Hollywood’s Zendayafication, Fubo vs. Everybody, MLB Lockout Fears
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Welcome back to The Daily Courant, your afternoon catalogue of Puck’s best new reporting.
First up today, Eriq Gardner offers a timely dissection of three legal sagas: the latest reality TV imbroglio consuming Bravo, a Stephen Miller–inspired D.E.I. battle at CBS News, and a shocking copyright victory in an under-the-radar music industry case that could totally upend global I.P. law.
Plus, below the fold: Peter Hamby digs into the salacious G.O.P. scandal consuming the Virginia governor’s race. Marion Maneker examines the art world’s textile fixation vis-à-vis Olga de Amaral’s striking Miami retrospective. Sarah Shapiro and Rothy’s C.E.O. Jenny Ming discuss how the brand evolved beyond its D.T.C. roots. And exclusively for Inner Circle members, Julia Alexander reveals why Fubo TV might be uniquely positioned to succeed in streaming… even if Wall Street hates the stock.
Meanwhile, on the pods: Matt Belloni connects with National Research Group’s Ray Subers on The Town to dissect its latest study ranking the Hollywood stars with the most box office gravity. John Ourand is joined by MLB insider Jeff Passan on The Varsity to explain why a lockout might be inevitable. And on The Powers That Be, Peter and Marion preview the art fair circuit kicking off this week.
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Eriq Gardner |
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News and notes on some timely industry legal spats, including a Bravo reality TV morass, a Stephen Miller–inspired D.E.I. complaint at CBS News, and a surprise copyright win for the “greatest fraternity rock song of all time.”
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Peter Hamby |
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A Republican sex scandal has upended the Virginia governor’s race—but not in the way that anyone expected, with the MAGA base flocking to John Reid, an openly gay Trump supporter, and turning on Glenn Youngkin for trying to push Reid out. “Trump broke the evangelical stuff,” said a campaign operative in Richmond. “There is purity, and there is winning. And they are both drugs, but one of them is a lot more addictive.”
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Marion Maneker |
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Textiles are having a moment as a valid art form. A new Olga de Amaral retrospective in Miami is a festival of technical skill that puts her fabrics, in the words of ICA Miami’s director, “somewhere between painting and sculpture.”
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Sarah Shapiro |
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Rothy’s has been resurgent ever since Jenny Ming, a retail veteran of Gap and Old Navy, left the boardroom and got back into the C-suite. In a candid interview, she discusses diversifying Rothy’s channels and supply chain as the shoe brand moves beyond D.T.C.
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Julia Alexander |
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If Disney’s struggling Fubo TV can figure out how to be the destination aggregator for sports, and attract a significant portion of the 50 million-strong customer base still addicted to cable, it may yet be a viable business.
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Matthew Belloni |
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Matt is joined by Ray Subers, senior vice president and head of film at the National Research Group, to parse the newest iteration of its eye-opening study highlighting which stars get people going to movie theaters. They discuss why Tom Holland is so high in the ranking, why Glen Powell is so low, and why Zendaya is nearing the top 10. Matt finishes the show with a box office prediction for Final Destination Bloodlines.
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John Ourand |
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ESPN’s MLB insider Jeff Passan joins John for a sweeping conversation about the state of the league a few months into the 2025 season. Jeff discusses MLB’s biggest red flags, the forthcoming labor and media rights negotiations, and the parity between high-payroll teams and small-market teams. Then, as the specter of a new salary cap looms, Jeff warns why a 2027 lockout may be all but inevitable.
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Peter Hamby |
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Marion Maneker |
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Marion Maneker joins Peter for a deep dive into the art fair circuit as it hits a fever pitch this week. Marion unpacks the explosion of events on the calendar, whether demand can keep up with the pace, and why Endeavor’s Ari Emanuel just placed a high-stakes bet on Frieze. Then, he draws the line between fairs and auctions—and explains why the distinction matters.
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