Reuters Entertainment News Summary
The last season of the science fiction series premieres on November 26, and will be released in three parts on Netflix. AI revives French playwright Moliere with a new play What might have been Moliere's next play if the 17th-century French playwright had not died after collapsing on stage while performing "The Imaginary Invalid"?
Following is a summary of current entertainment news briefs.
Eurovision host Austria backs Israel's participation, aims to stage record event
Austrian national broadcaster ORF, which will host next year's Eurovision Song Contest, said it wants Israel to take part despite several countries' objections and hopes it can host the biggest event in years despite boycott threats. Eurovision, an annual feast of pop music and high camp from around Europe and as far afield as Australia, became embroiled in a dispute over the war in Gaza in 2025 and 2024 and was hit by street protests over Israel's participation.
'Stranger Things' creators elevate creative elements for final season
Matt and Ross Duffer, the twin directors known as The Duffer Brothers, have pushed to raise the stakes with each season of "Stranger Things," a strategy they say is crucial as the series heads into its fifth and final chapter. The last season of the science fiction series premieres on November 26, and will be released in three parts on Netflix.
AI revives French playwright Moliere with a new play
What might have been Moliere's next play if the 17th-century French playwright had not died after collapsing on stage while performing "The Imaginary Invalid"? It's a question French scholars, artists and an AI firm teamed up to answer. The result is "L'Astrologue ou les Faux Presages" (The Astrologer or the False Omens), a comedy that will debut next year in the Palace of Versailles, where Louis XIV, Moliere's patron, held court centuries ago.
Warner Music Group, Udio settle copyright case, plan new AI song creation platform
Warner Music Group has settled a copyright infringement case with artificial intelligence company Udio and will jointly launch a new platform for song creation in 2026, the companies said on Wednesday. The new subscription service, which will be powered by AI models trained on licensed and authorized songs, enables new revenue streams for the artistes and songwriters while protecting their work.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

