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All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.
Anyone still in denial that spooky season is done until next year, don’t worry — you don’t have to say goodbye quite yet. The Exorcist: Believer makes its chilling debut on streaming and video starting Friday (Dec. 1), which means you can relieve every jump scare or experience it for the first time at home (so you can keep the lights turned on).

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Taking place 50 years after the first film, the sequel to the original nail-biting scary movie brings a modern twist. Leslie Odom Jr. stars as Victor Fielding, a single father whose daughter Angela (Lidya Jewett) and her best friend, Katherine (Olivia O’Neill), go missing for three days. When the two are discovered, they struggle to recount what happened due to gaps in their memories. Victor then witnesses strange and disturbing acts from his daughter that present as signs of demonic possession. It’s then that he searches for the only person known who has also experienced with such a phenomenon: Chris MacNeil (Ellen Burstyn).

Other cast members include original Exorcist star Linda Blair, E.J. Bonilla, Jennifer Nettles, Ann Dowd, Linda Boston, Raphael Sbarge, Norbert Leo Butz, Danny McCarthy and Antoni Corone.

Keep reading to learn the streaming options available.

How to Watch The Exorcist: Believer

The horror movie will stream exclusively through Peacock starting Friday (Dec. 1). If you already have a Peacock subscription, you can stream the movie for no additional cost. Just log in to your account and find the film under new releases.

Don’t have a subscription? While Peacock doesn’t offer a free trial, it is one of the more affordable streaming platforms out there with plans starting at $5.99/month. If you’re a student, you can take advantage of its student membership promo, which offers 12 months of the service for $1.99/month (regularly $5.99/month). Click here or the button below to start your subscription.

The Exorcist: Believer won’t be the only thing you can watch on Peacock. The streaming platform has two plans to choose from: Peacock Premium and Peacock Premium Plus, which will determine what content you have access to. Peacock Premium is the ad-supported plan that’s $5.99/month and offers the entire Peacock library on top of current Bravo and NBC shows, live sports and events and over 50 live TV channels. Peacock Premium Plus is $11.99/month and includes everything in the Premium plan minus ads, and allows you to download and watch select programs offline.

Content you can look forward to watching include Bupkis, Mrs. Davis, Poker Face, Bel-Air, Poker Face, Yellowstone, The Real Housewives: Ultimate Girls Trip, Vanderpump Rules, Queens Court, The Traitors, The Best Man: The Final Chapters, Sick and other Peacock Originals in addition to NBC and Bravo shows, sports and more.

More Ways to Watch The Exorcist: Believer

If you prefer not to sign up for another streaming platform, The Exorcist: Believer is also available to buy on Prime Video, Apple TV and Roku TV starting at $19.99.

Collectors may want to snag the hardcopy of the collector’s edition DVD that’s available in Blu-ray and 4K editions.

Amazon

“The Exorcist: Believer”

$27.99

$29.96

7% off

Included in the special collector’s edition of The Exorcist: Believer is a 4K definition disc, Blu-ray disc and digital code to bring the movie with you on the go.

Watch the trailer for The Exorcist: Believer below:

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All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.
After an exciting season, we’ve finally reached the Big Ten Championship Game. Michigan and Iowa have each been declared the champions of the East and West, and now must face off to determine who the ultimate champion will be. The 13th Big Ten Championship Game will be hosted in Indianapolis on Saturday (Dec. 2) at 8 p.m. ET, and there are a few streaming options to watch Big Ten Football online from the comfort of your home.

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For anyone who can’t snag last-minute travel deals to see Michigan vs. Iowa in person, the game will be broadcasted on Fox. Don’t have cable? We recommend using DirecTV Stream, which has a five day free trial that’ll let watch the game for free. Click here to start your free trial.

The game will begin livestreaming at 8 p.m. ET, and if you don’t have cable or are thinking of cutting the cord, there are other ways to catch each minute and play online for free.

Keep reading to learn all of your watch options.

