Le Journal

Macron et Trump discutent sur Signal : pourquoi ce choix de messagerie est agaçant ?

Tesla : des emplois supprimés dans la plus grande usine d’Europe ? Le constructeur répond
La gigafactory du constructeur fait face à des défis colossaux.

« Cela commence par un courrier » : cette arnaque à l’Assurance Maladie peut vous coûter très cher

Netflix va repenser totalement son application avec un objectif affiché : concurrencer TikTok

ChatGPT teste une nouvelle fonction pour deviner si vous avez plus de 18 ans
Cette nouveauté de ChatGPT devrait mieux protéger les plus jeunes utilisateurs.

Promo trottinette électrique 1000W : la Ausom L1 Max à 519 €

L’humanité menacée d’une « faillite hydrique » : qu’est-ce que ça veut dire ?

Pannes internet, box, prix : Bouygues Telecom vole au secours des oubliés de la fibre

Elon Musk n’aurait jamais dû chercher Ryanair : la compagnie aérienne se déchaîne
Elon Musk et le CEO de Ryanair enchaînent les provocations par médias et comptes interposés. L’origine de cette dispute : Ryanair n’est pas intéressé par le Wifi de Starlink pour ses avions.

Netflix keeps giggling with another year of Netflix Is A Joke
Netflix is bringing comedy back to Los Angeles this May, with another installment of its Netflix Is A Joke Festival. A partnership with LiveNation that can only be described as “thrilling,” Netflix is hosting more than 350 live events between May 4 and May 10 at some of the city’s biggest venues, including the Hollywood Bowl, the Greek Theater, and the world-famous Comedy Store. Earlier today, the streamer announced the first batch of comedians and celebrities making the long drives across L.A. for the festival. The line-up includes: Malin Akerman, Mo Amer, Eric André, Jeff Arcuri, Fred Armisen, Maria Bamford, Ralph Barbosa, Nate Bargatze, Hannah Berner, Mike Birbiglia, Rachel Bloom, Joel Kim Booster, Bill Burr, Michelle Buteau, Nicole Byer, Nick Cannon, Jerrod Carmichael, Steve Carell, Dana Carvey, Ronny Chieng, Margaret Cho, Deon Cole, Larry David, Pete Davidson, Paige DeSorbo, Tim Dillon, Earthquake, Alex Edelman, Danny Elfman, Franco Escamilla, Feid, Fortune Feimster, Flight of the Concords, Ben Folds, Jim Gaffigan, Zarna Garg, Mo Gilligan, Shane Gillis, Nikki Glaser, Ilana Glazer, Brett Goldstein, Stavros Halkias, Chelsea Handler, Kevin Hart, Patti Harrison, Marcello Hernández, Jeff Hiller, Tony Hinchcliffe, Robby Hoffman, Kate Hudson, Nate Jackson, Jameela Jamil, Sam Jay, Jim Jefferies, Ken Jeong, Anthony Jeselnik, Mindy Kaling, Jimmy Kimmel, Bert Kreischer, Nick Kroll, Bobby Lee, David Letterman, Lizzo, Luenell, Natasha Lyonne, Mae Martin, Heather McMahan, Hasan Minhaj, Diane Morgan, Leanne Morgan, Sam Morril, John Mulaney, Mark Normand, Tig Notaro, Ego Nwodim, Conan O’Brien, Bob Odenkirk, Atsuko Okatsuka, Patton Oswalt, Tom Papa, Ms. Pat, Trisha Paytas, Edi Patterson, Matt Rife, Seth Rogen, Jelly Roll, Adam Sandler, Andrew Santino, Kristen Schaal, Andrew Schulz, Iliza Shlesinger, Tom Segura, Jerry Seinfeld, Shaq, Brittany Snow, Martin Short, Sarah Silverman, Bill Simmons, Will Smith from the Dodgers, David Spade, Sommore, Brenda Song, Meg Stalter, Jon Stewart, Wanda Sykes, Bob The Drag Queen, Taylor Tomlinson, Kill Tony, Julio Torres, Trixie & Katya, Mike Tyson, Jonathan Van Ness, Nick Viall, Theo Von, Dwyane Wade, Sheng Wang, Katt Williams, Justin Willman, Ali Wong, Jimmy O. Yang, Ramy Youssef, Noah Wyle. That’s a healthy mix of comedians, up-and-comers, stars from The Pitt, David Duke’s gym buddies, and white nationalists, making for a fun week of comedy. We’ll spare you the latter because, wow, Netflix books a lot of those types, but some of the more fun (and funny) shows include John Mulaney: Mister Whatever at the Hollywood Bowl, Seth Rogen at the Greek, Feid and Marcello Hernández at the Hollywood Bowl, the first Flight Of The Conchords gig since 2016, the premiere of the Martin Short documentary, Marty, Life Is Short, The Not Inapproriate Show With Bob Odenkirk, a screening of Princess Bride with Cary Elwes and Naked Gun with David Zucker, a Portlandia reunion, and more. Most hilariously of all, there will be a live edition of Endeavor CEO Ari Emanuel’s podcast, Rushmore, where he’ll grill Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld about which episodes of Seinfeld deserve a spot on Mount Rushmore. Not even the funniest comic on Netflix Is A Joke can think of a premise sadder than a billionaire who needs a podcast to share Seinfeld opinions. Nevertheless, the one we’re most excited for is Tribute to Pee-wee Herman, celebrating 40 years of Pee-wee’s Playhouse. Patton Oswalt will host the tribute, featuring music and comedy from the B-52s, Mark Mothersbaugh and Gerald Casale of DEVO, Danny Elfman, Fred Armisen, Sheng Wang, Bob The Drag Queen, Patti Harrison, Julio Torres, Michael Carbonaro, and Puddles Pity Party. Tickets go on sale on January 23 at 10 a.m. pst at NetflixIsAJoke.com.

