The Rest Is Entertainment - What Marina Asked Glen Powell
Episode Date: October 28, 2025Can Saudi Arabia beat Hollywood in an entertainment arms race? What is Glen Powell really like? Marina Hyde reports back on her whirlwind tour of the United States to interview actor Glen Powell, t...he chat was nice - but why did she feel he was stopped from saying anything interesting? In one of the biggest entertainment deals in history, Jared Kushner and Mohammed Bin Salman are buying video game giant EA. Why does the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia believe video games are the key to unlocking total dominance in the entertainment world? Join The Rest Is Entertainment Club: Unlock the full experience of the show – with exclusive bonus content, ad-free listening, early access to Q&A episodes, access to our newsletter archive, discounted book prices with our partners at Coles Books, early ticket access to live events, and access to our chat community. Sign up directly at therestisentertainment.com The Rest Is Entertainment is proudly presented by Sky. Sky is home to award-winning shows such as The White Lotus, Gangs of London and The Last of Us. Requires relevant Sky TV and third party subscription(s). Broadband recommended min speed: 30 mbps. 18+. UK, CI, IoM only. To find out more and for full terms and conditions please visit Sky.com For more Goalhanger Podcasts, head to www.goalhanger.com Video Editor: Charlie Rodwell Senior Producer: Joey McCarthy Social Producer: Bex Tyrrell Exec Producer: Neil Fearn Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello and welcome to this episode of The Resters Entertainment with me Marina Hyde
and me Richard Osman. Hello everyone. Hello Marina.
Hello Richard. How are you?
I'm very, very well. I'm very well. I mean, I'm still heavily sedated after Traders last week
and I'm gradually being brought back to sort of full consciousness.
No spoilers. No spoilers.
We have our Celebrity Tracist's podcast which people are very welcome to listen to if they've
already watched it.
I'm just implying that it's good.
100%.
It's great.
But I don't want people to switch off immediately because they're like, I'm just about to watch it.
Oh, no, there's nothing about it in this particular podcast.
Nothing whatsoever.
Nothing apart from this.
Tell you who we are going to talk a bit about.
Yeah, I'm very excited about this.
I'm going to talk a little bit about Glenn Powell.
So you, as we all remember, interviewed Glenn Powell a while ago.
He did an introduction to the podcast for us.
And that interview came out on Saturday.
I know lots of people would have read it.
So I want to talk a bit about that, but really we want to talk about why nobody says anything interesting in interviews anymore.
And by the way, he said lots of interesting things in that interview.
I think it's really significant.
And I think what's happened to interviewing and what's happened really to people's celebrities' ability to say anything of interesting, remotely interesting at all.
And we'll talk about why.
Also going to talk about the Saudis.
Oh, I've heard of them.
Heard of them as well.
We know they've been moving into all sorts of different forms of entertainment.
We talked about the Reaad Comedy Festival.
We've obviously talked about the golf before.
And now they're going into video games.
So we'll talk about the various deals that they've done and the way they're trying to.
And they're basically kick-starting a movie studio in Hollywood as well.
So we'll talk about...
We'll talk about war by other means.
War by entertainment means.
War by entertainment, which could be a tattoo on the shoulder of Mr. Glenn Powell.
Yeah.
So the interview I thought was fantastic.
No, no.
Well, that's very kind of you.
Thank you.
No, no, no. It was awful. Do you know what? It was awful. Do you know what? I cannot write. Do you know what I'm a hack?
No. I was reading it. Honestly, I threw up when I was reading it. It was interesting. And we'll talk a little bit about what the process of doing an interview like that is.
Because as I say, and I said in the interview, I don't do interviews very often. So, in fact, last one I did, I think was about 13 years ago and was Nigel Farage.
I met somebody yesterday who had interviewed Marilyn Monroe.
Really?
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
How cool is that?
Yeah, yeah.
I digress.
Did you tell her I'd done forage?
Yes, I did.
Yeah.
You'll notice, often, oftentimes, he didn't sit with a PR in the interview at all, which I really liked.
I had sort of 55 minutes with him, basically, and I went all the way to the cursed city of Los Angeles for that.
And who did he think you were, if you know what I mean?
Was he just walking into a room?
He doesn't know.
Yeah, just thinks I'm.
doing an interview with him, which is what I am doing.
It's just another thing that's been cited.
So he's doing stuff for a movie.
His publicist would have sent him 100 asks.
Well, they would have had 200 asks.
They would have knocked it down to about 30 that they think, oh, this is sort of acceptable
for what we want in terms of demographics.
Some will be podcasts.
Some will be print interviews.
