Vevo was all over the internet in the 2000s. Today is just another forgotten episode of the old music industry

In December 2009, two of the biggest record labels on the planet organized a party in New York with Bono as the guest of honor to celebrate the launch of something that, according to them, was going to give them back control of the music business on the Internet, which, as we will now see, was not going through its best moment. It was called Vevo, an acronym for “Video Evolution.” The (r)evolution lasted less than a decade: the fundamental changes in the business and the arrival of a different way of understanding music videos relegated it to the secondary level of nostalgia for millennials which is today. Bad times. In the late 2000s, The music industry was collapsing.. Income from record sales had been falling for years due to the combined effect of piracy and chaotic digitalization, unbeknownst to the labels, and which was very far from the orderly and official moment that it is experiencing today thanks to streaming platforms. For example: YouTube (which had already been bought by Google in 2006) accumulated hundreds of millions of video clip views without the labels seeing a single euro in compensation. Attempts were made to renegotiate the terms of that relationship, without success: Warner Music was the first to withdraw their entire catalog from YouTube in 2008. Ideaca. Doug Morris, then CEO of Universal Music Group and a central figure in the creation of Vevo, envisioned a way to enter the internet and video clip business when he saw his grandson consuming online video clips with advertising, which led him to ask how much money Universal was generating with those reproductions… The answer was obvious: zero. From that point on, Morris pressured companies like Yahoo and MTV to compensate him for playing his videos. He did end up reaching an agreement with Google. Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Vevo! Vevo officially launched on December 8, 2009 following an agreement between Universal Music Group, Sony Music Entertainment and EMI, with Warner Music Group joining years later, in August 2016. Vevo would provide the official catalog in high definition, YouTube would serve as a mass distribution platform, and both parties would sell advertising on that inventory. In October 2009, the Abu Dhabi Media Company already had invested about 300 million dollars to operate in the United States and Canada. Immediate result? Spectacular. In its first month it was already the most visited music site in the United States, surpassing Myspace Music. The economic impact was also rapid: according to Vevo’s CEO at the time, the average CPM of an online music video went from $3 before launch to more than $30 in 2013. In 2012, Vevo accumulated 41 billion views annually across its network, with a catalog of around 75,000 videos. By August 2013, Vevo had surpassed MTV in terms of digital viewership: 609 million video views versus MTV’s 261 million that month. Vevo Certified for artists who surpassed 100 million streams became an indicator of cultural relevance comparable to a number one on sales charts. Issues. However, Vevo’s structural problem was not the audience, but your delivery model. Although the company had a turnover of $250 million in 2013, more than 90% of that income was shared between labels, Google and music publishers. Universal and Sony captured 55% of the total and Vevo operated at a loss. It was, in practice, an advertising inventory manager without its own capital: it generated value for its shareholders, the labels and Google, but not for itself as an independent operating entity. In 2014, the company hired Goldman Sachs and The Raine Group to find a buyer willing to pay nearly $1 billion for the company. None appeared. Vevo ruled out the sale and announced that it would seek profitability through its own means. Change of course. In April 2015, Erik Huggers (creator of the famous BBC iPlayer) arrived as the new CEO. Vevo then wanted build your own applications for mobile and connected TV, reduce its dependence on YouTube and eventually launch a paid subscription service. They began developing apps for iOS, Android and connected TV platforms, but it was short-lived: the paid subscription project was canceled in February 2017, and Huggers left the position. Sizes and layoffs took place and the commitment to technological autonomy ended. Coup de grace. In January 2018, YouTube automatically migrated subscribers from Vevo-branded channels (such as “RihannaVEVO” or “JustinBieberVEVO”) to YouTube’s new Official Artist Channels. That same week, YouTube relaunched YouTube Music as a paid subscription service, directly competing where Vevo had tried to enter. Paradoxically, Vevo had broken even that year for the first time. But the proprietary model had never caught on, and without it, there was no reason to maintain the infrastructure. What’s left of Vevo. Vevo has not completely disappearedlike other projects of the time. The company pivoted to the connected television business and FAST channelsthe free shelves with advertising. Its library exceeds 900,000 video clips and generates approximately 25,000 million monthly views. The model is, ironically, the one that MTV never managed to make happen: a free music network supported by advertising, although in the case of Vevo, distributed over the Internet instead of cable. Vevo’s footprint is not entirely negative: it set the standard for the official high-definition music video on YouTube, created the monetization infrastructure that allowed video clips to become a business again, and demonstrated that the recording industry could negotiate on an equal footing with technology platforms. But the fact that the video clips have ended up becoming amateur choreographies on TikTok is something that, of course, the CEO of Universal could not foresee. In Xataka | MrBeast created an extreme survival challenge with the goal that no one could overcome it. Until ‘Juan the Mexican’ arrived

