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Anaheim Ducks will move local games to free TV on Fox's KCOP

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Anaheim Ducks will move local games to free TV on Fox's KCOP

The Anaheim Ducks will broadcast 65 of the team’s NHL games on Fox Television Stations’ Los Angeles outlet KCOP starting with the 2024-25 season.

The deal announced Tuesday is the latest by a major league sports team to put local telecasts on a free over-the-air channel that consumers can watch with a TV antenna. The games also will be available on a new ad-supported streaming service called Victory+, launching next month.

The move toward broadcast TV reflects how team owners are concerned that cord-cutting — canceling cable subscriptions in favor of streaming platforms — is limiting the exposure of their teams’ games in their local markets.

“It is a significant organizational priority to connect Ducks fans with our entire market and for every fan in our region to have the opportunity to watch Ducks games without cost across multiple, accessible platforms,” Ducks President Aaron Teats said in a statement.

The reach of over-the-air TV was clearly a factor in the NBA’s decision to award its new TV contracts to NBCUniversal and the Walt Disney Co., which both have broadcast stations in their portfolio, while making Amazon Prime Video its primary streaming platform.

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One reason the NBA’s longtime incumbent Warner Bros. Discovery lost in the bidding for the new contract is its dependence on cable networks. (The company is suing the NBA, claiming it had the right to match the Amazon deal.)

KCOP reaches 100% of the 8 million homes in Los Angeles and Orange County. Victory+, which is operated by A Parent Company Inc., will give viewers a streaming option and expand the team’s reach into markets outside of Los Angeles including San Diego, Santa Barbara and Hawaii.

For more than 20 years, a majority of Ducks games aired on the regional sports network Bally Sports West, formerly known as Fox Sports West. The network’s parent company, Diamond Sports, filed for bankruptcy in 2023.

Diamond has reorganized but had to relinquish a number of its sports rights deals, leaving a number of sports franchises without a local TV platform.

KCOP, which has never been affiliated with a major network, has a long history of broadcasting live sports. It carried games of the Los Angeles Clippers from 1991 to 1996, the Los Angeles Dodgers from 2002 to 2005 and the Los Angeles Angels from 2006 to 2019.

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KCOP is now known as 11 Plus, a nod to KTTV, Fox’s flagship in Los Angeles on Channel 11. The station is still found at its longtime dial position, channel 13.

Fox Television Stations, like other TV ownership groups, have been looking to add sports to their lineups again as viewers move to streaming platforms to watch scripted movies, dramas and sitcoms.

While teams that go the free TV route lose the subscriber fees they get from pay TV services, they can see an increase in other revenue sources such as stadium and arena advertising signage, which reach a wider audience on broadcast.

Fox recently added a slate of New York Liberty women’s basketball games to its New York station WWOR, cashing in on the increased popularity of the WNBA.

Last season, Nexstar’s KTLA showed 11 Clippers games while CBS-owned KCAL showed six Los Angeles Kings contests.

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Other franchises have taken a similar approach to the Ducks’. The Las Vegas Golden Knights have most of their local telecasts shown on a Scripps-owned TV station in the market.

The NHL has always been the weakest draw on TV among the four major U.S. sports leagues. But ratings have been on the upswing nationally and have gained in relative strength as other TV genres have been in decline.

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Movie Reviews

Slingshot (2024) – Movie Review

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Slingshot (2024) – Movie Review

Slingshot, 2024.

Directed by Mikael Håfström.
Starring Casey Affleck, Laurence Fishburne, Emily Beecham, Tomer Capone, David Morrissey, Nikolett Barabas, Charlotta Lövgren, Mark Ebulue, and Harry Szovik.

SYNOPSIS:

An astronaut struggles to maintain his grip on reality aboard a possibly fatally compromised mission to Saturn’s moon, Titan.

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On the surface, Mikael Håfström’s Slingshot is about a space mission to Saturn’s moon containing methane, which can be collected and used for a healthier Earth. None of that actually matters, as this is more of a setup for psychological games that not only revel in clichés but come in so much quantity that they instantly telegraph themselves from one to the next. The result is less having fun with the insanity and more laughing at it for falling in line to the next predictable swerve.

The script from R. Scott Adams and Nathan Parker immediately reveals Casey Affleck’s astronaut John as an unreliable perspective for this story, emerging from a hibernation pod aboard a spaceship with an automated voice reminding him of the symptoms. The primary one to pay attention to here is confusion. This is a character device relied on to such an annoying effect that it mostly feels like cheating. Beyond a certain point, there is no reason to take anything we see here seriously; it’s all face-value BS, and our brains are hardwired into not believing any of it or assuming the opposite.

