Numlock News: January 24, 2023 • Puppies, Podcasts, Pickleball
By Walt HickeyRoadThe big ice roads in Alaska — the ones that have television shows — are in service to the oil extraction and mining industries predominantly, but networks of resident-supported ice roads connecting remote areas cut off from major population centers are a staple of Alaskan life. For instance, over the past several years, come winter the iced over Kuskokwim River is plowed into a road, maintained by three plow trucks and three graders for about $300,000. Costs are up — fuel costs $9 a gallon up there, and the markers that delineate the road have doubled in price to $32 this year — and for the past decade that’s been an issue as maintenance costs had been covered by donations from businesses, residents, city and tribal governments, and companies, at times literally passing a hat to compensate plow drivers. Last year, the state legislature began giving crews grants to maintain, and the federal infrastructure bill passed in 2021 allowed the state to fund Safe Ice Roads for Alaska, which funds entities up to $500,000. Victoria Petersen, High Country News Puppy MillsSince 2010, 440 cities, counties and states have prohibited the sale of dogs in an attempt to curtail exploitative and unsafe puppy mill operations. It’s had an impact: The number of USDA-licensed breeders in the wholesale pet trade is down from 4,604 in 2008 to 2,916 in 2022, the average number of dogs at such operations is down from 87 dogs per facility in 2012 to 57 dogs per facility in 2022, and the number of pet stores selling dogs is down from 900 in 2016 to 600 now. States have led the way here, especially some states that had serious issues; Missouri was once the puppy mill capitol of the country, but a series of policy changes that capped the number of breeding dogs and required more space per dog saw the number of puppies sold from licensed breeders drop from 265,379 in 2009 to 100,701 in 2021. PickleballESPN has taken the bait, and has cut a deal to broadcast eight pickleball recap shows on ESPN2 and stream over 200 hours of live coverage of eight events from the Association of Pickleball Professionals. Over 4.8 million people in the U.S. play the sport, and the wager for some broadcaster is, will they watch it? Or, more specifically, is the center of the Venn diagram of “avid pickleball player” and “person who is sufficiently tech savvy to set up a streaming service to stream their favorite sport, pickleball” enough subscription revenue to sustain a viable industry. NoiseSome traffic cameras in New York City have a new gadget on them, sound meters capable of identifying the cars and motorcycles that have been customized to remove the muffler systems from them to make incredibly loud noises, or as we call them here in scenic Astoria, Queens, fart cars. At least 71 drivers have been hit with tickets regarding noise violations during the pilot program, and the Department of Environmental Protection plans to expand the implementation. Vehicle owners face fines of $800 for a first offense and then up to $2,625 if they ignore the third-offense hearing. Bobby Caina Calvan, The Associated Press Video GamesThe Last Of Us on HBO is already a critical and commercial hit, an exemplary adaptation in what had long been considered an impossible genre of video game adaptations. That said, Americans have begun to reject the idea that Hollywood does a cruddy job of adapting games, with 16 percent of adults saying Hollywood was very good at it and a further 34 percent saying they were somewhat good at it. That rehabilitation comes on the heels of a number of successful-by-some-metrics adaptations that include Sonic the Hedgehog, Tomb Raider, Uncharted and Detective Pikachu. Finally, the market is ready for the horror adaptation from the twisted mind of Walter Hickey, a gritty serpentine survival story where our hero is relentlessly pursued by a series of revenants and must decide to do the unthinkable to live another day. See Pac-Man coming Fall 2024, dumped off on some streaming service near you. Saleah Blancaflor, Morning Consult ProductionTelevision production in Los Angeles was down 24 percent year over year in the final quarter of 2022, a sign of cutbacks at the many streaming services that until recently were gaping maws for new content. While television production was down overall on the year — FilmLA counted 16,778 days of shooting, which was down 9.6 percent — it appears that television commercial shoots are way down as companies trim ad spending. Year over year, commercial shooting days were down 34 percent in the fourth quarter of last year. Christopher Palmeri, Bloomberg PodcastsAccording to podcast search engine Listen Notes, there were 1,109,000 new podcasts launched in 2020. That would appear to be a high-water mark for the industry, as the figure fell to 729,000 podcasts in 2021 and a mere 219,000 in the year 2022, lower even than the 2019 level and down an estimated 80 percent from 2020. This is, on one hand, a reflection of the undeniable boom in podcasts during the early months of the pandemic, but the reversal is rough and can be seen quarter to quarter last year, with just 44,000 new podcasts launched in Q4 of 2022, down from 67,000 launched in Q1. One other reason may be that there are new podcasts, but they’re just inhabiting the feeds (and assuming the audience) of existing ones. Episodes are down just 13 percent from 2020 to 2022, bearing that out. Another detail is that it’s a bloodbath out there: Of every podcast that stopped publishing since 2010, 78 percent of them died in 2020 or 2021. Thanks to the paid subscribers to Numlock News who make this possible. Subscribers guarantee this stays ad-free, and get a special Sunday edition. Consider becoming a full subscriber today. Send links to me on Twitter at @WaltHickey or email me with numbers, tips or feedback at walt@numlock.news. Send corrections or typos to the copy desk at copy@numlock.news. Check out the Numlock Book Club and Numlock award season supplement. 2022 Sunday subscriber editions: 2022 · NIMBY · Undersea Life · Bob vs Bob · Instant Delivery Curse · Monopoly · Twitter · Crypto · Rotoscope · Heat Pumps · The Ruck · Tabletop · Mexican Beer · The Chaos Machine · [CENSORED] · Podcast Industrialization · Fantasy Shows · Law Dork · Chinese Box Office · Box Office Recovery ·Giant Hornets · Graphic Novels · Infotainment · Nuclear Energy · Fast Fashion · Salty · Twitter Friction · Fangirls · Air Quality · Non-Colonial AI · The Reckoning · Hippos · Fixing Baseball · Booze TrialsSunday Edition Archives: 2022 · 2021 · 2020 · 2019 · 2018You're currently a free subscriber to Numlock News. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |
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Numlock News: January 23, 2023 • Flo Rida, Carp, Reactors
Monday, January 23, 2023
By Walt Hickey Welcome back! Water Avatar: The Way of Water is on a record-breaking tear, hitting $2.024 billion as of this past weekend, $598 million of which came from North America and $1.426
Numlock News: January 20, 2023 • Catfish, Covers, Eggs
Friday, January 20, 2023
By Walt Hickey Have a great weekend! Sunday was another Numlock Podcast edition of the Sunday edition, available for anyone to listen to on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts,
Numlock News: January 11, 2023 • Vigilantes, Megalopolis, Bowling
Friday, January 20, 2023
By Walt Hickey Megalopolis The single most interesting movie currently in production right now is Megalopolis, a sci-fi movie directed by Francis Ford Coppola. The reason this is so wild is because
Numlock News: January 12, 2023 • Kingdom, Titles, Princes
Friday, January 20, 2023
By Walt Hickey Whoops JP Morgan is suing a 30-year-old founder of a fintech company they bought for $175 million in September of 2021, alleging a shocking amount of fraud during the due diligence
Numlock News: January 13, 2023 • Fireball, Starry, K-Pop
Friday, January 20, 2023
By Walt Hickey Have a great weekend! Numlock is off Monday in observation of Martin Luther King Jr. Day. We'll be back Tuesday. Fireball Fireball, the spirit that should barely even be considered
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