In this Oct. 20, 2015 file photo, Gloria Steinem attends a party for her new book, "My Life On The Road", in New York. (Photo by Greg Allen/Invision/AP, FIle)
NEW YORK (AP) --
Gloria Steinem will host and produce a new television series on the Viceland network about the political impact of violence against women throughout the world.
Viceland said Monday that the series, which will be called "Woman," will premiere on May 10.
As executive producer, Steinem is leading a team of all-female journalists working on the series. Planned episodes will report on sexual violence in the Congo, sexual assault within the U.S. military and extremism in Pakistan.
The network, a collaboration between Vice Media and the A&E networks, has been struggling to find an audience since launching two months ago.
Baltimore Ravens running back Derrick Henry, left, and quarterback Lamar Jackson (8) are interviewed by Netflix reporter Jamie Erdahl after an NFL football game against the Houston Texans, Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024, in Houston. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
Netflix's first NFL Christmas Day doubleheader ended up being successful globally.
The Baltimore Ravens' 31-2 victory over the Houston Texans averaged 31.3 million while Kansas City's 29-10 win at Pittsburgh averaged 30 million worldwide, according to Netflix's first-party data released on Tuesday.
The two games are also the most streamed in NFL history in the U.S.
The Ravens-Texans contest has an updated average of 27.2 million with Chiefs-Steelers coming in at 25.8 million, according to Nielsen and Netflix.
Both NFL games surpassed the previous mark of 23 million for last season's AFC wild-card game between the Miami Dolphins and Chiefs on Peacock.
Nielsen also said there were 65 million U.S. viewers who tuned in for at least one minute of one of the two games, making it Netflix's most-watched Christmas Day.
Netflix and the NFL said viewers from 218 countries and territories tuned in to at least one of the games.
It was also a nice rebound for Netflix after widespread streaming problems during the Mike Tyson-Jake Paul fight on Nov. 14. The only noticeable technical glitch was the stream not going to live action and starting at the beginning whenever viewers tuned in.
"In terms of the big picture, it went as well as we could have hoped," said Brandon Riegg, Netflix's vice president of nonfiction series and sports. "Given the weight of expectations, especially coming off a fight, I think we acquitted ourselves as well as we could have hoped. I'm glad that the narrative changed and there was at least an acknowledgment that we didn't run into any of those issues that plagued us before."
The Chiefs-Steelers game was in the daily top 10 in 72 countries with high viewership in Canada, Germany, Ireland and... Read More