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  • Disney’s ‘Lilo & Stitch’ becomes Hollywood’s first $1-billion movie of 2025

    Disney’s ‘Lilo & Stitch’ becomes Hollywood’s first $1-billion movie of 2025

    Walt Disney Co.’s live-action adaptation “Lilo & Stitch” has now generated more than $1 billion in worldwide box office revenue, becoming the first U.S. film of the year to do so.

    The movie, based on the 2002 animated film of the same name, made $416.2 million in the U.S. and Canada and an additional $584.8 million internationally. It is the highest-grossing Disney live-action film ever in Mexico, where it brought in $67 million.

    “We knew there was a lot of love for ‘Lilo & Stitch’ with audiences around the world, yet we never take that for granted,” Disney Entertainment co-Chairman Alan Bergman said in a statement. “We’re proud of how this new film has connected with people.”

    The Burbank-based media and entertainment giant has already announced that a sequel to “Lilo & Stitch” is in development.

    The movie was released on May 23 and hauled in $183 million domestically during its opening weekend, a total that edged out 2022’s “Top Gun: Maverick” to claim the mantle of biggest Memorial Day weekend opener ever.

    The original animated movie was only a modest box-office performer at the time, bringing in $273 million. Yet over time, Stitch has become increasingly popular, ranking in the top 10 bestselling Disney franchises, alongside stalwarts like Mickey and Minnie Mouse, the princesses, Star Wars and Marvel, Disney has said.

    Sales of Stitch-themed merchandise totaled about $2.6 billion last year. And before the new film was released, the “Lilo & Stitch” franchise, which includes animated series, TV films and direct-to-video movies, drove 546 million hours of global viewership on Disney+, with the original movie accounting for more than half of that.

    Bergman said in May that the popularity of the little blue alien “definitely” played a role in greenlighting the live-action film.

    The success of “Lilo & Stitch” comes as family-friendly movies have ruled the box office. The momentum began in April with Warner Bros. Pictures’ “A Minecraft Movie,” which has now made $955 million worldwide, and continued with “Lilo & Stitch” and Universal Pictures’ live-action adaptation “How to Train Your Dragon,” which released in June and collected more than $564 million globally.

    “Lilo & Stitch” is just the most recent Disney film to cross the $1-billion mark. Last year, Disney and Pixar’s animated “Inside Out 2,” Walt Disney Animation’s “Moana 2” and Marvel Studios’ “Deadpool & Wolverine” each made $1 billion in global box office revenue.

    Globally, the biggest film of the year remains “Ne Zha 2,” a Chinese animated juggernaut that grossed more than $2 billion in ticket sales, the vast majority of which came from its home country.

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  • Should You Buy the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 or Z Flip 7? Review, Price, Features

    Should You Buy the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 or Z Flip 7? Review, Price, Features

    The most impressive thing about Samsung Electronics Co.’s new Galaxy Z Fold 7 is that it feels like a normal phone. Considering the inherent engineering challenges of building a folding handset, that’s actually high praise.

    The $2,000 Z Fold 7 is part of the company’s seventh generation of foldable phones, a category that has yet to win over mainstream consumers. But this model is thinner and lighter than any of Samsung’s previous efforts, and it comes with fewer compromises. (And the area where it does skimp is more likely to annoy diehard enthusiasts than everyday consumers.)

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  • Accessories Council to Host Annual Design Excellence Awards in NYC

    Accessories Council to Host Annual Design Excellence Awards in NYC

    The Accessories Council announced on Thursday that the seventh annual Design Excellence Awards will take place in New York City this November at The Fifth Avenue Hotel. Entries are open and will be accepted until Aug. 29. Finalists will be announced Sept. 9.

    “We look forward to welcoming submissions from both emerging and established talent for this year’s Design Excellence Awards,” said Karen Giberson, president and chief executive officer of the Accessories Council. “We encourage designers to be bold and creative, and to join us in this unique opportunity to earn a stamp of approval from respected industry leaders.”

    Marchon Eyewear from top: Nike Flyfree injected frame material derived partially from castor bean oil; Ferragamo acetate sunglasses in opaline khaki blond tortoise; Paul Smith acetate sunglasses in transparent khaki; Calvin Klein acetate sunglasses in azure.

    Chelsie Craig/WWD

    The Accessories Council will honor brands across accessories categories from handbags to eyewear (optical and sun), footwear, jewelry (fashion and fine), tech and innovation, and more disciplines.

