Russia Vs. Ukraine Vs. Smith Vs. Rock

It’s been dubbed the slap heard around the world. And if Twitter can be used as a proxy for the world, then it’s true, according to an analysis of two major conflicts people have been tweeting about: Smith/Rock vs. Russia/Ukraine.

Sadly, Will Smith’s shocking physical assault of Oscar presenter Chris Rock during the live telecast was enough to blow the magnitudes-greater tragedy of Russia’s assault on Ukraine off the twittersphere, according to an analysis that social-media analytics company ListenFirst did for “Red, White & Blog.”

While the military conflict in Ukraine has been trending consistently on Twitter since Russia’s invasion, it declined 10% in the three days following Smith’s slap vs. the three days prior.

There were zero tweets referencing Smith and Rock together in the days before the Oscars, but the number surged to nearly 4 million in the days following the slap.

But sticking with the wag-the-dog aspect of media and social media, it’s probably also worth noting that the clear winner of media conflicts the past few days has been Smith, followed by Rock, followed by Russian president Vladimir Putin, followed by Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky in terms of tweets garnered the past few days in ListenFirst’s analysis.

I say “winner” in the old Madison Avenue adage of “say whatever you want, just spell my name right,” which in the case of Zelensky — or Zelenskyy — may not always be the case.

And while Zelensky may no longer be an entertainment industry personality, I did ask an expert on how his recognition and reputation would be playing if he was evaluated as one.

“We don’t measure political personalities,” Henry Schafer, executive vice president of the Q Scores Company reminded me, adding, “Based on my experience, the fact that Zelensky has stepped up to the plate from the get go and in view of his traditional media and social media savvy, I believe he has made significant positive engagement with populations all over the world – especially here in the US.

“Hence, if we were to take Q Score measurements of him, I believe the scores would be very high and well above average. There was no hesitation on his part to do all of the above to lead and support the people of Ukraine in a very positive way and getting worldwide support at the same time.  All good things that create high likability.”

In terms of the actual show biz personalities referenced in this column, Schafer said it’s likely the “immediate consumer reaction to both of them will have some negative effect on their likeability.

“However, as I’ve seen through the years, the more the celeb responds with timely statements, the less the negative reaction is over time.

“Since Will Smith apologized immediately and has done so more often publicly with various emotionally charged statements over the past few days, this will serve to mitigate the negatives and the public will most likely be more forgiving by the time we update his Q Scores this summer.  Since the media coverage from Chris Rock’s point of view appears to be limited, the negative impact on his likeability could be more pronounced in our next measurement, although he may benefit from being the ‘victim.'”

Schafer had no opinion to offer on the “likeability” of the other personality referenced in his column, Putin, but if you ask me, the only Q ratings he’d score well in are QAnon’s.

The Arena Group Drives Sharp Revenue and Audience Growth in Fourth Quarter

Tech-powered media company The Arena Group Holdings  (AREN) – Get The Arena Group Holdings Inc. Report, which owns and operates 35 properties and more than 200 brands including Sports Illustrated, TheStreet and HubPages, reported total annual revenues increased 48% in 2021 compared to the previous year and fourth-quarter revenues jumped 44% compared to the same period in 2020, according to financial results released for the period  ending Dec. 31.

Fourth-quarter revenue increased to $61.2 million from $42.4 million in 2020, while annual revenue rose to $189.1 million compared to $128 million for the previous year. Gross profit percentage improved to 56% in the quarter compared to 37% in the same period the previous year.

Adjusted EBITDA improved to a positive $1.1 million for the fourth quarter of 2021 as compared to a loss of $2.1 million for the same period in 2020. Adjusted EBITDA improved to a loss of $12.1 million for fiscal year 2021 as compared to a loss of $23.2 million for fiscal 2020.

Ross Levinsohn, chairman and chief executive officer of The Arena Group, said in a statement that “2021 was a watershed year for our company, our employees, partners and stockholders with record revenue growth, operational efficiency, a national listing of our common stock on the NYSE American and transformative acquisitions.”

Levinsohn added that “It was also a year of important investment, as we developed, streamlined, and validated our technology stack and our strategic approach, establishing a scalable platform for profitable growth.”

