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2022/12/29

๐ŸŽฎ Future of media: Gaming

Plus: Ball behind the scenes | Thursday, December 29, 2022
 
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By Mike Allen · Dec 29, 2022

๐Ÿงค Hello, Thursday! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,196 words ... 4½ minutes. Edited by Noah Bressner.

 
 
๐ŸŽฎ 1 big thing — Future of media: Gaming

Illustration: Aรฏda Amer/Axios

 

Video games will move to the center of the entertainment and pop-culture universe next year.

  • Why it matters: Streaming services, Hollywood studios, tech giants — even the Saudi government — are racing to capitalize on gaming's vast and ever-expanding popularity, and its lucrative intellectual property, Axios Gaming author Stephen Totilo writes.

๐Ÿ–ผ️ The big picture: Gaming is now a $184 billion business, an ideas factory for other media — and the leading edge of the tech industry, both as a business and a harbinger of industry policy battles.

  • It's the foundational tech inspiring Meta's costly adventure into virtual worlds.
  • It's how Netflix plans to grow its subscriber base, as the streamer tries to become a top video game developer and distributor.
  • It's the industry Saudi Arabia's ruling class has chosen to invest $38 billion in, for image and economic diversification.
  • It's the locus of a growing labor movement in tech.
  • And it's a recurring FTC target.

The games themselves are poised for a blockbuster year:

๐ŸŽž️ Gaming movies are the biggest challenger to Hollywood's superhero hegemony:

  • Spring will bring "The Super Mario Bros. Movie" (trailer; in theaters April 7) — a partnership between Nintendo and Illumination, the studio behind the Minions.
  • HBO's first prestige series of 2023, mid-January's "The Last of Us," is an adaptation of a hit PlayStation video game.
  • Streaming platforms are preparing a pipeline of games-turned-shows, including adaptations of God of War, Fallout and Assassin's Creed.

๐ŸฅŠ Reality check: Gaming breathlessness doesn't always pan out.

  • E-sports is growing awkwardly. It's still picking up viewers — but its poor profitability is scaring off investors.
  • Google is shuttering its Stadia game-streaming platform in January.

๐Ÿ’ฌ Our thought bubble: This is what happens when a subculture has been deepening its roots for a half-century.

  • Many of the first kids who grew up with gaming become gamer parents, ready to pass gaming to the new generation.
  • Power takes notice. Outside elites elbow in.
  • Inside, young workers and players look around and see their once-rebellious pastime as an establishment that needs to be challenged.

The bottom line: From World of Warcraft to Wordle, it's a game lover's world.

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2. ๐Ÿ—ณ️ Dems' statehouse momentum
Data: Ballotpedia. Chart: Kavya Beheraj/Axios. ("Seats gained" includes those that were vacant, or held before the election by members who didn't identify as D or R.)

Democrats' unexpected strength in midterms extended to state legislatures, where they picked up seats in 21 states and took control of five chambers from the GOP, Axios' Stef Kight writes from Ballotpedia data.

  • Why it matters: State legislatures have vast power over abortion laws, voting rules, gun policies and other issues with real-life impact.

๐Ÿ‘€ What we're watching: The stakes are raised, as the Supreme Court considers a case that could eliminate checks on legislatures' power over redistricting and elections.

State of play: Republicans currently have more state trifectas — veto-proof majorities, chambers, and overall state legislative seats — than Democrats.

  • In November, Democrats managed to flip more chambers, earn more state trifectas and pick up seats in more states controlled by the opposing party — while also matching Republicans for the number of new veto-proof majorities.

๐Ÿงฎ By the numbers: Democrats flipped four chambers — both Michigan chambers, the Minnesota Senate and Pennsylvania House. Despite still having more Republicans than Democrats, a bipartisan coalition will now serve as the majority in Alaska's upper chamber.

  • Adding in gubernatorial wins, Democrats won state trifectas in Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, and Minnesota. They lost their Nevada trifecta, while Republicans lost their state control in Arizona.

Republicans' biggest gains came in two already deeply red state legislatures — West Virginia and Florida, where they picked up 17 and 14 seats, respectively. Republicans now have supermajorities in both states.

  • Republicans also picked up eight seats in the Wisconsin state legislature, though they fell just short of a supermajority.

Share this story.