Netflix premieres today one of the best dystopian series of all time and breaks a sadly unusual record

When ‘The Handmaid’s Tale‘ premiered on Hulu in April 2017, winning the Emmy for Best Drama when it was still a cult series. Now, a year after airing its sixth and final season, the series lands on Netflixbreaking a record that is as pleasant as it is sadly unusual: it is a series with a very specific production company (owned by Disney), but in Spain it can be accessed on practically all platforms. It’s on Netflix, yes, but also on Disney+ (where you can also see – this time, exclusively – its prequel ‘The Testaments’), Prime Video, HBO Max and Movistar Plus+. The weight of the series It is well understood by reviewing its impressive collection of awards: six seasons, 76 nominations and 15 Emmy wins, including the historic award for Best Drama in its first season, the first ever awarded to a streaming platform. streaming. That first season also won for writing, directing, leading actress (Elisabeth Moss), supporting actress (Ann Dowd) and guest actress (Alexis Bledel). For its last season it only received one nomination, but by then it had already made history. In its terrifying dystopian vision, ‘The Handmaid’s Tale tells us how in the near future, the United States government has been overthrown by a theocratic movement that founds the Republic of Gilead. In the face of a global birth crisis, the new regime enslaves the few remaining fertile women (the Handmaids) and assigns them to elite families to father children through ritualized rape. The series follows the awakening, escape and rebellion of one of these maids. Margaret Atwood, author of the original 1985 novel, stated that nothing in the novel was pure invention: everything had already happened. The repressive Taliban system, which since its return to power in 2021 has denied women access to work, education and almost any form of presence, has been repeatedly pointed out as the most direct parallel with the Republic of Gilead. But in the United States, debates about reproductive rights in different states have continued to fuel the political reading of the series. Nobody is spared. For this reason, the Handmaids’ clothing has become a symbol of feminist protest, thanks to a series that remains as shocking and terrifying today as when it premiered. In Xataka | The ambitious adaptation of a literary classic with 70 million copies sold comes to Prime Video