How to Watch Big Ten Championship Game: Michigan vs. Iowa

Fox will be the official broadcaster for the Big Ten Championship Game featuring Michigan vs. Iowa. If you have cable, you can watch the game for no additional cost — just flip over to whichever channel Fox is on (check your cable provider’s channel guide for the exact channel).

If you don’t have cable, there are live TV streamers that are offering free trials, discounts and promos that’ll let you watch the game for free or without dropping hundreds of dollars.

DirecTV Stream offers a five-day free trial on top of a $25 off the first two months when you bundle any of its plans with a sports package. Once the free trial ends, you’ll be charged the discounted price for the first two months, then full-price, which will depend on the plan you choose.

Another affordable option is FuboTV, which has a seven-day free trial on top of up to $20 off the first two months of any plan. Once the free trial is over, you’ll be charged the discounted price based on the plan you choose for two months before having to pay the full plan cost. Each plan also includes DVR storage and the ability to watch programs on up to 10 screens at once.

SlingTV lets you personalize your package to fit your needs and right now you can score any of the packages for 50% off the first month, which means you can watch Michigan vs. Iowa and more programs for just $20. The Blue Plan includes Fox some of its affiliates, which will give you access to the game. If you want to increase how many channels you get, you can combine the Blue and Orange plans for $27 for the first month.

Hulu + Live TV will provide you with the most content options as you’ll have access to the entire Hulu library and tons of live TV channels. Plus, when you sign up, you’ll get a 30-day free trial so you can stream Michigan vs. Iowa and much more for no cost. If you want to quadruple your program offerings, you can bundle it with Disney+ and ESPN+ for an additional cost.

Spotify‘s Artist Wrapped is back for a seventh year — and in 2023, the platform is offering even more ways for artists to engage with their top fans.
Available this year in 37 languages, the Artist Wrapped experience will be available to all artists on Spotify who have at least three listeners; to find it, artists can either log in or sign up for Spotify for Artists and click the “Your 2023 Artist Wrapped” card.

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Once again, artists were given the opportunity to record personalized video messages for their top fans on the platform. Among the artists to take part this year were superstars including Taylor Swift, Bad Bunny, Peso Pluma, NewJeans, SZA, KAROL G and Jung Kook. Those messages will show up in top fans’ Wrapped data stories, in the Wrapped feed on the Spotify homescreen and elsewhere.

Additionally this year, artists in the United States and Canada were given the opportunity to reward their top fans in those markets with discounts on select merch items, which will be promoted through the Wrapped experience on Spotify, via email and more. Fans across the globe will also receive concert recommendations from their top artists in the Wrapped feed, the Live Events feed and other off-platform promotion.

One new feature in 2023 is Wrapped listening parties, described as digital live audio experiences that will allow artists to speak directly to their fans and thank them for their support, stream their top tracks of 2023, answer fan questions, sell merch and more. These listening parties will be available to top fans of a select group of artists, including Ava Max, JVKE, Chelsea Culter and Lauren Daigle.

Also available to artists this year is a series of data stories with the following stats: the number of listeners who heard an artist for the first time in 2023, the top three places where touring artists saw the highest ticket sales and the average time spent listening by each of an artist’s top 0.001% of fans. Artists will additionally receive a summary share card highlighting fan engagement, including the number of new listeners, saves and playlists as well as the number of fans who had them as a top artist.

Last but not least, Spotify brought back Songwriter Wrapped for a second straight year. Once again, songwriters and producers with an active songwriter page and “Written By” playlist on the platform will receive an exclusive Songwriter Wrapped experience and share card recapping how the songs they wrote performed on Spotify in 2023. This year, songwriters can also fill out customizable social share forms that will allow them to call out their fellow creators and favorite songwriting or production moments with categories like “My Favorite Songwriter of 2023,” “My Pick for Best Lyrics of 2023,” “My Favorite Producer of 2023,” “My Pick for Best Beat of 2023,” “My Favorite Mixing Engineer of 2023” and “Thank you to my 2023 collaborators.” All are accessible on Spotify’s @SpotifySongwriter Instagram page and here.

