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Watch 'Shark Tank' star Kevin O'Leary skate off with a potential deal on the next episode

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kevin oleary inboard skateboard shark tank abc

On Friday's new episode of ABC's "Shark Tank," star investor Kevin O'Leary literally skates off with a potential deal.

In an exclusive preview for Business Insider, a trio of entrepreneurs entered the tank to pitch their business, Inboard Technology. They manufacture remote-control electric skateboards. And "Mr. Wonderful," as O'Leary likes to refer to himself, couldn't help but try out the product.

The guys were pretty confident about the safety of their product — they tested it to 1,200 pounds. But that confidence may be their downfall. They made the potentially fatal mistake of leaving the tank to discuss an offer and get a surprise from the sharks upon their return.

Also on Friday's episode, Tech billionaire Chris Sacca returns. Plus, the show has its highest evaluation ever for a business — $40 million.

"Shark Tank" airs at 9 p.m. Friday on ABC.

Watch Mr. Wonderful try one of those electric skateboards below:

SEE ALSO: Billionaire Chris Sacca: My role on 'Shark Tank' is to 'bust Mark Cuban's balls'

DON'T MISS: The 5 biggest mistakes small business owners make according to 'Shark Tank' stars

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: 'Shark Tank' investor Robert Herjavec reveals the biggest mistakes small businesses make


Move over, Vine — people are raking in thousands of dollars a week on a new video app

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Walking around his hometown of College Station, Texas, last summer, 21-year-old social media star Aaron Doh began to get stopped for pictures. Fans recognized him from Vine, where he had racked up 1 million followers by August 2015.

"I think that's when I hit my peak," said Doh, a budding comedian who performs on social media rather than in clubs.

Needless to say, Twitter's recent announcement that it planned to kill Vine was a bummer. For some young social media celebrities, it brought an end to a source of income. Vine stars could charge as much as six figures for a sponsored video, The Wall Street Journal reports.

For Doh, it would obliterate the massive following he spent years building.

The sandy-haired aspiring actor has a plan B. Live.ly, an app that spun off from the video network Musical.ly over the summer, is an emerging live-streaming platform that debuted to half a million downloads in its first week. Live.ly lets users make monetary contributions, which the app calls "gifts," during their favorite users' streams.

An increasing number of Vine expats, including Doh, have turned to Live.ly to make a quick buck by talking to fans who tune in. Some rely on the app's monetization model as a source of income and argue it could one day compete with YouTube and Instagram in terms of ad dollars offered.

"Live.ly is paying my rent, paying my bills, so I don't have to worry about putting food on the table," Doh told Business Insider. "It's not traditional by any means."

2016 saw a mass exodus of stars from Vine. Over half of the app's top 1% of users stopped posting by the start of the year, according to the online data portal Statista. Since Vine announced in October that it would shut down "in the coming months," the app has bled even more users. People can still log in and download their videos from Vine as keepsakes.

It's not a total surprise Vine threw in the towel. The app faced fierce competition.

"Snapchat and Instagram have taken off on the short-form video side, YouTube has always been a giant on the longer-form side, and there are a million different services in between," Business Insider's Jeff Dunn wrote in October.

Live.ly is one of those in-between services with the most potential. But unless you're in middle school or know a child who's around that age, you've probably never heard of it.

Musical.ly, a fast-rising video network with over 150 million users, spun off the live-streaming app in June. People — mostly teens — upload 15-second videos of themselves lip-syncing, dancing, and performing comedy skits. The two apps feed each other traffic by notifying users when their favorite Musical.ly stars begin streams on Live.ly.

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Within 24 hours of launching, Live.ly jumped over 100 chart positions to No. 1 in the App Store. The company did not disclose the number of downloads to date.

Vine and Live.ly aren't one-to-one rivals. While Vine stars create carefully produced six-second bursts of content, Live.ly stars just hit record and talk at their phones. Viewers leave comments and engage with the host in real time. Streams can go on for hours. The longer the stream, the more money you're likely to make, Doh says.

Though the apps are different, Live.ly fills a void left by Vine's collapse: Young people with a smartphone and time to kill can earn a living making videos.

lively app screenshot 1

Bart Baker, the self-proclaimed king of music video parodies, has became a top-earning broadcaster on Live.ly. He cut his teeth making videos on Vine and YouTube, where he has over 8.7 million subscribers. His following on Live.ly pales in comparison, but Baker says he generates enough on the platform to cover his overhead costs.

"For some people, what I'm making off Live.ly you could live off of. If you do it every day for four hours a day, you could probably pull in 30 grand a month," Baker told Business Insider.

Cameron Dallas, the floppy-haired darling of Vine with 9.6 million followers, also made the leap to Live.ly. He's featured prominently in the app's tutorial and is an avid Musical.ly user.

The top 10 broadcasters on Live.ly made $46,000 on average over two weeks, according to data provided by Musical.ly. The average stream lasts about 30 minutes.

aaron doh

Doh does not rank among the app's top-earning broadcasters, but he still manages to support himself on gifts from fans. On a typical day, he holds between one and three sessions, each lasting about 90 minutes, and earns anywhere from $800 to $1,900.

His streams show Doh shooting the breeze with viewers and using funny voices. When a fan makes a contribution, Doh receives a notification that shows the person's username. He takes the opportunity to thank the fan aloud and sometimes follows their account back.

An analytics tool allows Doh to see his top supporters of the week. There are a few "regulars" he can count on to send money, though Doh says it's not the most stable source of income.

A few weeks ago, he made a record $1,900 from a single session.

"The funny thing was, it wasn't really different from any other live stream. It was the person who came [into the stream]," Doh said. "You get lucky with the type of people sometimes."

Live.ly sounds like an easy way for kids to blow through their weekly allowance. It's also not a sustainable method for generating income, especially compared with YouTube's pre-roll ad system.

YouTube places an ad before top creators' videos, tallies up the revenue the ad makes, and splits the profit with the creator. Live.ly users can only encourage their fans to send gifts. This week, I received a notification from one broadcaster saying they would follow the day's top contributor.

A spokesperson for Live.ly told Business Insider that the company is currently looking into additional monetization opportunities such as sponsored videos, which are common on YouTube.

Manly little girl

A video posted by Aaron Doh (@aarondoh) on Mar 15, 2016 at 9:55pm PDT on

Doh credits the engaged user base for keeping him afloat. Thanks in part to users' gifts, he was able to move to Los Angeles and start auditioning for roles in TV and movies.