Some will be TV interviews, things like that.
They will get it down to about 30.
They will then send it to Glenn's manager who will knock it and say, oh, no, no, not here.
no he won't do that because blah blah
and he will knock it down to maybe
15 and then Glenn will look at those
and go yeah I'll do that okay I'll do that one
I don't think he looks at them in my
and I don't think most stars do either
I think they they sort of vaguely trust
the many teams they have around them
don't forget you don't have just your agent
you've got management you've got obviously you've got
the film company in this case Paramount
but Paramount also would offer
Paramount would think well
because they're in charge of this particular movie
this movie being the running
Edgar Wright's remake of the Running Man
And so Paramount might have said, oh, we would offer them to The Guardian or we would offer, you know, you're thinking where would we like to place something?
And in the UK, by the way, they'd be thinking, okay, we've got UK strategy, we'll probably do one TV, we'll probably do one newspaper and we'll do one big lead time magazine.
Yeah, you'll do Graham Norton, you'll do, you know, whatever it is.
But you'll, and also, obviously, it's completely mandatory that you would have the cover.
Otherwise, you're not doing.
There's a certain point where you'll only do it if you have the cover.
Yeah. And he's definitely at that stage.
I'd like to say he was on the cover if it wasn't him.
Well, many people will say, oh, you can't, you know, you can't say this, you can't ask that.
And there is always a bit of that.
I think the key is to not have any of that in writing.
But I mean, I know some people who have done interviews where you've told in advance,
you can't talk about this, you can't talk about that.
And there's so many different things.
And actually then, in general, I do think as a journalist, also never sort of agree completely
because you don't know what they might say.
You can't sort of say, oh, well, I just refuse to follow that line of questioning.
But also, they may open up to you.
They may want to say all sorts of things.
Because those demands come from two different places that he will not talk about X.
If there's 10 of those, nine of those will come from Paramount or whoever the company are
because they don't want it to be about certain things.
They have a very clear idea of what they want it to be.
And maybe one or two of them will come from Glenn or come from whoever you're interviewing.
Just going, oh, actually, you know what, I've really had enough talking about this,
or this has been a thing that I've seen reported.
I just don't want to talk about it.
And when you start interviewing them, you find out which is which, right?
You might be able to get around it and you might be able to bring it up.
So when journalists do celebrity interviews, what are typical things they're told the person might not want to talk about?
Well, the PR is supposed to be looking after them and we'll think, okay, here are the liabilities,
has recently been in a film with someone who has recently been in a scandal, won't want to talk about that.
Just trying to put guardrails so that they don't have to talk about anything that every single word,
you've got to think on the hoof.
Most journalists I know
will still find a way
near the end
because you don't want to make
the way of asking those things.
I mean there were all sorts of tricks
I only had a little bit of time
so I thought
would it be good if I could go along
to the photo shoot
because you don't have to say anything.
He looked amazing
in that sort of capri's purple
because it was in this huge old warehouse
and Brisket his internet famous dog
he was like wiping up after him
and I thought you know
Glenn Palpat himself after his own dog
that's good
I wouldn't, you know, it's just a little thing that you might see.
The person I spoke to yesterday who interviewed Marlon Monroe also said she met Senator Joseph McCarthy.
This is an amazing conversation.
And she said, he was talking to a young child.
And I thought, oh, my God, he's like talking to a kid.
And I thought, oh, wow, you know what, maybe I've misjudged him because he was being incredibly charming.
He said the child walked away.
Senator McCarthy took his hand and just wiped it on his trousers.
And she thought, oh, okay.
Anyway, that's such a, that might be our biggest sidebar of all time.
I love that.
okay right so you might so you're trying to find ex joys
I do know people I mean
Lynn Barber who's famous
famous celebrity interview always used to turn out of half
if they went she went to you know she'd always try and do it
their house because it's good to be on their town
and she would always turn out half an hour early
then they're not expecting it and it's just starting
I know at least another I won't say
because I think they're probably still using that
particular technique but doing that
I mean if they'll have you at the house
or if they'll come to your house
anywhere you know you can see that
people will, some people want that to happen.
I think that's unusual to want them in your house.
Personally, I would not have one journalist in one's house.
It's never have one in my house.
It's like having a film crew in your house.
I like, listen, I love film crews.
Yes.
You know I love film crews, but I'd never have one in my house.
So there will always be things that they don't really want you to talk about.
Having said that, with Glenn Powell, he did not have a PR, which is now almost a common occurrence,
at least two publicists sit in lots of interviews and say, no, you can't talk, he's not talking about that.
you know, none of that happened.