For full details, check out Spotify’s full Artist Wrapped and Songwriter Wrapped blog post here.

All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.
Selena Gomez is serving up some holiday spirit in a new special coming to the Food Network called Selena + Chef: Home for the Holidays. The four-part series will debut Thursday (Nov. 30) at 8 p.m. ET on the Food Network and later on Max (home of her cooking show titled Selena + Chef, which is what the special is based on).

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As we start decorating our homes with real or artificial Christmas trees and grab our Christmas ornaments out of storage, the “Single Soon” singer also wants to inspire you with holiday-themed dishes that’ll put all your cookware deals to good use. Award-winning chefs Eric Adjepong, Alex Guarnaschelli, Michael Symon and Claudette Zepeda will join the Only Murders in the Building actress each episode bringing their personal favorite holiday recipe with them.

“The holidays have always meant so much to me,” said Gomez in a press release. “It was an honor to have these amazing chefs in my kitchen to introduce some of their favorite foods and what makes the holidays special for them.”

Keep reading to learn the streaming options availble.

When & How to Watch Selena + Chef: Home for the Holidays

The holiday cooking special will premiere on the Food Network on Thursday (Nov. 30) at 8 p.m. ET. Three more episodes will follow every Wednesday with a new guest chef joining each episode. If you have cable, you’ll be able to watch the show wherever the Food Network is. Just make sure to check your cable provider’s guide to see what exact channel it’s on. Don’t have cable? You might be able to watch Selena + Chef: Home for the Holidays through and HD antenna like this one here from Amazon.

Max, HBO’s streaming platform, is the home of Selena + Chef and will also have the holiday special episodes to stream and rewatch later. If you’re a Prime member, you can add Max to your Prime Video library through the Prime Video Channel storefront for $9.99/month. Click here or the button below to add Max.

Not a Prime member? Amazon offers a 30-day free trial that’ll give you access to the Prime Video library and additional perks. Once you start your Prime membership, you’ll need to add Max to your channels through the Prime Video Channel storefront for an extra $9.99/month. Once your free trial ends you’ll be charged the regular membership fee of $14.99/month or $139/year on top of the Max subscription. Click here or the button below to start your free trial.

Students can take advantage of the student membership, which comes with a six month free trial and 50% off the membership price. If you’re a part of a qualifying government program, you can sign up for the EBT/Medicaid membership that has a 30-day free trial and half off membership price.

More Ways to Stream Selena + Chef: Home for the Holidays

Live TV streamers are offering a slew of promos, free trials and discounts as part of their Cyber Week deals, which means you can watch the holiday special and more for the best price: free!

DirecTV provides a five day free trial that’ll let you watch the first episode of the holiday special for no cost. Afterwards, you can score $50 off plans for the first two months when you combine them with a Sport’s Pack. After the free trial is over, you’ll be charged the sale price for the first two months based on the plan you choose.

Fubo is treating you to a seven day free trial, then $20 off the first two months of any plan. Each plan also includes DVR storage, over 100 channels to watch and the ability to stream from multiple devices at once.

Whether you miss live TV or are looking cut the cable cord, Philo offers a seven day free trial and is only $25/month after the free trial is over. You’ll receive over 70 channels and DVR storage.

SlingTV may not offer a free trial, but it is having a 50% off promo that’s almost too sweet to pass. Sling’s Orange Plan is half off and includes the Food Network channel and 31 additional channels. The Blue Plan doesn’t include the Food Network, but you can combine the two plans together for even more channels. Each plan includes DVR storage to record content to watch later.

For the most content viewing options, Hulu + Live TV provides you with a 30 day free trial along with access to the entire Hulu library and live TV channels to watch all your favorite series and movies the moment they air. You can also quadruple your program offerings by bundling it with Disney+ and ESPN+.

