- A month after closing, the Hasbro-eOne merger has been cleared by the UK’s antitrust body (Deadline)
- SVOD stacking—when a user subscribes to three or more streamers—is on the rise globally (Digital TV Europe)
- Smaller startups are asking the US government to rein in big tech (WIRED)
- Psych professors examined 40 studies about kids and phones, and found that smartphones don’t make kids depressed (MIT Tech Review)
- Do you know what Famous Birthdays is? Well you should. The tween/teen site just hit 25 million monthly views (Tubefilter)
- Awards season continues, and Toy Story 4 took home the PGA for best animated feature (IGN)
- Netflix’s chief content officer says he’d be interested in working with Prince Harry and Meghan Markle (Digital TV Europe)
- Disney is dropping the Fox name from several of its movie studios (New York Times)
- …And despite a massive year for the House of Mouse, its CEO’s pay dropped by 28% (Variety)
- Instagram’s IGTV app is losing its shortcut button after it was downloaded just seven million times (Tubefilter)
- The best-selling games of the last decade are in! Call of Duty dominated, but a few kid-friendly titles managed to sneak in (Engadget)
- Netflix is set to invest US$17.3 billion in content this year, according to new reports (The Hollywood Reporter)
- …And the streamer is getting its own ice cream flavor, aptly dubbed Netflix and Chilll’d (Wall Street Journal)
- Forget Star Wars, Disney is all about the toy wars right now as it hunts down Etsy creatives making Baby Yoda toys (The Verge)
- How can you convince viewers not to cut the cord? By offering free streaming (NBC News)
- Why Stars Wars just can’t seem to take off in China (New York Times)
- Target thought it was filling a gap in the marketplace, but its toy sales disappointed this holiday season (CNBC)
- The Oscars took great pains to diversify its voter base, but looking at this year’s nominees, it didn’t make much of a difference (Variety)
- How do kids use the internet? Primarily to watch TV (eMarketer)
- …And new research from Discovery has found that TV is the top way people fuel their passions (Advanced Television)
- Meat substitute Quorn is putting its carbon footprint on packaging, which could be a game-changer for other products (Fast Company)
- Amazon’s latest tactic to win the streaming wars is to pretend it’s not a part of it (Variety)
- Disney+ surpassed 30 million downloads in Q4, according to marketing firm Sensor Tower (Digital TV Europe)
- Netflix made a bit of history yesterday, earning 24 noms from the Oscars (CNBC)
- Tablets haven’t killed toys—digital activity is increasing children’s interest in physical playthings (eMarketer)
- Who says TV isn’t good for kids? A special new screen promises to fix their lazy eyes (Tech Crunch)
- Last year’s Chinese animated hit Ne Zha is getting a sequel with a US release date (The Hollywood Reporter)
- The Oscar nominations are in, and Frozen 2 has been snubbed in the animation category in favor of riskier styles (The Hollywood Reporter)
- …Meanwhile, Disney has reportedly snagged a voiceover deal with Meghan Markle (Vanity Fair)
- NBC is shuttering its non-scripted division, Peacock Productions (Deadline)
- It’s a big year for SVODs, especially in Africa, where subscriptions are set to increase six-fold (Digital TV Europe)
- A guide to which films could be blockbusters and which could be flops in 2020 (Variety)
- This year’s Oscar nomination race can be predicted using a bit of math (The Hollywood Reporter)
- From the best wearable to the smartest accessibility tech, these are the Best of CES 2020 winners (Engadget)
- Following a year of Facebook controversy, Mark Zuckerberg has outlined his plans for the next decade (TechCrunch)
- AT&T is shuttering its Audience Network in favor of a preview channel for HBO Max (Variety)
- As MGM shakes up its execs, the studio might have to decide between growing and selling (The Hollywood Reporter)
- BBC Studios has missed its targets for third-party streamers and broadcasters commissions (Deadline)
- Here’s why streamers’ kids programming focuses so heavily on iconic brands (Associated Press)
- Sonos is suing Google for allegedly stealing its patented smart speaker tech (The Verge)
- A third of all media and entertainment execs say their businesses won’t be around in five years unless they change their models (Variety)
- Women made “unprecedented gains” as protagonists in 2019’s top-grossing films, but there’s still work to be done (Deadline)
- How Ms. Marvel changed Marvel comic books and became the publisher’s most important superhero (Vox)
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