Predator: Badlands is now available for home viewing wherever you want! The bold new chapter in the iconic “Predator” franchise is now available to buy or rent digitally or on disc, and is also streaming on Hulu on Disney+!
Predator: Badlands pushes the franchise into a new space. Set on a distant and deadly planet, Genna, the story follows Dek, a young Yautja (Predator) who’s been cast out by his clan. On his first hunt, he encounters a Weyland-Yutani synthetic named Thia. Together they form an unexpected alliance and embark on a dangerous journey to confront their most formidable opponent yet. Their unlikely bond is what sets this installment apart, in a story where the line between hunter and hunted blurs like never before. While the film promises the same action we’ve grown to love, it also brings forward tests of survival, trust, and honor.
Predator: Badlands is the highest-grossing entry in the franchise’s 38-year history, earning $183 million worldwide and surpassing the previous record holder, 2004’s Alien vs. Predator. The film’s success is matched by strong audience and critical response, with a 95% Rotten Tomatoes Verified Hot Popcornmeter score and an 86% Certified Fresh Tomatometer critics rating.
‘Predator: Badlands’ 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Steelbook combo pack
The DVD, Blu-ray Disc and 4K Ultra HD come with the same bonus feature as the digital editions. For the ultimate collectors in the “Predator” storyscape, a limited edition 4K Steelbook dramatically captures the scale and intensity of battle with the Kalisk, while highlighting the unexpected alliance between Dek and Thia.
Fan voting has begun for the 2026 Home Entertainment Media Play Awards. This is the 16th year of the annual home entertainment industry honors, and the ninth year they have been presented by Media Play News.
Through March 31, film and TV fans and home entertainment enthusiasts can visit MediaPlayNews.com/awards/ballot to select their favorite home entertainment releases of 2025 as nominated by studios, distributors and home entertainment industry professionals.
The awards cover a wide array of home entertainment options, including streaming, from SVOD to AVOD and FAST channels; DVD, Blu-ray Disc and 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray; premium video-on-demand (PVOD) and digital sellthrough.
The results of the consumer vote will be combined with ballots submitted by a panel of expert judges.
“Best of show” winners are then selected from among all eligible submissions for Packaged-Media Title of the Year, TV Disc Release of the Year and Best Blu-ray Disc. A “Fan-Favorite” trophy also will be awarded for the single title receiving the most consumer votes. Judges may also present awards based on special merit.
Winners will be announced in the April issue of Media Play News, scheduled for release April 20.
Last year’s Home Entertainment Media Play Awards saw the Warner Archive Collection’s remastered 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray of John Wayne’s The Searchers earn the top prize, voted Title of the Year among its five trophies, including Blu-ray Disc of the Year, Best Restoration, Best Audio/Visual Quality, and Best Release of a Western.
Media Play News for the fifth consecutive year is honoring the top independent film distributors, with nominations being accepted through Feb. 27.
The 2026 edition of “Top Indie Power Players” will be published in the March issue of Media Play News, which will be available in both print and digital editions on March 23. The feature also will run online a week later, with all profiles, pictures and congratulatory ads embedded in the story, the latter with live links to the advertiser.
In this special issue, MPN editors will once again profile the top independent film distribution executives who have played a vital role in the home entertainment industry for nearly 50 years. We will profile the key players and decision makers who are bringing to consumers an eclectic mix of groundbreaking new films from all around the world, cult classics, and niche product from documentaries to music, horror and other genres.
Indie distributors have long excelled at multi-platform releasing, since most independent productions only have a limited theatrical or festival release and then go straight into the home, either through streaming or through transactional home entertainment (digital and disc).
“Independent film distributors truly are the unsung heroes of the business,” said MPN publisher Thomas K. Arnold. “We hear a lot about the creative side, the filmmakers and the directors, but getting this incredible content into the public eye is critical to the viability of the independent film business. And with the proliferation of platforms and the rise of streaming, the distribution side of the business has never been more challenging – but also, rewarding.”
Chris McGurk, chairman and CEO of Cineverse, is this year’s Fast Forward Award honoree, Media Play News announced Jan. 19.
The Fast Forward Award is presented each year by Media Play News, one of the five major Hollywood trades and the only one to focus on “last mile” home distribution of films and shows, to people, technologies, or organizations that move the home entertainment industry forward.
McGurk, who will be saluted in the February 2026 issue of Media Play News, is the architect of Cineverse’s transformation from a digital cinema company to an entertainment and streaming technology company, which is built around the principle that streaming and theatrical are synergistic rather than cannibalistic, and that technology is the engine that allows our industry’s crown jewel, content, to shine brighter than ever.
Cineverse distributes content across all windows and platforms, from theatrical to digital to physical, and has a library of more than 71,000 films, series and podcasts that reach 50 million unique monthly viewers. The company also has a technology organization that it built alongside its content business. Matchpoint is the company’s core technology suite for delivering streaming content, an automated and workflow platform that prides itself on efficiency and also provides tools for scalable app creation, analytics and predictive dashboards, and AI-powered quality control and metadata enrichment.
“Chris epitomizes the new type of studio executive who both understands and welcomes technology as an enabler,” said Thomas K. Arnold, publisher and editorial director of Media Play News. “After I moderated a discussion with Chris at AFM 2024, where we talked about the success of Terrifier 3 and how it was marketed through Cineverse’s own streaming platforms and technologies, I thought he would be an ideal candidate for this annual honor — and everyone I talked to about it later agreed.”
McGurk said, “I’m honored to be a part of an amazing team that continues to innovate, evolve, and surprise the industry. We have pivoted when needed, while staying true to our mission of redefining what a studio looks like in 2026. From bringing franchises back to fans in theaters — like Return to Silent Hill on Jan. 23, Guillermo del Toro’s Pan’s Labyrinth, and Air Bud Returns, our first family film — to growing our AI and streaming technology capabilities through our best-in-class engineering team, and strategic moves like our recent acquisition of Giant Worldwide, we are proving what’s possible when creative ambition and technical excellence come together.”
Past Media Play News Fast Forward honorees include Katherine Pond, Group VP at Vizio; Danny Fisher, CEO of FilmRise; Andrea Downing, president of PBS Distribution; and Eddie Cunningham, at the time president of Universal Pictures Home Entertainment.
The February 2026 issue of Media Play News becomes available in both print and digital editions on Feb. 23.
Nominations are now being accepted for the annual Home Entertainment Media Play Awards, which for the ninth year is being presented by Media Play News.
Nominations for the awards — which honor the best movies, series and other content aimed at home audiences released during 2025, from streaming to TVOD to disc — are due from participating studios, distributors and content creators Feb. 6.
Winners in all categories will then be determined by a blue-ribbon panel of industry experts in conjunction with a consumer vote. Voting will take place in March and the winners will be announced in April.
The awards cover a wide array of home entertainment options, including streaming, from SVOD to AVOD and FAST; DVD, Blu-ray Disc and 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray; premium video-on-demand (PVOD) and digital sellthrough.
“Best of show” winners are then selected from among all eligible submissions for Packaged-Media Title of the Year, TV Disc Release of the Year and Best Blu-ray Disc. A “Fan-Favorite” trophy also will be awarded for the single title receiving the most consumer votes. Judges may also present awards based on special merit.
Last year’s Home Entertainment Media Play Awards saw the Warner Archive Collection’s remastered 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray edition of director John Ford’s 1956 Western classic The Searchers starring John Wayne winning in five categories, taking the top prize of Title of the Year, as well as Blu-ray Disc of the Year, Best Restoration, Best Audio/Visual Quality, and Best Release of a Western.
Overall, this is the 16th edition of the annual home entertainment awards.
As 2025 draws to a close, Media Play News is once again taking a look at the headlines that rocked the home entertainment world.
Stories were selected by the Media Play News editorial staff, and are listed in countdown form.
10. Box Office Blues — The 2025 theatrical market got off to a terrible start, with year-to-date North American ticket sales down 7% to $1.34 billion through March 25, according to Comscore. The March 14-16 weekend tally posted the slowest theatrical start for the month of March in 29 years. Cinema executives began to sound the alarm, blaming shortened windows, but fortunately hits such as A Minecraft Movie rode to the rescue. Still, Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos’ disregard for the theatrical window loomed over discussions about the future of theatrical exhibition — and indeed the streamer’s purchase of Warner Bros. Discovery’s assets. Arguably the biggest surprise hit feature of the year — KPop Demon Hunters — didn’t find its audience on the big screen. The Sony Animation-produced film started streaming on Netflix first, before mounting a short and successful theatrical run after it became a pop culture phenomenon. Speaking at a September conference, Sony Pictures CEO Ravi Ahuja admitted that the studio may have traded away a box office blockbuster. “At the time, it made sense [to give Netflix distribution],” Ahuja said. “But now you look at the success and think maybe it could have been theatrical. Obviously, in hindsight, it’s such a big hit.”
9. YouTube Throws Its Weight Around — YouTube got into the sports game in a big way in 2025, exclusively live-streaming the first game of the 2025 NFL season. The game, featuring the Los Angeles Chargers and the Kansas City Chiefs in São Paulo, Brazil, on Sept. 5, was streamed to a worldwide audience — outside North America — on YouTube and YouTube TV. It marked the first exclusive NFL game to be streamed live and for free in its entirety on YouTube. YouTube threw its weight around later in the year tangling with Disney over carriage costs on its OTT pay-TV platform YouTube TV. The dustup left YouTube TV subscribers unable to watch content from Disney networks, including ESPN, ABC, Disney Channel, FX, National Geographic and Freeform — and even extended to Google/YouTube pulling out of the Movies Anywhere digital locker service (it’s scheduled to return). The two companies settled their dispute, but the fracas showed YouTube was ready to go toe-to-toe with traditional media giants. As a coda to YouTube’s shift into the traditional TV space in 2025, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences signed a multiyear deal giving YouTube exclusive global rights to the Oscars — a broadcast TV staple — from 2029 to 2033. The agreement kicks off with the 101st Oscar ceremony and includes red carpet coverage, behind-the-scenes footage, Governors Ball access and more content available live and for free to more than 2 billion viewers around the world on YouTube, and to YouTube TV subscribers in the United States.
8. The Break-Up — Before Warner Bros. Discovery attracted numerous deep-pocketed suitors, the plan was to split up the company. WBD was not alone in seeing the advantages of the strategy. Comcast Corp. mounted a separation of it cable television networks and digital platforms from its remaining businesses, creating an independent, publicly traded company named Versant Media Group, taking Fandango and its Fandango at Home transactional digital service with it.