Check below for the Selena + Chef: Home for the Holidays trailer.

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As Taylor Swift would say, “‘Tis the damn season,” and for some of us, the holiday season officially begins once the iconic Rockefeller Center Christmas tree is lit.

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Rockefeller Center will be hosting its 91st annual lighting ceremony is on Wednesday (Nov. 29) at 8 p.m. ET. Whether you’ve snagged travel deals to see it in person or plan to watch it from the comfort of your couch, the 2023 Christmas tree lighting ceremony is bound to get you in the holiday spirit with the help of a slew of guests and musical performances.

This year, popstar and talk show host Kelly Clarkson will be hosting the tree lighting ceremony with appearances from Today‘s Savannah Guthrie, Hoda Kotb, Al Roker and Craig Melvin. You can also expect musical performances from Clarkson as well as Chloe Bailey, Adam Blackstone, Cher, David Foster, Liz Gillies, Darlene Love, Seth MacFarlane, Barry Manilow, Katharine McPhee, Keke Palmer, Carly Pearce, Manuel Turizo, Radio City Rockettes and more.

If you want to join in on the festive fun (from the comfort of your own home, not the Big Apple), we’ve compiled everything you need to know to watch the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree lighting ceremony online and on TV for free.

Check below for the streaming options available.

How to Watch the Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony 2023 on NBC & Peacock

The ceremony will air on Wednesday (Nov. 29) at 8 p.m. ET on NBC and Peacock. If you have cable, you can watch the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree lighting ceremony on TV through your local NBC affiliate — just check your cable provider’s channel guide to find your local NBC channel. Don’t have cable? You may be able to watch the tree lighting ceremony for free with an HD antenna like this one here from Amazon.

Cable cutters can also use NBC’s official streaming platform, Peacock, which will be live streaming the ceremony. Already have Peacock? You can watch the ceremony for no additional cost by logging into your account and going to live TV.

Don’t have a subscription? Peacock is currently slashing its monthly and annual plans to $1.99/month (reg. $5.99/month) or $19.99 for the year (reg. $59.99/year) for 12 months. To redeem the offers use the promo code BIGDEAL for the monthly plan or YEARLONG for the annual plan. The offer ends at midnight Monday (Nov. 27), so don’t wait too long! Click here or the button below to sign up for Peacock.

Besides the 2023 Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony, a Peacock subscription will give you access to the entire Peacock library including exclusive and original TV series, movies, sports and more such as Bupkis, Mrs. Davis, Poker Face, Bel-Air, Poker Face, Yellowstone and Based on a True Story. You’ll also be able to watch NBC and Bravo programs like the Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, Saturday Night Live, Parks & Recreation, The Office, Vanderpump Rules and more.

Additional Ways to Watch Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony 2023 for Free

Looking for more money-saving options? Live TV streamers are offering free trials and promos that can save you even more without having to pay hundreds of dollars on cable each month.

FuboTV offers a seven day free trial, which means you can watch the tree lighting ceremony and more for free. You can also take advantage of $20 off each plan for the first two months. Plans start as low as $55/month and include over 100 channels, DVR storage and more. Once your free trial and promo are over, you’ll pay the regular subscription price based on the plan you choose. Click here or below to launch your free trial.

Hulu + Live TV comes with a 30-day free trial and gives you the most content options as you’ll not only have access to the NBC channel as well as many more live TV channels, but also the entire Hulu library. You can also bundle it with Disney+ and ESPN+ for even more programs to watch. Once your free trial is over, you’ll be charged the normal subscription fee of $77/month. Click here or below to launch your free trial.

SlingTV is also offering 50% off its plans for the first month and a free Amazon Fire TV Sick Lite when you sign up. The Blue plan includes NBC and its affiliated channels for $20 for the first two months (reg. $40) and will give you access to DVR storage, the ability to stream on up to three devices at once and more. You can expand your channel offerings by combining the Blue and Orange plans for even more content for only $27.50 (reg. $55). Click here or the button below to sign up.