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3. ✈️ Southwest had years of warnings

Photos (clockwise): Robyn Beck/AFP, Trevor Hughes/USA Today via Reuters, Jeff Roberson/AP, Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post via Getty Images

 

It's coast to coast: Above you see (clockwise) Southwest Airlines bag dumps in Burbank, Denver, St. Louis and Baltimore.

Southwest's "pilot and flight attendant unions warned for years that the company's rickety computer systems left the airline vulnerable," The Washington Post reports.

  • "The carrier stuck with outdated technology and never heeded those warnings, they say."

๐Ÿ’ฐ In a new video, Southwest chief commercial officer Ryan Green offers "ways to submit receipts for travel expenses incurred in disrupted travel, to request a refund for canceled or significantly delayed flights, and ... to help us deliver delayed bags free." 90-second video.

๐ŸฅŠ Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg told ABC's "Good Morning America" that Southwest's woes "are past the point where they could say that this is a weather-driven issue."

  • The meltdown began with the storm, of course. Now it's "a system failure," Buttigieg said. (Video)

๐Ÿ—ž️ USA Today front page: "Chaotic Denver airport hosts a mass sleepover."

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A message from Walmart

Walmart named one of LinkedIn's Top 20 Companies to Grow a Career
 
 

Patrick Joseph began his Walmart career as a pharmacy intern. Today, he oversees 11 pharmacies and eight vision centers — and his story is just one of many.

See how Walmart's focus on mentorship and advancement helps create more stories like Patrick's.

 
 
4. ๐Ÿค– Future is now
Photo: Ng Han Guan/AP

In Beijing, a police autonomous robot patrols a mall yesterday.

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5. ๐Ÿฆ Twitter takes the night off

Screenshot: Twitter on my laptop last night

 

Twitter users around the world reported problems accessing the website last night, Axios' Rebecca Falconer writes.

  • Elon Musk tweeted: "Works for me."

Why it matters: Any outage in the Musk era draws intense scrutiny.

  • It appeared to be the first widespread outage since Musk took over in October.
  • Outages lasted a few hours, per Downdetector.

Musk later said Twitter rolled out "significant backend server architecture changes" to make it feel faster — though it's unclear if that caused the outage.

Screenshot: Twitter

๐ŸฅŠ During last night's web outage, "Did Elon" trended on the Twitter app, with various jokes following that prompt.

  • Lots of: Did Elon buy Southwest?
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6. ⚖️ Lying winner faces federal, local probes
Rep-elect George Santos in a campaign video. Photo via Reuters

Rep.-elect George Santos (R-N.Y.) is facing investigations by both federal and local prosecutors after admitting he lied about his background during the campaign.

  • Prosecutors for the U.S. attorney's office in Brooklyn are in the early stages of looking at his finances — including financial disclosure filings, ABC News reports.
  • Nassau County District Attorney Anne Donnelly, a Republican, opened an investigation yesterday, saying that Santos' fabrications and inconsistencies "are nothing short of stunning."
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7. ๐Ÿ›️ McCarthy vows to reopen Capitol to public

House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy, who faces a cliffhanger fight for the speakership when the new Congress opens next Tuesday, is already flexing majority muscle.

  • He tweeted a letter yesterday that he sent just after midterms to Capitol Police, the Architect of the Capitol and the attending physician.

"[T]he People's House must once again be open to the American public," he wrote.

  • "After years of closure, I am aware that there are many logistical and security requirements needed to reopen the Capitol ... [Y]ou will have my full support as we ... return to a place of normalcy."

Read the 2-page letter.

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8. ๐ŸŽŠ 1 fun thing: Ball behind the scenes

Photos: Iris Zimmerman/Instar Images via Reuters

 

194 of the 2,688 crystal panels in the Times Square New Year's Eve ball were replaced by Waterford's Irish craftsmen this week to reflect this year's "Gift of Love" theme.

  • The geodesic sphere, which will take its 60-second ride at 11:59 p.m. ET on Saturday, is 12 feet in diameter and weighs 11,875 pounds.

More fun facts.

Photo: Michael Loccisano/Getty Images

For the first time since the pandemic hit, Times Square will have no COVID restrictions on New Year's Eve.

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A message from Walmart

Walmart is investing $1 billion in career training and development
 
 

At Walmart, a first promotion is often just the first of many — 75% of management started as hourly associates. That's just one reason why Walmart was named one of LinkedIn's Top Companies to Grow a Career in 2022.

Learn how Walmart's mentorship and training help associates advance in their careers.

 

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