According to the budding comedian, Live.ly beats other live-streaming platforms because he feels closest to his fans there. It's almost never difficult to fill a 90-minute slot.

"It's pretty crazy, but if you think about talking to your friends for an hour ... I'm talking to 100,000 people at a time," Doh said. "I definitely enjoy it."

SEE ALSO: How to use Musical.ly, the app with 150 million users that teens are obsessed with

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NOW WATCH: Vine is shutting down — check out Trump's incredible account from 2013

Business Insider is hiring an entertainment intern

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Business Insider is hiring an entertainment intern to join our growing team in winter 2017. We’re looking for someone who is obsessed with all things movies, box office, TV, music, awards shows, and more — from the latest headlines to the biggest industry developments.

We are looking for someone with knowledge of entertainment news who is also interested in the business side of the industry and what goes on behind the scenes. Ideal candidates are self-motivated and interested in smart analysis and original reporting on entertainment content.

As an intern at Business Insider, there's no getting coffee, filing, or making copies.

Our interns are an integral part of our team. Many of our current writers and editors started as interns.

BI Interns spend their time doing meaningful work: researching, writing, pitching, and producing features — even breaking news if the timing's right.

Interns are encouraged to work full-time (40 hours a week) if their schedule allows. The internship is paid.

APPLY HEREwith a resume and cover letter if this sounds like your dream internship, and specify why you're interested in working on the Entertainment team.

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The top 5 breakout artists of 2016 who you need to hear, according to Spotify

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Spotify says 2016 was a year of discovering new music and artists.

On Thursday morning, the streaming service revealed its annual list of the year's biggest artists, albums, songs, and trends across the globe.

While the most-streamed artists included familiar names like Drake and Justin Bieber, some newcomers also made an impact.

Spotify's weekly personalised playlist, Discover Weekly, was streamed over nine billion times worldwide in 2016, giving users a chance to hear music targeted to their tastes and discover new favourite artists.

These were Spotify's most-streamed new artists in 2016:

SEE ALSO: The 50 best-selling albums of all time

5. Rob $tone

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Jaylen Robinson, aka Rob $tone, is a San Diego-born rapper who went viral when he released his track "Chill Bill" as a single this year.

He is now signed with RCA and has his biggest fan base in Los Angeles, according to Spotify.



4. MadeinTYO

Born Malcom Jamaal David, MadeinTYO's named came from his Tokyo, Japan upbringing.

"Uber Everywhere," a song on his debut mixtape, went viral this year, and the Atlanta-based MC and producer was picked up by Warner. His largest fan base is in Los Angeles.



3. Anne-Marie

It's no surprise that Essex-born singer and songwriter Anne-Marie Nicholson, known simply as Anne-Marie, has her biggest fan base in London, according to Spotify.

The artist's top song, "Alarm," has been streamed over 148 million times on the service.

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The evidence is piling up that Trump will let AT&T buy Time Warner (TWX, T)

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Donald Trump

President-elect Donald Trump's transition team has assured AT&T that, contrary to Trump's campaign rhetoric, the proposed merger of AT&T and Time Warner will be treated without prejudice, according to the Financial Times.

"After talking with the president-elect’s team, AT&T executives are confident that their deal has a good chance of passing regulatory scrutiny, people informed about the conversation said," the FT wrote on Thursday.

There have been concerns that the government, particularly under Donald Trump, would move to block the $85 billion deal. Trump certainly helped give that impression.

“In an example of the power structure I’m fighting, AT&T is buying Time Warner and thus CNN — a deal we will not approve in my administration because it’s too much concentration of power in the hands of too few,” Trump had said while campaigning.

This attitude seems to have softened, especially with Trump's appointment of two former officials with favorable records on the issue to his transition team.

The FCC question

But even before these recent developments, AT&T was telling Wall Street not to worry.

At RBC's Technology, Internet, Media and Telecommunications (TIMT) Conference in New York last month, AT&T management suggested there wouldn't be any trouble with the merger.

One big reason AT&T was optimistic at the conference is because the company believes the merger won't be under the jurisdiction of the FCC.

"The only scenario in which the FCC would have jurisdiction is if Time Warner transfers certain broadcast licenses to AT&T," RBC analyst Jonathan Atkin, who viewed the presentation by AT&T's Chris Womack and Michael Black, wrote. "The company believes these licenses (primarily business radio licenses and licenses related to Time Warner’s ownership of the WPCN superstation) can be offloaded easily, obviating the need for an FCC review."

That would mean the merger would only need to clear the Department of Justice, which AT&T is optimistic about.

"The major difference between an FCC and DOJ review is that a DOJ review provides AT&T legal recourse while the FCC, if it chooses not to support the deal can defer the issue to an administrative law judge, a process that can last upwards of three years, usually resulting in the dissolution of the deal," Atkin wrote.

AT&T said it liked its odds, and expects the timeline on the merger to be 12-14 months.

SEE ALSO: AT&T will give away free Apple TVs and Fire Sticks with its new $35 streaming TV service

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Obama: 'We are going to have to guard against a rise in a crude sort of nationalism'

The 7 most shocking Scientology allegations we learned from Leah Remini's new show

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Leah Remini continues her quest to expose the truth about her former religion, Scientology, on her new series, "Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath."

With the eight-episode series, Remini set out to document the stories of alleged abuse from former Scientologists, including her own 30-year experience belonging to the organization. But the former "King of Queens" star said at the top of this week's highly rated premiere that she found out more than what she set out to find.

"When I first started filming this show, I thought I would just be documenting stories of families that were torn apart by the Church of Scientology’s policies and practices," Remini said. "But what I uncovered was much deeper and darker than I ever expected. What you’re about to see sheds light on the truth of what’s really going on with this church, a church that I promoted, defended, and believed in most of my life."

The premiere episode focused on Amy Scobee, a former high-ranking Scientology executive assigned to the religion's Celebrity Centre. After leaving the organization, she reunited with her mother, Bonny Elliott, and defied the religion's rule of disconnecting from family and friends who are labeled enemies of the church.

Scientology allegedly tried to get the show pulled from airing, which led to Remini demanding the church pay her $1.5 million in damages. The church called her request "extortion" and maintains that the stories of its alleged abuses in the series are false.

