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Menampilkan postingan dari Februari, 2022

Best movies leaving Netflix, Hulu, and HBO Max at the end of February 2022

Watch Gareth Evans’ brutal Indonesian action sequel before it leaves streaming. ebruaryFebruary is almost over, which means we have a fresh new selection of movies to look forward to on streaming next week. Until then, you know what that means: it’s time to marathon all the best films available to stream right now before they leave your service of choice and flutter off to who knows where. From Gareth Evans’ Indonesian action film The Raid 2 and Michael Mann’s Miami Vice to 2005’s The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy and Showdown in Little Tokyo starring Dolph Lundgren and Brandon Lee, these are all the movies you need to make time for before they leave streaming next month. Infonewsviewers - Based on the 1987 TV series of the same name, Phil Lord and Christopher Miller’s 2012 buddy cop comedy 21 Jump Street stars Jonah Hill and Channing Tatum as Morton Schmidt and Greg Jenko, two high school classmates from radically different social circles who befriend one another later in life as

Disney Releases Corporate Social Responsibility Report For Fiscal Year 2022

The Walt Disney Company has shared its fiscal 2021 corporate social responsibility report. The data-driven report details Disney’s efforts to increase diversity, equity, and inclusion, support environmental sustainability, and charitable giving. There are three focus areas within the report, World of Belonging, World in Balance, and World of Hope. “At Disney, creating stories and experiences that inspire and bring people together is ours. Our stories encourage children and adults to see the world in a positive light, to believe that anything is possible, and to take action to make their world a better place,” said Jennifer Cohen, executive vice president, Corporate Social Responsibility, The Walt Disney Company. World of Belonging In 2021, Disney launched a company-wide initiative called Reimagine Tomorrow, which is meant to advance opportunities for diverse communities, amplify underrepresented voices, and highlight the importance of representation in media and entertainment. Through

YouTube From To BoxingPivoting, Jake Paul Earned Million In The Ring

Jake Paul elicited a chuckle or two when he compared himself in August to Muhammad Ali, Mike Tyson and Floyd Mayweather before even his fourth fight. But the controversial YouTuber-turned-boxer may yet have the last laugh: Even if his fists never match his mouth, his paychecks already rank him among the sport’s biggest stars. Forbes estimates that Paul raked in a combined $40 million before taxes from his three boxing victories in 2021, which ran his record to 5-0 overall. With an additional $5 million from his other endeavors, including his videos, Paul comes in at No. 2 on the list of the highest-paid YouTube stars for 2021, returning to the list for the first time since 2018. That $45 million total would have landed him at No. 20 on last year’s Forbes list of the world’s highest-paid athletes, ahead of the only boxer to crack the top 50 of that ranking, Canelo Alvarez, who tied for 48th with $34 million. It also would have pushed him past established sports stars like Phil Mickelson

A New Billionaire was Minted Every 17 Hours on Average Over the past Year

It’s been a year like no other, and we aren’t talking about the pandemic. There were rapid-fire public offerings, surging cryptocurrencies and skyrocketing stock prices. The number of billionaires on Forbes’ 35th annual list of the world’s wealthiest exploded to an unprecedented 2,755--660 more than a year ago. Of those, a record high 493 were new to the list--roughly one every 17 hours, including 210 from China and Hong Kong. Another 250 who’d fallen off in the past came roaring back. A staggering 86% are richer than a year ago. Jeff Bezos is the world’s richest for the fourth year running, worth $177 billion, while Elon Musk rocketed into the number two spot with $151 billion, as Tesla and Amazon shares surged. Altogether these billionaires are worth $13.1 trillion, up from $8 trillion in 2020. The U.S. still has the most, with 724, followed by China (including Hong Kong and Macao) with 698. We used stock prices and exchange rates from March 5 to calculate net worths. See below for t