the best deals on technology today (May 6) on Amazon

Technology inundates us in our daily lives. We live with smart TVs, mobile phones, tablets and countless technological devices every day. If you are thinking of renewing any of your equipment or buying a gadget, these are the best bargains that we found today, May 6, on Amazon. XIAOMI REDMI Note 15 Pro+ 5G – 8+256GB Smartphone The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Smart TV LG OLED65G54LW by 1,459 euros: 55-inch OLED and with webOS 25. smartphone Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5G by 379 euros: 6.83 inches and with a 200 MP camera. Pack Blink Outdoor 4 + Mini 2K Camera + Blink White by 47.99 euros: a perfect pack to keep your home under control. portable projector TCL C1 by 193.34 euros: with Google TV and 285º rotating support. portable battery Anker by 37.89 euros: with a capacity of 20,000 mAh and fast charging up to 87 W. Smart TV LG OLED65G54LW If before the 2026 World Cup you are thinking of renewing your old TV at home for a high-end modelthis one from LG is a bargain now on Amazon. Before it cost 1,655 euros, but now, you can get it (in this flash offer) for 1,459 euros. This TV mounts a 55-inch OLED evo panel with 4K resolution. It belongs to the G5 series and works under the operating system webOS 25. It is compatible with Dolby Vision & Atmos, as well as the voice assistants Alexa and Google Assistant. LG OLED65G54LW – TV 65″, OLED EVO 4K The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5G Smartphone For those who want to change their mobile phone for a mid-range one but with good features, this Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5G is a good option. Now you have a discount of 120 euros and you can buy it for 379 euros. This Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5G It has a 6.83-inch AMOLED screen with 1.5K resolution. Its main camera is 200 MP and its battery supports fast charging at 100W. The processor it has is Snapdragon 7s Gen 4, accompanied by 8 GB RAM and 256 GB of storage. XIAOMI REDMI Note 15 Pro+ 5G – 8+256GB Smartphone The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Blink Outdoor 4 Pack + Mini 2K Camera + Blink White If you were looking for a security camera for your home, in order to have your house under control while you are on vacation or getaway, this Amazon pack will interest you. Comes with camera Blink Outdoor 4 surveillance, the Mini 2K camera and the white Blinkto be able to connect these devices. Its price now is 47.99 euros instead of the 64.98 euros it cost before. The Blink Outdoor 4 is a surveillance camera smart wireless, which serves to protect both the interior and exterior of the home. It has two-way audio and its battery offers a autonomy of up to two years. As for the Blink Mini 2, it is a wired camera that incorporates four-fold zoom and color night vision. Blink Outdoor 4 + Mini 2K+ Blink White Camera (latest generation) The price could vary. We earn commission from these links TCL C1 Portable Projector Now that the World Cup is approaching, if you are one of those who want to watch big games without spending a fortune on a TV, this TCL C1 projector It can be a good investment. Now you can buy it on Amazon for 193.34 euros. This projector from the TCL firm comes with Google TV operating system and incorporates an 8 W speaker compatible with Dolby Audio sound. It supports 4K and HDR10 and offers 230 ISO lumens. It has autofocus and a 285º rotating support. In addition, it incorporates WiFi 5 and Bluetooth 5.1 connectivity. TCL C1 4K Portable Projector Compatible The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Anker portable battery If you are one of those who suffer thinking that your cell phone is going to run out of battery on a trip, getaway or even on a daily basis, this power bank by Anker It’s on sale now on Amazon. It used to cost 49.99 euros, but now you can get it for 37.89 euros. This portable battery from Ankekr has a capacity of 20,000 mAh and comes with an integrated USB cable. Accepts fast charging up to 87 W and incorporates two USB-C ports and a USB-A port, so you can charge up to three devices simultaneously with it. Anker 20,000 mAh Portable Charger with Integrated USB C Cable The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Some of the links in this article are affiliated and may provide a benefit to Xataka. In case of non-availability, offers may vary. Images | Anker, LG, Xiaomi, TCL, Blink and Iván Linares (Xataka) In Xataka | Best televisions in quality price. Which one to buy and seven recommended 4K smart TVs In Xataka | Best sound bars in quality price. Which one to buy and seven recommended models from 140 euros

the Mediterranean reaches 20 degrees and today a DANA is going to show us what it means

