Is Saudi Arabia the next film frontier?
Eager to rehabilitate its image and shine brightly on the world stage, Saudi Arabia is investing in Hollywood.
Eager to rehabilitate its image and shine brightly on the world stage, Saudi Arabia is investing in Hollywood.
After her Super Bowl performance, Rihanna’s music broke the Internet with a 211% increase in on-demand streams and a 390% increase in digital song sales.
That’s the million-dollar question running through every media executive’s mind these days.
As fans prepare for Beyoncé’s Renaissance World Tour, they’re bracing for the likelihood that they won’t be able to secure tickets.
Tickets for Beyoncé’s Renaissance tour go on sale over the next few days, and their rollout will be Ticketmaster’s biggest test since demand for tickets to Taylor Swift’s Eras tour shut the platform down in November.
It’s that time of year when generally low theater attendance limits a film’s potential box office return.
In the search for new audiences, news publishers like The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post are flocking to TikTok.
More and more reality TV competition shows are rejecting the idea of a traditional host in favor of digital prompts to guide contestants.
Justin Bieber just sold the rights to his music catalog to Hipgnosis Songs Capital for $200 million.
If mailed DVDs defined the first act of Netflix’s story, and uninterrupted streaming marked the second, then an ad-supported option may round out its narrative.