Friday, June 10, 2022
FANG stocks defanged by Meta Platforms ticker change
With Facebook parent Meta Platforms changing its ticker to META from FB on Thursday, the FANG group of top internet stocks loses more relevance. Will talk of FANG stocks wither after the change? Will a new stock group emerge to define the next growth era?
CNBC’s “Mad Money” host Jim Cramer coined the term FANG stocks in 2013 to refer to the group of leading internet companies: Facebook, Amazon, Netflix and Google.
The FANG stocks group persisted after Google was placed under umbrella organization Alphabet in 2015. But Alphabet retained its GOOG and GOOGL tickers, allowing the acronym to continue.
Certainly, many Wall Street analysts and investors will continue to use the FANG acronym despite the change. The same is true for its many variants: FAANG (which adds Apple to the mix), FATMAN or FAATMAN (Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Tesla, Microsoft, Alphabet and Netflix), FANMAG (Facebook, Amazon, Netflix, Microsoft, Apple and Google). There’s also FANGMAN (which adds Nvidia).
Cramer suggested MAMAA (Meta, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon and Alphabet) as a replacement, though others have stylized it as AMAMA.
Others have played around with acronyms with the companies Apple, Amazon, Alphabet (or Google), Meta, Microsoft, Netflix and Tesla. They’ve come up with GAMMA, MANGA, MAGMA, MANTA and A MANTA.
China’s version of FANG stocks is the BAT stocks. BAT includes internet companies Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent. There’s also BAIT, which adds iQiyi.
With FANG stocks defanged by Facebook and Google name changes, what stock group will define the next growth era?
In March, BofA Securities analyst Vivek Arya created a grouping of top semiconductor stocks under the acronym MANGO. The MANGO stocks include Marvell Technology (MRVL), Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Analog Devices (ADI), Broadcom (AVGO), Nvidia (NVDA), GlobalFoundries (GFS) and Onsemi (ON). Arya combined the three tickers that start with A as one letter in the acronym. It looks better than MAAANGO.
Monday, June 6, 2022
Actress in Sean Paul music video identified as model Gabriela Salvadó
One of the most consistently popular posts on Tech-media-tainment over the years has been one titled “Who is the hot actress in Sean Paul’s ‘She Doesn’t Mind’ music video?”
Several people have since confirmed to Tech-media-tainment that the actress in question is New York City-based model Gabriela Salvadó. The international model is originally from Guatemala.
The producers of the music video inadvertently created the mystery by not crediting Salvadó in the footnotes for Sean Paul’s “She Doesn’t Mind” video on YouTube. By contrast, model Lisa Jackson got credited elsewhere for her role in the 2011 video, which has over 470 million views on YouTube.
It’s too bad the mystery took several years to solve.
Check out more about the lovely Gabriela Salvadó on Facebook and Instagram.
Photos: Gabriela Salvadó.
Sunday, June 5, 2022
Former Lingerie Football League gets woke
Women’s football league X League kicks off its first season on Friday June 10 in Independence, Missouri. But the league actually has been around since 2009 when it got its start as the sexy Lingerie Football League.
Back then, the women played in bras and panties with minimal athletic protection. They wore shoulder pads and hockey helmets plus knee and elbow pads. But they still showed a lot of bare skin. Naturally there were numerous “wardrobe malfunctions.”
The league inspired other sexy women’s sports leagues including the Bikini Basketball League, Lingerie Basketball League, Bikini Hockey League and Lingerie Fighting Championships. But it was a short-lived phenomenon.
In 2013, the Lingerie Football League rebranded as the Legends Football League. With the rebrand, the uniforms became more sports appropriate. So, no more wardrobe malfunctions.
The recent change to the X League is the second rebranding of the Lingerie Football League. It’s trying to become a legitimate sport now. That means no more cleavage-baring outfits.
Frankly, I’m surprised the league has lasted this long.
Tuesday, May 31, 2022
Sweets & Snacks Expo 2022 provides look at fun eating trends
The Sweets & Snacks Expo, held May 23-26 in Chicago, offered a glimpse into the types of treats consumers are ingesting these days.
Candymakers like Hershey, Jelly Belly, Mars, and Tootsie Roll showed off new products that offered twists on fan favorites. Smaller companies at the show brought out edgier eats.
Trends at the 2022 show included more s’mores-flavored confections and greater varieties of spicy chips and snacks. Plant-based products included carrot bacon jerky, non-dairy chocolate, and vegan gummies. Two candy brands introduced drinks: Jelly Belly Sparkling Water and Warheads sour soda.
The 2022 show attracted about 700 exhibitors and 16,000 attendees. Other major exhibitors included General Mills, Hostess Brands, Kellogg, Mondelez, and PepsiCo. The Sweets & Snacks Expo boasted 4.5 acres of candy and snack innovation at the McCormick Place Convention Center.
Next year’s show is the last planned for Chicago. Future shows will alternate between Indianapolis and Las Vegas.
Related article:
Sweets And Snacks Get Boost From Economic, Societal Trends (Investor’s Business Daily; June 17, 2022)
Photos: Sweets & Snacks Expo 2022 in Chicago (Patrick Seitz)
Sunday, May 15, 2022
Rotten Tomatoes is the best review aggregator but it needs improving
A recent study by BacanaPlay determined that Rotten Tomatoes has the most reliable and fairest film rating database when compared with IMDb and Metacritic. But Rotten Tomatoes isn’t perfect.
