- Netflix can thank mobile phones for its big subscriber jump (Variety)
- A new digital platform is taking kids’ worst fears and turning them into relatable cartoons (Mashable)
- Celebs that are missing Comic-Con will still be there in life-size Lego form (The Hollywood Reporter)
- Use the force…or a cool Star Wars AR headset that Disney is releasing for US$200 (Forbes)
- One year later and still no app has matched the success of Pokémon GO (Recode)
- The magic may never end: Two new Harry Potter books are set for release this fall (USA Today)
- Now that’s some Comic-Con marketing: Amazon goes all out with 24-foot, emotive Tick replica (AdWeek)
- Her kid-friendly YouTube baking tutorials earn this celebrity chef US$6 million per year (NPR)
- NBC News is hoping to attract younger viewers with a daily show on Snapchat (Reuters)
- Netflix reaches 104 million members, with global subscribers outnumbering those in the US for the first time (The Guardian)
- Mattel’s longtime CFO is stepping down (Reuters)
- Nearly 75% of American kids have a video game console at home (Recode)
- Internet-connected toys have the FBI worried (CNBC)
- No Italian, no problem: London’s Royal Opera House and Twitter are releasing operas entirely in emoji (AdWeek)
- Doctor Who casts its first-ever female Doctor (BBC News)
- Wonder Woman is bigger than Harry Potter? (The Hollywood Reporter)
- A rising tide could lift all ships: What Amazon Prime Day really means for the retail sector (eMarketer)
- Meanwhile, Amazon is reportedly launching its own messaging app (The Verge)
- How do you win in Hollywood? You bet on girls (Forbes)
- Streaming services led the pack at this year’s Emmy nominations…and why that matters (Los Angeles Times)
- Cars 3 has a lot going on under its hood when it comes to mentorship messaging (The Atlantic)
- Resistance no longer: Disney gives a first look at its billion-dollar Star Wars lands (The Verge)
- An Afghan all-girl robotics team has been granted entry to the US after all (Endgadget)
- What actually needs to happen in order for VR to make it big (Fast Company)
- Asia’s online video biz is going to grow threefold to US$46 billion by 2022 (Variety)
- Hasbro explains why Rey hasn’t made her way onto the Monopoly board (The Verge)
- Kano launches its most affordable kids coding product yet (TechCrunch)
- Pinocchio’s nose does make for a great selfie stick: What Disney classics would look like in 2017 (Mashable)
- What’s better than Christmas? Amazon’s Prime Day surpassed Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales combined (CNBC)
- More than half of US broadband households subscribe to Netflix, Amazon or Hulu (Rapid TV News)
- Disney’s casting process for Aladdin hasn’t exactly been smooth sailing (The Hollywood Reporter)
- Influencers. Interactive. Ikea. The ideas behind this back-to-school marketing campaign are as buzz-worthy as it gets. (AdWeek)
- The Japanese prodco behind Domo is producing a stop-motion kids series for Netflix (Variety)
- Not easy being green: Longtime Kermit the Frog puppeteer exits The Muppets (BBC News)
- How other retailers, like Toys “R” Us, are competing against Amazon Prime Day (NBC)
- The way to get ahead? Oculus cuts the price of its VR set in order to lure more consumers (The Globe and Mail)
- Are smart toys doing a parent’s job? (MarketWatch)
- My Little Pony word ‘ponify’ is now officially in the Webster’s dictionary (Action Figure Insider)
- Dalian Wanda, Disney’s largest rival in China, is being sold for a whopping US$9.3 billion (BBC News)
- Spider-Man: Homecoming swings to the US weekend box office’s top spot (Variety)
- The future is friendly: BBC is testing voice-activated kids content via Amazon Alexa and iOS (Digital TV Europe)
- Meanwhile, is Amazon Prime really on track to become more popular than cable TV? (Recode)
- What today’s teens want, from Bill Nye the Science Guy to Beyonce (Advertising Age)
- Trust no one: Kids are most likely to be bullied by their own friends (CNN)
- Sesame Street takes path to Hulu via a new HBO deal (CNBC)
- Niantic CEO on the success of Pokemon GO and where the app is headed next (The Verge)
- How Instagram makes itself addictive (Fast Company)
- Plugged-in parents make for more badly behaved kids, says a new study (The Globe and Mail)
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