Here are the seven most shocking revelations about alleged happenings in Scientology from the show's premiere episode:

 

 

 

SEE ALSO: Leah Remini's new Scientology expose TV show has giant ratings

DON'T MISS: Scientology created a website to bash Leah Remini and her new TV show of 'liars'

1. Remini's eventual split from Scientology began at Tom Cruise’s wedding to Katie Holmes.

In November of 2006, Remini attended the lavish wedding of Scientology "messiah" Cruise and the former "Dawson's Creek" star. While at the wedding, she realized that Shelly Miscavige, Scientology leader David Miscavige's wife, wasn't at the wedding. That made Remini curious, so she said she innocently asked about Shelly's whereabouts and got a very harsh response.

"In my mind, I’m a parishioner but I’m also just a human being asking where another human being was," she said on the show. "The response that I didn’t have f---ing rank to be asking about a human being, it spoke to the person in me that doesn’t like to be bullied. And that's what started me questioning the church more and more."



2. When parishioners are being interrogated for bad behavior, they pay for the sessions.

While Remini told of being interrogated by Scientology officials for questioning the faith, she mentioned that Scientology charges the members hundreds of dollars per hour while in interrogation sessions.



3. Recruiting celebrities to Scientology is one of the faith's highest missions.

"Scientology concentrates on collecting celebrities," Scobee said.

She said that the goal was to make celebrities "walking success stories of Scientology."

Remini added, "The Church of Scientology is a business. And like any business, they like to have a celebrity selling it."



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Instagram revealed who has the most followers in 2016 — here are the top 10

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Instagram has released the numbers for the top-followed accounts of 2016, and pop star Selena Gomez has snagged the top spot with 103 million followers, unseating Taylor Swift (93.6 million).

Women dominated the top spots, taking the first five spots and eight of the top 10. Cristiano Ronaldo (No. 6) and Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson (No. 8) were the only men who made the list.

As to whose star is rising the fastest, Gomez and Ronaldo gained the most followers in 2016, at 50 million and 42 million respectively, according to People.

Here is the full list:

SEE ALSO: Instagram finally revealed who has the most followers in the world — here are the top 5

No. 10: Kendall Jenner — 68.9 million followers



No. 9: Nicki Minaj — 69 million followers



No. 8: Dwayne Johnson — 71 million followers



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

How one of Led Zeppelin's greatest hits was made

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Below is an excerpt from Marc Myers' new book "Anatomy of a Song: The Oral History of 45 Iconic Hits That Changed Rock, R&B, and Pop" (Grove Press), which you can buy on Amazon. In it, Myers talks to Led Zeppelin member Jimmy Page and collaborators about the making of one of the band's hits that changed rock history, "Whole Lotta Love." Released in November 1969, the song helped kick off a wave of more experimental rock on radio.

In 1968, record companies were becoming more comfortable letting unproven rock bands experiment on albums. In prior years, only seasoned musicians and proven moneymakers like the Beatles, the Beach Boys, the Rolling Stones, and Bob Dylan had that opportunity. The rest had to focus on tightly controlled singles, with albums functioning merely as collections of those short records. Starting in 1968, the album began to be viewed by a growing number of labels as a separate creative platform for rock bands, particularly those with electric guitarists who could wail on longer solos. There were two reasons for the abrupt shift. First, the rising sales of stereo systems were creating an appetite for rock albums. Second, a growing number of stereo FM radio stations were promoting rock albums as a more sophisticated and better-sounding format than pop singles.

Unveiled in the early 1930s, FM radio didn’t catch on until the early 1960s. Up till then, most U.S. radio manufacturers didn’t bother adding the FM band on their units, since consumers were perfectly content with AM radio. But when car companies began offering the FM band on the radios of new models in the early 1960s, AM stations started investing in FM operations. As FM activity picked up, the Federal Communications Commission insisted in 1964 that FM stations be devoted to original programming, not the duplication of AM broadcasts. The turning point for FM radio came in the late 1960s, when Japan began exporting inexpensive stereo components to the U.S. Among the electronics arriving in stores were solid-state integrated stereo receivers that featured both AM and FM radio bands. The availability of FM radio on many new stereo systems led to the rise of stereo stores and the proliferation of FM radio stations, particularly near college campuses. But since FM radio was so new in 1968, stations had trouble attracting advertisers, leaving a glut of airtime to fill. Many stations allowed program hosts to play whatever they wished, including long album tracks and even entire sides.

By 1969, with the consumer market for rock and soul albums expanding rapidly, record companies invested in bands that could fill the longer format imaginatively. One group that benefited from the shift was Led Zeppelin. After signing a major deal with Atlantic Records, the British band toured the U.S. in late 1968 and early ’69 before releasing Led Zeppelin, its first album. The band then embarked on two more arduous North American tours in 1969, releasing Led Zeppelin II in October. The album opened with “Whole Lotta Love,” a song that revolutionized the sound of the rock vocal and electric guitar. The album went to No. 1 on the Billboard pop chart for seven weeks. After “Whole Lotta Love” was released as a single in November 1969, it reached No. 4 on Billboard’s pop chart, and in 2007 it was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.

Interviews with JIMMY PAGE (Led Zeppelin guitarist and cowriter), GEORGE CHKIANTZ (recording engineer), and EDDIE KRAMER (final-mix engineer)

JIMMY PAGE: I came up with the guitar riff for “Whole Lotta Love” in the summer of 1968, on my houseboat along the Thames in Pangbourne, England. I suppose my early love for big intros by rockabilly guitarists was an inspiration, but as soon as I developed the riff, I knew it was strong enough to drive the entire song, not just open it. When I played the riff for the band in my living room several weeks later during rehearsals for our first album, the excitement was immediate and collective. We felt the riff was addictive, like a forbidden thing.

By January 1969, we cracked America wide open with the release of our first album and our first U.S. tour. I had this avant-garde master plan for “Whole Lotta Love” and could hear the construction coming together in my head. From the start, I didn’t want “Whole Lotta Love” — or any of our songs — to be a single. I had been a session musician since the early 1960s, as had [bassist] John Paul Jones. We had recorded on hundreds of singles and hated the abbreviated, canned format. I also knew that stereo FM radio was emerging in America and playing albums. I wanted to develop our songs emotionally, beyond just lengthy solos.

Our label, Atlantic Records, got it, but there was really very little risk on their end. John Paul and I knew our way around a recording studio, so we weren’t going to waste studio time or produce something that wasn’t cohesive. More important, I wanted to expand our approach to ensure that our album wouldn’t be chopped up into singles for AM radio. To make sure that didn’t happen, I produced “Whole Lotta Love” — and our entire second album — as an uneditable expression, a work that had to be aired on stereo FM to make sense.

