4 May 2021 | 07:45am
StockMarketWire.com - Financial services group WH Ireland said it expected to report a full-year pre-tax profit of around £1 million on the back of a 29% rise in revenue.
Revenue for the year through March 2021 was seen increasing to £27.9 million, up from £21.6 million year-on-year.
WH Ireland said it had achieved a strong second-half performance and made significant new hires during that period. WH Ireland has had a very significant year of progress, returning its first full year profit for more than five years, delivering a substantial number of capital markets transactions, including two IPOs, and completing our first wealth management acquisition, chief executive Phillip Wale said.
As a former writer and creative director on
Gravity Falls, Mike Rianda is no stranger to heartwarming content ostensibly made for kids but equally beloved by adults. That’s certainly the case with his new movie,
The Mitchells Vs. The Machines, which was made with the help of Phil Lord and Chris Miller and premiered over the weekend on Netflix. Packed full of amazing actors we’re talking Maya Rudolph, Danny McBride, Abbi Jacobson, et al and quirkily hilarious techno-references, the film is an animated classic for the most modern age. It speaks to how we live today and in particular, how younger people live, work, and connect on the internet.
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Advocacy group wants to see more Asian dancers on the stage, and more Asian choreographers on the program
Anying Guo, The Washington Post
May 2, 2021
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1of3Phil Chan and Georgina Pazcoguin, the founders of Final Bow for Yellowface.Erin BaianoShow MoreShow Less
2of3Brinda Guha, a choreographer featured in Final Bow for Yellowface s 10,000 Dreams Virtual Choreography Festival. (Lukas van der Fecht/LVDFLukas van der Fecht/LVDFShow MoreShow Less
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Phil Chan and Georgina Pazcoguin, the founders of Final Bow for Yellowface, an organization dedicated to eliminating offensive Asian stereotypes in dance, had been working on their virtual choreography festival for months when something suddenly shifted their focus: a shooting in Atlanta that left eight people dead, six of them Asian.
Image: Sony
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse was so big, it needed three directors to bring it all together. Now we know the sequel will be the same, albeit this time with three new directors.
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Variety reports, and Sony Pictures Animation confirms in the below Tweet, that the still-untitled
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse sequel will be directed by Joaquim Dos Santos, Kemp Powers, and Justin K. Thompson. They’ll take over for Bob Persichetti, Peter Ramsey, and Rodney Rothman, who made the first film. Ramsey remains on as an executive producer, along with Phil Lord, Chris Miller, and a slew of others. Lord and Miller wrote the script, along with David Callaham, who co-wrote