7. Foreign Affairs — U.S. streamers courted partners for international growth as subscriber expansion in the domestic marketplace hit a wall. To attract foreign audiences, streamers such as Disney+, HBO Max and even Netflix, which has prided itself on boosting local productions, looked to partner with, or acquire, local content distributors and producers.
6. FAST Becomes a Fixture — After exponential growth, the free-ad-supported streaming television (FAST) marketplace began to mature into a fixture of the ecosystem. Firmly established as an integral part of the smart-TV lineup, FAST channels became another permanent menu item in the streaming landscape.
5. License to Bill — Universal animated movies and AMC series were a staple on Netflix in 2025, as content owners began to be less interested in keeping titles on their own services. Late in the year, Netflix secured rights from Amazon MGM to stream a collection of James Bond films (which had been streaming on competitor Prime Video), as well as other MGM features such as Legally Blonde.
4. Subscription Prices Hikes — Netflix kicked off 2025 increasing prices for all U.S. plans, raising the ad-supported plan to $7.99, the standard ad-free plan to $17.99, and the premium plan to $24.99 monthly. The Apple TV+ (renamed Apple TV) subscription streaming service lifted its monthly fee $3 to $12.99, from $9.99, effective Aug. 21 for new consumers, and within 30 days for existing subscribers. HBO Max Oct. 21 disclosed it was raising the monthly subscription price across all tiers, effective immediately for new subscribers, and on Nov. 21 for existing subs. Disney Sept. 23 announced it was raising monthly subscription prices across all streaming platforms for the third time in three years, effective Oct. 21, except for the ad-free Disney+/Hulu bundle, which remains unchanged at $19.99 per month.
3. Sports Goes Streaming — Sports streaming entered the big leagues in 2025, beginning with Fox-owned Tubi becoming the first AVOD platform to live-stream Super Bowl LIX on Feb. 9. Sports streaming is continuing to overtake linear TV with ESPN, Netflix, Peacock, Paramount+, HBO Max and Prime Video embracing the genre. Upwards of 118 million viewers were expected to stream sports monthly by year’s end, up 71% from 2021 — fueled by the NFL and NBA incorporating over-the-top video distribution in new media distribution deals that began in 2025, according to Nielsen. Broadcast still thrives for major events (e.g., the Super Bowl as the most-watched TV show ever), but standalone sports streaming went mainstream in August with Disney’s rollout of ESPN Unlimited, and Fox One offering subscribers access to all its licensed live sports (the two apps later formed a bundle for an even bigger sports draw). Netflix live-streamed three exclusive boxing fight cards in 2025 drawing millions of global viewers. Netflix again spearheaded a streaming-centric NFL Christmas week with two games on Dec. 25, followed by Prime Video’s Thursday Night Football. Peacock and Paramount live-streamed NFL games on Dec. 27. “Instead of competing and conflicting with their linear TV components, streaming platforms like Hulu, Paramount+,and Peacock have really come into their own as key connections to streaming-native consumers,” said Brian Fuhrer, SVP of product strategy and thought leadership at Nielsen.
2. Bundling Up — As consumers were taking a harder look at their growing subscription streaming bills, services stepped up bundling with others. The discounted ESPN Unlimited/Fox One bundle launched Oct. 2. Apple and NBCUniversal announced the launch of the Apple TV and Peacock Bundle, available beginning Oct. 20. NBCUniversal inked a new bundle distribution deal with Amazon that makes the Peacock streaming service accessible via Prime Video Channels and Amazon Fire TV devices, while renewing access to Universal Pictures’ movies available for digital rent or purchase on Prime Video. In return, the Prime Video streaming service continued to be made available to Comcast Xfinity X1 premium television subscribers. Those were just some of the moves in 2025 to bundle up.
1. Consolidation Fever — Media company consolidation took center stage in 2025. The year culminated in Warner Bros. Discovery accepting a bid from Netflix for its studio and streaming assets. Meanwhile, Paramount Skydance refused to let go of its attempt to acquire the whole company, mounting a hostile takeover bid. Paramount Skydance itself had formed just over the summer after Skydance Media closed its acquisition of Paramount Global. On the indie front, New York-based film and television studio and streaming network FilmRise merged with Los Angeles-based Shout! Studios following its acquisition by Oaktree Capital, which renamed the combined company Radial Entertainment.
Welcome to Media Play News’ second annual feature spotlighting the groundbreaking ways artificial intelligence and machine learning are reshaping the digital entertainment landscape. This year’s featured products and technologies cover everything from revolutionizing content creation, supply chain logistics and content discovery, to marketing that content and dubbing it for localization.
The top 20 selections were chosen by our editorial team, who carefully reviewed nominations submitted by our readers and then did hours of additional research to make sure we were spotlighting only the true standouts.
And then we asked ChatGPT to rank them — countdown style.
AI is clearly on the march, but consumers are wary.
In a Looper Insights study of 1,200 U.S. consumers and 48 streaming executives that was conducted Oct. 6-20, 56.8% of streaming executives said systematic AI training is already underway in their companies.
While executives rank AI-driven content creation (scripts, visuals, editing, localization) as the No. 1 most disruptive application of AI, seeing AI as a creative engine, audiences are divided on the concept, fearing a loss of authenticity compared with human storytelling. Only 22.8% of consumers see AI-created content as exciting, while 25.4% are skeptical and 24.5% are outright opposed.
Meanwhile, 38.3% of executives say AI assistants and interactive AI-driven storytelling have very high potential for the future of streaming, while consumers are, again, split. Only 27.1% of consumers in the survey said they would regularly use an AI assistant, and only 29.1% said they are excited about AI-driven interactive stories. A sizable portion would prefer no AI involvement at all.
Despite consumer concerns, the industry believes AI’s benefits outweigh the risks, with 42.7% of executives in the survey saying AI’s upsides (efficiency, cost reduction, personalization) outweigh the downsides, and only 13.8% believing the risks (job displacement, bias, loss of creative authenticity) outweigh the benefits.
While consumers may be hesitant, the industry is embracing AI as a key tool in the future of the entertainment industry. Here are the 20 initiatives from 2025 that our editors believe play the most significant role in pushing the industry into that future.
DotstudioPro this year launched Chillfree TV, what it bills as the world’s first AI-built OTT platform supporting 24/7 live FAST and AVOD content featuring more than 7,500 hours of content. The company also merged with independent supplier BayView Entertainment to add content.
Available cross-platform on iOS/Android, Roku, Apple TV and Fire TV, with Samsung, Vizio and LG launching shortly, Chillfree TV is a free ad-supported streaming service featuring classic and independent films across all genres, contemporary TV series, a 4K movie collection and more — built entirely by AI using tools such as Manus, Claude 4.0 and Cursor, and powered by dotstudioPRO’s API-first infrastructure.
What makes Chillfree TV unique is not just the way it was built but how the content was curated, according to the company. The platform’s launch slate draws from titles that have demonstrated strong monetization and engagement metrics across dotstudioPRO’s extensive third-party AVOD, TVOD and FAST distribution network. The platform features 24/7 live FAST channels with an AI-optimized program guide and personalized discovery through smart AI search and recommendations.
In addition, through the strategic merger with BayView, Chillfree TV has added more than 3,500 hours of content such as the genre film Skinamarink, and legacy releases Robot Monster and The Endless Summer. The catalog allows dotstudioPRO to scale faster into AVOD, TVOD and FAST.
Our editors say: An ambitious AI-built OTT service, but its impact depends on long-term traction in a competitive FAST/AVOD landscape, as well as its content lineup.
Roku in October updated its voice assistant with AI features that can answer questions about movies, shows and actors, as well as help consumers find something to watch next.
Now, instead of just following simple commands, Roku says its voice assistant can respond to questions such as “How scary is The Shining?” or “What kind of fish is Nemo?” or “What’s Barbie about?”
Roku Voice will display a text response on your screen, while also offering links to shows or movies relevant to the query.
Viewers can ask Roku Voice questions about movies, shows and actors, and see the answers on their TV. Viewers can also ask follow-up questions, and Roku Voice will keep up with the conversation, responding directly on the screen.
Our editors say: A useful enhancement to voice search, yet largely incremental in a space already crowded with similar assistants.
Samsung TV Plus, the consumer electronics giant’s FAST service, in August unveiled an upgraded user home page with enhanced interface, navigation and AI-driven personalization, among other features. The upgrade aims to enable less scrolling and easier discovery of content for Samsung TV owners.
“With AI at the core and a bold new look, this is our smartest and most visually stunning update yet,” Salek Brodsky, SVP and global head of Samsung TV Plus, said at the time.
The key new features include a new design and interface simplifying navigation, with metadata and enhanced imager, and a personalized home screen based on personal viewing habits to bring the most-relevant channels, shows and genres to the forefront. The page now allows easier transition from linear programming to on-demand content, in addition to improved discovery for live content such as sports and breaking news. Samsung TV Plus carries more than 3,500 ad-supported linear channels in 30 countries, and is accessible on more than 630 million active devices.
The platform is the exclusive home of “Conan O’Brien TV” and “Letterman TV,” among other channels available worldwide. Samsung TV Plus is available on Samsung TVs, Galaxy devices, Samsung Smart Monitor and Family Hub.
Our editors say: An interface redesign with improved personalization that benefits users, but doesn’t fundamentally reshape content distribution or creation.
Movie platform maker Kaleidescape in August announced an AI-powered discovery feature, kAI, now available on the Web version of the Kaleidescape Movie Store. The new feature enhances the way movie enthusiasts find and explore movies, music concerts and television shows, making the discovery process smarter, more intuitive and personalized, according to the company.
“kAI represents our commitment to transforming movie discovery through cutting-edge AI technology,” Tayloe Stansbury, chairman and CEO of Kaleidescape, said at the time. “Kaleidescape continues to pioneer the future of premium home entertainment, and kAI marks a significant step forward in delivering smarter, more-engaging experiences.”
With the addition of kAI, Kaleidescape customers can harness the power of generative AI to find exactly what they’re looking for, when logged into the movie store and using the feature with natural-language prompts. For instance, a user can simply type “What’s the movie where the guy falls in love with the machine?” to get tailored results, or refine their search with more-detailed questions such as “Are there any that are set in space?” and “Are any of these appropriate for teens?” to find the perfect movie, according to the company. This new feature builds on Kaleidescape’s discovery features, which include its on-screen cover art shuffle that uses proprietary algorithms to bring similar movies together.
Our editors say: A strong natural-language discovery tool for a premium niche audience, but too limited in adoption to shift broader industry workflows.
