasn't close to being finished yet.

He had about another year before he was through recording lines.

"The monologue, 'My name is Peter B. Parker and I was bit by a radioactive spider,' I did that monologue probably 35 to 40 different times," Johnson said. "I would come back and they would say, 'Hey, we made a little tweak, we're doing the monologue again,' and I would just be like, here we go."

Read more: Dick Chaney biopic "Vice" is a wicked satire that messes with the audience and features an outstanding Christian Bale performance

But constantly repeating Peter Parker lines for over two and a half years hasn't burned him out on playing the role. With the movie being an Oscar contender in the animation category, and the movie breaking the record for the biggest opening weekend ever for an animated released in December, Johnson hopes there will be more chances to play Parker.

"There are money jobs everywhere in this business but the reason I didn't want to get cut out of this movie is because I really hope to keep playing Peter," he said. "I like it. I really want to see another script. I really want to know what happens to him and MJ. And I also don't want to be in the writer's meetings, I want to see the script."

"Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse" is currently playing in theaters.

SEE ALSO: Peter Jackson fantasy epic "Mortal Engines" could lose over $100 million after flopping hard at the box office its opening weekend

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NOW WATCH: A Harvard psychologist reveals the secret to curbing your appetite

Hackers target The Wall Street Journal and 100,000 printers around the world to try and help the most popular YouTuber keep his crown

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Felix

  • The Wall Street Journal website was hacked on Monday morning to include a message in support of YouTuber Felix "PewDiePie" Kjellberg.
  • PewDiePie is the most popular YouTube star in the world with more than 77 million subscribers, but he's in danger of being overtaken by Bollywood YouTube account T-Series.
  • In recent months, PewDiePie has been at the center of a social media campaign to keep his account ahead of T-Series in subscribers, and supporters have gone to extremes to promote his channel.
  • Another hacker caused more than 100,000 printers across the globe to print messages in support of PewDiePie, while claiming that the hack was to expose security flaws.


The Wall Street Journal was made an unwilling participant in a YouTube power struggle when hackers took over a page on the newspaper's website to post a message of support for YouTuber Felix "PewDiePie" Kjellberg.

A page on the site was altered to fake an apology to PewDiePie for "misrepresentation," and said the newspaper would be supporting the YouTuber in his effort to beat T-Series, a Bollywood-focused YouTube account, to 80 million subscribers. The hacked page also included a number of memes featuring PewDiePie and T-Series.

PewDiePie is the world's most popular YouTuber account with more than 77 million subscribers, but many have predicted that T-Series would surpass him by the end of the year.

Wall Street Journal Hack

The page was eventually taken down by The Wall Street Journal. Variety reports that the page in question was not directly associated with the Wall Street Journal newsroom, and is managed by advertising branch WSJ Custom Solutions.


Read more:The 10 highest-paid YouTubers of 2018


PewDiePie tweeted a link to the page before it was deleted, claiming that The Wall Street Journal had joined his campaign against T-Series. The YouTuber has had a contentious relationship with the media — and specifically The Wall Street Journal — after being repeatedly criticized for racist behavior and promoting anti-Semitic YouTube accounts.

This isn't the first time hackers have taken action in support of PewDiePie. A hacker using the Twitter handle @j3ws3r claimed responsibility for accessing more than 100,000 printers across the world and forcing them to print a pro-PewDiePie message. The hacker claims that the goal of the printer hacks are to point out common security flaws within IT networks. A first round of printer hacks took place in November, and over the weekend even more printers began spitting out the message of support.

While PewDiePie has acknowledged the printer hacks, he has not claimed any involvement in the scheme, nor has he discouraged the hackers. His account remains slightly ahead of T-Series in subscribers at the moment.

SEE ALSO: PewDiePie will lose his crown as YouTube's biggest star next week, thanks to India's obsession with Bollywood

SEE ALSO: The 10 highest-paid YouTubers of 2018 include the Paul brothers and a 7-year-old toy reviewer — here's the full list

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NOW WATCH: I'm a diehard iPhone user who switched to Android for a week — here's what I loved and hated about the Google Pixel 3 XL

TV advertising is already declining. Here's why things could get worse. (ROKU, AMZN, NFLX)

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Roku CEO Anthony Wood

  • The traditional television-advertising business is increasingly under threat as Americans shift their viewing habits, Pivotal Research Group analyst Brian Wieser said in a new report.
  • New data from Nielsen indicates that streaming-video services are making significant gains against ad-based broadcast and cable television networks.
  • TV-ad spending already is declining, but things could get worse, Wieser said.

Streaming video could soon have a big impact on the TV-ad business — even bigger than it's already had.

Americans are increasingly watching video on their televisions via streaming devices such as Roku's players instead of from traditional broadcast or cable services, Brian Wieser, a financial analyst with Pivotal Research Group, said in a new report. That's bad for the ad industry because the kinds of video that consumers are streaming are less likely to have advertisements in them than video from broadcast or cable.

"Overall, the industry-level conditions remain negative for ad-supported national TV as a medium," Wieser said in the report.

Wieser's report followed up on new data from Nielsen about November television viewing. Nielsen found that overall TV watching was basically flat in the month compared with November of last year. The average household spent about 0.2% more time watching television in the month compared with the year before, while the average viewer between the ages of 18 and 49 spent about 3.8% less time.

Americans are watching more streaming video and less cable

But Nielsen's data showed an ongoing and significant shift away from watching cable or broadcast television and toward watching video through electronic devices. Viewers aged 18 to 49 spent about 36.1% of their total TV time watching ad-supported cable-television shows in November, according to Nielsen data cited by Wieser. That was down from 38.9% in November last year and 41.3% in November 2016.

Brian Roberts Sun Valley The portion of the total TV-watching time that viewers in that age group spent watching English-language broadcast TV saw a similar decline. It went from 21.5% of their TV time in November 2016 to 19.9% in November last year to 19.2% this year.

By contrast, the amount of time viewers are spending watching TV through Roku's boxes or other internet-connected devices has grown rapidly. In November, viewers aged 18 to 49 devoted about 16.5% of their total TV time to watching shows through such gadgets. That was up from 11.9% last year and just 8.4% in November 2016.

The amount of time viewers are spending watching video through streaming players has grown by about 40% on an annual basis throughout much of the last year, Wieser said.

Video-game consoles are also seeing increasing usage as video-watching devices. Viewers in the same age group spent 10% of their TV time watching video streamed through their game machines. That was up from 9.5% in November 2017 and 8.6% in November 2016.

"The fact that internet connected device-based viewing — whose viewing can include ad-supported content but more often does not — is sustaining ~40% growth rates is particularly negative" for the TV-ad business, Wieser said.

TV-ad spending is already declining

The TV-ad industry is already starting to take a hit because of shifting viewing habits. TV-ad spending in the US fell last year by 1.5% to $70.2 billion and will fall by 0.5% this year to $69.9 billion, according to eMarketer.

Marketers have been increasingly shifting their spending to digital ad formats, buying spots on Facebook, Google, and elsewhere. Advertisers have also been moving some of their spending to ad-supported streaming-video services, including Hulu and the Roku Channel. Amazon may cash in on that trend too; it reportedly has its own ad-supported streaming channel in the works.

Read more: Amazon's got its eyes set on yet another market — and one high-flying upstart should be worried

EMarketer expects traditional TV-ad spending to rebound in 2020. But Wieser thinks things for the industry could get increasingly worse as viewership declines.

"Budgets are generally unaffected by changes in ratings in the short-term," he said. "Unfortunately, sentiment towards the medium worsens as commonly reported or relied-upon measures such as adults 18-49 fall, especially by the significant levels observed recently. Negative sentiment ultimately leads to advertisers efforts to explore and encourage the use of alternative media vehicles."