During the band’s rehearsals in early ’69 for our second album, “Whole Lotta Love” sounded strong enough to open it, so I wanted to record the song first. In April, we went into London’s Olympic Studios and cut “Whole Lotta Love” with engineer George Chkiantz, who had recorded Jimi Hendrix there.

GEORGE CHKIANTZ: There were two studios at Olympic — one large and one small. Management had installed our sixteen-track recorder in the small one with hopes of luring rock bands in there and away from the larger sixty-by-forty-foot space with twenty-eight-foot ceilings, where we recorded mostly classical works and film scores. But Jimmy chose the larger one — even though it had only an eight-track recorder. He wanted the extra space so the drums could be miked properly for stereo.

I was a relative novice then, and what Jimmy wanted was a stretch, given Olympic’s traditional way of miking drums. So I invented a new way. I didn’t mike the snare, since that would have reduced the size and space of the drum sound. Instead, I used a stereo mike on an eight-foot boom above the drums, along with two distant side mikes to give the tom-toms edge, and a huge AKG D30 mike positioned about two feet from the bass drum. Jimmy knew that high-end mikes didn’t have to be up against an instrument to maximize the sound.

PAGE: For the song to work as this panoramic audio experience, I needed Bonzo [drummer John Bonham] to really stand out, so that every stick stroke sounded clear and you could really feel them. If the drums were recorded just right, we could lay in everything else.

CHKIANTZ: To make the drums sound impressive, I placed them on a platform about one and a half feet off the floor. The floor at Olympic was made of wood, not cement, which meant I needed to keep any drum movement from transmitting rumble across the wood floor to other microphones. When we began taping, [lead singer] Robert Plant sang in the studio, but eventually he moved to the vocal booth to better isolate his voice. At one point, Jimmy began fooling around with a theremin [an electronic instrument] that he brought to the studio. We worked it in when the song shifted into a weird, free form.

PAGE: The theremin’s eerie sound begged for more experimentation. To get my guitar to sound surreal, I detuned it and pulled on the strings for a far-out effect. I was playing a Sunburst 1958 Les Paul Standard guitar I had bought from [James Gang guitarist] Joe Walsh in San Francisco when we were out there on tour. The Standard had this tonal versatility, allowing me to get a blistering high pitch. Robert’s vocal was just as extreme. He kept gaining confi-
dence during the session and gave it everything he had. His vocals, like my solos, were about performance. He was pushing to see what he could get out of himself. We were performing for each other, almost competitively.

When we toured the U.S. again in May and June, we took the rough-mix tapes along with us in a large trunk. In Los Angeles, we’d work at studios like Mirror, Mystic, and A&M to overdub material. In New York, we worked at Mayfair, Groove, and Juggy studios. Today, digital files are e-mailed all over the place, but back then you actually had to take your tapes if you wanted to work on the road.

When we were ready to mix all the songs for the album, I wanted Eddie Kramer to do it. Eddie had engineered several of the album’s songs from scratch in London, and he had worked with us in the American studios. He also had engineered Jimi Hendrix’s albums. But by the summer Eddie had relocated to the States, so when we were in New York in August, we called him. “Whole Lotta Love” was all there on tape, but it needed a big, polished mix for the album.

EDDIE KRAMER: The first time I heard “Whole Lotta Love” was in August ’69, when Jimmy and I started working on the album’s final mix at New York’s A&R Recording. Jimmy and I had first met in 1964, when he was playing on the Kinks’ first album [Kinks] at Pye Studios and I was the assistant engineer. I also had heard Led Zeppelin early on in ’68, when John Paul Jones played me an acetate of Led Zeppelin’s first album, before it was released. I was blown away — it sounded so hard and heavy.

In New York, the recording console at A&R was fairly primitive. It had only twelve channels, with old-fashioned rotary dials to control track levels instead of sliding faders, and there were just two pan pots [control knobs] to send the sound from left to right channels. But as Jimmy and I listened to the mix, something unexpected came up.

At the point where the song breaks and Robert slowly wails, “Way down inside . . . woman . . . you need . . . love,” Jimmy and I heard this faint voice singing the lyric before Robert did on the master vocal track. Apparently Robert had done two different vocals, recording them on two different tracks. Even when I turned the volume down all the way on the track that we didn’t want, his powerful voice was bleeding through the console and onto the master.

Some people today still think the faint voice was a pre-echo, that we added it on purpose for effect. It wasn’t—it was an accident. Once Jimmy and I realized we had to live with it on the master, I looked at Jimmy, he looked at me, and we both reached for the reverb knob at the same time and cracked up laughing. Our instincts were the same—to douse the faint, intruding voice in reverb so it sounded part of the master plan.

PAGE: I hadn’t heard anything like that before, and loved it. I was always looking for things like that when I recorded. That’s the beauty of old recording equipment. Robert’s faraway voice sounded otherworldly, like a spirit anticipating the vocal he was about to deliver.

KRAMER: By adding reverb, we made his faint voice more dynamic, and it became part of rock history. I also used the pan pots on Jimmy’s guitar solo to fling it from side to side, so it would move from one speaker to another. I loved the sonic imagery, and I like to think of my mixes as stereophonic paintings.

On the break after the first chorus, where the song gets quiet and we hear Bonzo’s cymbals and percussion and Jimmy’s distortion, Jimmy and I went nuts on the knobs. We had eight dials controlling the levels on eight individual tracks, so we rehearsed the choreography of what we were going to do to create the far-out sounds. Then we did it and printed the result onto the master stereo reel. Because Jimmy was a studio brat, he really understood how we could push the limits. When you have limitations in the studio, you go for it and stretch your imagination.

PAGE: Some people said later that “Whole Lotta Love” was based on Willie Dixon’s “You Need Love” [recorded by Muddy Waters and released in 1962] and the Small Faces’ “You Need Loving” [released in 1966]. My riff — the basis for the entire song — sounds nothing like either of them. Robert had referenced the Dixon lyrics because with my riff, they felt right. This eventually forced us to give Dixon a cocredit on our song. But if you take Robert’s vocal out, there’s no musical reference to either song.

When we were done, “Whole Lotta Love” ran 5:33, which was great since at the time it was too long to edit for a single. So Atlantic released the album version as a single. We loved that. But soon after, Atlantic cut the single down to 3:12 to satisfy AM radio. Weeks before its release, they sent me an acetate of the edit. I played it once, hated it, and never listened to the short version again.

