Global ‘Squid Game’ Mania Lifts Netflix Quarter

Netflix’s global sensation “Squid Game” helped lure more new customers than expected, the world’s largest streaming service said on Tuesday. (Netflix/AFP)
Netflix’s global sensation “Squid Game” helped lure more new customers than expected, the world’s largest streaming service said on Tuesday. (Netflix/AFP)
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Global ‘Squid Game’ Mania Lifts Netflix Quarter

Netflix’s global sensation “Squid Game” helped lure more new customers than expected, the world’s largest streaming service said on Tuesday. (Netflix/AFP)
Netflix’s global sensation “Squid Game” helped lure more new customers than expected, the world’s largest streaming service said on Tuesday. (Netflix/AFP)

Netflix Inc’s global sensation “Squid Game” helped lure more new customers than expected, the world’s largest streaming service said on Tuesday as it predicted a packed lineup would further boost signups through the end of the year.

After a sharp slowdown in the first half of 2021, Netflix added 4.38 million subscribers from July through September to reach 213.6 million worldwide. Wall Street analysts had projected 3.86 million additions, according to Refinitiv data.

Netflix enjoyed a subscriber boom last year as COVID-19 kept audiences at home, but growth stalled early this year. At the same time, Walt Disney Co’s Disney+, AT&T Inc’s HBO Max and other competitors bolstered their offerings. Netflix blamed the earlier weakness in part on a thin slate of new programming caused by production shutdowns from the pandemic.

Then, South Korean drama “Squid Game” debuted on Sept. 17 and surprised executives by becoming the streaming service’s most-watched original series in its first month. On Tuesday, Netflix said a “mind-boggling” 142 million households had watched the dark drama about people who compete in a deadly competition to erase financial debt.

The series, made with a relatively small budget, shot to the top of Netflix viewing charts in 94 countries, kick-started sales of track suits and Vans sneakers, and kindled interest in learning Korean. “Squid Game” merchandise is now on its way to retailers, Netflix said.

The fervor around “Squid Game” also is expected to lift the current quarter. Netflix projected it will pick up 8.5 million new customers by year’s end, ahead of industry forecasts of 8.33 million, as it releases a heavy lineup of new programming. Upcoming debuts include big-budget action flick “Red Notice” and a second season of fantasy drama “The Witcher.”

It also expects a “more normalized” programming slate in 2022 spread throughout the year, “assuming no new COVID waves or unforeseen events,” the company said in a quarterly letter to shareholders.

Shares of Netflix were close to even in after-hours trading at $641 following the earnings report.

Overseas growth
Most new customer pickups in the quarter came from the Asia Pacific market, where Netflix now has 30 million subscribers. Industry experts believe the region may rival the United States and Canada - Netflix’s largest market - in three to five years, said Third Bridge senior analyst Joe McCormack.

Netflix is trying new ways to attract customers overseas, including offering a free plan in Kenya. It will take one to two years to tell if that tactic leads to more paying subscribers, the company said.

For the quarter that ended in September, diluted earnings-per-share came in at $3.19, beating analyst expectations of $2.57. Revenue rose 16% to $7.5 billion.

Before the earnings report, Netflix shares had risen roughly 22% this year and were trading near record highs, but their gains lag behind the 54% increase in the Nasdaq.

Netflix, which keeps much of its viewership data secret, also said it will release information more frequently and shift its main publicly reported metric to hours viewed, rather than the number of accounts that watched a title for at least 2 minutes. The company noted that it competes with a large set of activities beyond TV including TikTok and Fortnite. When Facebook Inc suffered a global outage in early October, “our engagement saw a 14% increase during this time period,” Netflix said.