SEE ALSO: After a blockbuster earnings report, Roku's CEO explains why its advertising business is exploding

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: I tried cooking an entire Thanksgiving dinner using Google Home Hub and found there are two major flaws with it

'Fresh Prince' actor Alfonso Ribeiro and Instagram's Backpack Kid are the latest artists to sue the creators of ‘Fortnite’ for allegedly copying dance moves to make money

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Scrubs Fortnite

  • Alfonso Ribeiro of "The Fresh Prince of Bel Air," Instagram star Ryan "Backpack Kid" Huggins, and rapper 2 Milly will sue the creators of "Fortnite" for allegedly copying their dances and selling them in the game.
  • While 2 Milly has been the most vocal about the similarities between "Fortnite" dances and existing work, several artists have accused the game's creators of taking their dances without permission or pay.
  • "Fortnite: Battle Royale" is the world's most popular game, making more than $200 million a month selling emotes and other cosmetic items for use in game.

"America's Funniest Home Videos" host Alfonso Ribeiro and Instagram star Backpack Kid are the latest artists to sue the creators of "Fortnite" for allegedly copying their dance moves. Both stars have enlisted law firm Pierce Bainbridge to pursue cases against both Epic Games and "NBA 2K" developer "2K Games."

In his lawsuit Riberio claims "Fortnite" developer Epic Games copied "The Carlton Dance" he made famous while starring in the 1990s TV sitcom "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air." "Fortnite" added an emote called "Fresh" to the game in January 2018 that seems inspired by Ribeiro's moves. In the video below you can see the in-game dance alongside Ribeiro's performance of "The Carlton Dance" on "Dancing with the Stars" in 2014. The "Fresh" emote is sold for 800 v-bucks, the equivalent of $8, in the "Fortnite" shop.

Ryan "Backpack Kid" Huggins is the 16-year-old internet sensation responsible for the "Floss" dance-craze that began in the spring of 2017. Huggins is credited with creating the dance and performed it alongside Katy Perry on "Saturday Night Live" in May 2017. An emote named "Floss" appeared in "Fortnite" in December 2017 as a part of the game's Season 2 Battle Pass.

Ribeiro and Horning's lawsuits follow Brooklyn rapper 2 Milly's announcement that he would sue "Fortnite" developer Epic Games for allegedly stealing a dance he created, the "Milly Rock." 2 Milly has been vocal about his distaste for the game's monetization of popular dances in interviews with Insider and CBS News. The "Milly Rock" dance originally arose in 2014 from the video for 2 Milly's song of the same name, "Milly Rock."

"Fortnite" added a dancing emote called "Swipe It" to the game in July 2018 that appears to be inspired by the Milly Rock. For a time, players could unlock the dance through playing or by paying cash to level up the game's Season 5 Battle Pass, but Swipe It can no longer be acquired in-game. Players who unlocked it before can still use it though.

"Fortnite: Battle Royale" is the world's most popular game and has a massive audience that most artists can only dream of. While the game is free-to-play, the majority of its earnings come from the sale of emotes and other cosmetic items in-game. The game generated more than $300 million in revenue in the month of May and those emotes are available to more than 200 million registered players around the world, with no mention of the artists who inspired them.


Read more:Forget about paying to get better at 'Fortnite' — some kids are paying for 'Fortnite' dance lessons


2 Milly and Ribeiro aren't the only artists claiming that the game turned their original dance into emotes for purchase in "Fortnite" without permission or pay. Rapper BlocBoy JB criticized the use of his "Shoot" dance in "Fortnite" and actor Donald Faison claimed that "Fortnite" lifted a dance he performed for the TV show "Scrubs" as the game's default dance.

On Twitter, Chance the Rapper also suggested that Epic Games should find a way to compensate the creators behind the dances.

Pierce Bainbridge is representing multiple cases against Epic Games, and not all of them are related to "Fortnite." The firm also claims that Epic used the likeness of former NFL player Len "Skip" Hamilton to create the character Cole Train for the Gears of War video game series. Pierce Bainbridge partner David L. Hecht claims that Epic Games has repeatedly "misappropriated the likeness of African-American talent."

Experts have been skeptical of whether artists can claim ownership over a dance, compared to the clear copyright laws that protect music and song lyrics, but it seems that won't stop artists from trying to protect their creative interests.

SEE ALSO: Forget about paying to get better at 'Fortnite' — some kids are paying for 'Fortnite' dance lessons

SEE ALSO: How big is 'Fortnite'? With more than 200 million players, it's now equal to nearly two-thirds the US population

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Why it's so difficult to land a spacecraft on Mars

A former NASA engineer made an explosive glitter bomb to shock parcel thieves and dedicated it to Kevin from 'Home Alone'

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GLITTER BOMB THUMB

  • Mark Rober, a former NASA engineer, built a hi-tech glitter-bomb prank targeting parcel thieves.
  • Rober had a parcel stolen in May by "porch pirates" and the police didn't help, so he devised a solution himself.
  • The glitter bomb is hidden in an Apple HomePod speaker box, and the explosion is recorded using four hidden smartphones inside.
  • Rober placed the fake speaker on his porch several times and captured reactions of people showered in glitter and novelty fart spray.

A former NASA engineer made an explosive glitter bomb meant to ward off parcel thieves after a parcel was stolen from his porch earlier this year.

Mark Rober, who worked for NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory for nine years, said in a Monday YouTube video that he spent six months building a "glitter-bomb revenge package" after someone stole a parcel from his porch in May.

The police at the time told him there wasn't much they could do about it, he said.

Here's how the high-tech prank works

The glitter bomb is hidden inside the packaging of an Apple HomePod speaker, which is wrapped in clear cellophane and left on a person's porch.

glitter prank box

But instead of the speaker, the box contains four concealed smartphones that record the would-be thief from every angle through hidden windows cut into the box.

The package also has a built-in GPS locator and accelerometer, which prompt the phones to start recording if the box is moved.

accelerometer

As a tribute to Kevin McCallister, the "Home Alone" prankster played by Macaulay Culkin, Rober put postage stickers on the package that were addressed to Harry and Marv, the movie's slapstick crooks.

nasa glitter bomb

As the thief opens the package, wires are tripped that cause the motor inside to start spinning, covering those nearby in glitter.

There's no way to tell whether the person opening the packing is the rightful owner, which means the product would be of limited use in the real world.

glitter bomb rober

To add insult to injury, the 38-year-old also added a "fart spray" dispenser to the prank.

When the box is opened, a canister sprays the foul-smelling synthetic "fart spray" out the top of the box. In the video, Rober says: "No joke you can clear a room with one spray of this."

Rober said in his video: "If anyone was going to make a revenge package and overengineer the crap out of it, it was going to be me."

"The moral of the story is just don't take other people's stuff," he said.

glitter theif amazon

Here's the full video:

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Why it's so difficult to land a spacecraft on Mars

'We made a spiritual pact': Azealia Banks reveals her side of the story behind the amulet she reportedly made with Jack Dorsey's beard hair to protect the Twitter CEO from ISIS

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jack dorsey

  • Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey reportedly had rapper Azealia Banks make an amulet from his beard hair in 2016 after he received threats from ISIS. 
  • Banks told Business Insider on Monday that the story — which has recently been recirculating — is "absolutely" true and that she still has one of the strands of Dorsey's hair. 
  • According to Banks, she expected Dorsey to tweet about her mixtape in exchange for the amulet and her mention of Square on Twitter, which she did in a tweet posted in March 2015.
  • "I made a pact on his behalf and he left me hanging," Banks said. "He will pay for that." 

An old story about rapper Azealia Banks making an amulet for Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey from his beard hair is making the rounds. And, Banks tells Business Insider the anecdote is completely true. 

Back in 2016, Banks posted on her since-deleted Twitter account that Dorsey had "sent me his hair in an envelope because i was supposed to make him an amulet for protection."

The tweet was accompanied by a photo that appears to show feathers and blood in a small jar. 

The anecdote resurfaced in a recent Vanity Fair article about Dorsey.