Working with Captain Franks (Laurence Fishburne giving a stern and stellar performance that is unquestionably the best aspect of the movie) and a data/technological specialist named Nash (Tomer Capone, frequently overplaying his increasing paranoia that develops), their strategy to get near Saturn is to attempt a slingshot boost maneuver from Jupiter. The reasoning behind this is never explained, but presumably, it simply concerns Saturn being farther away from Earth. The details, or lack thereof, are the least of this film’s problems, and the title mostly feels like a metaphor for what it’s trying and failing to do to the audience with its mind games.

It turns out that during one of the hibernation phases, the spacecraft collided with an unidentified object and suffered some structural damage that technically could be fatal. Contradicting this, the computer systems still report that everything is intact and safe. However, the crew loses communications with mission overseers back in Houston.

From there, a difference of opinion breaks out with John (played with despondency and disorientation by Casey Affleck, which sometimes is taken too far and doesn’t feel right for the role) caught up in the middle of Nash, essentially encouraging a mutiny, paranoid that the ship is not stable enough to sustain a boost at such a speed, covering an extraordinary amount of distance between planets within minutes. Meanwhile, Captain Franks has the standard cold “complete the mission at any cost” tone. This film also wants viewers to know there is something else off about Captain Franks based on his behavior, which includes occasionally singing the lyrics “Please don’t let me be misunderstood.” As a result, much of the film becomes a waiting game for the first major twist to drop. It interjects a nightmare sequence and a body mutation hallucination bit, both feeling out of place and desperate attempts at keeping up engagement.

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John also regularly hallucinates seeing his NASA program love interest, Zoe (Emily Beecham), on the ship, which the filmmakers use as opportunities to toss viewers into flashbacks depicting how they became close, various aspects of John’s backstory, and the one-sided nature of the relationship. He is infatuated with Zoe, upfront that his work will always come first, and seemingly closed off from relationship commitment and reciprocating love. 

It is undeniably clear that through all of the psychological mind games, Slingshot wants to say something about paranoia and anxiety not only concerning the mission but also what we project onto others regarding how they see us. There are also questions of duty and when it’s time to prioritize safety and, even more courageously, standing up to a shortsighted leader who could get everyone killed.

However, that is all artificial; the narrative gets lost in that series of twists without the self-awareness that Slingshot has long stopped feeling suspenseful. There are moments of intended clever dark humor, paling in comparison to the amount of unintentional hilarity. Put it this way: it’s practically impossible not to see the final rug-pull coming right before it happens. The anticipation is there for the wrong reasons; it elicits snickering.

Flickering Myth Rating – Film: ★ ★ / Movie: ★ ★

Robert Kojder is a member of the Chicago Film Critics Association and the Critics Choice Association. He is also the Flickering Myth Reviews Editor. Check here for new reviews, follow my Twitter or Letterboxd, or email me at MetalGearSolid719@gmail.com

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=embed/playlist

 

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Lionsgate Marketing Consultant Built Movie Trailer Filled With AI Generated Fake Movie Reviews Of Old Films

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Lionsgate Marketing Consultant Built Movie Trailer Filled With AI Generated Fake Movie Reviews Of Old Films

from the natural-stupidity dept

I’ll admit, when I’ve been able to witness some of the fuckery around the use of artificial intelligence in stupid ways, some part of me has always gotten some amusement at those being fooled. I’ve gotten to witness most of this from afar, after all. It feels a bit different when you write about a situation where you were among those fooled by the bullshit.

At some point in the last week or so, I personally recall seeing the following trailer for Megalopolis, the forthcoming film from Francis Ford Coppola.

Now, the reason I recall seeing that trailer is due to those opening quotes from movie reviews of previous Coppola films. See, I’m a fan of many of his movies, as are millions of others. I recall laughing at those quotes, wondering just how in the hell reviewers could have gotten it so completely wrong when it comes to films like The Godfather and Apocolypse Now. I even thought briefly about googling those critics’ names and seeing if I could find the full reviews, just to laugh at how hilariously wrong they were.

Well, someone else did exactly that. And they found that those are AI-generated quotes from fake reviews that those reviewers never wrote.

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Lionsgate has parted ways with Eddie Egan, the marketing consultant who came up with the “Megalopolis” trailer that included fake quotes from famous film critics. The studio pulled the trailer on Wednesday, after it was pointed out that the quotes trashing Francis Ford Coppola’s previous work did not actually appear in the critics’ reviews, and were in fact made up.

Sources tell Variety it was not Lionsgate or Egan’s intention to fabricate quotes, but was an error in properly vetting and fact-checking the phrases provided by the consultant. The intention of the trailer was to demonstrate that Coppola’s revered work, much like “Megalopolis,” has been met with criticism. It appears that AI was used to generate the false quotes from the critics.