The Arena Group in January signed a non-binding letter of intent to acquire AMG Parade, a premium multimedia content company reaching more than 250 million people each month with lifestyle, celebrity, food, health & wellness, sports, and outdoor verticals including the Parade Media, AMG/Parade Sports, Relish, Spry Living and other lifestyle and outdoor brands. The company expects to complete the acquisition shortly.

Accelerating Momentum

“We have clearly proven our ability to drive revenue and audience growth and expand revenue streams, leading to margin expansion across all our properties,” Levinsohn said. “Our momentum in Q1 of 2022 has accelerated, with further growth across almost every sector and we are well positioned to continue to expand with our new lifestyle vertical, anchored by the popular brands established by AMG Parade (which is anticipated to close shortly),” he said.

In February, the company recorded more than 111 million unique visitors, according to Comscore. The Arena Group reached the No. 34 spot in the U.S. rankings, up 40 spots from February 2021, and its sports vertical, led by Sports Illustrated, reached No. 4 in the sports category. Also in February, the Sports Illustrated Media Group reached more than 86 million digital users, more than tripling the amount year-over-year.

Sports Illustrated now has the No. 1 share of voice on Facebook among sports publishers for linked stories, according to data from CrowdTangle.

“Our highly efficient, data driven, technology-powered media platform is now proven and operating at scale, with significant room for expansion both organically and inorganically,” Levinsohn said. “We continue to add highly relevant content to our platform, leveraging brand recognition, strong audience development capabilities and a unified backend system driving efficiency and margins to create value for our partners across our ecosystem,” he said.

Since the departure of Jim Cramer from TheStreet in October 2021, The Arena Group has grown users at the financial site by 249% to more than 17 million monthly unique visitors, according to Comscore data recently released in February and has seen its engagements at Facebook grow by more than 520% year-over-year for the first two months of 2022, according to data from ListenFirst.

The company’s “The Arena Group ‘Playbook,’” its plan to feature premium content and expert analysis, as well as audience and editorial strategies designed to efficiently deliver robust experiences to audiences across platforms, has driven significant recent growth for Sports Illustrated, The Spun, TheStreet and PetHelpful, with plans to roll out across additional properties and publisher partners in the coming year.

Stock Uplisted

In the first quarter of 2022, The Arena Group uplisted its common stock to the NYSE American under the symbol “AREN.” Simultaneous with the uplisting, the company completed an underwritten public offering of 4,181,603 shares of its common stock, which included the partial exercise of the underwriter’s overallotment, at a public offering price of $8.25 per share. This resulted in net proceeds to The Arena Group of $31.5 million, after deducting underwriting discounts and commissions and other offering expenses.

The company reported an improved net loss of $19.1 million for the quarter compared to $22 million for the same period in 2020, while an annual net loss remained relatively flat year-over-year at $89.9 million for fiscal 2021 as compared to $89.2 million for the previous fiscal year. Non-cash charges represented 76% of the annual net loss for 2021.

Will Smith drama continues

The most-discussed Oscars topic on social media was no surprise. There were 3,357,759 Tweets mentioning Will Smith on March 27, and 2,096,580 Tweets mentioning Chris Rock, according to ListenFirst. Will Smith and Chris Rock were mentioned together in a tweet 1,410,714 times, while a tweet sharing the Japanese television feed of Smith slapping Rock with uncensored audio got 609,953 engagements and was the most popular Tweet mentioning both of them. All told, there were 6,782,662 tweets that mentioned the Oscars on March 27, up 164% from 2021, including one from Oscars producer Will Packer: “Welp…I said it wouldn’t be boring.

Will Smith Outslaps Chris Rock 2-to-1 On Twitter

Will Smith’s live televised slap of presenter Chris Rock during Sunday’s Oscars telecast on ABC millions of tweets within moments of the real-time event as social media users debated the veracity of what they saw, as well as who was right and who was wrong in the incident.

Without weighing in on the sentiment, social media monitoring service ListenFirst estimates Smith generated nearly twice as many tweets referencing him explicitly vs. Rock.

“If nothing else, the Will Smith incident got the social media audience talking about the Oscars again,” notes ListenFirst Director of Content and Communications Marketing Jonathan Cohen, adding: “There were 6,782,662 Tweets that mentioned the Oscars on March 27, 2022. That’s a 164% increase from the 2,571,356 Tweets mentioning the Oscars last year on April 25, 2021.”

Cohen said the best-performing individual tweet related to the Oscars, were primarily related to the real-time face slap.

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