"Once, a source who worked with him told me Dorsey had sent a rapper his beard shavings to make him an amulet that would protect him from evildoers," Nick Bolton reported. 

Read more:Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey is facing backlash for encouraging people to visit Myanmar, where social media may have helped fuel a mass genocide

Business Insider reached out to Banks via Instagram DM on Monday to get her side of the story — which she says "absolutely" happened, though she used strands of his hair as opposed to shavings. According to Banks, she still has one of the strands of Dorsey's beard hair in an envelope in her storage space. 

As Banks recalls, Dorsey followed her on Twitter a few years ago. The two texted frequently and once met up in person, she said.

"We have this awkward dinner of turkey slices, asparagus, and tomato as he is on something called the Bulletproof Diet ... the food was nasty, so I had some drinks and we kept talking," Banks says. 

Soon after the dinner, Banks says that she offered to do a protection spell on Dorsey after he was threatened by ISIS in a propaganda video. In exchange for the spell — which Banks says required some of Dorsey's hair — and tweeting about Dorsey's company Square, she says she asked him to tweet a link to her Slay-Z mixtape when it was released. 

Azealia Banks

However, Dorsey did not tweet a link to the mixtape when it was released in March 2016. In April 2016, Banks tweeted that Dorsey had failed to live up to his side of the deal.

"A lot of articles said I put a hex on him but I didn't," Banks said. "I have no reason to wish him harm. But we made a spiritual pact and he was supposed to make good on his end."

Banks' Twitter account was deleted in 2018 after she graphically insulted Monet X Change, a contestant on "RuPaul's Drag Race." The rapper says she believes that she was further targeted by Twitter for her formerly pro-Trump views. 

According to Banks, she and Dorsey have not been in contact in recent years.

In 2018, Banks was linked to Tesla CEO Elon Musk, as she said she was staying at one of the executive's Los Angeles properties soon after he tweeted that funding was "secured" to take Tesla private. Banks told Business Insider she saw Musk "scrounging for investors" when she stayed at his house, despite the CEO claiming at the time he had secured funding to take Tesla private.

Read more:Azealia Banks reveals why she thinks Elon Musk was right to settle with the SEC and who Tesla should tap as its new chairman

Banks feels many people — including Dorsey — have misunderstood or misrepresented her interactions with the Twitter CEO. Twitter did not respond to Business Insider's request for comment. 

"He may think that my religion is a facet of mental illness but it isn't," Banks said. "It's a well-established African traditional religion which should be respected."

"I made a pact on his behalf and he left me hanging. He will pay for that." 

SEE ALSO: A cult-favorite sock startup said it was forced to turn off its phone line after being flooded with complaints of incomplete or disappearing orders

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NOW WATCH: Millennials and teens are making Gucci cool again — here's how the brand nearly doubled its sales in 2018

One video perfectly demonstrates why the folks behind 'Fortnite' are being sued over dance moves

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The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (Will Smith and Alfonso Ribiero)

  • The actor who played Carlton on "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air," Alfonso Ribeiro, is suing Epic Games, the maker of "Fortnite."
  • Ribeiro is one of several people suing Epic Games; he claims that "Fortnite" copied a set of dance moves that originated with his character Carlton on "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air."
  • A video comparing the in-game dance with Ribeiro's version shows just how similar the two are.

For six television seasons, Alfonso Ribeiro played Carlton on NBC's hit show "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air."

Carlton was notoriously dorky and prone to breaking out in dance when he got excited. More specifically, Carlton was known to do "The Carlton" — a characteristic set of dance moves that remain a fixture in modern culture.

The internet is rife with GIFs of Ribeiro cutting a rug.

Ribeiro is so directly associated with the dance that, when he appeared on season 19 of "Dancing With the Stars" in 2014, he nailed a polished version of his classic "Fresh Prince" moves. Unsurprisingly, he and his partner Witney Carson won.

A version of Ribeiro's famous dance moves, dubbed "The Fresh," is even included in the massively popular game "Fortnite." Dance moves, of course, are a core component of the game; there are kids taking dance lessons specifically focused on "Fortnite."

Ribeiro, however, recently joined a group of people who are suing Epic Games over the use of said dance moves.

One look at this short video comparison is all it takes to see why Ribeiro is suing:

On the left is the dance from "Fortnite," and on the right is Ribeiro in his performance on "Dancing With the Stars" from 2014.

Whether Ribeiro's claim will stand up legally remains to be seen, but, if nothing else, the video is a damning indictment in the court of public opinion.

SEE ALSO: 'Fresh Prince' actor Alfonso Ribeiro and Instagram's Backpack Kid are the latest artists to sue the creators of 'Fortnite,' accusing it of copying dance moves to make money

SEE ALSO: Rapper 2 Milly says it's clear Fortnite 'stole' his Milly Rock dance move to make money — and he's considering legal action

Join the conversation about this story »

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'Aquaman' director James Wan chose the character 'everyone makes fun of' because there'd be less pressure. Then the DC Comics franchise imploded.

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James Wan AP

  • The "Aquaman" director James Wan talked to Business Insider about how the movie is already breaking box-office records.
  • He also spoke about how making a movie like "Furious 7" prepared him for the pressures of making a DC Comics movie, especially one that needed to be a hit with audiences following the disappointing "Justice League" release.
  • Wan also explained why looking over 2,000 visual-effects shots for "Aquaman" made him feel as though he had made an animated movie.
  • And he expressed his love for the Pitbull song in the movie, "Ocean to Ocean."

James Wan didn't go into making "Aquaman" thinking it would have to be the savior of the DC Extended Universe.

Sure, he knew the movie would get a lot of attention from fans and the executives at Warner Bros. But he didn't think it would be on the level of "Furious 7," in which he had to figure out how to send off Paul Walker's character following the actor's death at the end of production in 2013.

How could it be that much pressure? It's the superhero "everyone makes fun of," as Wan told Business Insider.

While Warner Bros. concentrated on making a standalone "Batman" movie with Ben Affleck, Wan would be hanging out with Jason Momoa (who plays Aquaman) and Amber Heard (Mera), surrounded by green screens that would one day become the mythical underwater city of Atlantis. At least, that's what Wan thought.

Boy was he wrong.

First, the DCEU's crown project, "Justice League," got slaughtered by critics and underperformed at the box office last year. Then Affleck stepped away from directing and writing duties for a "Batman" movie. (The project has since been taken over by Matt Reeves, the "Planet of the Apes" franchise director.) And suddenly "Aquaman" was center stage.

aquaman

But Wan has never been one to back down from a challenge.

With 2004's "Saw," he transcended the horror genre. Then he proved it wasn't a fluke with the success of the "Insidious" and "Conjuring" franchises. After that, he jumped into the "Fast and Furious" movies with "Furious 7" and made the highest-grossing title to date in the franchise, taking in over $1.5 billion worldwide. And he gave fans a touching goodbye to Walker's beloved Brian O'Conner character.

Now, with "Aquaman," he's proving that the superhero everyone makes fun of is going to have the last laugh. The movie has already broken box-office records in China and looks to have brought the DCEU back to respectability in the eyes of the fans.

Business Insider spoke to Wan about the pressures surrounding the making of the movie, the process it took to sign off on more than 2,000 visual-effects shots in it, and why he's all about its Pitbull song.

"Aquaman" opens in theaters Friday.

Jason Guerrasio: With the news of the record-breaking success in China already for the movie and the positive reviews here in the US, are you the type of guy who can ignore all of that, or do you read the coverage?

James Wan: I try not to jump the gun at this point. I want to wait until the film comes out and then assess it. But I would be lying if I didn't look at any of that kind of stuff. I think we all want to take that in.

Guerrasio: Especially when it's positive. It's not like someone is warning you never to look at the internet ever again.

Wan: [Laughs] Right.

aquaman warner bros

Guerrasio: Are you surprised that this movie has had such an impact already in China?