Let’s start at the beginning: what is going to happen today in Castellón is something completely ordinary. A DANA coming down from the Cantabrian Sea and discharging water over the interior and coast of Castellón, perhaps some hail and intense gusts of wind. The extraordinary thing is everything else, everything that surrounds it: the warmest April in decades, the Mediterranean with a ‘heat wave’ at the beginning of May and the uncertainty of not knowing what will happen in the coming years. What we do know is what is going to happen now. Because, as I said, the DANA was located on the Cantabrian Sea and has been moving towards the east. The point is that the most unstable sector of this DANA spreads today over the north of Castellón. Once there, the DANA, the surface winds and a steep orography facing southeast force the rise of humid air from the Mediterranean. That is the recipe for potentially very intense convective nuclei in inland regions. By Wednesday or Thursday the situation will improve. As I say, a priori, it is nothing exceptional… Although we normally associate DANAs with autumn, the truth is that spring is also a time when they are abundant. What makes this event worth studying is the context that surrounds it. …except for one thing. At the end of April, anomalies of 2 to 3 degrees were recorded in the Gulf of Valencia, the area around the Balearic Islands and Catalonia. A fact that summarizes all this: the Sa Dragonera buoy It touched 20 degrees on April 26while the average for the Balearic Sea in April is 14.9. A warmer Mediterranean in spring is equivalent to more moisture available in the lower troposphere. When there is a contribution of cold air at altitude, that moisture becomes fuel: greater convective instability and more intense rains in less time. This is the problem. While AEMET maintains the yellow noticethere is no reason to assume more danger than expected. However, it is true that it is increasingly difficult to rule out torrential accumulations in any month of the year. The question is not whether it will rain a lot or not, the question is that DANAs arise on a Mediterranean different from the one that served as a reference to build our infrastructures and our warning thresholds. Image | BenBaso In Xataka | There are meteorologists who are already comparing El Niño of 2027 with that of 1877, a catastrophic event that wiped out 4% of the population

Today on Netflix the series that, nine years after its premiere, remains the best thriller ever seen on streaming

How many times, watching a series, do you have that curious feeling of “I’m watching the history of the medium”? You may have noticed it with series that not only impact you in a special way, but you also know that the people around you who also watch it experience a very similar feeling. If you’re watching ‘Succession‘You’ll know what I’m talking about. My last time, before HBO’s magnificent family intrigue epic, was on ‘Mindhunter‘, that Netflix premiered in 2017. Nine years later, it is still my favorite series of all those released on the platform. Neither ‘Stranger Things‘, neither ‘The Witcher‘, neither ‘sandman‘ nor any other have managed to match the degree of intensity and perversity of this brief masterpiece by Joe Penhall (also screenwriter of ‘The Road’) in which David Fincher directed some chapters. It started from a real event in the history of criminology: in 1977, two FBI agents revolutionized investigation techniques, giving a twist to how to get into the minds of serial killers. The series is based on the book written by some of the protagonists, and although obviously the suspense and suspicions generated by the agents’ investigation are played here, as well as the portrait of famous murderers such as the Son of Sam, Ed Kemper, Charles Manson or BTK, the realistic reflection of an era is above all. A realism that takes great care to present heroes and villains, and much less to mythologize serial killers, as the worst do. true crimes. ‘Mindhunter’ describes with coldness and a certain perverse sense of humor (and here the Fincher style is clearly evident) these first times in which psychology entered in the darkest minds and abysmal, with a fascinating portrait of these first methodologies. And all supported by an excellent cast (Jonathan Groff, Holt McCallany and Anna Torv) that not only gives credibility to the ensemble, but also catapults the empathy we experience for a group of researchers who, literally, tread on absolutely unknown ground. Image | Netflix In Xataka | Today comes Netflix’s biggest release this week, an action-packed psychological thriller starring Charlize Theron

In 1802 someone proposed to Napoleon to unite France with England. Today the Eurotunnel invoices more than 1,000 million a year