We sat at a picnic table and that passed it on the paramount lot.
None of that happens.
But you know why?
Yeah.
They knew you're toothless.
Yeah.
Also, maybe because it's Glenn Powell, Richard?
Have you ever thought about that?
This is a soft soap.
We know this?
They're going, you know what?
Just before you walked in, they went, she's nice.
She's no Lynn Barber, but she's nice.
If you haven't read this interview, by the way, absolutely, you must read it.
It is peak hide.
You can imagine what people don't want to talk about.
And the reason they don't want to talk about.
And the reason they don't want to.
talk about and actually I think they increasingly stars themselves have in the old days they would say
I don't want to talk about my love love you know I get all that that's really kind of you know
maybe they would get onto it if you persuaded them or whatever but you can see why they wouldn't
want to talk about things like that but actually it's widened so much more that you know you would
think oh I don't really want to have to talk about anyone who's caught up in I don't want to
talk about politics especially if you're someone like Glenn Powell who wants to be a multiplex guy
and it wants to be for all America and he's actually in many ways I think
One of the things I talked to him about in the interview was, is it quite hard to be an all-American person, want to be an all-American person in a divided America, when the perception is that there are certain people who one side can like, and late night has become entirely that.
It's become entirely siloed for, you know, I'm calling it the left, but it's not, you know, you know what I mean, not the Republicans.
And in the old days when David Letterman was, or Jay Leno, everybody watched these shows.
They were for everybody.
And the stars, you know, and a lot more people went to the movies, which is interesting.
But now, all of those kind of shows are perceived as political persuasion.
And movie stars and all sorts of stars, I would say that there are really quite few people who people don't think, oh yeah, I know what you're about.
So everyone can like The Rock.
Everyone can like Travis Kelsey.
Glenn Powell wants to be the sort of guy that everyone can like.
I can tell you that I think Sidney Sweeney wanted to be someone who everyone can like.
And look what happened.
So devil's advocate.
sitting home and going, no, but look, these people are, you know, they want this free publicity.
They want all this publicity.
And they have a, they, they must speak out.
They should speak out.
They should tell us what they think about things.
What would your take on that be?
My first take would be, they don't really want to do this publicity.
First of all, they don't want to do this publicity.
My second take would be, in the old days, yes, of course I thought, oh, you know, you want to be on the cover of a magazine, you want to be this or that.
You should, you should, to some degree, take a position on things.
And if you're asked a question and it's not completely rude or unreasonable,
I think you could talk to me about, I don't know, Sydney-Sweeney in the Culture Wars or something like that.
I fully understand these days that it has changed totally.
Talk us through your sensibility walking into there and why it would have been different to walking into there 15 years ago.
Because 15 years ago, an interview with any star would be in what we used to call a colour supplement or me in a magazine.
It might be on, you know, and that interview would sort of stay there.
And if you read it, you'd think, oh, that was a brilliant individual.
It's so cool. And they said fascinating things. Go back and read those, read interviews from 15, 20 years ago. Stars say incredibly interesting things. They talk about their co-stars. You look at them now. They are so on message. They speak like politicians. And there's a single reason for it all, which is because of what's happened with news distribution on the internet. Every interview, and I, by the way, I have to say that publications are as guilty of this. And I'm not the Guardian, but lots of publications. I'm doing it as a general. But everybody always says,
is there a news line?
So you do an interview
and what they mean by that is,
can we have a story
that could go on the news page
is like, I'm just going to think
some random thing here,
you know, say Glenn Powell had said,
you know, I'm actually hardcore MAGA
and that's why I am now.
That would become a news story.
So not only would it be in the interview
and be an interesting part of the interview
and an eye-popping part,
by the way, he didn't say that.
But what they want is then there to be a news story
because news stories get clicks
and eyeballs and drives it into the,
and it's all about traffic.
and everybody wants this now.
You know, you see people going to TV festivals, like industry gatherings.
I saw what happened.
Someone from Channel 4, Channel 4 News said,
I think lots of those people from adolescents that will piggybacked on what Channel 4 news would do,
or something like that.
I can't remember what she said in a panel discussion
at the Edinburgh Television Festival and industry gathering,
and it was reported around the world as, you know,
like adolescents are sort of ripped off Channel 4 or something like that.
And I just thought, you've had an absolute nightmare there.
What you've tried to say is maybe something like we've made.
some interesting crime documentary
or something. I don't even know.
Or, by the way, you're trying to entertain
people. In fact, you're in front of a live audience
and you're talking to people.
300 people in a sort of hall in Edinburgh.