"ANATOMY OF A SONG: The Oral History of 45 Iconic Hits That Changed Rock, R&B, and Pop" © 2016 by Marc Myers. A version of this chapter first appeared in The Wall Street Journal as part of the column “Anatomy of a Song,” 2011–2016. Reprinted with the permission of the publisher, Grove Press, an imprint of Grove Atlantic, Inc. All rights reserved.

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NOW WATCH: Watch the trailer for the new Martin Scorsese film that took over 20 years to make


Here's the real cost of the '12 days of Christmas'

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Your true love will need to raise his or her budget for your Christmas gifts this year.

PNC released its annual Christmas Price Index on Friday, and it showed that prices for items from the Christmas carol "The Twelve Days of Christmas" rose by 0.7% from last year. That's slightly up from the 0.6% pace in 2015.

The cost of everything on the list, from the partridge to the drummers, totaled $34,363.49, an increase of a few hundred dollars from last year. The "core" index, excluding volatile swan prices, rose 1.1% to $21,238.49.

But as the carol goes, all of the gifts except the drummers are counted multiple times, bringing the cost up to $156,507.88.

PNC has published this index for over 30 years based on current prices of the 12 gifts in the carol.

It does it in part to entertain its clients, and you, as things slow down over the holidays. It doesn't expect this to be taken too seriously.

But the index is based on prices of the real items. For example, prices for geese are sourced from a waterfowl farm, and PNC asks a nursery in New Jersey for the cost of pear trees.

PNC found that it was mainly a scarcity of turtledoves that drove the cost of Christmas higher. Wage growth across the economy made pipers and drummers more expensive. Though it has been a wild year for gold, the price of gold rings held steady.

Here's PNC's full breakdown of the 12 days. You can check out a fun infographic here.

Screen Shot 2016 12 02 at 9.32.52 AMThe real economic data in fact shows inflation pressures both within and outside the US. Commodity prices are moving back up after tumbling during the past few years; earlier this week, a deal by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to limit oil production lifted prices back above $50 a barrel.

Also, the US is getting some wage inflation. Average hourly earnings rose in October at the fastest annualized rate since the recession. Though the November report released Friday showed a pullback, the trend has crept higher this year.

And, of course, the 12 days of Christmas are more expensive this year.

SEE ALSO: The unofficial Goldman Sachs gift guide for 2016

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Pandora stock popped over 12% on a report that it's willing to sell itself (P)

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Tim Westergren

Internet-radio pioneer Pandora saw its stock soar Friday after a report from CNBC said the company was open to selling itself.

CNBC reported that Pandora was "open to engaging in talks with longtime suitor SiriusXM," citing sources.

Pandora stock was at one point up over 12% on Friday morning.

The CEO of Liberty Media, which controls Sirius XM, reportedly made an informal offer to buy Pandora earlier this year for $15 per share (Pandora is currently trading at around $13 per share). That offer valued the company at over $3.4 billion, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Pandora is a company in transition, on the brink of launching an on-demand product to compete with the likes of Spotify and Apple Music. That product is scheduled to arrive on December 6.

Pandora has endured on-and-off rumors that it is for sale, but many took the installing of founder Tim Westergren in the CEO spot, in March, as a sign that the company was not actively looking to sell itself. But some have wanted Pandora to sell for awhile. There has been pressure, particularly from Pandora's activist shareholder, Corvex, for the company to consider a sale.

In September, SunTrust analysts led by Robert S. Peck explored who the potential buyers for Pandora would be. Here's what they came up with at the time:

  • Liberty Media/SiriusXM: "Liberty’s CEO has been reported by CNBC to have acknowledged the benefits of a P/Sirius merger and was reported by the Wall Street Journal to have made an informal $15 offer for P. Liberty Media is 65% owner of Sirius XM. Further, P’s activist shareholder has publicly endorsed a tie-up between P and Liberty/SiriusXM."
  • Spotify: "A potential merger of Spotify and Pandora has also been discussed in the press, including Forbes. We believe synergies would be substantial as it relates to product development, marketing, salesforce, content delivery, royalty tracking/reporting, back office, demographics, data, local, in-auto, upsell, and programmatic. A reverse merger could provide Spotify an alternative to an IPO and a liquidity event for its investors."
  • Others: "The suitors that make most sense to us are mobile-first and acquisitive with an ad business and amenable to an inside plus feet-on-the-street salesforce model. We believe this includes Verizon and to a lesser extent AT&T."

SEE ALSO: Instagram revealed who has the most followers in 2016 — here are the top 10

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NOW WATCH: These size comparisons show the true scale of enormous things

Despite what’s going on in Westworld, Neil deGrasse Tyson says we shouldn’t worry about killer robots

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Movies would have you believe that killer robots are the inevitable future of technology gone awry — but Neil deGrasse Tyson isn’t afraid, here’s why.

Produced by Kevin ReillyDarren Weaver, and Kamelia Angelova. Animations by Rob Ludacer.

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StarTalk Radio is a podcast and radio program hosted by astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson, where comic co-hosts, guest celebrities, and scientists discuss astronomy, physics, and everything else about life in the universe. Follow StarTalk Radio on Twitter, and watch StarTalk Radio "Behind the Scenes" on YouTube.

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Why 2016 was one of the greatest years for horror movies ever

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the witch

Whether it was big studio releases or smaller indies, the horror genre thrived this year.

Though Disney has taken most of the box-office headlines in 2016 as it nears an industry record of $7 billion earned worldwide in the year, the scrappier horror genre made close to $600 million domestically, according to Box Office Mojo. Not only did several titles find near-universal critical praise, like “The Witch” and “Green Room,” others like “The Conjuring 2” and “Don’t Breathe” hit No. 1 on their opening weekends.

In an era when the conventional thinking is that impossible-to-miss blockbusters are the only things to motivate audiences to get to movie theaters, horror consistently still brings in the crowds. Partly for its unique stories, but also because people still love to go to the movies to be scared.

dont breathe sony“I think horror in particular is one genre that people really feel like it's worth going out and seeing with a big group,” Jason Blum, head of the successful horror production company Blumhouse Productions, told Business Insider. “In some ways horror is not falling off the way other theatrical genres are where we are watching them more in different places other than movie theaters.”

And the big demo leading the charge? Women. Though the trend has been building in the last decade as horror films have cast female leads often in empowering roles, “Lights Out” producer Lawrence Grey saw an increase this year.

“It used to be 50 percent of ticket sales were female. Now it's ticking to 60 and above,” Grey told Business Insider earlier this year.

