[bc_video video_id=”6225755739001″ account_id=”6116119081001″ player_id=”CJdhmO46zo” embed=”in-page” padding_top=”56%” autoplay=”” min_width=”0px” playsinline=”” picture_in_picture=”” max_width=”640px” mute=”” width=”100%” height=”100%” ]
The Covid-19 pandemic is changing the way we watch movies. For the streaming services, its been a bonanza but there are casualties.
The new James Bond movie, No Time to Die, has been delayed for a third time.
The crisis has been seen as devastating by those who are angry that blockbusters like Wonder Woman 1984 was streaming on the same day as it was released in cinemas.
In this special report ARISE Correspondent Deborah Hadfield looks at the likely winners and losers in the movie world as the landscape of the industry changes forever.
Follow us on:
The Statistician-General/Chief Executive, National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), Mr. Semiu Adeniran, on Friday disclosed that…
The 2,249,780 voters in Edo State that have collected their Permanent Voters Cards (PVCs) out…
President Bola Tinubu on Friday declared that his purpose for seeking the nation's number one…
Kano state government is partnering Tony Blair Institute for Global Change to attract $23.5 million…
Nigeria's federal government has said it is currently reviewing the nation’s legal frameworks, among other…
The Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, and the Port Harcourt International Airport have been recognised…