Why can't you say anything? But you can't
say in there because then you've got three days
of firefighting and everybody's saying
coming to you for another quote, they've gone back
to the adolescence people. What do you think about the fact that they just
slagged you off? And it's just this absolute
shitstorm all the time.
And so you know that if you're a
celebrity and you're being interviewed and you say
anything that, I mean, even touches in the same postcode as something that's an ongoing
news story, you will be, it will immediately say, you know, as I've said in the interview, Glenn
Powell sort of wades into the Sydney-Sweeney discourse and he has to talk about that and then
it's scraped by every clickbait news site and it's, this thing just has a life of its own and it
tears off across the internet and it's days and days of it now.
And sorry, can I just say this, which is if, you know, if people would hear that and just
go, well, that's a, God, that's a bit woe is me. I mean, who cares? I mean, no one cares
other than you're just turning up to do your job, which is do this interview for something,
and your next three days is then incredibly boring, because you're constantly, you're constantly,
people say, it's X, it's why, it's this, it's that or the other, and you just think, oh,
God, I had really nice chat to somebody I thought was really, really nice, and then suddenly
I'm having to deal with this for four days, and, you know, it's, it's, so it's not, it's not like
no one's kind of, it's not destroying anyone's lives, but it's definitely making you think,
oh, next time I just won't say anything.
It stops you working for three days.
You have to just deal with that.
I'm not really getting anything out to it.
The only thing, the reason you ever give anything in an interview is if you're having a fun time.
If you're chatting to an interviewer and you think, I want to have an interesting chat,
this will go out and people will read it.
So I want to say something that represents me.
And, you know, the people at the record company or the film company are happy.
but the second that that goes out and you know
you've got even a day of just people going
it's interesting that you said this because blah blah blah you just think
oh okay I just it's the easiest thing this time will be not
not to bother doing that as a result people have become
incredibly boring yeah and they try very very hard not to make news
in headlines because you can just see the next you've had it happen to you
enough times that you can see the next few days spooling out
and it's going to take you away from your core business
and what you actually want to do with your time
and so I think the flip side
of that is, which is what I ended up saying to him, which was, you know, I felt, I thought it
was absolutely nonsense. Of course, Sydney Sweeney's jeans campaign was nothing to do with eugenics,
but you didn't see anybody from Hollywood coming out and saying, this is bullshit. And I said to him,
I felt that she was left to slightly twist in the wind when everyone must have known it's
bullshit. And I think he found it quite hard to answer all that sort of stuff because he is
friends with her. And, you know, your friends can't come out and say it because then it's just,
they just get drawn into it. It doesn't stop it. And I think that was his point. It doesn't
stop it, it just prolongs it. Oh, the discourse gets more, right? You're never, you're not changing
anybody's mind. No. You're just, you're just annoying more and more and more people.
For something that you just, I just think it would have been easier not to say anything.
It's what happened to politics a long, long time ago. And it's that search for the news thing.
So it's not, it's not enough to say, I'm going to talk to you about what's happening about.
It's what is the news thing that we get this over. So if Laura Kinsboe does an interview on a Sunday
morning, the job is, do you have something that leads the six o'clock news?
or the 10 o'clock news.
So can you get something that leads that,
and not something that the government wants you to lead with,
but you found something else.
And that's, you know, and that's, by the way,
perfectly good journalism.
It's not good journalism if that's all you do all the time.
You always do good politics to have to feel
that rather than actually try and present complex and difficult arguments
and try and work out how you can do the best thing,
you have to think, let me parcel something out
so that you have something for the Laura Kinsberg interview
that will appear to be.
news line and so it becomes this incredible sort of diminishing returns thing and actually you know
that started right back in you know kind of new labours era of spin news management when they're
trying to literally parcel something out something for the six o'clock something for the 10 o'clock
everybody's got to have their little thing and then everyone will be happy and now it's become so
lawless but now entertainment has gone the same way and that's why almost all interviews are
incredibly boring I think it's very difficult and I think everyone I think it's the number one thing that
anybody sits the star now sitting down things which is I don't want there to be any news coming out of this
and I think at the moment it's a particular issue with print publications I think for example if you do go on jimmy kim or if you go on graham norton
you are very aware that their job is to be an entertainment show not to get a news item and if on occasion they'll get them but that's that's not the job the job is to be as funny as possible with interesting entertaining people I've never felt going on a TV thing that you don't have to watch yourself
quite so much because no one is deliberately trying to trip you up.
Every time, listen, for me, it's nothing about it because I just talk about books and stuff
like that.
But even I can see if I talk to certain publications that they'll do all the stuff and then
at the end, you know, they'll ask you a political question or stuff.