Netflix subscribers watched the hell out of Boots before Netflix canceled it
The people who watch TV have spoken, and they want more queer romance on screen. We could point to HBO Max’s Canadian hit of the season, Heated Rivalry, the hockey romance about two pro stickmen who begin a torrid love affair off the ice. But we’d rather talk about Boots, the Netflix dramedy about a closeted Marine in training, which the streamer abruptly canceled shortly after the Pentagon started whining about it. According to Netflix’s What We Watched report, per Deadline, the series ranked 23rd among the most-watched shows between July and December, making it Netflix’s most-watched canceled series of the last six months. Boots premiered on October 9 and garnered more than 30 million views by the end of 2025, right behind Hunting Wives and beating out Nobody Wants This, The Witcher, Emily In Paris, The Diplomat, and the second season of Ms. Rachel. Obviously, the show wasn’t going to beat Wednesday, Stranger Things, or Man Vs. Baby, but it was a bigger hit than several of Netflix’s buzziest and most promoted shows, so what gives? The only major hiccup in the show’s short life came from the hollowed halls of military power. Shortly after Boots premiered, Pentagon Press Secretary Kingsley Wilson called the show “woke garbage,” claiming that hypermasculine Secretary of War and President Donald Trump were “restoring the warrior ethos.” This means that they will not “compromise our standards to satisfy an ideological agenda, unlike Netflix, whose leadership consistently produces and feeds woke garbage to their audience and children.” Boots creator Andy Parker appreciated the ratings boost from the very unbothered, confident army guys. Still, less than two months later, amid critical acclaim and some of Netflix’s best ratings of the year, the streamer opted to put its Boots away permanently. It’s hard not see this as a total miss for the streamer, considering Heated Rivalry‘s success on HBO. The warrior ethos might make for some of the most pathetic army recruitment tools imaginable, but watching streamers, networks, and media conglomerates attempt to appease these guys has been one huge embarrassing failure after another.