LG Ad Solutions, a global provider of connected-TV advertising technology, in October unveiled Agentiv, an artificial intelligence platform developed to support the company’s suite of internal and external agents that enhance operational and data-driven efficiencies.
Agentiv is part of LG Ad Solutions’ broader efforts to incorporate AI tools into its advertising technology framework to improve workflow automation, collaboration and data accessibility. Currently, more than 20 intelligent agents operate within Agentiv, supporting various operational workflows. Internal applications include a media planning agent that produces feasibility reports based on campaign inputs, and a creative review agent that assists in managing ad-approval processes.
The initial phase includes a data collaboration agent that enables participating brands to combine their customer data with LG Ad Solutions’ insights in a privacy-compliant environment designed to inform audience identification and campaign evaluation.
Key features of Agentiv include:
Natural Language Query: Allows users to access campaign data through conversational interactions.
Persona-Based Permissions: Provides tiered access so advertisers, agencies, and partners can view relevant data securely.
Clean Room Integration: Supports privacy-focused data collaboration for shared insights.
Optimization Support: Enables data-driven assessment of campaign performance for timely adjustments.
Our editors say: Improves internal ad-tech efficiency through automation, but its effects remain mostly behind the scenes and operational.
Looper Insights’ AI Strategy Planner is a generative AI tool that transforms how content owners, distributors and streamers plan and measure digital merchandising.
Looper’s data provides visibility into where titles appear marketed across major connected-TV platforms, helping teams turn on-screen placement data into measurable value. Its new AI Strategy Planner elevates that intelligence by letting marketers generate instant, data-driven strategies through natural-language queries.
For example, users can simply ask, “I’m planning the launch of a new rom-com. Analyze relevant historical performance across our catalog and key competitors, and create a playbook that will maximize ROI across our priority U.S. platforms.” The AI then draws on Looper’s dataset to identify patterns, forecast outcomes and recommend the most impactful placements and creative approaches.
Looper Insights’ AI Strategy Planner helps marketers optimize visibility of content.
At the core of this capability is Media Placement Value (MPV), Looper’s proprietary metric that quantifies the visibility and commercial worth of every on-screen placement. MPV turns digital shelf space into media value, enabling accurate forecasting, benchmarking and demonstrable ROI.
Marketers can also inject their own data — combining internal knowledge with Looper’s intelligence.
Our editors say: Adds powerful intelligence to merchandising and windowing strategies, yet its impact is confined to marketing infrastructure.
AMC Networks in June announced a deal with Runway to incorporate the AI startup’s models and tools in AMC Networks’ marketing and TV development processes.
AMC Networks — home to such big subscription streaming services as AMC+, Shudder and Acorn TV — says deploying Runway’s tech has two big benefits. It helps creators and showrunners visualize, in advance, shows that have yet to be produced, allowing them to experiment with different visual directions without spending big money on sets and test shoots. Runway’s AI tech also lets marketers create stock images that can be used for promotional purposes, bypassing the need for expensive photo shoots.
Stephanie Mitchko, EVP of global media operations and technology at AMC Networks, said in June that “Runway’s cutting-edge technology is particularly exciting for its ability to streamline access to standout scenes for promotional use, support campaign ideation and even accelerate pre-visualization during development, blending AI innovation with creative collaboration. Our objective is always to use every tool at our disposal to help our creative partners fully realize the stories they want to tell. This partnership with Runway is the latest application of this longstanding commitment.”
On the company’s August earnings call AMC Networks CEO Kristin Dolan told analysts, “We’ve already begun using these tools to efficiently and quickly explore possibilities around certain storylines or locations, expanding the quality and volume of opportunity in these important areas.”
Our editors say: Accelerates marketing and pre-production workflows, but remains primarily an internal creative accelerator rather than a consumer-facing disruptor.
The National Basketball Association and Amazon Web Services in October announced a multiyear partnership that will incorporate AI-powered technology into league games streamed on Prime Video and other digital channels.
“NBA Inside the Game, powered by AWS” will provide AI-powered stats to help fans dive deeper into the games, teams and players they follow. The new platform will be available across all NBA digital channels, including the NBA App, NBA.com and the league’s social platforms.
New AI-powered stats include “Defensive Box Score,” which uses AI algorithms to track which defender is responsible for each offensive player in real-time; “Shot Difficulty,” which assesses the difficulty of attempted shots by taking into account such factors as the shooter’s orientation and setup, court positioning and defensive contest details related to pressure, interference and positioning; “Gravity,” which showcases how certain players create advantages for teammates simply by being on the court, even without touching the ball; and “Play Finder,” a new tool that uses AI to analyze and understand player movements across thousands of games.
Future iterations of the software will allow fans to explore basketball strategy on the NBA App. This technology lays the foundation for future generative AI integrations built on player tracking data, moving beyond technical capabilities to deliver tangible insights fans can use to deepen their understanding of the game.
Our editors say: Enhances analytics and fan understanding of the sport, though its relevance is limited to live sports rather than the full entertainment landscape.
Prime Video continues to leverage Amazon’s tech skills and resources to enhance the viewing experience for NFL fans with new AI-powered features for the 2025 Thursday Night Football season.
The streamer in August said the AI-powered Prime Insights will be introduced throughout the season on Prime Vision with Next Gen Stats, an alternative stream fans can watch in addition to the main feed. Prime Vision serves as a laboratory and incubator for new features that may eventually advance to the main feed.
Pocket Health is a proprietary AI model that instantly analyzes tens of thousands of data points across the offensive line throughout the play, generating dynamic on-screen visuals and statistics that illustrate threat levels affecting the QB’s protection in the pocket.
The End of Game Suite consists of three new tools that deliver insights surrounding crucial late-game scenarios and strategies for both teams: Path to Victory employs AI to predict remaining possession scenarios for trailing teams to map potential paths toward a comeback victory; Time Remaining Prediction features advanced game clock analysis that predicts how much time will be left on the clock if the defense can force a three-and-out; and Victory Formation identifies the right amount of time needed for a leading team to secure one final first down, and the ability to run out the clock.
Our editors say: Delivers innovative, predictive NFL insights for viewers, but remains confined to the live-sports vertical.
Netflix advertising president Amy Reinhard at the streamer’s May 14 Upfront presentation in New York City unveiled a series of new ad tools energized by both data and AI for the Netflix Ads Suite.
With the Netflix Ads Suite, advertisers can incorporate their first-party data, either through LiveRamp or directly with Netflix, so clients can match data sets for behavioral insights and targeting capabilities against Netflix’s ads audience.
Netflix also opened third-party data access to such partners as Experian and Acxiom, and announced its own “clean room” strategy, with a safe, neutral space for data collaboration and partnerships.
Netflix also announced the development of new first-party measurement solutions, starting with a brand-lift capability tying viewing behaviors to consumer brand perceptions.
The company debuted a new modular framework for ad formats that leverages generative AI to instantly marry advertisers’ ads with its shows.
Reinhard unveiled the first capability with interactive midroll and pause formats that build custom advertising creative with added overlays, call to action, second-screen buttons and more to serve the right ad to the right member at the right time. These formats will be available by 2026 in all ad-supported countries, according to Netflix.
Our editors say: Transforms targeting, measurement and creative modularity for ad buyers, yet sits more on the business side than at the core of content transformation.
My Drama is a vertical streaming platform delivering cinematic, phone-first series. The core innovation is a closed loop between production, marketing and product, generating and localizing large volumes of creative concepts for every title and releasing hundreds of thousands of assets across multiple languages.
User acquisition teams run hundreds of multivariate tests daily through an AI-assisted workflow, while audience signals are shared back in real time with editors, producers and product teams. This technology allows hooks, pacing and positioning to be refined continuously, ensuring each title finds the right audience quickly and efficiently. Flagship series have reached up to 20 million views, and title campaigns have generated more than 7 billion social impressions.
With a custom AI tool, the marketing team can produce twice as many creatives while freeing up 50% of their capacity, according to Holywater. Organic growth teams amplify this with high-end content across Meta, TikTok, Google and YouTube, helping the My Drama channel reach 1 million followers and deliver billions of impressions.
This model enables global discovery of bite-sized cinematic storytelling and unlocks new creative and commercial opportunities for Hollywood and worldwide creators.
The workflow addresses a growing industry problem: Indie filmmakers and small studios struggle to reach global viewers without legacy-sized budgets. My Drama reduces the cost and time required to build an audience by pairing premium vertical content with AI-accelerated creative generation, rapid testing and global localization.
Our editors say: Enables scalable vertical-series workflows but remains tied to a specific content format with limited broader industry application.
My Muse is a streaming platform for vertical video series produced with the aid of generative AI. The platform solves an existential problem for creators, empowering them to produce, distribute and fairly monetize high-quality video series for as little as 10% of the cost of traditional production, according to Holywater. My Muse series are created, written and directed by humans, with AI tools used to assist with audience analysis, idea generation, storyboarding, production and distribution.
My Muse is part of the tech company Holywater, with more than 55 million users across a portfolio including My Drama, a Webby Award-winning vertical streaming platform, and My Passion, an e-book platform. My Muse was originally built as a script-testing tool to support My Drama, but when early AI series outperformed all expectations, it quickly evolved into a standalone product.
With plans to include all genres, My Muse currently focuses on crime, a massive genre that remains largely unexplored in the vertical space due to production costs, according to Holywater. The market opportunity is immense, according to Holywater, with vertical video projected to be a $14 billion industry by 2027.
My Muse is already home to several successful AI-supported series. As it scales, it aims to release 100 short series per month. The Distance Between Two Points of Me, an AI short film from Ukrainian filmmaker Illya Dutsyk, won two Gold Telly Awards and was a finalist at the 2025 Runway AI Film Festival, the world’s largest AI-powered film festival.
Our editors say: Demonstrates the power of AI-assisted vertical series, yet still operates mainly in emerging formats rather than mainstream entertainment.
Paramount+ in July launched “Paramount+ Fan Frontier,” an interactive, AI-powered social experience based on the “Find Your Mountain on Paramount+” campaign, in which hit shows are blended to create bizarre mashups (such as “Yellowjackets” with “Survivor,” or “Star Trek” with “SpongeBob SquarePants”).
The Paramount+ Fan Frontier stunt invited fans on Facebook and Threads to reply to prompts to showcase their fandoms, including “name your favorite Paramount+ series” and “share your dream vacation spot.” Select participants then were given custom “deeds” to their own unique plot of land on Paramount Mountain. The personalized plots could range from a beachfront Dutton-style ranch to a luxurious pineapple under a tree in Tuscany. Each deed featured the owner’s social handle and official plot name, a design inspired by their chosen genre and a visual of Paramount Mountain.