They go, oh, God, this is probably not important.
It's not really for the article, but what do you think about this?
And you're like, I mean, I'm not an expert, so don't ask me.
But, I mean, secondly, come on.
I know what you're doing.
Every single week in this podcast, somebody will say something that you've said.
I believe that you've...
Oh God, I had the thing
my...
When we were talking about
what's coming
the Christmas number one book
and I was going through
the runners-or-writers
I was talking about clocks
and there's Diddley Squat
and I said so
Diddley Squat's just coming out
in a couple of weeks
and I said of course he's
bringing it out really near Christmas
that's the coward's way of doing things
and you know
if he had any guts
he'd have bought it out
earlier
nobody in Britain
hearing that
knows that's anything
other than a joke
so you know it's like
we used to just
do jokes
And immediately, I just had an email
saying, oh, we've just talked to Clarkson's representatives.
We heard you called him a coward.
You're like, yeah, I mean, and again.
Has this story appeared?
Oh, it's in like loads of things.
I mean, there's the second they centre.
We've talked about people talking, toiling in the content minds of reach
and the Daily Express, which is probably why I imagine that they appeared.
I will say this.
I will say this to the London Evening Standard.
Oh my God.
No, no, no, no.
Good.
It's good.
They're the only people who said, jokingly, calls Jeremy Clarkson a coward.
I really, there's so many times
I've like for a long time
I wrote a show bus column
and it was supposed to be
it was just making fun of the news
and so I wasn't breaking stories in it
but it was commentary every week
and there'd be three items in it
not unlike this podcast
and I remember always thinking
oh yeah but lots of people
have deliberately misunderstood this
and you can see this
I hate it when people do it with politicians as well
politicians do sometimes make jokes
and they are quite good
and every now
it's so rare but when it happens
it's such an easy thing to like pretend
that you didn't hear the inference and just turn it into a horrible news story.
It has resulted in a much, much, much more boring public discourse.
In an area, by the way, in which isn't politics and which people, you know, we should,
we'd love to be entertained by our...
Can I give one corrective to it?
Because I feel like I've been moaning and it doesn't affect me.
It's sad.
I talk to a journalist a lot whenever I've got a book out, anything like that.
And 99% of the time, it's a really positive experience.
I love it.
You know, and it is.
And, you know, you talk to the Daily Mail or people like that, and you just think, lovely interview, no one's, you know, and it comes out.
And I'm happy, if I've, you know, if you were able to speak freely, you can hopefully say interesting things and useful things.
But so almost all the time, it's easy, but you are constantly thinking, what's the pool quote?
But it's also all the secondary, tertiary, all the other sites that just scrape all that content, you have no control over that.
And they will just do whatever they like.
They will obviously deliberately take things that's supposed to be jokes as not jokes.
And it has made the world much more boring, much more full of slop.
And also, everything is kind of completely gutted for anything it has.
So you never find...
Yeah, strip for parts.
The whole of our culture is like a scrapyard.
You might spy from a train.
Yes.
Yeah.
I do think that.
But anyway, so it would be nice to think that we could return to some kind of
prelapse area in state where people could say things they thought and they could be
fascinating and scintillating.
And it wouldn't be just taken over by bad faith actors all the time.
Right, Richard.
we now go to a break?
Come on then.
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Now.
Welcome back everybody to the desert kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
As we know, Saudi Arabia under the aegis of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman
is trying to expand beyond oil.
And one of the absolute key things they've been trying to do is just build a kind of entertainment empire.
They've got the LiveGolf.
They've got an F1 race.
We've talked a lot about the Riyadh Comedy Festival.
They've bought stakes in Live Nation.
and they had staked in Activision Blizzard gaming company,
but they've gone big with the biggest ever leveraged buyout
brokered by none other than Jared Kushner, son-in-law of Donald Trump.
He can do you a Gaza peace plan.
He did them, I think, the same day.
Same day, in fact, these were announced.
They've acquired electronic arts who make all sorts of video games.
They make E-A-F-C FIFA to anyone who plays it.
Yes, EA Sports.
It's in the game.
It's in the game.
Madden and NFL, the Sims.
They've got all sorts of things.
yes, it's the biggest ever leveraged buyer and the Saudis have acquired it.
They also have their film festival, the Red Sea Film Festival is reactivating again in a few weeks,
and they want to become a film production hub.
And they've also brought in to Hollywood.
They've put a billion into a studio within LA that they want to make content in.
So let's talk about it.
Let's talk about electronic art.
So they paid or are paying it hasn't quite been approved yet.