While Google usually takes a 15% cut of customer payments for app subscriptions in its Play Store on Android devices, Spotify obtained a deal that allowed it to pay a drastically reduced commission, according to The Verge.
The details of the business arrangement were divulged by Google head of global partnerships Don Harrison on Monday (Nov. 20) in testimony during the Epic Games vs. Google trial: Spotify paid no commission if users bought subscriptions through Spotify, and 4% if users selected Google as their payment processor.

Harrison said in court that Spotify landed this “bespoke” agreement because “if we don’t have Spotify working properly across Play services and core services, people will not buy Android phones.” His testimony also indicated that the deal entailed a $50 million investment by both Google and Spotify in a “success fund.”

In a statement to The Verge, a Google spokesperson said that “a small number of developers that invest more directly in Android and Play may have different service fees as part of a broader partnership that includes substantial financial investments and product integrations across different form factors. These key investment partnerships allow us to bring more users to Android and Play by continuously improving the experience for all users and create new opportunities for all developers.”

A rep for Spotify did not respond to Billboard’s request for comment.

Epic Games, which is known for furnishing the world with the popular game Fortnite, has been battling Google since way back in 2020 over the 30% fee the search giant charges app developers for purchases made on its Play Store on Android devices. Epic tried to circumvent Google’s system by putting its own payment system into the Fortnite app and charging a reduced price; Google hit back by yanking Fortnite off the Play Store.

Epic then sued Google. “Google… is using its size to do evil upon competitors, innovators, customers and users in a slew of markets it has grown to monopolize,” Epic wrote in its complaint. The New York Times reported that Epic’s CEO, Tim Sweeney, said in court on Monday (Nov. 20) that Google “exercises de facto control over the availability of apps on Android.”

Wilson White, a Google vp of public policy, told reporters earlier this month that “Epic wants all the benefits of Android and Google Play without having to pay for them,” according to The New York Times. “The lawsuit [from Epic] would upend a business model that has lowered prices and increased choices,” White argued.

Google had tried to avoid revealing the nature of its relationship with Spotify in court, The Verge reported earlier this month. “Disclosure of the Spotify deal would be very, very detrimental for the negotiation we’d be having with… other parties,” Google attorney Glenn Pomerantz told the judge overseeing the case.

Spotify’s new royalties model will be a subject of discussion when IMPALA’s board meets later this month.
In a brief statement, the Brussels-based independent music companies association announced it was canvassing its member views on the proposed changes, detailed for the first time in a blog post published on Tuesday (Nov. 21).

“Our focus is and will remain ensuring a fair, diverse and sustainable music ecosystem for all,” reads the trade body’s message, “as set out in our 10-point plan to make the most of streaming, which was released two years and a half ago and was updated earlier this year.”

The board of IMPALA is scheduled to meet next Thursday, Nov. 30.

With its post, Spotify confirmed the broader music industry’s worst-kept secret by sharing details of a three-pronged royalties model, which would funnel more money to popular artists, labels and distributors, lift the streaming threshold, while putting the clamps on streaming fraud.

Among the changes touted by Spotify: tracks must have reached at least 1,000 streams in the previous 12 months in order to generate recorded royalties; labels and distributors will fined per track when “flagrant artificial streaming is detected” on their content; and functional content — think rain noises, whale sounds, recordings of wind rustling the leaves— will be significantly devalued, and its minimum track length increased to two minute into order to be eligible to generate royalties.

By tackling these issues that account for just a “small percentage of total streams,” Spotify reckons, its new policing of content “now means that we can drive approximately an additional $1 billion in revenue toward emerging and professional artists over the next five years.”

IMPALA’s voice has been front and center in the debate for a “fairer, more dynamic” streaming market.