Wan: Yeah, I'm a little bit surprised. But I knew the movie was designed to be a movie that is one for the whole family. And it's an action movie, it's fantasy — it's got all these elements that I think travel well internationally. So from that respect, I'm not surprised. But I am surprised by how incredible the word of mouth has been over there. It's been amazing.

Guerrasio: You mentioned you made the movie for the whole family. It's such a fun movie. I know that my kids would love it. Did you ever think of making it PG?

Wan: No, just because it's an action film as well, and by that very nature the violence wouldn't make that happen, though it's comic-book violence. So I don't think there was ever a PG version of this.

Guerrasio: Yeah, and then suddenly Jason Momoa will say a curse word, and I'm like, "Nope, my kids are still too young for this." Another thing that I loved was the numerous times dialogue is interrupted by some explosion or a fight starts. It was a fun little tweak that most blockbusters don't do.

Wan: I don't know if you mean that in a good way or a bad way. [Laughs]

Guerrasio: Totally in a good way.

Wan: It was definitely designed. Nothing in this movie is something that I can do by accident. There's so much visual effects — it wasn't like I showed up on the day and said, "Let's put an explosion here." It's all part of the narrative for me. And yes, I agree with you, it happens quite a fair bit.

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Guerrasio: There's so much CGI in this movie, but specifically the underwater shots. How much time did it take to get the look the way you wanted it?

Wan: It's a big part of the film we had to get right. If we didn't get the underwater stuff looking correct, we pretty much don't have a film.

Guerrasio: And what I mean is: You want it to look like the characters are underwater, but not that it's distracting.

Wan: Yeah. It's finding balance. We did so much work. Every shot we did was kind of a learning curve that we would apply to another shot. And then we would do that shot and learn something more. And as we went down the line, what we learned made us go back to the earlier shots and tweak that. So there was a lot of that.

For example, if the actors look like they are floating and their hair is flowing, sometimes we forget that they are underwater — it looks like they are flying. So when we felt that was the look going on, we would do little tricks like bubbles showing up on the side of the screen, or the most obvious one is a fish swimming by.

The visual-effects process was very organic. We continued to discover new things that worked, or things that didn't work, literally up until the very last minute that they took it from us.

Guerrasio: Do you have any idea how many visual-effects shots are in this movie?

Wan: Over 2,000 shots. Every single shot has a visual-effects component to it, from the big ones that have entire shots that are visual effects to a simple one where, say, we have a set and the window is a blue screen where we would enter a visual-effects shot.

I half-joke that I made an animated movie, but at the same time, I'm not joking. This is an animated movie. This is no different that freakin' "Ralph Breaks the Internet."

Guerrasio: So the Pitbull song in the movie, "Ocean to Ocean," has been released online, and the world is talking about it. How did the song come about?

Wan: That song was written specifically for the movie! And putting the song in the sequence where Aquaman and Mera walk out of the water in slow motion, I felt: For f---'s sake, let's have fun with it! It's something out of "Fast and Furious."

Guerrasio: Was Pitbull always attached to the song?

Wan: Pitbull was in there very early on. He was really excited to do something for the film. That sequence is very tongue-in-cheek, and we just wanted to have fun with it. And we wanted a cheeky song at that point of the movie. I just wasn't sure what song it was going to be.

Guerrasio: Was there more pressure making this movie because it's the DC movie after "Justice League" and that didn't perform the way Warner Bros. hoped for?

Wan: When you make a big film in general that's always pressure just because it's a huge film. Especially one that has a fan base attached to it. But listen: Three years ago, they asked me which superhero I would be interested in, and I picked Aquaman because it's the one everyone makes fun of, so there wouldn't be a lot of pressure. I'll go and make this movie under the radar — no one is going to care. Fast-forward, and there's just this massive spotlight on it. [Laughs]

Guerrasio: Was doing a "Fast and Furious" movie good training to do this, in regards to the pressure?

Wan: Yeah. In a big way. It trained me to understand what it means to do a movie like this, but also how to make a movie like this fun and in a way that people will endear it as opposed to scoffing at it. That's very important, and that's how those "Fast and Furious" movies are done. It's so outrageous, but people love that. In a lot of ways, I learned a lot from doing that. Also, I learned how to shoot a pretty-looking film. I really wanted "Aquaman" to feel like a travelogue movie.

fast and furious 7 cast

Guerrasio: So with "Furious 7," it grossed over $1.5 billion. You transcended horror with the "Saw" movie. The Chinese box-office record for "Aquaman" — what is left to conquer? Where do you go from here?

Wan: Yeah, good question. I felt "Aquaman" checked a lot of boxes for me. I wanted to create worlds, make another action movie, do a superhero movie — I did those all with this movie.

I like the idea of going back and forth with film, and I don't know, maybe I'll go back and make a more intimate film. I don't know. I don't have my next film planned out yet.

Guerrasio: Taking a little nap from the business would probably be nice, right?

Wan: Actually, I have a lot of movies I'm producing, so maybe I'll take some time off directing and focus on producing for a while.

SEE ALSO: Jake Johnson on why he was paranoid he'd be fired from "Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse" and the sweet moments with kids that made him realize he's a worthy Peter Parker

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The 45 most successful Christmas movies of all time

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  • From "A Christmas Story" to "Bad Santa," successful Christmas movies have come in many forms.
  • Here, we've compiled the 45 highest-grossing Christmas movies of all time at the domestic box office.

The holiday season wouldn't be complete without a laundry list of Christmas movies and a warm blanket.

Classics like "A Christmas Story" and "Elf" made this list alongside newer titles, including the 2018 version of "Dr. Seuss' The Grinch," which holds the No. 3 spot.

We compiled this list of the highest-grossing Christmas movies of all time at the US box office with data from Box Office Mojo (unadjusted for inflation). We also included each film's Rotten Tomatoes critic score and a review excerpt for each.

Take a look at the list below and check it twice for the 45 most successful Christmas movies of all time at the domestic box office.

Note: Several notable older films, including 1946's "It's a Wonderful Life," are absent for lack of data.

SEE ALSO: 13 people reveal how much money they've made from their side hustles

45. "One Magic Christmas" (1985)

Domestic box office total: $13,667,222

Critic score: 47%

What critics said: "It's a godsend for parents, a movie you can take the kids to, but which won't leave you gnashing at the armrest halfway through." — Paul Attanasio, Washington Post



44. "All I Want for Christmas" (1991)

Domestic box office total: $14,812,144

Critic score: 0%

What critics said: "Miracle on 34th Street this ain't."— Desson Thomson, Washington Post



43. "Unaccompanied Minors" (2006)

Domestic box office total: $16,655,224 

Critic score: 30% 

What critics said: "Not for the faint of heart, the movie is unsettling and startlingly true to life." — A.O. Scott, New York Times



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The next Xbox is expected to arrive in 2020 — here's what we know

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Xbox One X / Xbox One S

New video-game consoles? Already?

Yes and no.

It looks as if we've got until at least 2020 before the successor to the Xbox One arrives, according to the latest rumors. That lines up nicely with many of the details shared publicly by Microsoft's head of Xbox, Phil Spencer.

Between several reports from Brad Sams at Thurrott and Spencer's statements, in addition to some new reporting from Windows Central, we have a surprisingly clear picture of Microsoft's plans for the next Xbox consoles.

Here's what we know so far:

SEE ALSO: The 29 hottest video games you shouldn't miss in 2019

1. Microsoft officially announced the next Xbox in June 2018, at its annual E3 briefing in Los Angeles.

In a surprise move, Spencer outright announced Microsoft's work on the successor to the Xbox One.

"The same team that delivered unprecedented performance with Xbox One X is deep into architecting the next Xbox consoles," he said on stage in Los Angeles on June 10, "where we will once again deliver on our commitment to set the benchmark for console gaming."

Spencer offered more information during an interview with Giant Bomb's Jeff Gerstmann the same week.

