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TL;DR
In a hurry? Here's our pick of the top news items of the week.
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Netflix says it now has 325M+ subscribers globally, underscoring how aggressively streaming leaders are scaling audience and monetization. (Axios)
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YouTube TV is rolling out a customizable multiview builder, letting viewers choose the specific channels they want to watch at the same time. (Tech Crunch)
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The 2026 Oscar nominations include several snubs and surprises, with Ariana Grande, George Clooney and Paul Mescal missing from nominees list. (CBS)
Audiences
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Nielsen reports streaming hit a record 47.5% of total TV viewing in December 2025, reinforcing that streaming is now the default consumption mode for many households. (Nielsen)
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The “2026 is the new 2016” trend is surging on TikTok and Instagram, showing how nostalgia cycles are driving participatory content formats and engagement. (Forbes)
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Moviegoing held steady over the MLK weekend, with "Avatar: Fire and Ash" leading the box office again as new releases fought for attention. (AP)
Platforms
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Spotify will raise prices in the U.S. (including Premium Individual), continuing the industry’s push toward higher ARPU via subscription increases. (CNBC)
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Instagram is testing a “friends” count display in the profile header, another nudge toward social proof mechanics on the platform. (Business Insider)
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UK lawmakers are moving to tighten enforcement around under-16 social media access, signaling more aggressive age-verification pressure for platforms. (Trading View)
Content
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Netflix has cancelled "The Vince Staples Show" after two seasons. (Complex)
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"Shrinking" Season 3 will premiere on Apple TV+ on January 28, 2026, keeping the comedy pipeline moving early in the year. (Yahoo Entertainment)
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Amazon MGM and Mattel Studios dropped the first “Masters of the Universe” trailer, revealing Nicholas Galitzine’s He-Man and Jared Leto’s Skeletor ahead of the June 5 theatrical release. (Entertainment Weekly)
Tech & AI
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Apple is reportedly exploring turning Siri into a more ChatGPT-like conversational assistant, underscoring how fast voice UX expectations are shifting. (The Verge)
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OpenAI is working on consumer hardware devices slated for 2026, signaling a bigger push beyond software-only distribution. (Tech Crunch)
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Micron warned an “unprecedented” memory chip shortage is being accelerated by AI infrastructure demand and could persist beyond 2026, tightening supply for devices across categories. (Business Standard)
Location-based entertainment
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Sphere Entertainment announced plans for a 6,000-seat “mini-Sphere” immersive venue at National Harbor (outside D.C.), aiming to replicate the Las Vegas Sphere-style 4D spectacle in a smaller format. (Washington Post)
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Midland Mall debuted the “Jurassic Explorers” immersive walkthrough (life-sized animatronic dinosaurs, themed scenery and sound), launching as part of a Jurassic Weekend event on January 24–25. (Midland News)
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A short-term rental home in Clovis has been transformed into a fully themed “Stranger Things” stay, turning the property itself into an immersive, bookable fan experience. (Yahoo Entertainment)
Travel & hospitality
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United says business travel demand is “amazing” again, as the airline forecasts a strong 2026 lift driven by premium and corporate bookings. (Investopedia)
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“Skillcations” are emerging as a 2026 travel flex, vacations built around learning a new skill (from cooking to falconry), pushing hotels/resorts to package experiences as the product. (Axios)
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Foxwoods set an opening date for The Bedford by Martha Stewart (March 13, 2026), expanding the celebrity-chef destination play for resort casinos. (CT Insider)
Gaming
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Forza Horizon 6 will launch May 19, 2026 on Xbox Series X|S and PC (with Premium Edition early access May 15) and is also headed to PS5 later in 2026, signaling continued platform expansion for tentpole Xbox franchises. (The Verge)
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The Fable reboot is confirmed for fall 2026 on Xbox and PC and will also release on PS5, the first time the franchise launches on PlayStation. (The Verge)
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Former Nintendo of America president Doug Bowser has joined Hasbro’s board of directors as Hasbro pushes deeper into games, including plans to develop an in-house video game title in 2026. (The Verge)