“Bonjour mon ami,” said Graham Fagg. “Welcome to France”, replies Philippe Cozette. With these words an Englishman and a Frenchman greet each other. Both are operators of one of the most ambitious and spectacular infrastructures in the world. France and the United Kingdom have just been united by land. Specifically, the land lies 50 meters below the seabed. It is December 1, 1990 and the workers have found themselves in their excavation operations. Since work began in December 1987, it is the most exciting moment in the history of the Channel Tunnel. finally united The Eurotunnel is a 50.5 km excavation that since 1994 has connected buses and trains between the United Kingdom and France. The work runs for 38 kilometers under the sea and remains, to this day, the only land connection between the United Kingdom and Europe. More than 30 years after it was launched, the Channel Tunnel has a turnover of more than 1 billion euros a year. It is the magic figure that confirms why the investment has not only been profitable, but also why it is a project that has been talked about for hundreds of years. They explain in Reuters That the first time someone imagined a tunnel similar to the current one was 1751. The Frenchman Nicolas Desmarets, a French geologist, was the first to imagine the construction of a tunnel but no one bought the idea. Yes it would, they explain in MotorpassionNapoleon Bonaparte in 1802 when he gave his support to a project to dig a tunnel to the United Kingdom and launch a passage for horse-drawn carriages by the light of oil lamps. Evidently the project never went beyond paper because, in fact, throughout the 19th century projections were being made of what this step would be like to the point that, in 1866, the British engineer Henry Marc Brunel showed that the soil under water was composed of chalk (a type of limestone rock) that allowed drilling into the soil. In fact, these studies led him to create the gravity coring system, a working method that is still used today. However, it would not be until 1880 when the first steps on the ground would be taken. Progress that was initially successful but was completely suspended in 1883 when the works had already begun to enter the underwater zone. The reason given by the United Kingdom is that a tunnel could facilitate a potential invasion of the country from the continent. The argument carried so much weight that the project was frozen for almost a century. Winston Churchill advocated for it before the Second World War but no serious work was ever carried out to bring it forward. In fact, a system of hatches was proposed that, in the event of an emergency situation, would allow the tunnel to be flooded in case of fear of an invasion. This did not convince the military officials and the project remained suspended. It was not until the 1970s that the project was discussed again in much more serious terms. Along the way, all kinds of solutions had been proposed, including the possibility of creating an isthmus and that, through canals, allow ships to pass at the same time. In the end, the most logical solution was chosen: a railway tunnel between the United Kingdom and France. The agreement began to take shape in 1964 when technical studies began to make it viable. However, it would not be until 10 years later when work began. Some works that, in fact, barely lasted because the United Kingdom soon abandoned them due to the enormous cost of the project. Yet, The Eurotunnel had already started. And on January 20, 1986, François Mitterrand, on the French side, and Margaret Thatcher, for the British, announced the definitive construction of the tunnel. The decision maintained the idea of ​​previous decades of linking both countries with trains. Trains that, at the same time, allowed the transport of vehicles such as private cars. Thus, the tunnel now allows the transit of people with the one known as Eurostar, whose passengers travel by train, and a second train that allows the transfer of vehicles. It works through a system of three tunnels. Two of them perform round trip functions and the third is designed for their maintenance. The work, which began operating in 1994, now allows the passage of people and vehicles (including trucks) and is managed by Getlink (which was previously called Group Eurotunnel), a company that has the concession of exploitation by both countries as stated in the Treaty of Canterbury. This company benefits from the concession thanks to the passage of people and vehicles but also due to the interconnection of electrical energy on both sides of it. In fact, in 2025 turnover was close to 1.6 billion euros but almost 400 million euros came from Eleclink (the electrical interconnection between both countries) and Europorte (freight transport), the other two businesses that the company has associated with the exploitation of infrastructure. Photo | opihuck and Tambo on Wikimedia In Xataka | 125 kilometers of water separate 140 million inhabitants. China is going to solve it with a mega railway tunnel