That’s being far too kind. Some of these critics supposedly trashing Coppola’s work absolutely loved the films they were supposed to have denigrated. Variety was able to generate similar quotes with some trial and error prompting using ChatGPT, which is likely where this all came from. Misattributing the words and reviews of a film critic merely to drum up fake outrage as an interest multiplier for Coppola’s new film is both a complete violation of the actual work those critics did and an abdication of trust the public will have in the studio.

Now, to be fair, it appears Lionsgate had no idea that the quotes in the trailer were fakes, and worked fairly quickly to pull the trailer once it found out.

“Lionsgate is immediately recalling our trailer for ‘Megalopolis,’” the company said Wednesday. “We offer our sincere apologies to the critics involved and to Francis Ford Coppola and American Zoetrope for this inexcusable error in our vetting process. We screwed up. We are sorry.”

Still, at a time when both the public and every SAG member out there is concerned about how AI is going to start filtering into creative work in negative ways, this is a fairly terrible look for the industry.

Or, if Lionsgate would like ChatGPT’s take on this:

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Lionsgate’s use of fake quotes generated by AI for the trailer of “Megalopolis” was a significant misstep and attracted considerable criticism. Using AI-generated quotes can undermine the authenticity and credibility of marketing materials, especially when presented as genuine endorsements from critics.

For many, the inclusion of these artificial quotes not only misleads potential viewers but also raises ethical concerns about transparency and trust in advertising. When audiences or critics discover such manipulations, it can damage the studio’s reputation and affect the film’s reception.

In the case of “Megalopolis,” this controversy highlighted the broader issue of how AI can be misused in promotional contexts. It underscores the importance of maintaining integrity in marketing practices and being transparent about the sources and nature of endorsements.

And on that, you can quote me.

Filed Under: ai, francis ford coppola, marketing, megalopolis, trailer

Companies: lionsgate

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Where's Jax? Garcelle Beauvais says 'horrible' racist comments drove son to leave 'RHOBH'

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Where's Jax? Garcelle Beauvais says 'horrible' racist comments drove son to leave 'RHOBH'

Garcelle Beauvais says her teenage son Jax has decided to back away from the “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” spotlight after he was subjected to racist online harassment in 2022.

The “Coming to America” actor said her son approached her about his absence before the cameras began rolling for “RHOBH” Season 14. “Jax said to me, ‘Mom, I can’t do it anymore. It was too negative for me,’” Beauvais told “Pop Culture Moms” podcast hosts Andie Mitchell and Sabrina Kohlberg.

“I respected that, and so he’s not on this season at all,” she added in the episode published Tuesday.

In August 2022, the Daily Mail reported that Jax, who was 14 at the time, had spoken out about negative comments he received on an Instagram photo. He urged trolls, who left comments about older brother Oliver’s battle with addiction, to “leave me alone please.” Within the same week, Beauvais urged fans to “leave our kids alone” on social media amid the drama that was playing out onscreen.

“It hurts it’s not OK I’ve been in tears all night it’s just a TV show people scream at your TV throw something at your TV,” she tweeted at the time.

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In another statement shared on Aug. 24, 2022, Beauvais shared a statement on Jax’s behalf in which he condemned the online harassment: “I did not sign up for this show, nor do I have anything to do with the show’s drama.”

He added: “Middle aged women spamming me with racist and crude comments about my family is not what I expected for my first week of high school.”

At the time, Beauvais’ “RHOBH” co-stars and Bravo, which broadcasts the “Real Housewives” franchise, also voiced support for the actor and spoke out against the “harmful rhetoric.”

Beauvais, who shares twins Jax and Jaid with ex-husband Michael Nilon, said on “Pop Culture Moms” that she “absolutely” considered leaving “RHOBH” after her son’s experience. She also said that “Real Housewives of New Jersey” star Teresa Giudice was an additional source of support.

“When that happened with Jax, it blew my mind, because nobody deserves it,” Beauvais said. “Nobody’s kids deserve it. But I thought, you know, he’s doing this because of me and it’s our family. And it was his first week of high school. And for him to be subjected to such ugliness and such, it was just horrible. It was horrible.”

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The “Spider-Man: Homecoming” and “Flight” actor said she gives her sons the option to appear in “RHOBH” before the beginning of each season, adding that “they deal with enough in terms of … high school and trying to figure out their life.”

Though Jax won’t be on the show, Beauvais teased that “RHOBH” Season 14 will still be “really good.”

“I think there’s so many good moments and friendships that are changing and friendships that are dissolving,” she said. “I don’t know, can we get in a room together? Explosive.”

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