But as you say, given it's Mohammed bin Salman and Jared Kud.
you wonder who would disapprove.
Certainly, it would be hard to.
They would now openly say it with people connected with the Trump family that I don't
think there's going to be any regulatory issues.
So you can have a foreign company, can own an American company that has access to lots of
sensitive American citizens data in some cases.
Sorry, TikTok, but it's okay here because I guess Jared did the deal.
So they're paying $55 billion for electronic arts, $55 billion.
dollars and there's sort of the tip of the iceberg when it comes to gaming as you say so sports they've understood entertainment they've understood but you know live golf so you know it's like a hand grenade in in world sport this deal is essentially like 12 times bigger than the money they put into into that and is the tip of the iceberg in terms of gaming gaming seems to be the thing that they're putting a lot of their money they have a huge population of under 30s in saudi arabia and gaming of course is an enormous thing for them so i read somewhere that they they felt that
AI was going to, so soon going to take so many jobs that many people would have much more leisure time
and they really want to have gaming companies to be able to service that time.
I mean, it makes a lot of sense. If there's one thing FIFA will do for you.
Makes a cheery kind of sense, doesn't it, Richard?
It'll eat up a lot of their time. So I think most people think of EA as EA sports,
but they, Apex Legends is EA, Sims is EA. But I mean, a lot of gamers really hate them
and think that they ruin franchises and that they've, because they've got,
this monopoly on all of these things
and the biggest games
that they absolutely ruined them
they think they've ruined the Sims
they've ruined FIFA
which isn't called FIFA anymore
they think they've ruined
but it might as well be
yeah it is for our pubs
I mean have you heard that Twitter's not called Twitter
anymore
exactly I mean come on
yeah it'll always be FIFA
and yes and they bring up
life service versions of that
and people feel like
there's slightly being bled dry for money
and occasionally they'll
hey there's a worse ways to go
yes exactly that
and the Saudis are in charge
but yes
so they spent all of that money
but they're also trying
to become the the esports capital of the world and now for a long time certainly in the west
people have tried to make esports happen and they haven't really you know you keep hearing oh in
south korea there are these enormous arenas but you know they're still not really filling out
you know the o two every saturday night for people playing counter-strike two you know it is there's
something about it that hasn't quite kind of broken through but saudi are putting a big bet that
esports is going to be the next um huge thing so every year now they held the e-sports world cup
in Riyadh, $60 million in prize money, which is, I mean, I mean, you know.
Do they hold it in Boulevard, Richard?
Yeah, they hold it in square, I think.
Maybe they just do it in square.
If you listen to our Riyadh comedy episode, you will understand this entertainment
quarter that has these incredibly generic names.
And as always, when we talk about Saudi Arabia buying something, we're essentially talking
about the PIF, which is their big investment fund, which is controlled and owned
by the government.
and PIF owned Savvy Games Group,
which is the acutely titled name of their gaming company,
which is now about to own electronic arts,
which runs the esports stuff.
They bought the biggest esports companies, ESL Gaming,
and Face it were both bought by Savvy Games Group.
And so, you know, they have this World Cup every year.
They're going to hold the 2027 ESports Olympics in Riyadh as well.
They are absolutely betting huge amounts of money
that this is going to be the next big thing.
They own a 8% stake in Nintendo.
So Activision Blizzard they did have before Microsoft bought the whole thing.
The whole gameplay is oil is going to run out one day and so we need to replace it with something.
They're building an enormous e-sports arena, but in two, in fact, they're building one in Riyadh.
And they're also building one in Neum, which, as you know, is that entirely space age, new built, incredibly long indoor city,
which is exactly like something you would have read in 2000 AD
and gone, well, this would be thousands of years in the future.
They even call it, it's even written in capitals.
So they are building that.
In a way, I kind of, listen, I'm not taking a moral stance here at all.
I kind of like the mentalness of the future being built around us in real time.
I mean, it is crazy saying we're building an entirely artificial indoor city
and within it
we are going to hold an arena
for people to play digitised sports
against each other
Because the robots will be doing their jobs
Yeah
But it feels like
Oh this was
This was sort of what we were promised
Yeah
This feels like
Oh the fine cars
Then you've got the full set
I mean they will definitely have flying cars
You know very very soon
Weren't they
So yeah they're making this
Enormous bet on gaming
And electronic arts is
The biggest of the biggest
Of the big
But I think it's worth reflecting
on what a sort of extraordinary company
EA has been
and it was never really
it never really made video games
it's always a publisher
it always sort of bought other people's games
and distributed them
I think the first games they did were in 1983
the first sports game they did was
Dr. Jay and Larry Bird go one on one
which was like the foot you know it's
Julius Irvin and Larry Bird
essentially playing the game of you know
and back then with the amount of pixels you could have
this idea of having a half court game
and there's only two players they could do it
but it was always, it looks about as real as you can possibly make it.