The best technology offers from the MediaMarkt Renove Plan, today May 2

MediaMarkt opens a month of May full of offers through its new campaign Renew Plan. Are you looking for a television, a surveillance camera or the Nintendo Switch 2 itself? Well, be careful with what the store has to offer for a few days, since the campaign ends on May 10. Samsung Galaxy Watch7 by 151.05 euros When you log in to the store, a great watch to measure physical activity or carry on a daily basis. Samsung TQ65QN1EFAUXXC by 599 eurosa good TV to enjoy the World Cup in style. nintendo switch 2 by 479 eurosa new pack that once again includes a video game and a keychain. Marshall Acton III by 199 eurosthe perfect speaker to take your favorite music anywhere this summer. TP-Link Tapo TC71 by 20.99 eurosa good camera with night vision to have your home a little more protected. Nintendo Switch 2 + Super Mario Bros. Wonder + keychain The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Samsung Galaxy Watch7 It may not be the most recent model, but for what it costs Samsung Galaxy Watch7 Yes, it is one of the most attractive: by logging into MediaMarkt you will be 151.05 euros (before 179 euros). We are talking about an excellent watch that comes with WearOS as an operating systemwhich means there is a wide variety of apps to download. It includes sensors such as optical or electrical cardiac biosignal and its design is ideal if you are looking to use it for sports and also for everyday use. Samsung Galaxy Watch7 (BT, 40mm) The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Samsung TQ65QN1EFAUXXC If for the next World Cup you have thought about giving a radical change to your living room by changing the TV, be careful about the price of the TV. Samsung TQ65QN1EFAUXXC because it stays in 599 euros (before 859 euros). It is a TV with a Neo QLED panel and a 65-inch screen. Its refresh rate of up to 144 Hz is ideal for video games and sports, it is compatible with HDR10+ and works with both Alexa and Google Assistant. Samsung TQ65QN1EFAUXXC (65 inches) The price could vary. We earn commission from these links nintendo switch 2 New month, new pack. MediaMarkt has set up another combo of the nintendo switch 2 and this time it comes with the video game ‘Super Mario Bros. Wonder‘ and a ‘Mario Kart World’ keychain (the same one included in the previous packs). The good thing is that if you buy this pack it costs you 479 euros10 euros more than if you buy only the console. This way, you get a video game to use on the Switch 2 as soon as it arrives home. Nintendo Switch 2 + Super Mario Bros. Wonder + keychain The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Marshall Acton III Now that the weather is nice, we are starting to look forward to the “swimming pool” season. If facing summer you are already thinking about the music that you are going to take with you anywhere, you cannot miss a good Bluetooth speaker like the Marshall Acton IIIwhich is also now on sale for 199 euros (before 229 euros). It is quite powerful thanks to its 30W speakers, it includes a generous button panel to control many audio parameters and its design… there is little to say about it except that it maintains the particular design of the brand that makes it so attractive. The price could vary. We earn commission from these links TP-Link Tapo TC71 On the other hand, if you want to have the house a little more monitored and are looking for a good, pretty and cheap camera, MediaMarkt has the TP-Link Tapo TC71 for alone 20.99 euros. It has a format that allows the camera to be rotated 360º, offers a maximum resolution of 2K, has night vision, has motion detection and sending of notifications, incorporates a light and sound alarm and also comes with two-way audio. The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Some of the links in this article are affiliated and may provide a benefit to Xataka. In case of non-availability, offers may vary. Image | MediaMarkt and Compradicción (header), Samsung, Nintendo, Marshall, TP-Link In Xataka | Best smartwatch in quality price. Which one to buy based on use and seven recommended models In Xataka | Best Bluetooth speakers in quality price. Which one to buy based on use and six recommended models

20 years ago someone believed they had the key to decongesting Madrid. Today it is gaining strength again with a name: M-70