But there’s also the hunger for original stories. Throughout the year, horror movies have been giving moviegoers something different from Marvel superheros and lovable Pixar characters. That ingenuity has ranged from the more ridiculous, like Blake Lively as a surfer matching wits with a great white shark in “The Shallows,” to the macabre “The Witch,” in which a 1630s New England family falls victim to the sinister unknown.

“I do imagine part of why we're getting these great horrors — going back to ‘Let the Right One In’ and ‘The Babadook’ and ‘It Follows’ — I imagine other filmmakers are thinking like me,” “The Witch” director Robert Eggers said. “I want to make something good and personal, but it needs to be in a genre to get made right now.”

the eyes of my mother magnet releasingThat’s what led director Nicolas Pesce to use horror to make his feature debut “The Eyes of My Mother” (opening in theaters on Friday). Looking at a lonely woman consumed by her homicidal desires, Pesce gives the movie a terrifying setting by shooting it in black-and-white and showing a whole lot of gore.

“I loved movies like ‘Night of the Hunter’ and ‘Psycho’ so that to me is what horror movies are, this Gothic noir,” Pesce said. “But at the core of it, they are all a character study of a dark person and these movies use the horror set pieces to emphasize whatever actual drama is going on.”

But director Karyn Kusama, who made the terrifying dinner-party movie “The Invitation” this year, also believes the success of horror today comes from what’s going on in the world.

“I’m not going to lie, I think we live in horrifying times,” she said. “And horror offers us a window into those states of vulnerability that a lot of other genres can't or won’t. Horror movies are stepping in some cultural way to a role that I think is desperately needed in pop culture, which is access to our emotional lives and fears.” 

Though horror is doing as well as ever, Jason Blum feels the last thing he and his colleagues in the genre can do is be complacent.

“I think the movie business is guilty of looking in the rearview mirror, looking at past successes for future decisions,” Blum said. “What I try to not do myself, and I remind everyone at my company, when horror movies have a little run of success, you have to stop the impulse to try and copy what's worked and encourage the instinct of trying new things.”

SEE ALSO: Jessica Chastain talks ambition and male costars who are paid "seven times" their salary

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NOW WATCH: Mickey Mouse is the secret force behind modern copyright law

Here's how many people are watching one of Netflix's most expensive shows yet — and it's not great

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gilmore girls revival netflix

There was a lot of hype surrounding two of Netflix's newest original offerings, the "Gilmore Girls" revival and the high-priced "The Crown," but are people actually watching them?

According to SymphonyAM, whose app listens to sounds from users' televisions and takes that data to extrapolate viewership, the shows had very mixed results.

SymphonyAM measured how many adults aged 18 to 49, the demographic most desired by advertisers, watched Netflix's originals on the day they premiered and the three following days. It then ranked them according to those measurements.

The ranking is great news for "Gilmore Girls," which shot to No. 3 on the list with nearly 5 million viewers and a 3.59 rating in the 18-to-49 audience. While "Fuller House" and the fourth season of "Orange Is the New Black" still rank higher than "Gilmore Girls," first and second respectively, the revival beat Marvel's "Luke Cage," the second season of "Daredevil," and the cult sci-fi hit "Stranger Things."

the crown netflix reviewFor "The Crown," the picture is less regal. It ranked No. 22 against higher-rated Netflix originals with just a .43 18-to-49 rating and 590,000 adult viewers under the age of 50. It's joined at the bottom of the list by digital thriller series "Black Mirror" and comedy "Grace and Frankie."

There are a few caveats to this data. First, Netflix has said that SymphonyAM's numbers aren't accurate.

Second, Netflix's business model is based on subscriptions, not advertising, so the 18-to-49 ratings really just place their series in context with the broadcast networks. For example, a series like "Grace and Frankie" may have more viewers in the older demographics.

And third, Netflix's originals are offered internationally and SymphonyAM only measures US viewership. So, Netflix's expensive show, "The Crown," which follows the life of young Queen Elizabeth, may have bigger audiences overseas.

Take a look at SymphonyAM's Netflix show rankings below:

netflix rankings Nov 2016

SEE ALSO: How 'Gilmore Girls' finally landed its Netflix revival after one star had 'given up hope'

DON'T MISS: Dave Chappelle is reportedly making $60 million for his Netflix comedy specials

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NOW WATCH: Netflix is giving part of the ‘Mythbusters’ team their own show — here’s the trailer

The strangest-looking video game in years just got a new trailer — starring two Hollywood heavyweights

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What is "Death Stranding," beyond a bizarre name for a gorgeous and creepy-looking new video game? Your guess is as good as ours. 

Death Stranding

Here's what we do know:

  • The game is being created by "Metal Gear" series creative lead Hideo Kojima, a legendary character in the video game business.
  • It stars Norman Reedus, of "The Walking Dead" fame. He's the main character. Mads Mikkelsen, a Danish actor best known as the bad guy from "Casino Royale," appears to be the antagonist.
  • The game is a collaboration between Hideo Kojima and famed film director Guillermo del Toro. It's being funded by Sony, which means the game is only coming to the PlayStation 4.

If you noticed that the gentleman shown above looks a lot like Guillermo del Toro, that's because it's definitely him. Kojima and del Toro were working on a project together — a reboot of the "Silent Hill" franchise, from Japanese publisher Konami — when Kojima and Konami had a falling out. He was ousted from Konami and from the helm of the franchise he created ("Metal Gear"). 

Death Stranding

"Death Stranding" is a new version of Kojima's collaboration with Guillermo del Toro and Norman Reedus, with an entirely new franchise and funding from Sony. Kojima's an independent contractor with his own independent game studio — also named Kojima Productions — and this is the studio's first project.

What the game is actually about is unclear. In the most recent trailer, del Toro's character carries a baby in a glass jar; he and the baby appear to be human, while everyone else shown appears to be some form of monster. A tank rolls by with slithering tentacles, followed by an army of skeleton soldiers in war fatigues. Propeller planes fly overhead, followed by trails of black tentacles. It's pretty gross!

The game was first teased earlier in 2016 at the video game industry's annual trade show, E3. A second, longer trailer debuted on December 1 at The Game Awards, a now-annual video game award show. Kojima accepted an award for "Industry Icon" — a stand-in for the award he was supposed to receive in 2015.

Death Stranding

After accepting the award, Kojima took a cue from the late Apple CEO Steve Jobs — "One more thing," he announced with a smile. "I brought an early gift for the audience. Please enjoy." 