"Everybody knows what's happening," Spencer said, referring to Sony and Microsoft making new consoles. "It's this kind of unsaid thing of like, 'Well, they shipped Xbox One X. They didn't lay off their whole hardware team. What do you think they're doing?'"

He said the announcement was a means of easing potential concerns of longtime console buyers.

"It's not tomorrow, but I didn't want people to think that we're walking away from that part of the brand and the business, because it's really important to us," Spencer said.

In terms of what that console (or consoles) will be, Spencer isn't offering any major details just yet.



2. Microsoft has (at least) two Xbox consoles in the works.

Of note, Spencer said "consoles" on stage — as in, Microsoft is apparently working on more than one future Xbox One successor.

Rumors point to Microsoft creating two new consoles that coexist within the same generation: a smaller, less expensive Xbox potentially focused on streaming video games, and a larger, more traditional, more expensive Xbox that could power games locally (or stream them).

A Windows Central report says these consoles are codenamed "Lockhart" and "Anaconda," respectively.  

Notably, Microsoft doesn't offer a streaming service for video games — but one is in the works.

"Our cloud engineers are building a game-streaming network to unlock console-quality gaming on any device," Spencer said on stage in June. "Not only that, we are dedicated to perfecting your experience everywhere you want to play — on your Xbox, your PC, or your phone."

He was echoing previous sentiments, but it's the most definitive testament to Microsoft's plans for the future of gaming.

"There are 2 billion people who play video games on the planet today. We're not going to sell 2 billion consoles," Spencer told me in an interview following his presentation.

"Many of those people don't own a television. Many have never owned a PC. For many people on the planet, the phone is their compute device," he said. "It's really about reaching a customer wherever they are, on the devices that they have."

That said, logic dictates that the ability to stream "console-quality gaming on any device" depends on some pretty major upgrades to internet speeds around the world. It also faces hurdles like the uncertain future of net-neutrality laws and consumer internet data caps.

Microsoft's answer to those potential problems is the Azure cloud platform, an infrastructure that few other companies have.

"Fifty data centers in different parts of the planet? Billions of dollars of investment in building that out? It allows us to accelerate our growth in this space," Spencer told me.

In October, Microsoft officially unveiled its ambitious streaming service— it's currently known as "Project xCloud," and it's unclear when the service will light up.



3. The new Xbox consoles are rumored to launch in 2020.

It looks as if the two new Xbox consoles will arrive in 2020 — just in time for the return of the XFL!

That's according to Sams, who reported in July that the low-powered, streaming-focused box was "further along in the development cycle than the traditional console that will also be released in 2020."

Microsoft has not provided an official release window for its next console, but 2020 is a reasonable assumption based on the past. Home video-game consoles tend to exist on a five- to 10-year life cycle, and 2020 is seven years out from the Xbox One's announcement and launch in 2013.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Ninja had a simple answer for Jimmy Fallon when he questioned why people love to watch him play video games

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Ninja Jimmy Fallon

  • Tyler "Ninja" Blevins has become the face of the video gaming world with the No. 1 channel on Twitch and over 20 million subscribers on YouTube.
  • The Fortnite virtuoso appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon Monday night and discussed everything from his nickname to his famous Pon Pon dance.
  • During the interview, Ninja had a compelling answer for Fallon when he questioned why anyone would want to watch other people play video games.

Tyler Blevins — known to most as "Ninja" — has brought video gaming into the mainstream with the No. 1 channel on Twitch and over 20 million subscribers on YouTube.

Monday night, the Fortnite virtuoso appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon to discuss his love of video gaming, his nickname and signature headband, and his famous Pon Pon dance.

During the interview, Fallon questioned why anyone would want to watch other people play video games, and Ninja came up with a very convincing response.

"It's so funny [when people say that], man," Ninja said. "Why would you want to watch the best of the best play football, soccer, [or] hockey? Why don't you go outside and do it right now? If you love it so much, you could do it. That's what it is, there are so many people like 'well why do you watch people play video games if you could go play video games yourself?' and it's like, can you do that? Can you compete at that high a level?

"It's entertainment, right? So you watch the NFL and things like that because you want to watch people do things that you can't. It's kind of the same thing with gaming and streaming."


Read more:'YouTube Rewind 2018' is officially the most disliked video in YouTube history — here's why

This year alone, Ninja has streamed for 3,400 hours, which is equivalent to 142 days of gaming. The 27-year-old will cap his breakout year with a special New Year's Eve streaming event from 4 AM to 4 PM EST in Times Square. You can tune in on his Twitch channel

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Bernie Madoff was arrested 10 years ago today — here's what his life is like in prison

MoviePass' parent company just bought itself more time to live, but it's still in imminent danger of being kicked off the stock exchanges (HMNY)

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CEO of MoviePass Mitch Lowe attends 'An Evening with Beverly Luff Linn' Dinner presented by MoviePass on January 20, 2018 in Park City, Utah.

  • Helios and Matheson, the parent company of MoviePass, reached an agreement with its creditors Tuesday to reduce its outstanding debt.
  • The move also will eliminate all of its outstanding convertible notes and replace them with non-convertible notes.
  • By eliminating its convertible notes, the company freed itself up to sell potentially billions of new shares of stock.
  • But the move comes on the same day that the Nasdaq could delist Helios and Matheson's stock.

The parent company of MoviePass, just gave itself some more room to maneuver, at least from a financial perspective.

Helios and Matheson reached an agreement with its creditors that reduces the amount it owes them and frees it up to sell billions of additional shares of its stock.

The company announced Tuesday that it will exchange two sets of convertible notes — debt that could be converted into stock — for new non-convertible ones. As part of that of that agreement, it will reduce the outstanding principal that it owes creditors from $44.5 million to $11.3 million. And the agreement allows the company to pay off the debt early for just half that amount, or about $5.7 million.

"Following consummation of the transactions contemplated by the exchange agreements, the company no longer has any outstanding convertible notes," Helios and Matheson said in a regulatory filing. 

Representatives of the company did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

Helios and Matheson's future is in doubt

The reduction of the debt is significant for the company. The company has repeatedly warned investors that there is "substantial doubt" about its ability to continue as a going concern. As of September 30, it had just $4.9 million in cash on hand, while its operations had burned through more than $100 million in cash in the previous quarter. 

But the cancellation of the convertible notes could also prove important for Helios and Matheson. The company has funded its ongoing operational losses from MoviePass' money losing theater ticket subscription service largely by issuing and selling new shares of stock, massively diluting shareholders in the process.

Read this:MoviePass' parent company increased its share count by an incredible 9,000% in less than two weeks — and just after reverse splitting its stock to combat dilution

In recent months, though, its outstanding convertible notes have inhibited it from selling large numbers of new shares. The company has had to keep in reserve a certain number of shares if those notes were redeemed. As the company's stock price declined with its past dilution, the number of shares it had to set aside grew in inverse proportion, so that combined with the number of shares Helios and Matheson already had in circulation, the combined number exceeded the 5 billions shares it was authorized to issue.

In October, the company exchanged convertible notes it issued in June for non-convertible ones, alleviating some pressure on its share count. This move frees it up further still.

The agreement frees it up to sell more shares

Prior to the new agreement with its creditors, Helios and Matheson had 1.7 billion shares in circulation and 2.6 billion in reserve for the convertible notes, employee stock awards, and other purposes, according to documents it filed Tuesday with the Securities and Exchange Commission. With the cancellation of the convertible notes, it will only have to keep of fraction of those 2.6 billion shares in its reserves. 

Unfortunately for the company, the move comes on the same day as it's in danger of being delisted by the Nasdaq. After Helios and Matheson's stock fell below $1 a share in May, the exchange warned the company that it would delist its stock unless it got it back above $1 a share on a consistent basis.

The company has been unable to do that, despite reverse splitting its stock in July. Helios and Matheson cancelled a shareholder vote that would have given it permission to do a second reverse splitafter encountering widespread investor resistance.