The Paramount+ Fan Frontier campaign leveraged Adobe Firefly’s generative AI technology to build the personalized deeds in real-time. The campaign debuted July 9, with a second iteration held later that month at Paramount+’s “The Lodge” during San Diego Comic-Con, where fans were invited to answer prompts while in line as a remote design team generated a digital deed based on responses. Fans could pick up their printed land deed scroll upon exiting The Lodge, and a digital copy was sent via text for online sharing.
Our editors say: A clever AI-powered marketing activation that could be a model for things to come.
Fairground Entertainment is a new studio and streaming platform that is focused exclusively on creating AI-generated TV series. The company’s launch was announced in May by Colin Petrie-Norris, a founder of FAST pioneer Xumo, who told journalists he has raised $4 million in seed money from a group of investors that includes programming advertising company Viant Technology, which was one of the founding partners of Xumo alongside Panasonic.
Fairground at the time said it will launch its journey into AI-generated entertainment with a curated slate of programming developed alongside hand-picked creators. These initial projects explore innovative reimaginings of popular public domain stories, involving such iconic characters as Dracula and Robin Hood, as well as officially licensed, widely recognized IP to reimagine popular franchises for modern audiences. Fairground’s vision is to expand and redefine the entire entertainment ecosystem, combining human creativity with the power of advanced AI to unlock new forms of storytelling.
The company will produce both short-form and long-form content and was supposed to unveil its first shows in the third quarter of this year, but there is no release information on its website, just a solicitation for creators. Petrie is speaking in January at CES in Las Vegas.
Our editors say: Bold in concept, but unproven until it successfully delivers and distributes end-to-end AI-generated long-form programming.
Whip Media’s Helix platform helps entertainment companies manage, distribute and monetize content by replacing manual workflows and inconsistent data with a coordinated AI-native pipeline.
Helix includes:
Avails Ingestion and Normalization: Helix ingests avails from any partner and format (Excel, PDFs, feeds, APIs), validates and standardizes them, and maps them to canonical title records so availability decisions are accurate and repeatable.
Licensing and Contract Association: Once avails are selected, Helix supports licensing workflows end-to-end. Contracts can be managed natively or ingested and structured from external systems and documents.
Performance Data Integration and Insight: Helix ingests performance data from distribution platforms, unifies it against titles and surfaces it for reporting and analysis, supporting trend analysis, revenue assurance, programming optimization and renewal decisions.
The Agentic AI Pipeline: Helix is not simply “AI-on-top”; it uses agentic AI natively, coordinating specialist AI agents, each handling a distinct stage of the supply chain: Classification Agent determines data type and processing strategy; Extraction Agent identifies titles, windows, terms, pricing and metrics from structured and unstructured sources; Transformation Agent standardizes data to Helix’s schema using controlled vocabularies and enrichment; Validation Agent applies rule-based and predictive checks with anomaly explainability; and Mapping Agent matches products to known titles using semantic and metadata-driven similarity.
With its understanding of the business logic of rights, windows and revenue models, Helix turns raw data into operational intelligence, enabling faster partner and catalog onboarding, confident real-time availability and licensing decisions, revenue leakage detection, renewal and window optimization, and full data lineage and auditability. What once took days in the digital supply chain now takes minutes.
Our editors say: Reinvents the supply chain through agentic AI, providing deep operational value with industry-wide implications.
Vobile’s DreamMaker platform combines AI-powered video production with copyright protection and monetization solutions. Built on top of NVIDIA Media2 technologies and leveraging NVIDIA accelerated infrastructure, DreamMaker helps independent creators generate, compose and publish short video content while ensuring copyright compliance. Thus, creators can leverage the latest AI technologies to produce videos that respect existing IP, ensure copyright protection and generate revenue from their work.
Key features include:
Integration of Multimodal AI Models: Access to multiple generative AI models along with NVIDIA Media2 resources to create content.
Comprehensive Production Suite: A set of AI tools for video creation to streamline workflows.
Built-in Copyright Protection: Digital fingerprinting and watermarking technologies to ensure copyright compliance.
One-Click Monetization with the Vobile Max platform: Increased revenue opportunities for independent creators to focus on
storytelling.
Production with NVIDIA-accelerated Infrastructure: Performance accelerated by Blackwell to boost revenue and profit for creators.
Vobile’s DreamMaker platform helps independent creators generate short video content without violating copyrights.
Vobile recently partnered with Immortal Studio to bring its technologies to a broader community of independent creators. Creators collaborating with Immortal will gain access to Vobile Max and DreamMaker platforms.
Our editors say: Empowers creators with comprehensive AI tools while integrating copyright protection, making it highly impactful for independent creation ecosystems.
In today’s streaming era, viewers face endless choice, spending lots of time searching for something to watch, flipping through menus across disconnected apps. According to Gracenote’s 2025 State of Play report, 46% say it’s harder than ever to find what they want, and half would cancel a service if they can’t easily discover something new.
Cinesearch attempts to solve this problem by unifying content discovery across streaming services through AI that understands emotion, mood and context — turning “What should we watch?” into an intuitive, personalized answer.
For instance, when asked for best holiday movies (see screenshot below), Cinesearch understands intent and doesn’t rely on keywords, suggesting Home Alone or Die Hard. By comparison, Netflix suggests Captain Underpants: Hack-a-ween or Making It in Marbella with the same prompt. Cinesearch results are powered by Q-Points, an AI system that reveals how mood, setting, and sentiment drive each recommendation. This transparency builds trust and helps audiences understand why certain titles appear.
A screenshot of Cinesearch’s recommendations for best holiday movies.
Users can filter by genre or streaming service, instantly narrowing results to what’s available on their subscriptions. Biometric voice recognition personalizes results for every household member and learns individual preference. Privacy is foundational — data stays securely on-device and is never shared externally.
For viewers, Cinesearch reduces friction and replaces choice overload with clarity. For media partners and device manufacturers, it reduces churn, deepens engagement and extends viewing sessions by connecting audiences to what they love.
Our editors say: A breakthrough in AI-driven discovery that reduces churn and directly solves one of streaming’s biggest consumer pain points.
TrueSync, developed by Flawless, is an AI-driven localization system that lets actors appear as if they’re naturally speaking any language without reshoots, CG replacement or 3D scanning. Combining 3D performance mapping, audio-driven facial activation, and neural rendering, TrueSync rearticulates an actor’s mouth movements to match new dialogue while preserving micro-expressions and emotional nuance from the original performance.
The system begins by capturing the actor’s unique facial motion in 3D, then analyzes the new dubbed audio to predict how that actor would naturally articulate each sound. Finally, neural rendering synthesizes these new movements directly into the original footage, frame-accurate and photorealistic. A preprocessing step called “dialog removal” isolates emotion from speech, creating a “blank canvas” for new languages without losing authenticity.
TrueSync integrates into standard post-production tools such as Avid, Nuke and Resolve, ensuring compatibility and scalability for films, series and streaming content.
Every localized version is tracked through Flawless’ Artistic Rights Treasury (A.R.T.) framework, ensuring consent and creative integrity.
The technology was used for Watch the Skies, the first theatrically released film to use visual dubbing.
Our editors say: A transformative advance in localization that preserves actor intent and emotional nuance, dramatically raising the bar for global distribution.
The Walt Disney Co. CEO Bob Iger didn’t just tiptoe into the AI conversation during the company’s latest earnings call — he jumped in with both feet.
Calling AI “the biggest and most significant change to Disney+ since its launch in 2019,” Iger signaled that the streaming service is about to undergo a dramatic evolution, one that blends generative creativity, interactivity and deeper integration across Disney’s vast ecosystem.
According to Iger, the company is exploring AI-powered tools that would allow subscribers to create short-form, personalized content; experience game-like interactions inside Disney+; and move seamlessly between streaming, parks, games and commerce. In Disney’s view, AI isn’t just a technical upgrade — it’s a strategy to supercharge engagement and keep the platform sticky in an increasingly competitive streaming landscape.
But the bold vision sparked immediate backlash. Creatives and fans questioned whether AI-generated shorts and customized character interactions would dilute the craftsmanship and authenticity that built Disney’s legacy. Some accused the company of prioritizing algorithmic content over artists, prompting calls for subscriber pushback and even boycotts. Iger acknowledged those concerns, noting that Disney is in “productive conversations” to protect its iconic characters and franchises as AI adoption grows.
For Disney+, the road ahead is clear but precarious: AI may unlock powerful new experiences, but preserving the trust that defines Disney’s brand will be the real magic trick.
Our editors say: Represents a major strategic shift for one of the world’s most influential entertainment companies, blending personalization, interactivity and ecosystem-wide AI integration.
Ray3 claims to mark a turning point in how humans and machines create together. Built by Luma AI, it is billed as the world’s first reasoning video model, a system that doesn’t just generate footage but also understands visual intent, evaluates its own results, and refines them in real time.
Ray3 combines intelligence and fidelity, producing native 16-bit HDR EXR video suitable for film, advertising and game production. It can plan complex scenes, maintain consistent characters and motion, and deliver cinematic realism with the same dynamic range used in Hollywood pipelines.
With Draft Mode, creators can explore ideas up to 20 times faster, turning quick sketches into finished 4K HDR visuals while preserving composition and identity. This workflow mirrors how directors and designers actually think, according to Luma, allowing them to experiment first and polish later. Through partnerships with Adobe, Dentsu Digital, HUMAIN Create, Monks, Galeria and Strawberry Frog, Ray3 is being woven into the tools and studios shaping culture worldwide.
An image of an astronaut generated by Luma AI’s Ray3.
In Adobe Firefly, users can generate and refine video seamlessly between Ray3 and Premiere Pro. In Japan, Dentsu is using it to revolutionize ad production. HUMAIN is bringing Ray3 to the MENA region with cultural and ethical guardrails. Across agencies, creatives can now move from idea to broadcast-quality output in hours, not weeks.
By reasoning across words, images and motion, Luma’s system helps creators think visually in a process that is not automation, but collaboration. For entertainment, advertising and design, Ray3 offers AI that understands storytelling and brings it to life in cinematic form.
Our editors say: The most transformative because it introduces reasoning-based video generation with cinematic fidelity, fundamentally reshaping how visual storytelling can be created.
The rise of YouTube as a global force in the connected living room took another big step this week when the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences signed over exclusive global TV rights to the Alphabet-owned company for four years starting in 2029.
This means the Oscars, which averaged a still-very-impressive 19.7 million viewers on ABC back on March 2, will be available in the U.S. only via virtual pay-TV service YouTube TV and internationally via free-to-use, ad-supported YouTube.