    Additionally, the Accessories Council will select its prestigious Hall of Fame Award recipient of the year, which recognizes one single iconic product or brand that has stood the test of time as determined by the Accessories Council Board. The 2024 recipient of this honor was Citizen, a Japanese watch brand that commemorated its 100th anniversary last year.

    The Accessories Council will determine finalists based on such criteria as excellence in design, unique appearance and/or function, consumer needs addressed by product, appropriate aesthetics, innovative materials or technology, market positioning and competitive performance, social images, emotional appeal and sustainability. The criterion mirrors consumer evaluation when determining purchases.

    Sponsors of the forthcoming 2025 Design Excellence Awards include Caleres, Circana, and Marchon Eyewear. November’s award recipients will receive a trophy designed by Marchon Eyewear.

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  • 7% of games in the entire Steam library now disclose generative AI usage, study says

    7% of games in the entire Steam library now disclose generative AI usage, study says

    7% of games on Steam now disclose that they use generative AI in some form, according to a study.

    That comes from Totally Human Media (via VGC), which puts the number at 7,818 games out of a total of around 114,126 on the Steam platform, as of July 13, 2025. The source is Steam’s API.

    That’s a huge increase from Totally Human Media’s last study in April 2024, which put the percentage at 1.1% of Steam’s library. 20,000+ more games have been released on Steam since then.

    One in five releases so far in 2025 disclose generative AI use, according to the report. Around 60% of games with the disclosure notice are using visual asset generation.

    Other uses include audio generation, text and narrative generation, marketing and promotional materials, as well as code and game logic.

    Prominent Steam releases that disclose AI usage include inZOI (for generating in-game textures and character AI), Liar’s Bar (character voices), and Comedy Night (content moderation).

    11-Bit Studios was recently the subject of criticism for an instance of generative AI text in The Alters, which wasn’t disclosed. The studio vowed to update the art to remove this.

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  • Podcast #103 Matt Hauser: WTCS Hamburg debrief

    Podcast #103 Matt Hauser: WTCS Hamburg debrief

    “Before our leg started, I was joking to Dorian (Coninx)… the first time back in 2017 when I raced the mixed team relay, I remembered getting out of the swim just behind him and Ben Kanute I think, as an inexperienced 19-year-old… I hopped on the bike and they were gone with the click of a finger…”

     

    “And then  my girlfriend Georgia mentioned that in the post-race interview that him and Henry Graf were conspiring against me or just wanted to make sure that I wasn’t in that pack… and I thought that was quite funny that they didn’t take that opportunity and I was able to get on.”

     

    Letting Hauser get on was what would cost them this year’s title. If 2017 was the last time a soaring Australia were the Mixed Team Relay World Champions, then 13 July 2025 represented a new high watermark as they returned to the top of the relay podium for the first time in eight long years.

    This time it was Matt Hauser hoovering up the gap to the leaders after three strong legs from Sophie Linn, Luke Willian and Emma Jeffcoat. The only member of that mighty 2017 team in Hamburg, the 27-year-old was able to follow up his individual gold with an explosive swim, bike and run that closed a 20-second gap at its start, then took the tape with a 3-second gap at its end.

    All-in-all, it was another exceptional weekend in Hamburg for the man who stands on top of the men’s World Triathlon Championship Series rankings with two golds and two silvers so far in 2025.

    But only three WTCS scores (max 1,000 points to the leader) plus the Championship Finals (max 1,250 points) will count to the overall standings. With less than 300 points currently between him and second-place Miguel Hidalgo, Vasco Vilaça in third, Hauser will be taking nothing for granted as the calendar flips ever closer to a huge October weekend in Wollongong that could see an Aussie male crowned World Champion for the first time in 20 years.

    “I think the longer we can stop Vasco from winning the better it’s gonna be for everyone, to be honest. He is a fantastic athlete, and the win will come one day, I have no doubt about that. But  yeah, if we can hold on a little bit longer, that’d be good for everyone.”

    “I think everyone will be going back to their home environments  and training really hard   in preparation for those last few races. I’m gonna be doing the same, and yeah, hopefully everything goes well and it’s smooth sailing towards Wollongong.

     

    Can the Hauser high watermark get even higher in 2025? Listen to the full interview on Apple, Spotify, Amazon and wherever you get your podcasts.