Should the company's stock be delisted, Helios and Matheson could find it harder to sell new shares and raise additional funds. 

SEE ALSO: MoviePass' parent company has boosted its share count by an unbelievable 80,000% since July — but it's run out of room to issue new stock

Join the conversation about this story »

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Michelle Obama and Jimmy Fallon surprised people in the 30 Rock elevators, and their reactions were priceless

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  • Former first lady Michelle Obama appeared on Tuesday night's episode of the "Tonight Show".
  • During the appearance, they aired a clip of Obama and host Jimmy Fallon surprising 30 Rockefeller Plaza visitors.
  • The tour groups would stop on the wrong floor, where Fallon and Obama would be waiting.
  • Many yelled out in shock upon seeing the former first lady in the flesh.
  • Watch the full clip below:

SEE ALSO: Here are 25 things we learned from Michelle Obama's new memoir 'Becoming'

DON'T MISS: Michelle Obama reveals that Barack showed up late the first time he met her, and she was determined not to date him

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Anthony Scaramucci claims Trump isn't a nationalist: 'He likes saying that because it irks these intellectual elitists'

What you need to know in advertising today

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Rising stars Madison Avenue 2x1

Introducing the rising stars of Madison Avenue.

Whether developing breakthrough ad campaigns, using data in new ways, or coming up with new ways to reach consumers, this crop of young advertising professionals is turning traditional advertising on its head and shaking things up on Madison Avenue and beyond.

Business Insider has in the past recognized the 30 most creative people in advertising under 30. This year we broadened the criteria to include rising talent in departments beyond creative while increasing the age limit to 35.

We've included people with a variety of roles and experiences, spanning planning, creative, strategy, business development, and talent. We looked beyond ad agencies to consulting companies like Deloitte Digital and IBM iX that are increasingly competing with them.

We finalized the list based on agency and peer nominations, our own research into their awards and campaigns, the influence they've had on their companies, and their potential to be future leaders in the industry.

Click here to see who made the list.

In other news:

A MoviePass consultant was removed after employee allegations of inappropriate behavior toward women. His quiet return has eroded trust.Former music manager Bob Ellis, who has ties to Hollywood stars, worked as a marketing consultant for MoviePass starting in April, eight current or former MoviePass employees told Business Insider.

'It's just not fair': Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy defends his controversial site against accusations of toxicity and misogyny. Portnoy said Barstool is really just a comedy site that shouldn't be held to the same standards of behavior as a news site.

Facebook admits that it allowed Netflix and Spotify to access your private messages. The New York Times looks at how Facebook gave big brands like Amazon, Microsoft and Spotify access to private messages from a reported 70 million monthly users.

Elsewhere at Facebook, a story from Gizmodo claims that Facebook has changed its policy around location data collection and now makes it impossible for users to avoid being tracked for ads.A Facebook spokesperson told Gizmodo that the company does not use WiFi data to track locations for ads if a user has "Location Services" turned off, though it does use IP information, and other information like check-ins and the current city on a user's profile.

IHOP will no longer advertise on Tucker Carlson's Fox News show after he says immigrants are making the US 'poorer and dirtier.'The chain said it stands for "welcoming folks from all backgrounds and beliefs into our restaurants."

'Y' is for Verizon? Oath is rebranding as Verizon Media Group, but the company appears to have flubbed the announcement. Oath is changing its name to Verizon Media Group, and news of the rebranding was accompanied with what many guessed to be the new logo — the letter "Y."

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: 6 airline industry secrets that will help you fly like a pro this holiday season


MoviePass got rid of a consultant accused of inappropriate behavior toward women after executives threatened to quit. His quiet return has shaken the company.

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  • Bob Ellis, a former music manager who has ties to Hollywood stars, worked as a marketing consultant for MoviePass starting in April, eight current or former MoviePass employees told Business Insider.
  • Multiple sources told Business Insider that Ellis would touch female employees at events — placing a hand on the small of their backs, giving massages, and kissing cheeks — and had called or texted women outside working hours, causing some on staff to feel uncomfortable.
  • Four formal complaints were sent about Ellis to human resources, according to a source who viewed the complaints.
  • After MoviePass executives threatened to quit if Ellis was not dealt with, CEO Mitch Lowe told the company in June that a consultant had been removed, whom eight sources said the staff presumed to be Ellis.
  • But Ellis has continued to appear at business-related MoviePass events as recently as December, including a trip in which a pivotal leadership change was decided.
  • Ellis' continued presence at MoviePass has shaken the trust of some members of the company's management and is one more sign of dysfunction at the movie-ticket-subscription startup.

It was supposed to be a crowning moment for MoviePass: the premiere for the movie "Gotti" in New York City in June, the first major release for its distribution company, MoviePass Ventures.

But among the stars walking the red carpet — like the movie's lead, John Travolta — was Bob Ellis, a former music manager with ties to big names in Hollywood. Ellis had been "consulting" for the buzzy movie-ticket-subscription app, and some female employees had been trying to avoid him for months.

Ellis, 72, had come onto the MoviePass scene in April. He was a personal friend of Ted Farnsworth, the CEO of MoviePass' parent company, Helios and Matheson Analytics, and joined the company as a marketing consultant after attending a party MoviePass hosted with iHeartRadio at Coachella.

But eight current or former MoviePass employees, who asked to remain anonymous because of nondisclosure agreements, told Business Insider that Ellis had a reputation among some in the company for inappropriate behavior toward female employees. Several sources accused Ellis of touching female employees at events — placing a hand on the small of their backs, giving massages, and kissing cheeks — in a way some felt was inappropriate and said he occasionally had called or texted women outside working hours, causing some on the staff to feel uncomfortable.

Four formal complaints were sent to human resources about how Ellis acted toward women, according to a source who viewed the complaints. (Business Insider has reviewed a copy of one of the complaints.)

The situation came to a head immediately following the "Gotti" premiere on June 14, when Ellis approached a female employee who several sources said he'd made feel uncomfortable in the past. According to multiple sources present at the premiere, Ellis told this employee not to worry about his behavior at the event but then continued to attempt to engage her in conversation throughout the night.

The morning after the premiere, three MoviePass executives threatened to quit unless Ellis was dealt with, according to five sources with knowledge of the incident.

ted farnsworth mitch loweAt the next Monday all-hands meeting, MoviePass CEO Mitch Lowe told the company that the contractor who had approached the female employee at the "Gotti" premiere had been let go, according to five sources who were on the call. Though Ellis was not mentioned by name on the call, eight sources said it was widely understood by the staff after the call that Lowe had been talking about Ellis.

Despite this, sources said Ellis has kept popping up at MoviePass business functions as recently as December, including a pivotal retreat in which a major leadership change at MoviePass was decided. Ellis' continued presence has unnerved and frustrated some staff members, especially women who work at MoviePass, according to five sources.

Fifteen MoviePass staffers have quit or been fired since Ellis started consulting, seven of whom were women, according to a source with knowledge of the staffing at the company. While that looks, at first glance, like an even gender split of departures, women make up a much smaller percentage of the company than men. Currently women make up only 20 of about 62 on staff. Women made up about 35% of the company when Ellis started but have accounted for about 47% of departures.

Multiple sources viewed such numbers as a sign of the distrust some female staffers had toward management.

Business Insider contacted Ellis numerous times via phone, text, email, and social media to comment for this story but did not get a response.

The situation with Ellis isn't the only sign of dysfunction at MoviePass.

The company has been in disarray since it was taken over by Helios and Matheson in August 2017. In the past few months, MoviePass has gone through erratic product changes in an attempt to bring its cash burn under control and avoid having its parent company's stock delisted from the Nasdaq, which could happen any day if it does not raise the price over $1 a share. It is now trading at under $0.02.

Read more: MoviePass competitor Sinemia has 7 ways it can charge you fees, and many customers are furious

And the chaos around MoviePass' product and finances has been mirrored inside the company.