What does this mean for streaming? For broadcast? For viewers? Next TMT’s David Bloom and Daniel Frankel ponder the possibilities here in the second installment in a series of thought-provoking video podcasts brought to you by Media Play News on MPN’s YouTube channel and, soon, audio podcasts on Spotify and other top platforms.
Media Play News is pleased to announce a partnership with Next TMT co-founders Daniel Frankel and David Bloom, who will star in a new series of thought-provoking video podcasts available exclusively on our YouTube channel and, soon, audio podcasts on Spotify and other top platforms.
Their first podcast addresses the hot issue of the day: the proposed sale of Warner Bros. Discovery, or at least the studio and streaming part of the huge media conglomerate, to Netflix.
WBD’s board of directors on Dec. 17 advised its shareholders to reject a $108.4 billion hostile takeover bid from Paramount Skydance and approve the deal with Netflix, which the board has already approved. That deal values the venerable Hollywood media company at $82.7 billion sans its linear cable networks.
Media Play News has been tracking this story closely, and in their debut on the Media Play News YouTube channel, Frankel and Bloom try to make sense of what just unfolded … and predict what happens next.
With not just David Zaslav turning on him, but also seemingly President Trump, will Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison regroup and re-approach WBD investors with another, even bigger hostile bid?
Welcome to the fourth annual edition of The 40 Most Important People in Streaming, in which we profile the key executives driving streaming and its alphabet soup of acronyms — SVOD, AVOD, TVOD and FAST.
Our fourth annual list has quite a few new names, including Cindy Holland, who brought original content to Netflix and now leads streaming at the new Paramount, a Skydance Corporation; Netflix CFO Spencer Neumann, who oversees billions in annual content spending while keeping investors confident in Netflix’s long-term profitability; Salek Brodsky, under whose leadership Samsung TV Plus has become one of the largest FAST services globally; and Stephen Hodge, who heads OTTera, a global leader in OTT solutions powering hundreds of AVOD, SVOD, TVOD and FAST services worldwide.
As always, our finalists were selected by a blue-ribbon committee of Media Play News editors and prominent industry leaders, who relied on both nominations submitted by our readers and their own extensive knowledge and experience to come up with what we feel is our best list yet. And, as always, our definition of “important” is subjective — balancing revenue and subscriber counts against such other factors as content licensing and distribution, innovation and creativity, and enabling technologies and
services.
Please join us in congratulating the 40 most important people in streaming, class of 2025!
Despite sharing the CEO position, Sarandos and Peters continue to focus on their own niche components driving Netflix’s global dominance. Sarandos continues to champion original programming, AI for “better, faster” storytelling — not as a replacement for major talent — and Netflix’s role in “saving Hollywood” through streaming. Peters eyes product, operations and global expansion, emphasizing disciplined growth and innovation in ads and gaming, while exhibiting skepticism toward large-scale mergers and acquisitions, such as buying Warner Bros. Discovery. In the company’s October fiscal report, Sarandos echoed Peters on M&A selectivity, stating he has “no interest in owning legacy media networks,” but is open to acquiring IP such as HBO and Warner Bros. Pictures. While continuing to turn a cold shoulder to the theatrical window for original feature films, Sarandos approved distributing KPop Demon Hunters across select box office weekends, in addition to releasing the final episode of “Stranger Things” in movie theaters. In addition to touting Netflix’s production largess in the U.S. and the U.K., Sarandos and Peters hailed the streamer’s $2 billion fiscal impact in India (creating 20,000 jobs) and $1 billion presence in Mexico for 2025-28 productions, boosting the streamer’s ongoing think-local, stream-global synergy. Sarandos has been with Netflix since 2000, working alongside co-founder Reed Hastings to grow the original DVD-by-mail rental business and then transition the subscription model to streaming. Peters joined in 2008, a year after Netflix launched its streaming service, and as international development officer led the company’s expansion outside the United States. He was promoted to chief product officer in 2017 and became chief operating officer in 2020, the same year Sarandos was named co-CEO. Hastings stepped down in January 2023 and Peters became Sarandos’ new partner.
Amy Reinhard
President, Ads, Netflix
Amy Reinhard
Reinhard oversees global advertising sales, product development, operations and measurement teams — a critical function as Netflix increasingly relies on its ad-supported subscription tier to drive revenue growth. Earlier this year Netflix reported having 94 million ad-supported subscribers, representing more than 31% of the streamer’s global subscriber base. In April Netflix launched its first in-house ad-tech stack in the U.S. and Canada. In July it named Microsoft as the exclusive technology and sales partner for the ad-supported tier. And at this year’s Upfront presentation to advertisers, Reinhard said ad-supported viewers “pay as much attention to mid-roll ads as they do to the shows and the movies themselves.” Netflix claims that subscribers average more than 41 hours a month on the platform. Prior to ad sales, Reinhard’s executive roles at Netflix included VP of content acquisition (starting in 2016), where she handled global licensing for movies and TV shows, and VP of studio operations and consumer products (from 2020), managing physical production, facilities, casting and IP development.
Spencer Neumann
CFO, Netflix
Spencer Neumann
As Netflix’s chief financial architect since 2019, Neumann has quietly become one of the most influential figures in global streaming. A veteran of Disney and Activision Blizzard, Neumann brings Wall Street discipline to Hollywood creativity — overseeing billions in annual content spending while keeping investors confident in Netflix’s long-term profitability. Under his watch, Netflix has managed to balance skyrocketing production budgets, international expansion, and the rollout of new revenue streams such as the ad-supported tier and paid password sharing. However, the stakes are higher than ever. In Q3 2025 Netflix missed its net income and margin guidance due to a Brazilian tax issue, despite revenue aligning with forecasts. Even so, the miss triggered a sharp drop in share value and raised questions about the sustainability of Netflix’s growth model. Neumann’s role has become pivotal not just in spending wisely, but in restoring credibility, guiding valuation expectations, and steering Netflix toward maturity while preserving its creative edge.
Bela Bajaria
Chief Content Officer, Netflix
Bela Bajaria
Bajaria had a standout year in 2025, marked by major strategic expansions into live sports and events, and overseeing a slate of high-profile content that reinforced Netflix’s dominance in streaming. Managing a massive content budget exceeding $17 billion across 50 languages, Bajaria has overseen popular series such as “Wednesday,” “Baby Reindeer” and “Squid Game,” as well as such films as Adam Sandler’s Happy Gilmore 2 and KPop Demon Hunters, which at 325 million views is the streamer’s most-watched movie ever. She also leads Netflix’s push into live events, from high-profile fights such as the Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul heavyweight bout in Las Vegas, to NFL Sunday afternoon and Christmas Day games, and the $5 billion “WWE Raw” live-stream deal (launched in January). Bajaria was appointed to her present post in January 2023, seven years after she joined Netflix to lead the streamer’s move into unscripted programming. Prior to joining Netflix, Bajaria spent five years at Universal Television, most recently as President.
Keith Le Goy
Chairman, Sony Pictures Television
Keith Le Goy
Le Goy’s promotion this past January to Chairman of Sony Pictures Television (SPT) expanded his responsibilities to lead all of SPT’s production operations, including the studio’s legendary game shows business and Game Show Network (GSN), in addition to continuing his previous oversight of all television and home entertainment distribution for Sony Pictures’ film and television content, and the studio’s cable networks across Latin America and Europe. Under Le Goy’s leadership, SPT’s teams landed historic next-day streaming deals for “Jeopardy!” and “Wheel of Fortune” with Hulu and Peacock in the U.S. and Bell Media’s Crave in Canada. This marks the first time that current-season episodes of the iconic game shows were made available on a streaming platform. Prior to his present position, Le Goy served as Chairman of Worldwide Distribution and Networks for Sony Pictures Entertainment, leading the studio’s combined television and home entertainment distribution and marketing businesses, while also overseeing SPT’s cable networks.
Joe Earley
President, Direct-to-Consumer, The Walt Disney Co.
Joe Earley
Earley leads efforts to expand and elevate The Walt Disney Co.’s streaming services Disney+ and Hulu. Since he was appointed to his present position in April 2023, Earley has propelled Disney’s direct-to-consumer business to unprecedented heights, reaching streaming profitability every quarter for the past year. This success is attributed to strategic initiatives led by Earley and his team, including groundbreaking integrations that have created a seamless one-app experience, such as the incorporation of Hulu and ESPN content on Disney+ in the United States. Earley joined Disney in January 2019 to oversee Disney+ marketing and operations in the lead-up to its launch that year, and added responsibility for content curation in 2021 as the service expanded globally. In January 2022 he was named President of Hulu. Before joining Disney, Earley spent three years as President of the Jackal Group. Earlier, he enjoyed a two-decade run at 20th Century Fox, most recently serving as COO for the Fox Television Group.
Alisa Bowen
President, Disney+
Alisa Bowen
Bowen oversees subscriber and revenue growth and content scheduling for The Walt Disney Co.’s flagship streamer as well as business operations across the company’s direct-to-consumer division, including Hulu. Under her leadership, Disney+ has continued to expand its value proposition with ESPN-produced originals “SC+” and “Vibe Check” and ABC News’ daily series “What You Need to Know” — all specifically crafted for the Disney+ subscriber. This programming has helped create a more unified streaming experience, driving deeper engagement and reducing churn. Before taking charge of Disney+ in September 2022, Bowen served as EVP of Global Business Operations for Disney Streaming, overseeing global content and business operations, including cross-functional leadership of the global Disney+ rollout in 154 markets worldwide. Bowen joined Disney in 2017 as CTO of international operations. Prior to that, Bowen held product, digital technology and general management leadership positions at major media organizations, including Thomson Reuters, Dow Jones and News Corp.
Lauren Tempest
GM, Hulu, and EVP, Direct-to-Consumer Content Partnerships, The Walt Disney Co.
Lauren Tempest
Tempest is responsible for the Hulu business as well as global licensing oversight for Disney Entertainment’s direct-to-consumer services, strategically securing marquee titles that drive significant viewership globally. Recent examples include “Gilmore Girls” (U.S., Canada, and Australia/New Zealand), the Discovery/Scripps portfolio (U.S.), and “The Big Bang Theory” and “Young Sheldon” (EMEA). Tempest last year oversaw the successful integration of Hulu on Disney+, a milestone that required renegotiating rights for major titles and navigating complex challenges. Her work expanded content access and value for bundle subscribers across the United States. Prior to assuming her present position in 2023, Tempest was Hulu’s SVP of Content Partnerships, Acquisitions and Scheduling, overseeing Hulu’s library of content and helping establish a new strategic scheduling framework. She also worked with the company’s third-party partners to acquire top SVOD titles. Tempest joined Hulu in 2015 after six years in program acquisitions with NBCUniversal’s USA Network.
