News

The Movie in June 2025 has cemented its status as a transformative force in the film industry, propelling tech giants like Apple and Amazon into the forefront of theatrical filmmaking. With a global ...
The Movie opened in theaters around the globe to become Apple’s top-grossing film of all time, pulling in $146 million ...
Apple offered Liberty $150 million per year for F1 U.S. rights, per sources—the lower end of $150-200 million range I reported earlier. ESPN, which has been paying ~$85 million, will not match.
The Brad Pitt-starring film by Joseph Kosinski capitalized on the growing popularity of the sport in the U.S. has seen Apple reportedly poised to win actual F1 rights away from Disney/ESPN. Cook ...
Apple's 'F1: The Movie' starring Brad Pitt and Damson Idris has grossed $293 million globally, surpassing other Apple releases at the box office.
Apple had a box-office hit with "F1," the car-racing movie. Now it looks poised to win the US streaming rights for F1 races. ESPN streams them now.
Apple’s ongoing fight with regulators over App Store rules can get pretty confusing at times. Sometimes it’s hard to know whether regulators are being over-zealous in their required changes ...
Apple's bid to win US streaming rights for Formula One races appears to be in the lead, with the starting flag on Apple TV+ perhaps dropping in 2026.
Apple TV+ is reportedly looking to expand its sports coverage with a bid for the rights to F1 motor racing, specifically following the success of its Brad Pitt movie.
It’s possible, or perhaps likely, that Apple will obtain exclusive rights to F1 streaming in the US and therefore withhold access from F1 TV. F1, baby. My favorite iPhone accessories: ...
Less than two weeks after its release, Apple’s F1 The Movie is about to cross the $300 million mark at the global box office.
Whether the debut of "F1" on the platform, along with an ad-supported plan, brings Apple TV+ closer to profitability remains to be seen.