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Patreon has acquired Moment, a hosting and ticketing platform that lets creators hold digital events.
Moment (previously known as Moment House) was founded in 2019 by Arjun Mehta, Nigel Egrari, and Shray Bansal, and had raised $13.5 million from investors including UTA, Cody Ko, Noel Miller, Cameo founder Devon Townsend‘s Dumb Money Capital, former YouTube exec Shishir Mehrotra, and music artist Halsey.
By 2021, Moment had sold more than one million tickets to fans across 168 countries and 44 territories, it said.
Now it’s joining Patreon in a deal that’ll see the latter “integrate foundational elements of the Moment and Patreon platforms to enable creators and fans to have a seamless experience across our membership, digital commerce, and digital event products,” Patreon said in a company blog post.
Financial terms of the acquisition were not disclosed.
“Patreon’s mission has always been to help creators take control over their work, deepen connections with their most passionate fans,...
Moment (previously known as Moment House) was founded in 2019 by Arjun Mehta, Nigel Egrari, and Shray Bansal, and had raised $13.5 million from investors including UTA, Cody Ko, Noel Miller, Cameo founder Devon Townsend‘s Dumb Money Capital, former YouTube exec Shishir Mehrotra, and music artist Halsey.
By 2021, Moment had sold more than one million tickets to fans across 168 countries and 44 territories, it said.
Now it’s joining Patreon in a deal that’ll see the latter “integrate foundational elements of the Moment and Patreon platforms to enable creators and fans to have a seamless experience across our membership, digital commerce, and digital event products,” Patreon said in a company blog post.
Financial terms of the acquisition were not disclosed.
“Patreon’s mission has always been to help creators take control over their work, deepen connections with their most passionate fans,...
- 10/17/2023
- by James Hale
- Tubefilter.com
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Few types of films are more awkward to sit through than listless and unremarkable biographical documentaries that fall short of their inspiring subjects. Touring the film festival circuit since 2019 and finally available to the general public via virtual cinemas, Freida Lee Mock’s “Ruth – Justice Ginsburg in Her Own Words” unfortunately yields one such bumpy viewing experience.
On one hand, it is tough not to adore the central figure of “Ruth,” the legendary and influential Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who passed away last September and has been a lifelong, passionate teacher and practitioner of law, fighting against various forms of unconstitutional discrimination in the U.S. On the other, it’s curiously difficult to stay engaged with Mock’s film that merely puts forth a paint-by-numbers assembly of the wealth of material it has at its disposal.
“Ruth” consists of a collection of talking-head interviews, historical photographs and,...
On one hand, it is tough not to adore the central figure of “Ruth,” the legendary and influential Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who passed away last September and has been a lifelong, passionate teacher and practitioner of law, fighting against various forms of unconstitutional discrimination in the U.S. On the other, it’s curiously difficult to stay engaged with Mock’s film that merely puts forth a paint-by-numbers assembly of the wealth of material it has at its disposal.
“Ruth” consists of a collection of talking-head interviews, historical photographs and,...
- 2/12/2021
- by Tomris Laffly
- Variety Film + TV
Washington — Over the next few days, a curious piece of mail will land in the mailboxes of voters in northern Virginia, Hampton Roads, and the suburbs of Richmond that is unlike any political campaign lit they’ve received before. There are no shadowy photos of “corrupt” politicians, no all-caps doom-saying about the future.
Instead, this particular mailer takes the form of a letter — plain in design, black text on a white background, no graphics or photos — from a mother named Brenda M. whose son Shawn was killed by an act of gun violence.
Instead, this particular mailer takes the form of a letter — plain in design, black text on a white background, no graphics or photos — from a mother named Brenda M. whose son Shawn was killed by an act of gun violence.
- 10/11/2019
- by Andy Kroll
- Rollingstone.com
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