Cindy Holland
Chair, Direct-to-Consumer, Paramount, a Skydance Corporation
Cindy Holland
Best known for orchestrating Netflix’s move into original content, Holland now leads streaming at the new Paramount, a Skydance Corporation. She is responsible for overseeing the strategy, operations and performance of the company’s two streaming platforms, Paramount+ and Pluto TV. Holland previously advised Skydance on the streaming business. Prior to that, she was CEO of global independent studio Sister, which she joined in July 2023. Holland is best known for her 18-year run at Netflix, which includes nine years as VP of Original Content. In that role, she established the network’s original programming strategy and oversaw the teams behind such pioneering series as “House of Cards,” “Orange Is the New Black,” “BoJack Horseman,” “Narcos,” “Stranger Things,” “The Crown” and “Ozark.” Holland began her career on the producing side, working at Spring Creek Productions with Paula Weinstein, and at Mutual Film Co.
Efrain Miron
EVP, Head of Content Strategy and Licensing, Direct-to-Consumer, Paramount, a Skydance Corporation
Efrain Miron
Brought on board in August, Miron oversees strategy, dealmaking and valuation for both original and licensed content across the studios’ streaming business — Paramount+ and Pluto TV. Miron’s importance in the streaming world stems from his foundational role at Netflix where, from 2012 to 2021, he helped implement many of the business practices, frameworks and deal structures now standard across the industry. His experience negotiating breakthrough series such as “The Crown” and “Wednesday” underscores his ability to secure premium content that drives subscriber growth and retention. In his Paramount role, Miron’s deep background in business affairs, production partnerships and global distribution gives him the skill set to shape not only what content appears, but how it is sold, positioned and monetized. For a competitive platform such as Paramount+, his leadership in content strategy positions the service to challenge other major streamers and expand its footprint worldwide.
Mike Hopkins
Head of Prime Video and Amazon MGM Studios, Amazon
Mike Hopkins
Hopkins oversees all aspects of Amazon’s video entertainment business. He leads the strategic vision, product development and technology behind Amazon’s Prime Video streaming service, while also overseeing Amazon MGM Studios’ film and television divisions, as well as Prime Video’s live sports and licensed content offerings. Under Hopkins’ leadership, Prime Video has seen an unprecedented level of growth in both viewership and content offerings, including the launch of live coverage of the NFL, Premier League Soccer, UEFA Champions League Soccer, the Olympic Games, an exclusive 11-year media rights deal with the NBA beginning with the 2025-26 season, and other live sports — all in addition to a roster of award-winning films and series from Amazon Studios. Prior to joining Amazon in February 2020, Hopkins was chairman of Sony Pictures Television. Before that, Hopkins from 2013 to 2017 was CEO of Hulu. Prior to joining Hulu, Hopkins was President of Distribution for Fox Networks.
Jay Marine
Head of Prime Video U.S. and Global Sports and Advertising, Amazon
Jay Marine
Marine is responsible for P&L, revenue growth and profitability for Prime Video’s U.S. business. He also manages the Prime Video advertising business and oversees all aspects of Prime Sports globally, including the rights portfolio and the entire customer experience across production, product, technology and marketing. In the past year alone, Prime Video’s portfolio of exclusive sports properties has taken a huge step forward, and Marine has launched an array of game-changing initiatives. His team has played an instrumental role in the expansion and optimization of Prime Video’s offerings, which now include the NFL, NBA, Augusta National Golf Club, NASCAR, WNBA, UCL, NWSL and the NHL. During his 23-year career at Amazon, Marine has led teams across all aspects of general management, product, marketing, design, pricing, software development and business development. Marine spent eight years as a founding member of the Amazon Kindle business, before going on to serve as Jeff Bezos’ technical advisor for two years.
Kelly Day
Head of Prime Video International, Amazon
Kelly Day
Day drives content and marketing strategies, greenlight decisions, and business performance for Prime Video outside of the United States and for MGM+ globally. Reporting directly to Mike Hopkins, Head of Prime Video and Amazon MGM Studios, Day supervises teams across Europe, Latin America and the Asia Pacific region. In her Prime Video role, she is responsible for driving the growth of the SVOD service as an entertainment destination for its more-than 200 million global customer base. Last April, Day added oversight of Amazon MGM Studios’ International Originals to her purview, leading the teams producing films and series in more than 20 countries around the world, in addition to Prime Video’s international SVOD, TVOD and Channels businesses. Last year, Day also added global distribution of MGM scripted television and global leadership of MGM+ to her remit. Day joined Amazon in January 2022 as VP and Head of International for Prime Video. Before that, she held various roles at ViacomCBS, Discovery, AwesomenessTV and AOL.
Adam Gray
VP and Head of Prime Video Product and Design, Amazon
Adam Gray
Gray oversees all aspects of Prime Video’s product, design and UX research teams, including the customer experience for Prime Video users around the globe and distribution on over a billion devices, across living rooms, mobile and Web. Drawing on 15 years at Amazon — including five years expanding Prime Video to more than 200 countries — Gray focuses on innovations that address streaming’s fragmentation problem. Under his leadership, Prime Video introduced industry-leading accessibility features in 2024 and 2025, including streaming’s largest audio description library, AI-powered Dialogue Boost, and personalized X-Ray Recaps that solve the “where did I leave off?” dilemma. His team launched Prime Video’s reimagined Apple TV app and pioneered AI-assisted dubbing to expand global content accessibility. Gray’s vision of a unified entertainment destination — where customers discover content across subscriptions with one password, one payment method and a consistent interface — continues to reshape how consumers navigate today’s complex streaming landscape.
Jean-Briac “JB” Perrette
President, CEO Global Streaming and Games, Warner Bros. Discovery
JB Perrette
Perrette’s contract as the de facto head of the HBO Max streaming service was extended in July, even though parent company Warner Bros. Discovery’s future is murky: WBD is scheduled to split into two entities, Warner Bros. and Discovery Global, by the middle of next year, unless a sale or merger derails that process. In the meantime, Perrette and HBO Max are expected to keep chugging along with the streamer’s ongoing worldwide rollout, which saw the service in October launch in 15 new markets, including Bangladesh, Cambodia, Macau, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Ukraine. The rollout is part of WBD’s goal to have 150 million subscribers worldwide by 2026. The platform ended June 30 with 125.7 million subs. Prior to taking the reins of HBO Max when it was combined with Discovery+ in May 2023, Perrette was President and CEO of Discovery Streaming and International. Before joining Discovery in 2011 as Chief Digital Officer, he spent 11 years with NBCUniversal.
Casey Bloys
Chairman and CEO, HBO and HBO Max Content, Warner Bros. Discovery
Casey Bloys
Bloys oversees the full slate of originals for both HBO Max and HBO, including documentaries, specials and series. Hot new shows scheduled to launch soon on the WBD-owned streamer include “I Love LA,” Rachel Sennott’s new comedy series, and the French period drama series “The Seduction.” On the movie front, HBO Max continues to benefit from sister company Warner Bros. Pictures as well as a healthy relationship with A24, with recent releases including Celine Song’s romantic dramedy Materialists and Ari Aster’s COVID-era thriller Eddington. Also new to the service is the HBO original documentary One to One: John & Yoko, directed by Academy Award winner Kevin Macdonald. Bloys joined HBO in 2004 as Director of Development for HBO Independent Productions, and steadily rose up the ranks, rising to President of HBO Programming in 2016 and assuming original content responsibilities for HBO Max in 2020. He was promoted into his present position in 2022.
Matt Strauss
Chairman, NBCUniversal Media Group
Matt Strauss
Appointed to his present position in November 2024, Strauss oversees the strategy and revenue-generating functions of NBCUniversal’s media business. He leads business operations, strategy and platforms for NBC, Bravo and Peacock, and oversees key areas, including Platform Distribution and Partnerships, Advertising Sales and Partnerships, NBC Sports, Decision Sciences and International Networks. This year, under Strauss’ leadership, Peacock announced partnerships with Apple, Amazon, Google and Walmart. Also, 2025 brought NBCUniversal’s most successful Upfronts in history. Peacock continues to lead with innovative tech, including interactive features, cinematic sound and impressive reliability. This commitment to enhancing the user experience has led to Fast Company, Emmy and Webby Awards recognitions. Fan engagement has also grown considerably, with hits such as “The Paper” and “The Traitors,” and record performances across live sports and events. Strauss joined NBCUniversal from Comcast in 2019 to lead Peacock and NBCUniversal Digital Enterprises, where he helped spearhead the 2020 launch of the streaming platform.
Jim Denney
Chief Product Officer, Global Streaming and NBCUniversal Media Group, NBCUniversal
Jim Denney
Promoted into his present position this past February, Denney leads the product vision and strategy for all direct-to-consumer and NBCUniversal Media Group brands, including Peacock, digital platforms, broadcast and cable OTT apps, NBC Sports, and Hayu and Sky. Denney’s team is supercharging Peacock’s mobile experience, creating mini-games and a vertical video experience for NBCU’s loyal fandoms. One in 10 mobile users engaged with mini-games during the summer run of “Love Island USA,” and “Wheel of Fortune Today” became Peacock’s most-played game on its first day. Denney is also ramping up Peacock’s NBA streaming experience, building on lessons from the 2024 Paris Olympics. Looking ahead, Denney’s team will support hundreds of live events streaming on Peacock over 17 days in February as NBCU hosts the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics, NBA All-Star Game and Super Bowl LX. Prior to joining NBCU in April 2021, Denney was Head of Product and VP of Product Management at Hulu. Earlier in his career, Denney spent more than 15 years at TiVo.