And, you know, it sold like 400,000 copies or something.
So did amazing numbers.
They worked up very, very early on where things were going.
But, yeah, they were never really a developer.
It's a guy called Tripp Hawkins, who worked for Apple, who set it up.
And when they had enough money, they then started buying developers,
and then suddenly they are a developer of games.
But, I mean, they're buying developers and the developers are doing games.
But to build a $55 billion company out of that,
just thinking, oh, I'm going to get some, you know, indie game designers and I'm going to put them out on the Amiga and the Commodore 64 and all these things that they started doing.
It shows a certain vision, I would say.
It shows a certain kind of understanding of where the future is coming.
If you've talked about EA back in the 90s, it's Madden.
I mean, you know, American football I know nothing about, but we would play Madden almost on stop.
We would play FIFA.
We would play Madden.
We would play Colin McCray rally.
But the money they made from those
And then of course now, you know, with streaming and stuff,
the fact that they can do, you know,
live service versions of these games,
those games, FIFA and Madden,
are bringing in so much money every single year.
I mean, hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of millions.
But as I say, people do think they're sort of getting ruined
and that it's just a monopoly now.
And I mean, this is a big sellout, we have to say.
Oh, yeah.
Every one just wants that sweet sovereign wealth on money.
And, I mean, remember they were sort of,
persona non-grata off. In 2019, after the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, inside the Saudi embassy in
Istanbul, Ari Emanuel, who's a mega super agent and in charge of lots of other sort of big sporting
things and wrestling and so on, he had just taken 400 million from the Saudis when that
happened. He handed it back and said, we don't want to be in business of these type of people
after the murder of Jamal Khashoggi. And then he felt he's had to start traveling with
bodyguards, Ari Emanuel, after that. But having said that, now to do.
WW shows a year held in Saudi that he's saying again,
oh, we're very happy to be in business with the Saudis.
But on home soil, in the US, it's just been announced that it's not actually the PIF,
but it's another part of sovereign wealth controlled by Mohammed bin Salman,
have now backed something called Arena SNK Studios.
They've turned up with a billion, immediately saying,
we want to rival Marvel or legendary or one of those kind of companies.
And by the way, a billion is sort of chump change,
them at the moment.
Yeah.
Whereas it's actually not...
It is not jump change for Hollywood.
It's not quite enough to do what they're starting to say.
But having said that, what they do have and what's very valuable is that, as you said,
they own lots of video game rights and those are doing an anime, both of which, as we know,
are on a huge tear in terms of being able to make money as entertainment properties.
And are about to get a great deal cheaper to be made into movies as well.
Well, this is what they keep saying.
They don't have a problem with AI.
Yeah, yeah.
Look who is on the board of it.
It's being run by Eric Feig, who's the former Lionsgate president.
The former Disney Film Chief is on the board.
Really, really kind of blue-chip, Hollywood people are now allowing this money to come in.
And we know that they want to turn it into a production hub.
The trouble is the temperature does make that tricky.
But they can build these beautiful...
If you can build an indoor city, I'm pretty sure you can build some air-conditioned studios.
So they do want to turn it into a production hub.
and they're offering much better incentives than Morocco and Egypt.
I think Morocco and Egypt will offer you like 30%.
The Saudis will offer you 40%.
So they're constantly trying to move people.
I feel like the Riyadh Comedy Festival, which we have talked about before,
will, might be the final outpost of outrage over people going to Saudi Arabia
and investing in Saudi Arabia and taking Saudi investment.
And I know lots of people in Hollywood have been taking this money for a long time
and lots of people in sport, of course, have been taking it for a long time.
But that felt like everyone, it brought people up a little bit sharp, the comedy festival,
because of the people who were involved.
Who didn't need money, by the way, as we've said.
Comedians have never been richer than they are now.
Yes, but by the way, like Anthony Joshua needs money.
I mean, I get that.
But given that they didn't need it and they still did it,
and they sort of, I suppose, got away with it and they can carry on and still go on and talk about free speech.
every single person in every single area of entertainment
because entertainment
all it ever really wants is for you to give it money
that's what it wants it you know it's we've got stuff then
stuff needs to be funded they've all got houses
they want all these Hollywood executives have big houses that they want to
that's what they really mind about and suddenly people have got money
and you know they are all going
is this is this okay if enough of us do it I think it's going to be okay
if enough of us do it no one will say Jamal Khashoggi again
what's the point where I don't ever hear his name again
And they're all kind of, they've all got their ear to the ground going,
does someone else say, Jamal Khashoggi?