MoviePass' two-person human-resources department was fired in November, Lowe has passed day-to-day operations to another executive, and on Friday, issues with payroll caused some staff members to spend the whole workday worrying whether they would ever get paid.

When asked to respond to the allegations against Ellis and the specifics of this story, MoviePass said the following to Business Insider in a statement:

"MoviePass strongly protects the rights of all our employees, maintains an open door policy for employees to voice any concerns, and does not tolerate harassment of any kind. It is MoviePass' practice to regularly remind our employees of the resources and avenues available to them — including a hotline, which at employees' discretion can be anonymous and gender-neutral, as well as the availability of members of human resources and management — should they seek to report any issues. HMNY and MoviePass are both committed to fostering a workplace environment where all employees feel comfortable and take appropriate steps to address any issues reported by our employees."

Claims of inappropriate touching, crude language, and late-night texts

Bob Ellis was better known by the name Bob Ellis Silberstein in the late 1970s. He was a personal manager for musicians such as Meat Loaf, Billy Preston, the band Rufus, and Chaka Khan.

In 1971, Ellis married the legendary singer Diana Ross, and they raised three children together. One of them was Tracee Ellis Ross, who is best known for starring in the ABC series "Black-ish" and has been an outspoken supporter of both the #MeToo and Time's Up movements. Ellis Ross was not available to comment for this story.

Since Ellis and Ross divorced in 1977, he has stayed out of the limelight, occasionally showing up in Tracee Ellis Ross' Instagram. The first time many MoviePass employees met Ellis was at the Coachella party, where they were told by Farnsworth that Ellis would be helping out the marketing department as a consultant, according to a source present at the meeting.

Ellis got MoviePass to be a sponsor at the 2018 Greenwich Film Festival, but other than that, eight MoviePass sources were unclear what he did for the company outside partying with Farnsworth. On LinkedIn, Ellis lists himself as a "partner" at Helios and Matheson Analytics and at MoviePass.

What was certain was that Ellis was suddenly a fixture at events that MoviePass held or was a part of.

Seven current or former employees of MoviePass told Business Insider they had either personally experienced or heard a firsthand account of Ellis touching female staff members at events in ways described as inappropriate, such as placing his hand on the small of their backs, kissing them on the cheek, or massaging their shoulders. Multiple sources claimed they either experienced this behavior from Ellis or directly witnessed it.

And on at least two occasions, Ellis took female employees' hands and said, "I want to show you off," before leading them to the red carpet without letting go of their hands, according to several sources with firsthand knowledge.

Besides Ellis' behavior at events, he would occasionally contact some female employees during nonworking hours, through either calls or texts, and would sometimes get upset when his messages were not returned, according to several sources who said they received such messages from him.

Ellis would also use crude, profane language and mention use of drugs such as cocaine or Xanax, according to three sources who said they heard such comments.

On more than one occasion, women were in tears at the office following an encounter with Ellis, either in person or over the phone, according to two sources who said they witnessed the emotional staff members.

Four formal complaints were made to human resources about Ellis, according to a source who viewed the complaints. And recommendations were brought up the chain of command that Ellis should be fired, seven sources said. These sources also said that some staff members openly speculated that Ellis' friendship with Farnsworth was protecting him.

"Bob is a really close friend of Ted's, and this was a source of internal tension for many months," one source close to the calls for Ellis' termination said.

'My horns are down'

But the "Gotti" premiere was the final straw.

Five sources told Business Insider that Ellis approached a female employee that night whom he had made uncomfortable in the past and assured her not to worry about being bothered by him. "My horns are down," he said. He then continued to try to talk to her throughout the night. After this got back to the head of human resources, three executives told Lowe they would quit if action were not taken immediately about Ellis, those same sources said.

Shortly afterward, Lowe told the staff that a Helios and Matheson contractor had been let go.

"Everyone knew he was talking about Bob," one source who was on the all-hands call said.

In the weeks that followed, Lowe met the different teams in the company to listen to their concerns, according to four sources present at those meetings.

Bob Ellis

But Ellis wasn't gone from MoviePass.

Ellis has continued to be present at business-related events since Lowe’s announcement, according to accounts from four MoviePass sources as well as to social-media postings viewed by Business Insider.

Ellis was on a trip to Farnsworth's cabin in Albany, New York, in October, in which a major leadership shuffle at the company was sketched out. That trip was also attended by Khalid Itum, an executive vice president at MoviePass; Jake Petersen, a senior vice president at the company; and Adam Day, the creative director of Helios and Matheson.

Business Insider contacted Farnsworth, Itum, Petersen, and Day to comment for this story but did not get a response.

Two sources said this trip was when the decision to have Itum take over the day-to-day operations of MoviePass from Lowe, a change formally announced earlier this month, was decided. And Ellis was right there in the mix, according to pictures and videos from Instagram seen by four sources and to a Google calendar invite of the event with Ellis' name on it viewed by Business Insider.

Read more: MoviePass unveils details about its new 3-tier pricing plan and confirms a leadership shake-up

Ellis was also present during an outing in Miami in December that was attended by Farnsworth, Itum, Petersen, and Day.

In that instance, video of an Instagram story viewed by Business Insider showed many of them sporting red MoviePass caps while sitting on a giant float attached to a boat. When Itum was asked, during the anonymous question portion of the all-hands meeting the following week, whether MoviePass paid for the outing, his response was that "business took place on the boat," according to two sources at the meeting.

bob_jakepetersenThe continued presence of Ellis at business-related functions has led to frustration among some of the staff, according to eight sources, and even factored into the decision of some to leave the company.

And some staff members don't know where to turn for help in the company.

MoviePass' two-person human-resources staff was fired in November. Petersen, a close friend of Itum's, added HR to his duties. During the Monday all-hands meeting after the firing of the HR department, Itum informed female staff members that if they had something sensitive to talk about, they should reach out to Bernadette McCabe, a woman on the company's leadership team and senior vice president of exhibitor relations and business strategy, according to a source on the call.

The new HR structure has already faced challenges. According to an email to MoviePass staff members obtained by Business Insider, an error occurred leading to the staff not getting paid Friday morning. It took until the end of the work day for staff to get paid. Petersen noted in the email that this wasn't caused by "any funding or monetary issues."

"The assertion that the company had an issue with payroll on Friday is false," MoviePass said in a statement to Business Insider. "MoviePass fully met its obligations in this regard on Friday, December 14 as scheduled, and there was never any likelihood it would not."

Trust is running low at MoviePass

Several sources said they felt the Ellis situation contributed to a general lack of trust among some staff toward management.

Farnsworth, the CEO of MoviePass' parent company, "does not care about the employees," a former staffer told Business Insider.

And Lowe is not seen with high esteem by all at MoviePass as well.

Business Insider reported in November that Lowe had been absent at all-hands meetings for months, with Itum running them instead. In a New York Times story in December on MoviePass, the company confirmed that Itum had taken over the day-to-day operations of the company from Lowe.

Several sources characterized Lowe as uninvolved in MoviePass and said the general feeling was that Itum was running the ship.

It appears Itum is already trying to do damage control on this story. According to two sources on an emergency all-hands call Tuesday, Itum informed MoviePass staff members of a Business Insider story coming out. He then assured the staff that going forward there would be zero tolerance for inappropriate behavior, adding that along with McCabe, female employees could discuss sensitive topics with the other woman on the leadership team, Allison Mellon, the senior vice president of advertising sales and studio relations.

This is all happening while MoviePass' parent company is facing a delisting from the Nasdaq, which could have happened as soon as this past Tuesday (though it has not yet). The company is also the subject of an investigation by the New York attorney general into whether it misled investors.