Here's that full video:

SEE ALSO: This new horror game starring a 'Walking Dead' star looks insane

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NOW WATCH: We went inside an Amazon warehouse on Cyber Monday

Trevor Noah touches on the biggest issue surrounding the Dakota Access Pipeline — and it's centuries old

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Daily Show DAPL Comedy Central

On Thursday’s episode of “The Daily Show,” host Trevor Noah brought attention to the Dakota Access Pipeline protest, which has found more mainstream news attention since the end of the presidential election season.

Since April, the Native American Standing Rock Sioux Tribe in North Dakota have been protesting the completion of an interstate oil pipeline going through their reservation, which is sacred land. The tribe and protestors are also worried that the pipeline could leak and contaminate the Missouri River, which is their main water source.

The concerns are legitimate, especially given the fact that the CEO of the company constructing the pipeline, Energy Transfer Partners’ Kelcy Warren, has been shown in a video stating that while the pipeline is safe, "human error" leads to leaks.

Noah brings up one of the biggest issues with the pipeline to begin with: Its original path was to go underneath the city of Bismarck — which is predominantly white — but when concerns were raised there of potential leaks it was rerouted to go beneath the Standing Rock reservation.

“That’s right,” says Noah, “this pipeline is NSFW: Not safe for whites.”

“It’s just interesting to me, that the people with the longest history of getting f---ed over in American are the ones who are getting f---ed over,” said Noah, referring to Native Americans.

“America has spent centuries moving native peoples from place to place,” Noah went on to say. “Maybe just this one time, you can be the ones who move.”

Watch the entire segment below:

SEE ALSO: Why 2016 was one of the greatest years for horror movies ever

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AT&T's new $35 streaming TV package has been plagued by technical problems (T)

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directv now

Amidst all the fanfare surrounding this week's launch of DirecTV Now, AT&T's $35-a-month streaming TV package, one general concern flew under the radar: How would the service perform technically?

In the first couple of days, the answer has been poorly, for the most part.

CNET noted that DirecTV Now's Twitter account was dealing with a bunch of complaints on launch day, and that its forum was racking up posts (3,000-plus and counting). AT&T said it was just a launch-day problem, and that engineers had resolved the problem by day two.

But multiple Business Insider staffers, using both Apple TV and Fire TV devices, have continued to see channels stall and drop repeatedly. The bugs have resulted in a pretty awful time watching TV, though none has had the same issues on mobile.

Not ready for primetime

If you've never used a live-TV streaming product, this might surprise you. From a technical standpoint, Netflix is fine, Amazon is fine, Hulu is fine — so you might be forgiven for thinking DirecTV would be fine as well. But live streaming TV products have often been plagued with technical failures.

DirecTV Now's primary rival right now is Dish's Sling TV, which also promises your favorite cable or satellite channels delivered over the internet, wherever you are. This summer, after months of testing Sling TV, I wrote that while I had a largely positive experience with it, the product suffered from repeated technical failures, at the exact moments I really didn't want it to. Channels would get intolerably fuzzy or cease to work, particularly at high-traffic moments like the NBA playoffs or the "Game of Thrones" premiere.

Sling TV was a bargain. I loved the amount of channels I got for the price, and I feel similarly about DirecTV Now. (I even constructed the ideal cord-cutter bundle for myself at around $63 per month using DirecTV Now). But if AT&T doesn't nail the technical side, I simply cannot recommend it as a complete substitute for live TV. You want your streaming TV service to work every time you turn on your TV — like cable, or even Netflix — period.

Neither Sling TV nor DirecTV Now has showed me that yet. And it's not too much to ask.

SEE ALSO: AT&T's new $35 streaming TV package is the key to ditching your $100-plus cable bill and still watching whatever you want

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NOW WATCH: Here's what we know about Trump's pick for Defense Secretary: Gen. James 'Mad Dog' Mattis

A 'Fuller House' star makes his directing debut on the new season, and the creator was 'nervous'

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Getty Images dave coulier direting fuller house season 2 netflix

"Full House" star Dave Coulier made his directorial debut on the second season of Netflix's spin-off "Fuller House," show creator Jeff Franklin told Business Insider.

Coulier, who starred on the original ABC comedy series as Uncle Joey Gladstone and guest-stars on at least three episodes of the upcoming sophomore season, directed one of the biggest episodes of the new run: the Christmas episode.

"He really did his homework and he did a great job," Franklin said of Coulier's work. "He gets an A+. He really did a wonderful job. Everyone felt he was so good with the actors."

In order to prepare for his directing debut, Coulier shadowed a couple of the franchise's veteran directors, Rich Correll (whose credits also include Disney Channel's "Jessie" and "K.C. Undercover") and "Full House's" original stage manager-turned-director Mark Cendrowski ("Big Bang Theory," "Dr. Ken").

Helming an episode that can cost millions to produce is a high-level job, so Franklin admitted that he did have some reservations. But Coulier aced the gig.

"We were a little nervous, because Dave’s a big kid," Franklin said of the comedian. "But he really stepped up, took it very seriously, and did a great job."

Franklin said that Coulier would be welcomed back to direct another episode if Netflix renews the show for a third season. And as for other actors directing on the series, Franklin said there are currently no plans.

"We haven't heard from anyone else yet," the producer said. "But who knows. That's something that actors like to do in later years in a series in order to flex some other muscles. So, yeah, that could happen."

"Fuller House" returns for its second season December 9 on Netflix.

SEE ALSO: Here's how many people are watching one of Netflix's most expensive shows yet — and it's not great

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NOW WATCH: Netflix is giving part of the ‘Mythbusters’ team their own show — here’s the trailer

These are the top 50 movies of the year, according to Google (GOOG, GOOGL)

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Star Trek Beyond

Google has compiled the top movies of the year and it's confirmed: 2016 was another great year for superhero films.

The year's top films included "Captain America: Civil War," "Deadpool," and "Batman v Superman" — which actually made the list twice — as well as other action films like "Spectre" and "Star Trek Beyond." 

Google put together its list of the top 50 movies based on the most popular content worldwide on the Google Play store. Not all the movies on this list were released in 2016 — some came out at the end of 2015. 

Here are the 50 films that dominated our screens throughout the year. 

50. "The Boss"



49. "The Conjuring 2"



48. "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows"



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The 25 hottest TV shows around the world right now

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The Walking Dead

There may finally be a way to rank TV shows across all platforms.