No one said it.
Okay, no one said it for a week.
Okay, maybe we can do it.
Everyone is sitting there thinking, okay, we build, we build, we're not going to sort of come out and say it publicly too much.
But we are absolutely getting in bed.
And all of this money is coming from Saudi Arabian oil and Niham and Riyadh and all of these places.
It is just the future.
And that Riyadh comedy festival, I think we'll look back and just go, that was the last time.
The last staging post, I definitely agree.
Anybody ever sort of complained.
Can I recommend, by the way, if people have not read Helen Lewis's article about the Riyadh
Comedy Festival in the Atlantic, she went out to the Ria Comedy Festival with her editor
from the Atlantic.
It's a really, really, really good piece.
And there's a good piece about Saudi Arabia, and it's a good piece about the comics.
You went out there and what happened before.
And she actually goes to the gigs, tells you what it's about.
I thought it was fascinating.
I tell you one thing that's very interesting in that is at the Jimmy Carr-Louis K.
the opening act is an Irish comic called Andrew Maxwell
who lots of people will know
it's been on House of Games, all sorts of things
and you see the name, you're like,
huh, Andrew Maxwell is out there
and he is on the plane home with her
and she knows him a bit, so talks to him,
he gives the only good defence
I've seen from any comedian at that festival.
He actually says something that makes you think
and I thought was really, really, really interesting.
And it's the only smart bit of thought
I think from any of the comedians who've been out there that I've read.
So I thought that was fascinating.
But I do feel like this is a battle that is done.
And the Rear Comedy Festival is not the beginning of something.
It's not the beginning of some sort of, you know,
rearguard action where people are going to, you know, suddenly find their morals and not going to business.
It is the last post.
Yeah.
And Hollywood needs billions to keep it in the manner to which it's become accustomed.
And they're going to take it from anywhere.
And if it's allowed by Trump, then it will be allowed.
My favorite bit of the match from documentary on Netflix is Eddie Hearn, whenever he has to deal with Turkey Alshake, who's behind a lot of the Vision 2030 stuff.
And Turkey Alshake is always sort of calling him up at 11 p.m.
And Eddie Hearn sort of gets out at 4.
And it just goes, yeah, I had a meeting.
And then we went for dinner.
And then we had to go for a drink.
Then we had to go back.
And then only then were we allowed to talk about anything.
And he just looks so tired all the time.
You know, Jamal Khashoggi is a lightning rod for a lot of things.
you know human rights abuse you know there are there lots of people being executed in
Saudi Arabia you can find far more present examples yes of people not being allowed freedom
of speech we put it that way in Saudi Arabia and people and other and comedians and
anti-government voices being completely silenced and executed so far more contemporary than
2019 and it's interesting how our culture works because until you all rally behind the same
banner nothing happens so Jamal Khashoggi everyone knows
the name, knows what happened. And so that feels like something you can say. But when you talk
about some of the people we spoke about on the Real Comedy Festival episode, until everyone's
talking about the same thing at the same time, it dissipates through our culture and goes away. And
you know, it's a couple of people saying it, but they can still go on and do their deals. But
all the people who are currently working at Saudi Arabia, and I'm sure there are plenty of you
out there. It's worth looking into. Just make sure that
whatever compromise you feel you're making is the compromise you think you're making.
By the way, on Friday, if you remember, there's a real treat in store because
Olly Richards and Chris Lockery are going to go through in remorseless detail, every Oscar contender.
And if you don't know the work of Olly and Chris, two of my genuine favourite journalist,
when someone said that they would come and chat, I was like, okay, this is going to be.
They've already seen every single offering.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, they've seen it a month before they came out.
That would be a lot of fun.
Very funny men as well.
So if you want to join for ad-free listening and for bonus content, it's the rest of entertainment.com.
And can I ask you a question?
Are we going to do a Celebrity Traitors' Reaction episode this week?
What do you think?
Yeah, I think we are.
Let's try and keep it to under six hours.
But, you know, we can't.
Yes, we will be there moments after the last strains of the Tracer's credits have died away.
And that, as always, we'll be free.
Yeah, if you want those bonus episodes, ad-free listening, all that kind of stuff, wrestersentertainment.com.
Otherwise, we'll see you on Thursday for the Q&A and Thursday evening.
Our favourite traders.
Okay, see you on Thursday.
See ya.
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