In 2005, someone put on the table that, perhaps, the time has come to decongest Madrid from transit trips. That is, those that start outside Madrid and end outside Madrid. The idea is not new by any means. The M-30 or the M-40 They were born with the clear objective of keeping cars away from the city center. More kilometers for the driver but with the promise of taking much less time to reach our destination. The problem is that the municipalities and neighborhoods adjacent to the M-40 are enormous in Madrid. Some even merge with the city itself. As a result of this problem, the M-50. The highway finished being consolidated in the early 2000s. It has a total length of 85 kilometers and with it you can go from Las Rozas on the A-6 to San Sebastián de los Reyes, already on the A-1, surrounding Madrid on its southern side. It serves as a connection to the entire southern belt of the city, passing next to Móstoles, Leganés or Getafe but also next to Pozuelo, San Fernando de Henares or Barajas. The connection, however, is not closed in the north. That is, there is no direct connection A-1 and A-6 or vice versa, it is necessary to surround the entire southern framework because right now no highway crosses that space. The closest is the M-40 which, as we say, is next to the capital. But what if we go further? What if we try to eliminate traffic in Madrid with a radial highway that links all the provincial capitals that surround Madrid and without having to go through this autonomous community? This is what was proposed more than 20 years ago and now they want to recover. The M-70, an old Castilian desire Although it sounds utopian, the truth is that carrying out the Pentagon Project or the M-70, as the idea has been known since 2005, this idea has been raised more or less seriously. In fact, that year it was included in the Strategic Infrastructure Plan for Madrid just as they collected in 20Minutes and was considered of General Interest of the State as it was part of the Strategic Infrastructure and Transportation Plan (PEIT) 2008. The crisis, however, wiped out any reference to the project. That name of “Project Pentagon” It is because its construction would create a road network with this shape by joining Segovia, Ávila, Toledo and Guadalajara, passing through other municipalities of considerable size such as Ocaña, Maqueda or Tarancón. The name M-70 would not exist as such at the moment because, really, the objective would be to connect highways between said capitals in a kind of Frankenstein that would allow movement between all the radial roads near Madrid but without the need to enter said autonomous community. The last consistent reference to the project is a statement by Emiliano García-Page in 2024 who made reference to the fact that the connection of Cuenca with the A-5 through an extension of the A-40 would make the latter the M-70 of the city. And at the time of projecting that future M-70, it was already projected that the A-40 would be the road that would largely structure the project. This road, the A-40 It is a connection that aims to unite Ávila with Teruel. At the moment, on the west side, the road has been passable since 2012 between Maqueda (on the A-5) to Mocejón (past Toledo). At that point the highway is cut off as it passes through Aranjuez (the only point where it touches the Community of Madrid) and extends again from Ocaña to Cuenca. At the moment, that Madrid section and the connection from Maqueda to Ávila is in the study phase. And to finish this old dream of the Castiles, it would be necessary to extend the highway to Teruel from Cuenca, whose preliminary project has already been completed and approved. The concept of M-70, however, would be realized with the existing connection between Ávila and Segovia and, most complicated, the connection of the latter with Guadalajara. The “simplest” thing (yes, in many quotes) would be to create a connection between Segovia and the A-1 and reuse the latter in the direction of Madrid to unfold the possible ring road taking advantage of the route of the N-320. The latter connects the A-1 highway with Cuenca passing through Guadalajara. However, this Segovia-Guadalajara connection seems really complicated given the geographical accidents along the way. Despite this, as we said, a hypothetical M-70 ring road It would be an amalgamation of different highways or linked highways, not the construction of an entire ring road. It would, however, be a possibility to alleviate some traffic on the east-west and west-east routes without passing through Madrid. The A-40 wants to be that solution in the south but there were already those who dreamed 20 years ago of carrying it out also in the north. Photo | Command on Wikimedia and Google Maps In Xataka | The great artery between Madrid and Valencia had been awaiting renovation for years: 500 million euros will end the wait

Today the sequel that took 24 years to film and ended up failing at the box office after spending a huge budget arrives on Netflix

