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Here's how to watch Sony's Ghost of Yōtei State of Play showcase

Here's how to watch Sony's Ghost of Yōtei State of Play showcase

Yahoo08-07-2025
Sony is holding a State of Play livestream dedicated exclusively to the upcoming adventure gameGhost of Yōtei. It starts on July 10 at 5PM ET. It will stream on the official PlayStation YouTube and Twitch accounts.
The company promises "nearly 20 minutes" of gameplay hosted by developer Sucker Punch. The stream will also show off "new weapons, new ways to personalize your journey at the edge of Japan, new special modes and much more." The game comes out on October 2, exclusively for PS5.
For the uninitiated, Ghost of Yōtei is a sequel to the popular Ghost of Tsushima. However, it features a new protagonist, era and location. It takes place in Hokkaido, Japan in the early 1600s, which is over 300 years after the events of the first game.
It's still an open-world adventure and Sony promises "even more freedom and variety than in Ghost of Tsushima." The gameplay looks more open than the original, as players can hunt down the six major bosses in whatever order they choose. We'll find out a whole lot more about how the game works on July 10.
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Who Is Watching All These Podcasts?
Who Is Watching All These Podcasts?

New York Times

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Who Is Watching All These Podcasts?

The following are the runtimes of some recent episodes of several of YouTube's more popular podcasts: 'This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von,' #595: Two hours, 14 minutes. 'Club Shay Shay,' #172: Two hours, 59 minutes. 'The Shawn Ryan Show,' #215: Five hours, four minutes. 'Lex Fridman Podcast,' #461: Five hours, 20 minutes. These shows follow the same general format: people sitting in chairs, in generically designed studios, talking. And, like many of the biggest podcasts these days, these shows are all released as videos. They don't feature particularly fancy camerawork, or flashy graphics, or narratives. All of them require time commitments typical of feature films, ball games or marathon performance art installations. Yet going by YouTube's statistics, hundreds of thousands of people have viewed all of the above episodes. Which leads to comments like this, as one fan wrote after a recent episode of Theo Von's show: 'Truly, this podcast was amazing to watch.' So a genre of media named for an audio device — the iPod, discontinued by Apple in 2022 — and popularized by audiences enamored with on-demand listening has transformed in recent years into a visual one. It's well established that the American brain is the prize in a war for attention online, a place that incentivizes brief and sensational content, not static five-hour discussions about artificial intelligence. So what gives? Who exactly is watching the supersize video talk shows that have come to define podcasting over the last several years? At the highest level, the audience for video podcasts is simply people who consume podcasts. 'Who is watching these?' said Eric Nuzum, a podcast strategist. 'A person who loves podcasts who happens to be near a screen.' Indeed, according to an April survey by Cumulus Media and the media research firm Signal Hill Insights, nearly three-quarters of podcast consumers play podcast videos, even if they minimize them, compared with about a quarter who listen only to the audio. Paul Riismandel, the president of Signal Hill, said that this split holds across age groups — it's not simply driven by Gen Z and that younger generation's supposed great appetite for video. But dive a bit deeper into the data, and it becomes clear that how people are watching podcasts — and what counts as watching — is a far more revealing question. According to the Signal Hill survey, about 30 percent of people who consume podcasts 'play the video in the background or minimize on their device while listening.' Perhaps this person is folding laundry and half-watching 'Pod Save America,' or has 'The Joe Rogan Experience' open in a browser tab while they do busy work at the office. 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Meet the Boston Celtics artist in residency!
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USA Today

timean hour ago

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Meet the Boston Celtics artist in residency!

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Ex-pro wrestling star Buff Bagwell has right leg amputated: ‘This is hard'
Ex-pro wrestling star Buff Bagwell has right leg amputated: ‘This is hard'

New York Post

time3 hours ago

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Ex-pro wrestling star Buff Bagwell has right leg amputated: ‘This is hard'

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