Parrot Analytics has developed a tool to measure demand for shows, considering factors like viewing (where data is available), peer-to-peer sharing, social media chatter, viewer-generated ratings, and more. The firm shared with us an exclusive list of the hottest shows around the world from November 1-28.

AMC's "The Walking Dead" was on top of the pile, scoring higher than ever after the provocative beginning to its seventh season.

HBO finished strong with "Game of Thrones" and "Westworld" at two and three.

Then there are a bunch of US network shows, many of which are no doubt streamed on Netflix and the like. A striking six of them are based on DC Comics characters—"The Flash" at 4, "Lucifer" at 7, "Arrow" at 8, "Gotham" at 9, "Legends of Tomorrow" at 13, and "Supergirl" at 20. Marvel's "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." sneaks in at 21.

The only Asian series on the list were Korean variety show "Running Man" at 15 and Japanese animations "Naruto: Shippuden" at 16 and "One Piece" at 18.

The only digital original series was Netflix's "Black Mirror" at 24.

These rankings, of course, rely on often tangential data, crunched with a black-box algorithm, but they may be the best we have. Parrot has generated plenty of buzz in the industry, announced partnerships with the likes of BBC and Fox, and made sharp predictions like how Netflix originals would flop in Japan.

Screen Shot 2016 12 02 at 10.29.49 AM

Here's the top 25 globally for Nov. 1-28:

1. "The Walking Dead" with 8.0 million demand expressions and 30% growth since October.

AMC's zombie series won by a long shot, thanks to a ton of social media talk following the provocative opening of season seven in October. Apparently, it's a global phenomenon.

the walking dead2. "Game of Thrones" with 5.1 million demand expressions and -4% growth since October.

HBO's blockbuster is near the top despite its latest season ending five months ago. The show scores particularly high on peer-to-peer streaming during the off-season.

3. "Westworld" with 4.9 million demand expressions and 42% growth since October.

HBO's newest hit started strong in October and got even stronger in November.

4. "The Flash" with 4.7 million demand expressions and 17% growth since October.

5. "The Big Bang Theory" with 3.9 million demand expressions and 5% growth since October.

6. "Pretty Little Liars" with 3.4 million demand expressions and 5% growth since October.

The network teen drama is, as we've already reported, very popular on Netflix.

pretty little liars social media7. "Lucifer" with 2.9 million demand expressions and 21% growth since October.

8. "Arrow" with 2.7 million demand expressions and 19% growth since October.

9. "Gotham" with 2.6 million demand expressions and 3% growth since October.

10. "Quantico" with 2.5 million demand expressions and 3% growth since October.

11. "The Vampire Diaries" with 2.2 million demand expressions and 31% growth since October.

The Vampire Diaries12. "Suits" with 2.1 million demand expressions and -20% growth since October.

13. "DC's Legends of Tomorrow" with 2.1 million demand expressions and 71% growth since October.

14. "American Horror Story" with 2.1 million demand expressions and -25% growth since October.

15. "Running Man" with 2.1 million demand expressions and 0% growth since October.

16. "Naruto: Shippuden" with 2.0 million demand expressions and -6% growth since October.

naruto_shippuden_49298617. "How To Get Away With Murder" with 1.9 million demand expressions and 20% growth since October.

18. "One Piece" with 1.9 million demand expressions and 7% growth since October.

19. "Supernatural" with 1.9 million demand expressions and 15% growth since October.

20. "Supergirl" with 1.8 million demand expressions and 42% growth since October.

21. "Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." with 1.8 million demand expressions and -3% growth since October.

agents of shield 22. "The Blacklist" with 1.8 million demand expressions and 6% growth since October.

23. "Shameless" with 1.7 million demand expressions and 33% growth since October.

24. "Black Mirror" with 1.7 million demand expressions and 40% growth since October.

25. "Grey's Anatomy" with 1.7 million demand expressions and -4% growth since October.

SEE ALSO: The 20 most popular shows on Netflix

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GameStop employee on the sold-out NES Classic: 'Nintendo is dropping the ball'

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Nintendo's $60 NES Classic Edition console is adorable, affordable, and a genuinely great gift this holiday season. There's only one problem: It's nearly impossible to find.

NES Classic Edition

That's understandable: It's just $60, it's got 30 classic NES games (from "Super Mario Bros." to "The Legend of Zelda", and more), and it's a near-perfect replica of the first ever Nintendo game system (the Nintendo Entertainment System, or "NES). This thing is a no-brainer purchase for people who grew up with Nintendo, for kids who never experienced it, or anyone who likes sweet gadgets.

Just look at it!

NES classic edition

Nintendo promised a "steady flow" of new systems "through the holiday shopping season and into the new year" back in mid-November when the console launched. A company representative offered the same quote to Business Insider on Friday afternoon when we asked about the re-stocking effort.

GameStop is, by far, the largest brick-and-mortar game retailer in the world, with over 6,000 stores. It's one of the primary stores selling the NES Classic Edition, alongside Amazon, Walmart, Best Buy, and Target. From calls we made to over a dozen GameStop locations across the United States — from Connecticut to Texas, Minnesota to California — units are trickling out in some regions, and not arriving at all in others.

One Brooklyn area GameStop picked up the phone by saying, "Thank you for calling GameStop. Sorry, we don't have the NES Classic Edition. How can I help you?"

Nintendo Store

Similarly, Amazon, Best Buy, Walmart, and Target are all sold out and have been since launch. Re-sellers plague their online storefronts, charging $200 or more for the $60 console.

Of the GameStop stores we called, most had received just two or three units since the initial shipment on November 11. Several associates said their stores received zero units since launch, and every associate we spoke with said they were receiving dozens of calls every day with people looking for the system. 

Of the stores that did receive new units, they uniformly said that the units sold out immediately. One GameStop associate even said, "Nintendo's dropping the ball." His New York City-area store had received zero replenishment since launch, he said.

Several store associates suggested checking in frequently by phone, and one said they'd been trying their best to tip off customers on upcoming shipments. No one suggested going on eBay, thankfully — systems are selling in the $150 - $200 range:

eBay

There is one other option, should you live in or near New York City: the Nintendo Store in Rockefeller Center. The store's Twitter account has been tweeting out availability. 

And even then, at Nintendo's own store, supplies are limited.

Good luck, shoppers!

SEE ALSO: How to find the new $60 miniature Nintendo console that's selling out everywhere

DON'T MISS: Nintendo just released a brand-new $60 game system — here's what we know

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Unboxing the Nintendo NES Classic Edition everyone's going crazy for

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