It took Ridley Scott 24 years to return to the Coliseum. When he did it with ‘Gladiator II‘, a cast that was breathtaking was brought in, with Paul Mescal, Denzel Washington, Pedro Pascal and a budget that, depending on who you ask, exceeded 310 million dollars with the expectation of repeating the magic of its predecessor, which had won five Oscars in 2000. It didn’t quite succeed, but in streaming it has a second chance: you have it starting today Tuesday, April 28 on Netflix. The first announcement of a sequel to ‘Gladiator’ It dates back to June 2001, just a year after the release of the original. And Russell Crowe was on board even though his Maximus had died on screen. For years, Scott toyed with crazy ideas that included the resurrection of the character or a plot about the afterlife. The project stalled when DreamWorks sold the rights to the franchise to Paramount Pictures in 2006. What got the sequel out of limbo was that Scott saw Paul Mescal in the first few episodes of ‘Normal People’ and wanted to work with him. Scott also wanted to resolve the plot of Lucius Verus, then a child, now sixteen years after Maximus’ death. He lives under another identity in North Africa, until the Roman army invades and destroys his home, kills his wife and enslaves him. Brought to Rome as a gladiator, Lucius falls under the control of a former slave turned arms dealer, who uses him in the arena of the Colosseum while he secretly weaves his own plans to seize the throne from the corrupt twin emperors Caracalla and Geta. And so began an eventful filming, interrupted by the screenwriters’ strikes, which sent costs skyrocketing, according to some sources, beyond $300 million. With a final collection of 462 million worldwide, the business was somewhat lame. However, with its passage through platforms (in the United States it is exclusively on Paramount+, and has been on VOD for months), it is very possible that ‘Gladiator II’ can boast more comfortable profits and thus give rise to the already planned ‘Gladiator III’ in which Mescal has already expressed his interest. In Xataka | Today the animated spin-off of the platform’s only powerful franchise premieres on Netflix: ‘Stranger Things’

Today the green turtles are finally out of danger

Halfway between South America and Africa, in the immensity of the Atlantic Ocean, a small volcanic point emerges that is the ascension island. For centuries, this piece of land was the scene of a systematic massacre, but today it represents one of the greatest success stories of marine conservation in the 21st century, culminating last October with a historic announcement that the green turtle has officially gone from being “endangered” to being classified as “least concern.” His story. To understand the magnitude of the Ascension phenomenon, you must first understand the journey since each season, thousands of green turtles They travel 2,300 kilometers from the coasts of Brazil to this remote island to spawnthat is, release their eggs. But… How do they manage to find this small island in an ocean as enormous as the Atlantic? A GPS. The famous biologist Archie Carr proposed in his day that these creatures use a kind of “olfactory GPS”, with which they were capable of find chemical fingerprints dissolved in the ocean currents that emanate from the island. Although the exact mechanics remain the subject of study, since genetic analyzes based on mitochondrial DNA leave no doubt that there are perfectly differentiated Atlantic populations and that of Ascension has a unique signature. In fact, studies indicate that turtles born in Ascensión travel throughout the American continent, representing between 43% and 47% of those captured on the coasts of Uruguay and entering the Patagonian Sea. A dark past. Since its discovery in 1501, Portuguese and British sailors saw Ascension not as a sanctuary, but as an all-you-can-eat buffet, as has been masterfully documented. in works as Ascension: The Story of a South Atlantic Island by Duff Hart-Davis. For centuries, common practices were “flipping” where sailors literally turned turtles over on the beach, immobilizing them to keep them alive with their fresh meat for months. Here there are historical testimonies such as that of chaplain John Ovington in 1691 who recounts the industrialized slaughter of these reptiles, which were sent alive to England to satisfy the demand for “turtle soup.” Something that brought the species to the brink of extinction. A turning point. It arrived in 1977, and coincides with the moment it began control and monitoring of this species on nesting beaches, reversing centuries of human impact. And the results indicate that while in 1977 3,752 nests were counted annually, today the island hosts more than 25,000 nests each year. Images | wirestock on Freepik In Xataka | We have been thinking for 40 years that Spain escaped Chernobyl because it was far away. AEMET has discovered that it was pure luck

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