Sainsbury's shoppers have been left fuming after the supermarket increased the prices of a particular service that nearly every driver uses at the petrol station.
26.10.2022 - 01:19 / deadline.com
Spotify blew past subscriber, user and revenue forecasts for the September quarter and said it will explore a U.S. price increase after recent moves by Apple and YouTube.
“When our competitors are raising their prices, that is really good for us,” said founder-CEO Daniel Ek on a conference call following its latest financial report. Spotify has the lowest churn among its peers, he said, and offers “a great customer value proposition.” He said the music streamer has launched dozens of price increase in markets around the world with great results.
Price hikes just announced by Apple include a dollar increase for Apple Music for individuals to $10.99 a month, with the family plan jumping two dollars to $16.99 per month. Apple One, which bundles video and music streaming with cloud services, video games and other options is rising to $16.95 a month from $14.95 for individuals. Families will pay three dollars more, at $22.95 a month.
YouTube is raising the price of its U.S. Premium Family Plan to $22.99 from $17.99.
A U.S. price increase “is one of the things we would like to do and it’s something we will [consider] with our label partners. I feel good about this upcoming year, and what it means about pricing for our service,” Ek said.
The company’s third quarter mostly beat expectations with 456 million monthly active users and 195 paid subscribers. Revenue of reached 3 billion euros ($3 billion), was up 21% from the year-earlier quarter. But heavy investment and slower ad growth – still a small part of overall revenue — nipped margins. Shares fell more than 5% after market close.
Sainsbury's shoppers have been left fuming after the supermarket increased the prices of a particular service that nearly every driver uses at the petrol station.
Daniel Kaluuya has gone from one Marvel world in Wakanda to another in Sony’s Spider-Verse.The “Nope” star will join Sony Pictures’ animation film, sequel to the 2018 “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse,” as the voice of Hobart “Hobie” Brown, a.k.a. Spider-Punk.The second film will follow Miles Morales (Shameik Moore), who has taken on the mantle of Brooklyn’s friendly neighborhood Spider-Man, as he reunites with Gwen Stacy (Hailee Steinfeld) to navigate the complicated web of the multiverse in the shadow of a new villain and team of Spider-People.Justin K.
One TikTok user has gone viral after ranting about the price she paid for two pairs of trousers in Primark as many agree the cost of living crisis has 'gone too far'.
Apple CEO Tim Cook called the recent price increase at Apple TV+ a kind of obvious move give how much the service has expanded since it launched three years ago.
Katie Price has been left fuming after thieves have targeted her mucky mansion home and stolen her parcels.
, Yara and Jovi visit her mom, Olga, in Prague and Yara seriously considers the idea of not coming back to the U.S.Yara moved from Ukraine to New Orleans to be with Jovi, but she has been itching to go back to her home country, especially due to the current crisis. In this clip, Yara is overjoyed at her mom caring for her daughter, Mylah, and Jovi asks Olga if she would like to be Mylah's full-time babysitter in the U.S. While Olga is happy to babysit Mylah, she doesn't want to leave Europe, and if she applies for refugee status, she can't return in 10 years.
A 14-year-old boy was left injured after a suspected stabbing near a park in south Manchester.
Sam Fender has announced two huge gigs in Belfast and Dublin next summer.The singer-songwriter will headline Belfast Belsonic festival on Friday, June 23 and Dublin’s Malahide Castle on June 25, 2023.Tickets for both shows will go on sale this Friday (October 21) at 10am and can be purchased here.Fender also said a pre-sale will be held prior to the general sale and will be sent out via his mailing list.A post shared by Sam Fender (@sam_fender)Both shows will follow his forthcoming double header at Newcastle United’s St.
Netflix miniseries The Playlist have heaped praise on the series.The six-episode docu-drama, which was released on the streaming site last week, charts the rise of Spotify in a “fictionalised” account, following co-founder Daniel Ek and the idea to start a music streaming platform amid piracy in the music industry.“I’m convinced that The Playlist on @netflix is the best original I have seen on the platform in a while,” wrote one viewer on Twitter.Another said: “Don’t sleep on #ThePlaylist on @netflix. It is honestly one of the best limited series I have watched in a long time and gives you a great insight into the workings of the music industry and streaming business.”“THE PLAYLIST on Netflix — a dramatisation of the founding of Spotify — is pretty great.
Tesco has increased the price of its chicken once again, adding 10p onto a pack of two breast fillets. With the cost of living crisis impacting on families we've been keeping a close eye on prices, monitoring the same eight items at the six major supermarkets since March.
Raleigh, North Carolina, officials held a press conference early Friday after an alleged juvenile gunman shot and killed five people, including an off-duty police officer, and wounded two more. The young gunman opened fire near the Neuse River Greenway area in Raleigh just after 5 p.m., officials previously said.
We’re slowly moving towards Grammy season again and the complaints have already started rolling in.The nominations haven’t even been announced for the big American music awards yet, but Nicki Minaj says that she’s had her single ‘Super Freaky Girl’ switched from the rap category to which she submitted it to the Best Pop Solo Performance category. And she isn’t happy with that development.“‘Super Freaky Girl,’ where I only rapped on the song, was removed out of the rap categories at the Grammys and put in pop”, she told fans in an Instagram Live video.“Now, let’s say that ‘Super Freaky Girl’ is a pop song.
The looming writers strike in the U.S. could be an “interesting opportunity” for producers working outside the country in an era of globalized content, CAA’s head of Global TV Ted Miller told a panel at the MIA Market in Rome on Thursday.