Frances Berwick
Chairman, Bravo and Peacock Unscripted, NBCUniversal
Pearlena Igbokwe
Chairman, Television Studios, NBC Entertainment and Peacock Scripted, NBCUniversal
Pearlena IgbokweFrances Berwick
Berwick and Igbokwe both assumed their present positions in January, when the company combined its TV studios, NBC Entertainment, Bravo and Peacock under one roof as part of the newly formed Universal Television Entertainment Group. Berwick, previously
NBCUniversal Entertainment chair, now oversees all unscripted content and programming strategy across Bravo and Peacock, whose symbiotic relationship has amplified Bravo’s unscripted content across the portfolio. Fan favorites such as “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills,” “The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City” and “Summer House” all delivered their most-watched seasons ever, fueled in part by next-day availability on Peacock. Under Berwick’s leadership, Bravo has come to dominate the unscripted space with six of the top 10 cable reality shows, more than any other network. This past summer, “Love Island USA” continued to dominate pop culture, with season seven ranking as the No. 1 unscripted series across all streaming platforms for nine consecutive weeks, with more than 300 million hours streamed. Igbokwe added the NBC broadcast network and Peacock’s scripted output to her portfolio. Igbokwe leads the teams behind “Saturday Night Live” and “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,” two of television’s most enduring and influential franchises, plus hits such as “The Voice,” “America’s Got Talent,” “The Americas,” “One Chicago” and “Law & Order.” Her leadership also extends across top streaming and cable titles such as Peacock’s “The Paper,” which was the No. 1 original comedy across all streaming in its first week, the Emmy Award-winning “Hacks” and “The Gilded Age,” Peabody Award-winning “We Are Lady Parts,” global phenomenon “The Day of the Jackal,” and No. 1 Netflix hits “A Man on the Inside” and “The Four Seasons.”
Erick Opeka
President and Chief Strategy Officer, Cineverse
Erick Opeka
Opeka has served as Cineverse’s Chief Strategy Officer and President since December 2020, overseeing the day-to-day operations of the company’s streaming and distribution operations, and driving Cineverse’s corporate strategy and M&A initiatives. Under his leadership, Cineverse has reached over 80 million monthly viewers and more than 1.5 million paying subscribers through proprietary brands and strategic partnerships, resulting in triple-digit growth and positioning the company as the largest independent streaming library and channel portfolio. From his role within the Office of the Chairman, Opeka continues to lead the company’s dual content and tech strategy that has led to a pioneering blueprint for how to reach passionate fandoms across platforms — from independent theatrical releases to home entertainment, FAST channels, podcasts and more. Most recently he was the key driver in launching a new joint venture between Cineverse and Lloyd Braun’s Banyan Media Ventures — MicroCo — that is building a new platform and studio for the exploding microdrama/microseries format.
Tony Huidor
President of Technology and Chief Product Officer, Cineverse
Tony Huidor
Huidor drives Cineverse’s overall product roadmap and leads all key technology partnerships. Since joining Cineverse in 2015, Huidor has managed the launch and daily operations of the company’s portfolio of all subscription and ad-supported digital-first channels. He conceived and designed Cineverse’s proprietary Matchpoint Dispatch platform, which has allowed the company to effectively streamline its entire digital content distribution business. He also oversees overall product development of Matchpoint Blueprint, which powers all apps for Cineverse’s portfolio of streaming services, and Matchpoint Insights, which automates processing of all performance/revenue data and analytics. Huidor also developed
cineSearch, which won the DEG’s EnTech Emerging Technology Award, as
a next-generation solution for solving the entertainment industry’s problem of fragmented content discovery. The cutting-edge AI-based conversational search engine provides users with highly targeted and personalized content recommendations. Before joining Cineverse, Huidor was VP of Technical Product Development at the Universal Music Group.
Adam Lewinson
Chief Content Officer, Tubi
Adam Lewinson
Lewinson leads content strategy and acquisitions for the most-watched free streaming service in the United States, with the world’s largest collection of Hollywood movies and TV shows, thousands of creator-led stories, and hundreds of original movies and shows. During his tenure, Tubi has become a streaming and cultural phenomenon with 100 million monthly active users and a library of more than 300,000 movies and TV shows and over 300 Tubi Originals. Lewinson has been instrumental in expanding the platform’s original programming and distinct offerings such as live-streaming Super Bowl LIX, which averaged 13.6 million viewers for the most-streamed Super Bowl in history. Lewinson joined Tubi in October 2017, more than two years before the service was acquired by Fox Corp. He previously served as SVP of Programming and Marketing at Sony Pictures Television and its Crackle streaming platform. Earlier, Lewinson held senior positions at FX Networks, Lifetime Television, The Walt Disney Co. and Columbia Pictures.
Alison Hoffman
President, Starz Networks
Alison Hoffman
Hoffman this year was instrumental in Starz’s successful separation from Lionsgate and transition to a publicly traded entity. As the CEO’s right hand, she oversees more than half of the daily business operations for the United States and Canada. She solidified Starz’s market position as the most-bundled streamer, forging partnerships with broad-based and niche streamers, and she reduced subscriber churn for three consecutive quarters. In her decade-long tenure, she brought to market Starz’s most successful franchises, expanding in 2025 with “Outlander: Blood of My Blood,” which delivered the third-most subscriber adds for a premiere in Starz history. Under her leadership, the “Power Universe” also has thrived, continuing in 2025 with an 18-episode order of “Power: Origins.” Through Starz’s #TakeTheLead initiative, she champions inclusivity in programming, focusing on women and underrepresented audiences. Hoffman previously served as President of Domestic Networks. She was one of the key executives responsible for launching the Starz app and managing the network’s direct-to-consumer business.
Salek Brodsky
SVP and Global Head, Samsung TV Plus
Salek Brodsky
Brodsky leads the strategic vision and operations of Samsung’s FAST service. He oversees all aspects of the business, including programming, partnerships, marketing, revenue generation and product management. Under Brodsky’s leadership, Samsung TV Plus has become one of the largest FAST services globally, reaching over 88 million monthly active users across more than 30 countries and 630 million devices. The service now offers a robust lineup of premium, differentiated programming spanning 3,500 channels and tens of thousands of on-demand movies. Recent exclusive partnerships include high-profile collaborations with top creators including Mark Rober and Dhar Mann, Spotify, the Jonas Brothers, Billboard, and Bally Sports Live. Brodsky joined Samsung in 2013 through its acquisition of Boxee, a startup that developed a set-top box that streams media to TVs. He helped launch Samsung TV Plus two years later. Previously he was COO of Daylife, a pioneering service that provided internet publishers with innovative tools for presenting articles, links and images.
Katherine Pond
Group VP, Vizio
Katherine Pond
Pond leads platform business development, partnerships and marketing at Vizio, the TV manufacturer and connected-TV pioneer that is now owned by Walmart. Since joining Vizio in 2012, Pond has led a series of transformative initiatives to connect audiences with the entertainment they love. She has initiated, negotiated and closed deals across content distribution and acquisition, IP, advertising and data verticals with companies including Amazon, Apple, Netflix, Google, Disney, Sony, NBCUniversal and more. Earlier this year, Vizio ventured into bundling with a Starz and AMC+ subscription package priced at $13.99 per month, nearly $7 less than the individual cost. Viewers must have a Vizio account to purchase the bundle. Pond has received honors and awards including Stream TV Top Executive in Content Distribution Finalist, Media Play News’ Fast Forward Award and 50 Women to Watch in the Digital Entertainment Business, and Concordia University Irvine’s 2020 Alumna of the Year for Professional Achievement. Prior to joining Vizio, Pond held various leadership roles at Acer and Smart Modular Technologies.
Will McIntosh
President, Digital Platforms and Ventures, Versant Media
Will McIntosh
McIntosh oversees the portfolio of direct-to-consumer digital businesses in entertainment and sports at Versant, the recent spin-off from Comcast Corp.’s NBCUniversal. These businesses, which develop transactional and content technologies for millions of consumers each month, include Fandango, the nation’s top movie ticketer; world-renowned movie and TV recommendations destination Rotten Tomatoes; and premium on-demand streaming service Fandango at Home. The sports brands under his purview include golf tee-time booking and course technology platforms GolfNow and TeeOff; golf membership and video content platform GolfPass; and leading youth and recreational sports technology provider SportsEngine. McIntosh was promoted into his present position in June 2022. During his tenure, he has overseen 15 strategic mergers and partnerships as well as the launch of SportsEnginePlay, which in addition to capturing and viewing live and on-demand video of sporting events offers editing tools for highlight reels and player development videos from world-class athletes.
Cameron Douglas
SVP, OTT/Streaming, Fandango
Cameron Douglas
Douglas oversees Fandango’s flagship video-on-demand service, Fandango at Home. Leading up to the spin-off from NBCUniversal into Versant Media, he continues to expand industry partnerships and position the platform for growth. This year, Douglas led the introduction of live pay-per-view (PPV) capabilities with PPV.COM and cable TVOD distribution, enabling Fandango at Home to succeed longtime aggregator iNDEMAND. This strategic move allows the platform to deliver premium entertainment content and live events directly to consumers across multiple platforms. He also expanded Fandango at Home’s partnership with the TCM Classic Film Festival, launching a storefront on Fandango’s FanStore and curating a special collection of classic titles such as Jaws, Superman and Cinderella. Douglas began his career holding various analytics and marketing roles at Disney, Fox, DreamWorks and Paramount. He moved into digital entertainment in 2013 and was promoted into his present position in 2023, overseeing what has become the No. 3 player in the competitive transactional space.
Andrea Downing
President, PBS Distribution
Andrea Downing
Downing has redefined PBS Distribution’s role in the evolving media landscape, transforming it from a packaged-media business into a dynamic multi-platform distributor of public media content worldwide. She led the company’s entry into digital streaming with the launch of its first niche streaming service on Amazon’s Prime Video Subscription Channels in 2016. PBSd has since launched seven SVOD channels on Amazon — PBS Masterpiece (U.S. and Canada), PBS Documentaries (U.S. and Canada), PBS Kids, PBS Living, and PBS America (U.K.) — as well as numerous FAST channels, including “PBS | Antiques Roadshow,” “PBS | Nature” and, most recently “PBS Travel.” PBSd has also significantly expanded its AVOD footprint. Downing’s forward-looking strategy balances paid and free streaming models, ensuring both broad accessibility for audiences and sustainable revenue for the public media system. Prior to her role with PBSd, Downing was VP of Home Entertainment and Partnerships at PBS Ventures and held operational leadership roles at Discovery Communications in the Consumer Products division.
Anthony Wood
Founder, Chairman and CEO, Roku
Anthony Wood
Since 2002 Wood has led Roku to become the country’s top TV streaming platform, surpassing broadcast viewership for three months in a row. Under his leadership, Roku has consistently raised the bar with new devices and OS features to benefit the entire streaming TV ecosystem, delivering on its mission of making better TV for everyone. This past August, Wood and team launched a revolutionary offering to address the need for an affordable, ad-free experience featuring the quality movies and shows people return to again and again. For just $2.99 a month, Howdy gives viewers more than 10,000 hours of uninterrupted entertainment including award-winning titles and beloved favorites from Lionsgate, Warner Bros. Discovery and FilmRise as well as select Roku Originals. Prior to founding Roku, Wood invented the digital video recorder (DVR) and founded ReplayTV, which won “Best of Show” at CES in 1999 and was the first DVR to be sold.