Auction House to Sell Gene Hackman’s Golden Globes, Watch and Paintings He Collected and Created 

Gene Hackman accepts his Oscar for best actor at the 44th Academy Awards in Los Angeles, April 10, 1972. (AP) 
Gene Hackman accepts his Oscar for best actor at the 44th Academy Awards in Los Angeles, April 10, 1972. (AP) 
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Auction House to Sell Gene Hackman’s Golden Globes, Watch and Paintings He Collected and Created 

Gene Hackman accepts his Oscar for best actor at the 44th Academy Awards in Los Angeles, April 10, 1972. (AP) 
Gene Hackman accepts his Oscar for best actor at the 44th Academy Awards in Los Angeles, April 10, 1972. (AP) 

An auction house plans to sell off a variety of actor Gene Hackman’s possessions in November, including Golden Globe statues, a wristwatch and paintings he collected and created himself.

Hackman died at age 95 at his home in Santa Fe, New Mexico, after transitioning from an Oscar-winning career in film to a life in retirement of painting, writing novels and collecting.

Auction items include a still-life painting of a Japanese vase by Hackman and Golden Globe awards from roles in “Unforgiven” and “The Royal Tenenbaums.” There are annotated books from Hackman's library, scripts, posters, movie memorabilia and high-brow art including a bronze statue by Auguste Rodin and a 1957 oil painting from modernist Milton Avery.

Anna Hicks of Bonhams international auction house said the sales “offer an intimate portrait of Hackman’s private world.”

Listings start as low as $100 for Hackman's everyman Winmau dart board or $600 for a shot at his Seiko diver's wristwatch.

The catalog includes a likeness of Hackman from portrait artist Everett Raymond Kinstler, who painted US presidents and drew for comic books.

Hackman and his wife, Betsy Arakawa, were found dead inside their home on Feb. 26, sending shock waves through a high-desert city refuge for famous actors and authors seeking to escape the spotlight.

Authorities determined that Hackman died of heart disease with complications from Alzheimer’s disease about a week after Arakawa, 65, died of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, a rare but potentially fatal disease spread by the droppings of infected rodents.

Hackman made his film debut in 1961's “Mad Dog Coll” and went on to appear in a range of movie roles, including as “Superman” villain Lex Luthor and as a basketball coach finding redemption in the sentimental favorite “Hoosiers.” He was a five-time Oscar nominee who won best actor in a leading role for “The French Connection” in 1972 and best actor in a supporting role for “Unforgiven” two decades later.

He retired from acting in the early 2000s.


Sundance Film Festival Reveals Details about Robert Redford Tributes and Legacy Screenings

The marquee of the Egyptian Theatre appears during the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah on Jan. 28, 2020. (AP)
The marquee of the Egyptian Theatre appears during the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah on Jan. 28, 2020. (AP)
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Sundance Film Festival Reveals Details about Robert Redford Tributes and Legacy Screenings

The marquee of the Egyptian Theatre appears during the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah on Jan. 28, 2020. (AP)
The marquee of the Egyptian Theatre appears during the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah on Jan. 28, 2020. (AP)

Robert Redford’s legacy and mission was always going to be a key component of the 2026 Sundance Film Festival, which will be the last of its kind in Park City, Utah. But in the wake of his death in September at age 89, those ideas took on a new significance.

This January, the institute that Redford founded over 40 years ago, plans to honor his career and impact with and a screening of his first truly independent film, the 1969 sports drama “Downhill Racer,” and a series of legacy screenings of restored Sundance gems from “Little Miss Sunshine” to “House Party,” festival organizers said Tuesday.

“As we were thinking about how best to honor Mr. Redford’s legacy, it’s not only carrying forward this notion of ‘everyone has a story’ but it’s also getting together in a movie theater and watching a film that really embodies that independent spirit,” festival director Eugene Hernandez told The Associated Press. “We’ve had some incredible artists reach out to us, even in the past few weeks since Mr. Redford’s passing, who just want to be part of this year’s festival.”

Archival screenings will include “Saw,” “Mysterious Skin” and “House Party,” as well as the 35th anniversary of Barbara Kopple’s documentary “American Dream,” and 20th anniversaries of “Half Nelson” and “Little Miss Sunshine,” with some of the filmmakers expected to attend as well.