Thank goodness it offers both a critics rating and an audience score. Often it will certify a movie as “fresh” or recommended by the critics, that I will not like. Recent examples include “She Dies Tomorrow,” “Zola” and “The Green Knight.” In two of those cases, the low audience rating should have been a tip-off to avoid the movie.
I tend to side with the audience rating now. Critics often will recommend a movie just because it’s different or has some social message they agree with.
Rotten Tomatoes does well with covering big Hollywood releases. But it falls short when it comes to aggregating reviews for independent and foreign films.
It also does a mediocre job with television shows. That could be because there are fewer professional reviewers and more shows amid the “peak TV” trend now.
Many foreign shows on Netflix rarely get reviews posted on Rotten Tomatoes. Rotten Tomatoes probably needs to cast a wider net for international reviewers. Otherwise, consumers are flying blind.
Related article:
Report: Rotten Tomatoes Named Best Movie Rating Database (MediaPlayNews; April 27, 2022)
Sunday, May 8, 2022
Rock Hall Nominating Committee needs to course correct and focus on rock acts
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame was widely criticized this year for straying further away from what most people would consider rock music with its 2022 nominations and inductees.
This year’s inductees into the Rock Hall skew toward adult contemporary with picks like Dolly Parton, Lionel Richie, Carly Simon, and Harry Belafonte. Other performer inductees include Pat Benatar, Duran Duran, Eminem and Eurythmics. The hall gave a back-door induction to heavy metal group Judas Priest with its “Musical Excellence” category to counter the lack of pure rock acts.
The problem stems from the small group of people who pick the nominees that appear on the ballot. After all, the voting body can only choose from what they’re given.
I suggest that the Nominating Committee consciously load up the ballot with rock acts next time. That would ensure a rock-focused induction class and ceremony.
This year’s ballot included 17 candidates for induction. What follows are some names I’d love to see on the 2023 ballot. The first year of eligibility is in parentheses, based on data from Future Rock Legends.
Thin Lizzy (1996)
REO Speedwagon (1997)
Scorpions (1998)
Styx (1998)
Suzi Quatro (1999)
Boston (2002)
The Runaways (2002)
Foreigner (2003)
Motorhead (2003)
Joy Division/New Order (2004/2007)
Siouxsie & the Banshees (2004)
Iron Maiden (2005)
INXS (2006)
Phil Collins (2007)
Billy Idol (2007)
The Bangles (2007)
The Smiths (2009)
Hole (2016)
Smashing Pumpkins (2016)
The Cranberries (2017)
No Doubt (2018)
Sheryl Crow (2019)
Related reading:
The 2022 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductees are Dolly Parton, Duran Duran, Eminem and more (USA Today; May 4, 2022)
The Rock Hall Keeps Its Foot on the Gas (Future Rock Legends; May 4, 2022)
Rock Hall of Fame’s Class of ’22 Has Something to Satisfy Almost Everybody… Except People Who Like Rock Bands (Variety; May 4, 2022)
‘Another Terrible Band’: Two Rock Hall Voters Get Candid About Their Ballots (Vulture; May 3, 2022)
The Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame’s Weird Bias Against Alt And Indie Rock (Uproxx; May 5, 2022)
Sunday, May 1, 2022
Never-ending supply of cheap post-apocalyptic movies on Amazon Prime Video
I’ve written several times about how Amazon Prime Video is a dumping ground for cheap post-apocalyptic-themed movies. Most of these films have received poor reviews.
Lately there’s been a surge of low-budget exploitation flicks tied to the Covid-19 pandemic.
Also, there are quite a few Christian-themed apocalypse movies on Amazon Prime Video.
What follows are 33 more post-apocalyptic movies on the service. They bring the total number of such titles that I’ve tracked on Amazon Prime Video to 195 movies.
America 3000 (1986)
Apocalypse (1998)
Superstarlet A.D. (2000)
Left Behind: The Movie (2000)
Left Behind II: Tribulation Force (2002)
Left Behind III: World at War (2005)
Alien Apocalypse (2005)
Raiders of the Damned (2007)
Apocalypse Blues (2008)
Mutants (2008)
Battle of the Damned (2013)
2149: The Aftermath (2016) aka Confinement or Darwin
AmeriGeddon (2016)
Earthtastrophe (2016)
Rogue Warrior: Robot Fighter (2016)
After the End (2017) aka I’m OK
Cold Zone (2017)
I’m Dreaming of a White Doomsday (2017)
The Humanity Bureau (2017)
Reflections in the Dust (2018)
This World Alone (2018)
A Living Dog (2019)
Crucified (2019) aka Everybloody’s End
Into the Void (2019)
The Reliant (2019)
Apocalypse of Ice (2020)
75 Degrees West (2021)
Alien Conquest (2021)
Covid-19: Invasion (2021), aka Lockdown
Grey Eyes (2021)
School’s Out Forever (2021)
After The Pandemic (2022)
When Everything’s Gone (2022)
Related articles:
Covid-inspired apocalypse movies populating Amazon Prime Video (Jan. 16, 2022)
‘Mad Max’ rip-offs invade Amazon Prime Video (July 19, 2020)
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