Charlie Collier
President, Roku Media
Charles Collier
Collier helped Roku surpass broadcast for total viewing time in the U.S. and grew The Roku Channel to become the No. 1 FAST channel in the country. Most recently, the company debuted award-winning original programming such as “Solo Traveling With Tracee Ellis Ross,” announced a first-of-its-kind Roku City concert integration with Demi Lovato, scored exclusive media rights deals to sports broadcasts, announced the long-awaited “Laguna Beach” reunion, and forged a series of industry-defining advertising partnerships with the likes of Comcast, Samsung and Amazon. Collier joined Roku in October 2022 with more than 25 years of media leadership experience. Previously, he enjoyed a four-year run as CEO of Fox Entertainment. Prior to joining Fox in 2018, Collier was President and GM of AMC, SundanceTV and AMC Studios, overseeing the creative and business operations of all three divisions and launching award-winning series including “Mad Men,” “Breaking Bad,” “The Walking Dead,” “Better Call Saul” and “The Night Manager.”
Kristin Dolan
CEO, AMC Networks
Kristin Dolan
As CEO, Dolan has accelerated AMC Networks’ transformation from a networks-based cable programming company into a multi-faceted content producer and distributor with an expanding array of platforms, including linear television, streaming and more than 20 CTV/FAST channels. Dolan has expanded key partnerships to include such unlikely alliances as putting prior seasons of more than a dozen AMC shows on Netflix to build interest and awareness in new seasons on owned platforms. Streaming will be AMCN’s single-biggest source of revenue in 2025, and driving that is AMC+ and a collection of targeted services — Shudder for horror, Acorn TV for international dramas and mysteries, HIDIVE for anime, etc. Under Dolan’s leadership, AMCN has also continued to develop vibrant programming franchises around “The Walking Dead,” “Anne Rice Immortal Universe,” “Dark Winds” and more. Dolan was appointed CEO in February 2023; previously, she was CEO of 605, the audience measurement and data analytics firm she founded in 2016.
Dan McDermott
President, Entertainment and AMC Studios, AMC Networks
Dan McDermott
McDermott oversees the development, production, acquisition, scheduling and release of series and films across AMC Networks’ domestic portfolio, including streaming platforms AMC+, Acorn TV, ALLBLK,
HIDIVE, Shudder and Sundance Now. This includes the continued success of AMC’s popular “The Walking Dead Universe,” with new seasons of “The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon” and “Dead City”; the expansion of the “Anne Rice Immortal Universe” with “Interview With the Vampire,” “Mayfair Witches” and new series “Talamasca: The Secret Order”; as well as “Dark Winds.” McDermott has also overseen a banner year for the company’s Acorn TV service, with its most-successful series launch to date with the premiere of “Irish Blood,” as well as its Shudder service, with found-footage horror series “The Creep Tapes” the most-watched Shudder show of all time on AMC+. Before joining AMCN, McDermott was head of the Lionsgate and BBC Studios scripted-TV partnership. Previously, McDermott was a producer, writer and partner in Di Bonaventura Pictures Television.
Kim Kelleher
Chief Commercial Officer, AMC Networks
Kim Kelleher
Kelleher oversees both advertising sales and distribution. She has led groundbreaking partnerships across linear, streaming, FAST and CTV, expanding AMCN’s reach and driving monetization strategies. Under her leadership, AMCN has completed significant affiliate renewals, including a long-term renewal with Charter Communications that made the ad-supported version of AMC+ available to video subscribers at no additional cost. Kelleher has also overseen the expansion of the company’s FAST and CTV partnerships, growing to 28 channels comprising more than 190 feeds. She was instrumental in AMCN’s branded partnership with Netflix, which generated over 210 million global views and a more than 600% increase in first streams for key series on AMC+. Kelleher also led the unveiling of AMCN Outcomes, which gives partners real-time insights into purchasing decisions driven by consumers’ exposure to marketing. Prior to joining AMC Networks in 2019, Kelleher was the Chief Business Officer of GQ, GQ Style, Golf Digest, Golf World, Pitchfork and the Wired Media Group.
Eddy Cue
SVP, Services, Apple
Eddy Cue
Cue oversees the vast and ever-expanding universe of Apple’s services, including Apple TV, Apple Music, Apple News, Apple Podcasts, Apple Pay, Apple Card, Maps, Search Ads, iCloud, and the company’s suite of productivity and creativity apps. Working hand-in-hand with Jamie Erlicht and Zack Van Amburg — the former Sony Pictures Television chiefs hired to spearhead Apple TV — Cue continues to shape Apple’s global entertainment and digital-services strategy. Most recently, he oversaw the rebranding from Apple TV+ to just Apple TV, telling the media that’s what everyone was calling it anyway, and played a key role in securing a five-year partnership with Formula One that will bring all F1 races exclusively to Apple TV in the United States beginning next year. While Apple TV remains selective in its output and famously tight-lipped on subscriber counts, Cue’s measured approach has yielded prestige results, from Emmy darling “Ted Lasso” to Oscar Best Picture winner CODA.
Garson Foos
CEO, Radial Entertainment
Garson Foos
Foos is at the helm of Radial Entertainment, a leading content distribution studio in the global entertainment industry. Radial boasts a diverse library of 70,000 movies and episodes — making it one of the largest independent catalogs in the industry. Radial combines the strength and capabilities of FilmRise and Shout! Studios to offer an end-to-end solution for production, distribution and streaming. Prior to the recent founding of Radial Entertainment, Foos was CEO of Shout! Studios, one of the industry’s preeminent independent film and television distributors. Through Foos’ leadership in content licensing and distribution, particularly in the realm of digital media and streaming, TVOD, SVOD, AVOD and FAST became well-established businesses for Shout! Studios. Foos led the merger with FilmRise, which distributes content worldwide, invests in original content and works with digital creators to help monetize their libraries in the streaming space. The company holds a leading footprint across FAST and AVOD as well as a library of more than 30,000 movies and episodes.
Jim Packer
President, Worldwide Television Distribution, Lionsgate
Jim Packer
Packer is responsible for growing and monetizing Lionsgate’s more-than 20,000-title film and television library and licensing its content to buyers throughout the media ecosystem. Under Packer’s leadership, Lionsgate is bolstering its library sales by licensing content to its owned-and-operated Lionsgate+ platforms on Amazon. In addition, the studio has rolled out more than 30 proprietary FAST channels, including 50 Cent Action — which quickly became the No. 1 action channel on Roku and LG Channels — and MovieSphere, the first FAST channel to receive a Nielsen rating. Packer also recently shepherded Lionsgate’s partnership with Roku on its new SVOD service, Howdy, offering a more-accessible alternative to premium streaming platforms while unlocking a new revenue stream for the studio’s content. This year, Packer spearheaded a groundbreaking deal to license “The Chosen” to Amazon Prime, marking a first-of-its-kind approach that combined scripted series, unscripted content and two feature films released theatrically. He has also sold this coveted faith-based property to more than 50 buyers internationally.
William Neighbors
Chief Content Officer, Xperi
William Neighbors
Neighbors oversees the group within Xperi that is charged with delivering entertainment content across Xperi’s independent media platform inclusive of homes, connected cars and mobile devices. Since merging with TiVo in June 2020, Xperi has become one of the largest licensing companies in the world. Other Xperi brands and partnerships include DTS, the audio and imaging technologies company; TiVo, whose Media Platform brings a rich content-first experience to millions of consumers around the world; and Imax Enhanced, a certification and licensing program operated by Imax Corp. and DTS that offers an immersive viewing experience by bringing together devices, remastered video and audio content, and elevated streaming. Neighbors and his team have signed multiple partners to Xperi’s independent media platform. Neighbors has worked in the entertainment technology industry for more than 30 years spanning the music, TV and motion picture sectors, including his role as a foundational leader at DTS in 1993.
Stephen Hodge
Co-founder and CEO, OTTera
Stephen Hodge
A visionary in digital media, Hodge for nearly a decade has headed OTTera, a global leader in OTT solutions powering hundreds of AVOD, SVOD, TVOD and FAST services worldwide. Under his leadership, OTTera’s platforms have grown to reach over 250 million monthly viewers, while he has busied himself forging global partnerships with top electronics brands, telecoms and content creators. His expertise in digital distribution, platform development and monetization has built scalable, inclusive ecosystems for audiences worldwide. His leadership drives innovation in content delivery, monetization and accessibility, enabling partners — from major electronics brands to emerging creators — to reach audiences across every platform. Hodge’s focus on inclusivity and global expansion, including OTTera’s acquisition of Afroland TV, underscores his commitment to diverse, culturally rich entertainment. Prior to co-founding OTTera, Hodge spent more than 15 years at Toon Goggles, an on-demand entertainment service for children that he also co-founded. Before that, he held executive positions at Digital Media Interactive and Anywhere Artists.
Scott Olechowski
Co-founder and Chief Product Officer, Plex
Scott Olechowski
As the visionary co-founder of Plex, Olechowski is responsible for product strategy, product management and business development. A pioneer in streaming media, he co-founded Plex — as a hobby — with the intent of making organizing and accessing digital media easy and seamless. In the nearly 17 years since he started building Plex, he has championed its evolution to becoming one of the world’s largest independent streaming media companies, available in more than 195 countries, with one of the largest catalogs of FAST channels (1,000+), a strong AVOD catalog, and now a social and discovery experience that connects entertainment lovers and the content that’s right for them. Over the past 25 years, Olechowski has applied his entrepreneurial know-how and spirit to a number of software- and internet-focused start-ups. His professional experience includes executive positions in product strategy, business development, marketing and international sales for a number of established brands such as Cisco, PostX and IronPort.
Zachary Chapman
Chief Revenue Officer, Plex
Zach Chapman
Chapman leads revenue efforts across direct and sponsorship advertising, programmatic/audience sales, data licensing and strategic partnerships. In just six months at Plex, he has assembled an ad sales team, leading to onboarding multiple new media partners across the United States, Canada and EMEA, and amplifying direct brand partner presence. He works tirelessly with the Plex product and marketing teams to expand ad suite capabilities. And such cutting-edge ad innovation as pause ads, content overlay interactive units for CTV and innovative sponsorship packages are now being implemented, while leveraging Plex’s products and audience behavior data. Chapman joined Plex from NBCUniversal, where he was SVP of Global Partnerships, overseeing all ad and partnership revenue outside the United States as well as domestic and international large-scale agency partnerships. Before that, he spent eight years at The Walt Disney Co. in leadership roles across programmatic and audience sales, ESPN International across LATAM, EMEA and APAC, and growing the Category Partnership and Ad Sales Research organizations.