Netflix is betting big on reality TV as it seeks to expand its reach in Japan, a key international growth market amid plateauing subscriber gains for streaming services in much of the West. The company unveiled a slate of five reality series Wednesday at its offices in Seoul, South Korea, during an event showcasing unscripted content across Asia. The slate reveals Netflix leaning heavily into dating and variety show formats in Japan, two of the country’s most popular TV categories.
The lineup includes quirky dating shows Is She the Wolf? and Love Like a K-Drama, and an intimate spin on Japan’s well-worn comedy-variety category, Lighthouse, featuring musician-actor Gen Hoshino and comedian Masayasu Wakabayashi. Two renewals round out the slate: Second season orders for the comedy competition show Last One Standing and the middle-aged dating show Love Village.
“We’re excited to move into a new phase of our content strategy,...
The lineup includes quirky dating shows Is She the Wolf? and Love Like a K-Drama, and an intimate spin on Japan’s well-worn comedy-variety category, Lighthouse, featuring musician-actor Gen Hoshino and comedian Masayasu Wakabayashi. Two renewals round out the slate: Second season orders for the comedy competition show Last One Standing and the middle-aged dating show Love Village.
“We’re excited to move into a new phase of our content strategy,...
- 8/10/2023
- by Patrick Brzeski
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Thundercat links funk’s past and future with Steve Lacy and Steve Arrington on his new song, “Black Qualls.” The track will appear on Thundercat’s new album, It Is What It Is, out April 3rd on Brainfeeder.
The whole track is anchored by a thick bass groove that allows the rest of the song to peel off into curious and unexpected places filled with crisp guitars, sweet harmonies and swirling synths. In a statement, Thundercat described the song as a meditation on what it means to be a young black American,...
The whole track is anchored by a thick bass groove that allows the rest of the song to peel off into curious and unexpected places filled with crisp guitars, sweet harmonies and swirling synths. In a statement, Thundercat described the song as a meditation on what it means to be a young black American,...
- 1/15/2020
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Save the Children, the international humanitarian organization, held its “Centennial Celebration: Once in a Lifetime” on Wednesday evening, paying tribute to the organization’s 100th anniversary and mission to do whatever it takes for the most vulnerable children in the U.S. and around the world.
James Taylor performs at Save the Children's Centennial Celebration
Credit/Copyright: Andrew Toth/Getty Images for Save The Children
The West Coast event, held at The Beverly Hilton Hotel, was hosted by Save the Children trustee and actor Jennifer Garner and honored The Walt Disney Company Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Robert A. Iger with the Centennial Award, which was presented by Oprah Winfrey. James Taylor performed hit songs “You’ve Got a Friend” and “How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)”, and ‘Shower the People" accompanied by the Amani Children’s Choir from Uganda and the Mid Cities Youth Choir.
Iger...
James Taylor performs at Save the Children's Centennial Celebration
Credit/Copyright: Andrew Toth/Getty Images for Save The Children
The West Coast event, held at The Beverly Hilton Hotel, was hosted by Save the Children trustee and actor Jennifer Garner and honored The Walt Disney Company Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Robert A. Iger with the Centennial Award, which was presented by Oprah Winfrey. James Taylor performed hit songs “You’ve Got a Friend” and “How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)”, and ‘Shower the People" accompanied by the Amani Children’s Choir from Uganda and the Mid Cities Youth Choir.
Iger...
- 10/9/2019
- Look to the Stars
The largest class of Creators For Change ever assembled has been announced. YouTube has revealed the 47 channels that will participate in an annual program, now in its third year, that offers resources, mentoring, and other perks to creators who are fighting for social justice around the globe.
The 2018 Creators For Change hail from 16 different nations and territories, as evidenced by a blog post shared by YouTube. 16 of the featured difference-makers were also members of last year's Creators For Change class, and they'll be joined in the program by some of the biggest names on the world's top video site. ASAPScience, the educational hub run by Canadians Gregory Brown and Mitchell Moffit, has joined the Creators For Change lineup, as has Brown and Moffit's compatriot Rossana Burgos, the matriarch of the Eh Bee Family. On the other side of the pond, travel vlogger Louis Cole of Fun For Louis is one...
The 2018 Creators For Change hail from 16 different nations and territories, as evidenced by a blog post shared by YouTube. 16 of the featured difference-makers were also members of last year's Creators For Change class, and they'll be joined in the program by some of the biggest names on the world's top video site. ASAPScience, the educational hub run by Canadians Gregory Brown and Mitchell Moffit, has joined the Creators For Change lineup, as has Brown and Moffit's compatriot Rossana Burgos, the matriarch of the Eh Bee Family. On the other side of the pond, travel vlogger Louis Cole of Fun For Louis is one...
- 5/8/2018
- by Sam Gutelle
- Tubefilter.com
After a stellar freshman season, the return of “Dear White People” for Season 2 was always going to be one of our anticipated premeires of 2018. But even though this new batch of episodes experiments with its form and has a new framing device for these ten half-hours, there’s one thing that has stayed consistent over the series’ run: a fantastic soundtrack.
Mixing songs from across the decades, this is one Netflix show that has a little bit for everyone: Edvard Grieg, DeJ Loaf, Tyler, the Creator, and Andy Williams, all in one big musical happy family.
Some of these tracks will lodge themselves in your subconscious for the coming weeks and months (that Louis Cole track in Episode 2 is a nuclear-grade earworm). Others will have you flipping through the entire back catalogue. There’s even one song that plays a key role within the show, even if it’s not sung by the original artist.
Mixing songs from across the decades, this is one Netflix show that has a little bit for everyone: Edvard Grieg, DeJ Loaf, Tyler, the Creator, and Andy Williams, all in one big musical happy family.
Some of these tracks will lodge themselves in your subconscious for the coming weeks and months (that Louis Cole track in Episode 2 is a nuclear-grade earworm). Others will have you flipping through the entire back catalogue. There’s even one song that plays a key role within the show, even if it’s not sung by the original artist.
- 5/5/2018
- by Steve Greene
- Indiewire
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