SEE ALSO: MoviePass' parent company just bought itself more time to live, but it's still in imminent danger of being kicked off the stock exchanges

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A 'Fresh Prince' star is suing 'Fortnite' maker Epic Games, claiming his dance moves were stolen. Decide for yourself with these comparisons of every dance in the game

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The Carlton Dance Fortnite

  • "Fortnite" maker Epic Games is being sued by several different people. They accuse Epic Games of lifting their dance moves for use in "Fortnite" without paying.
  • A huge portion of the dance moves in "Fortnite" are either references or direct recreations of dance moves popularized elsewhere.
  • Thus far, only three of the game's dances have provoked legal action.

"Fortnite" is making hundreds of millions of dollars every month for its creator Epic Games — an impressive feat for a game that costs nothing to download and play.

And now, Epic is being sued due to one of the main ways it makes so much money.

Epic Games turns its enormously popular, free game into a cash machine through the sale of a seasonal "Battle Pass" and the sale of individual items. Perhaps you want a sweet new backpack for your in-game avatar? Just drop a few hundred V-Bucks — the virtual currency in "Fortnite" that's largely derived from people exchanging actual money for virtual dollars — and it's yours. 

Or maybe you're more of a dancer, as millions of other "Fortnite" players appear to be. For the privilege of doing "The Fresh" — the dance commonly referred to as "The Carlton," popularized by Alfonso Ribeiro's character Carlton on "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air" — you've gotta drop 800 V-Bucks ($8). 

That's just part of why Ribeiro and two others are suing Epic Games. Here's a rundown of all the dances from "Fortnite" that pull from outside sources:

SEE ALSO: 'Fresh Prince' actor Alfonso Ribeiro and Instagram's Backpack Kid are the latest artists to sue the creators of ‘Fortnite’ for allegedly copying dance moves to make money

The chicken dance from "Arrested Development," called "Chicken" in "Fortnite"





"The Band of the Bold" by Marlon Webb, called "Best Mates" in "Fortnite"



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Stephen Colbert ridiculed Les Moonves after the ousted CBS boss lost $120 million in severance

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  • Stephen Colbert once again mocked his former boss, ousted CBS CEO Les Moonves, on Tuesday's "Late Show" after CBS announced Moonves would not receive a $120 million severance.
  • "Every show he greenlit for the last 20 years was about investigations," Colbert said. "On the bright side, CBS has enough material for a new procedural: 'NCIS: Human Resources.'"
  • This isn't the first time Colbert has discussed Moonves on his show. 

 

Stephen Colbert ridiculed his former boss, ousted CBS CEO Les Moonves, on Tuesday's "Late Show." On Monday, CBS announced that Moonves would not receive his $120 million severance.

The CBS board of directors said that investigators concluded the network had reason to terminate Moonves for violating the company's policies and failing to cooperate with the investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct against Moonves.

"I wonder what's going to happen to all that money," Colbert said. "I'm pretty sure it goes to me. Do I get it? I get half of it. The other half goes to Tom Selleck's mustache."

Colbert went on on question how Moonves thought he could get away with it all.

"Every show he greenlit for the last 20 years was about investigations," Colbert said. "On the bright side, CBS has enough material for a new procedural: 'NCIS: Human Resources.'"

This isn't the first time Colbert has mocked Moonves. Colbert discussed Moonves on his show in July when the first New Yorker report revealed allegations against Moonves, and again in September when Moonves resigned following a second New Yorker report with additional allegations. 

"I believe in accountability," Colbert said in July. "Everybody believes in accountability until it’s their guy, and make no mistake: Les Moonves is my guy. Accountability is meaningless unless it's for everybody, whether it's the leader of a network or the leader of the free world."

Watch the full clip below:

 

SEE ALSO: Les Moonves left CBS in September with a net worth of $700 million. Now, he won't get a dime of his $120 million severance

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Michelle Obama jokes that Barack wanted to seek a second term so he could keep their daughters under Secret Service guard in their teen years

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  • Michelle Obama appeared on "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon" Tuesday night.
  • During the interview, Obama joked that her husband was motivated to seek a second term because he wanted their daughters to spend their teen years under the guard of the Secret Service.
  • "He was like, 'We've got to win, because I don't want those girls walking around,'" Obama recalled.

Forget gun control and healthcare reform — former President Barack Obama had a personal reason for wanting to win a second term so badly.

During an appearance on the "Tonight Show" Tuesday night, former First Lady Michelle Obama said her husband was motivated to win reelection because he wanted to keep their daughters under the guard of the Secret Service.

"I've always said, as quiet as it's kept, the second term of the presidency was really fueled by Barack's desire to keep them with their agents into their teen years," she said.

"He was like, 'We've got to win, because I don't want those girls walking around.' He wanted men with guns with them. He worked extra hard on those votes. He's like, 'Come on voters!'" Obama recalled.

The couple's daughters, Malia and Sasha, were 14 and 11 years old, respectively, when their father was inaugurated for his second term in the White House.

Read more:Michelle Obama and Jimmy Fallon surprised people in the 30 Rock elevators, and their reactions were priceless

The family decided to stay in Washington, DC, after Obama's second term was up so that Sasha, now 17, could finish high school. Eldest daughter Malia, now 20, is in her second year at Harvard.

Malia Obama

During the interview, Obama said she enjoys the relationship she has with her daughters now that they are older.

"I love the baby stage. I'm like you — I love every age, but now they're really interesting. We're friends," she said. "There are boyfriends we can talk about. You know, they drive, so they can earn money, so they ask for less. I love it."

Obama appeared on the show to promote her new memoir, "Becoming," which is at the top of the New York Times bestseller list for hardcover nonfiction.

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Olivia Munn is reportedly dating Tucker Roberts, an esports team president and the son of Comcast’s CEO

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Tucker Roberts Olivia Munn

  • "Dark Phoenix" actor Olivia Munn, 38, has been romantically linked to 28-year-old Tucker Roberts.
  • Roberts is the president of Philadelphia Fusion, an esports team competing in the Overwatch League and the son of Comcast CEO Brian Roberts.
  • While the relationship between Munn and Roberts has not yet been defined, the two share a common background in video games.

Rumors are swirling around actress Olivia Munn's budding relationship with the head of a competitive video gaming team.

Munn was recently photographed in Los Angeles alongside Tucker Roberts, son of Comcast CEO Brian Roberts and president of the Overwatch League's Philadelphia Fusion. According to Entertainment Tonight, the two enjoyed a date on Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills over the weekend, holding hands and looking affectionate as they shopped.

Munn hadn't been publicly linked to anyone since ending a three-year relationship with Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rogers in early 2017.

Roberts, 28, was named president of the Philadelphia Fusion in January 2018 for the team's inaugural season. The team competes at the highest levels of Blizzard's acclaimed and best-selling competitive first-person shooter, "Overwatch." Fusion managed to reach the Overwatch League Grand Finals and took home $400,000 as the runner-up in July.

The team is officially owned by Robert's family's company, Comcast Spectacor; the same company also owns the Philadelphia Flyers and 76ers, along with Wells Fargo Center where they play.

Prior to taking over the day-to-day management of the Philadelphia Fusion, Roberts worked as a strategic advisor and entrepreneur in residence for other Comcast subsidiaries, and spent two years as an associate producer with video game publisher Electronic Arts, according to his LinkedIn page.

While it's not clear how Roberts and Munn met, they have at least one thing in common: Munn has said in interviews that she's a big fan of first-person shooter games like "Halo." Plus, Munn has her own professional history with video games. She worked for four years as a co-host of video game and pop culture variety show "Attack of the Show" on the now defunct G4 TV network. Munn's role in geek culture helped her earn a dedicated following as she made the transition to acting full-time. 

Beyond budding romance, the pair has plenty to look forward to next year. Munn reprised her role as Psylocke in the the upcoming X-Men movie "Dark Phoenix" due out in June 2019, and Roberts will be preparing the Fusion for their next Overwatch League season starting in February 2019.

SEE ALSO: 'Fresh Prince' actor Alfonso Ribeiro and Instagram's Backpack Kid are the latest artists to sue the creators of ‘Fortnite’ for allegedly copying dance moves to make money

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