“Over the almost 30 years of Sundance Institute’s collaboration with our partner, the UCLA Film & Television Archive, we’ve not only worked to ensure that the Festival’s legacy endures through film preservation, but we’ve seen that output feed an astonishing resurgence of repertory cinema programming across the country,” said festival programmer John Nein.

“The films we’ve preserved and the newly restored films screening at this year’s festival, including some big anniversaries, are an important way to keep the independent stories from years past alive in our culture today.”

Tickets for the 2026 festival, which runs from Jan. 22 through Feb. 1, go on sale Wednesday at noon Eastern, with online and in person options. Some planning is also already underway for the festival’s new home in Boulder, Colorado, in 2027, but programmers are heads down figuring out the slate of world premieres for January. Those will be revealed in December.

“There’s a lot more to come and a lot more to announce,” Hernandez said. “This is just laying a foundation.”

Redford's death has added a poignancy to everything.

“Seeing and hearing the remembrances took me back to why I felt compelled to go to the festival in the first place,” Hernandez said. “It’s been very grounding and clarifying and for us as a team it’s been very emotional and moving. But it’s also been an opportunity to remind ourselves what Mr. Redford has given to us, to our lives, to our industry, to Utah.”


'Dream Come True' for US Pianist Eric Lu after Chopin Competition Win 

Pianists vying for the top prize performed in a multi-stage contest to showcase their skills in various musical forms. Wojtek RADWANSKI / AFP
Pianists vying for the top prize performed in a multi-stage contest to showcase their skills in various musical forms. Wojtek RADWANSKI / AFP
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'Dream Come True' for US Pianist Eric Lu after Chopin Competition Win 

Pianists vying for the top prize performed in a multi-stage contest to showcase their skills in various musical forms. Wojtek RADWANSKI / AFP
Pianists vying for the top prize performed in a multi-stage contest to showcase their skills in various musical forms. Wojtek RADWANSKI / AFP

American pianist Eric Lu won the top prize at the prestigious International Chopin Piano Competition, the contest's Polish organizers said Tuesday.

The competition -- held every five years in Frederic Chopin's homeland -- is seen as a gateway to classical music glory, with winners going on to play top global venues and sign recording deals.

"This is a dream come true," Lu, 27, told reporters in Warsaw, thanking "all the Chopin lovers around the world".

A graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, Lu participated in the competition's 2015 edition, finishing fourth.

Pianists vying for the top prize performed in a multi-stage contest to showcase their skills in various musical forms composed by Chopin, including polonaises, sonatas and mazurkas, AFP said.

It culminated with a final round that saw 11 pianists performing one of two Chopin piano concertos and his Polonaise-Fantaisie, considered notoriously difficult to master.

Previous winners of the competition include some of the biggest names in classical music, including Maurizio Pollini, Martha Argerich and Krystian Zimerman.

American pianist Garrick Ohlsson, who won the top prize in 1970, chaired the jury that selected this year's winner.

"We had a number of very difficult discussions involving our opinions about artistic matters, and it did really take this long", Ohlsson said after the jury's nearly five-hour deliberations.

"But we actually got rid of the roadblocks, and I think we have a fine decision for this year's competition," he added.

Record interest

Canada's Kevin Chen, 20, finished second and China's Zitong Wang, 26, came third.

The winner receives a prize of 60,000 euros ($70,000).

Young pianists aged 16 to 30 were eligible to take part in the competition, first held in 1927, and the Warsaw organizers received a record number of more than 600 applications for this year's edition.

Only around a tenth of them made it through a complex qualification process that included playing in a preliminary round in Warsaw.

The last event, held in 2021 after being deferred because of the Covid pandemic, ended with Canadian pianist Bruce Liu scoring the highest accolade.

Broadcast live on YouTube, the contest attracted record online interest and drew music buffs from around the world.

"I came here to just listen to this concert," Kosei Harada, a 21-year-old Japanese student living in Germany told AFP after the competition's final stage and the verdict.

"Actually I wanted the Japanese to take the prize. But I really loved the performance of Eric Lu too. So it's okay for me," Harada said.

Tickets for the competition had sold out within 30 minutes of their release online, with the final round tickets gone in two minutes.