In April, IMPALA published an updated version of its 10-step plan to “make the most of streaming,” which proposed various changes to how digital royalties are allocated, including attaching a premium value to tracks that the listener has sought out, a so-called “Fan Participation Model” whereby artists and rights holders could generate incremental revenue within digital services through offering special features and extra tracks, higher share for master rights and more. 

Later, in September, IMPALA raised concerns over the new “artist-centric” streaming model being rolled out by Deezer and Universal Music Group (UMG), warning of a potential “two-tier” music market that unfairly disadvantages indie artists and labels.

The European trade body represents nearly 6,000 independent companies, labels and national associations, including Beggars Group, Cooking Vinyl, Epitaph and PIAS Music Group.

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Hulu isn’t messing around with its 2023 Black Friday deals! Whether you’re a new subscriber or eligible returning member, the platform is offering one of its most affordable streaming options to date: a year of its ad-supported plan for just $0.99/month (regularly $7.99/month). Yes, you read that right. Less than a dollar a month.

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Hulu officially launched the new promotion on Tuesday (Nov. 21), but it won’t last forever. From now until next Tuesday (Nov. 28), you can take advantage of 88% of savings and get ready to stream your favorite holiday movies, TV shows and more for the entire holiday season.

All you have to do is sign up for Hulu’s ad-supported plan and you’ll automatically receive the discount, as well as instant access to the entire Hulu library. Click here or the button below to redeem the offer.

Holiday films and series won’t be the only content you have access to: The Hulu library is filled with original and exclusive TV shows and movies from FX, ABC and more, such as Not Okay, Sex Appeal, White Men Can’t Jump, American Horror Story: Delicate, American Idol, Bachelor in Paradise, Only Murders in the Building, The Handmaid’s Tale, Normal People, How I Met Your Father, What We Do in the Shadows, Little Fires Everywhere, The Great, Shrill, Pen15 and The Bear.

You’ll also be able to create six profiles under one account, watch programs on up to two devices at once, and stream content on any smart device.

Hulu also offers other plans to personalize to your needs, like its ad-free premium plan ($17.99/month) that gives you everything in the ad-supported plan as well as the ability to download and watch eligible programs offline. Want live TV options? Hulu + Live TV gives you access to the entire Hulu library as well as hundreds of live TV channels to watch your favorite shows and sports the day and time it airs — and all starting at $70/month. Did we mention you’ll also get a 30-day free trial when you sign up?

If you’re looking for even more savings, you can bundle Hulu with Disney+ and ESPN+ starting at $14.99/month, which will triple your library of offerings.

Over the last several years, artists, record labels and streaming services have been doubling down on one of the longtime staples of the music, and particularly live music, business: merch. And there’s good reason for that: As Spotify’s global head of music, Jeremy Erlich, tells Billboard, the company estimates that the music merch business is worth around $8 billion globally. And with streaming now far and away the dominant form of music consumption, merchandise has increasingly become the go-to way to express fandom at a time when purchasing music has become a decidedly niche activity.

In recent months, Amazon Music has been doubling down on its merch efforts, partnering with the likes of Beyoncé, Mariah Carey, Rauw Alejandro and Doja Cat on exclusive merch related to tours (and, in Carey’s case, the year-end holidays). Over the past month, Spotify has also expanded deeper into the merch business — both with a new, dedicated hub for artist merch, which it announced earlier this year, and a new capsule collection that debuted in the past few weeks featuring exclusive one-off drops by the likes of Peso Pluma, Rosalía, Daft Punk, Tyler, the Creator and Tems.

This marks the latest foray into the merch space for streaming market leader Spotify, which has offered artists various ways to promote their own merchandise on their artist pages for several years via partnerships with Merchbar and Shopify. The capsule collections, which are being white-labeled through a partnership with Sony-owned merch company Ceremony of Roses, represent the latest evolution of the Spotify strategy: Erlich tells Billboard they’re “part of a pyramid of merch offers and services that we can provide for artists and fans,” aligning with the company’s stated goal of helping artists make a living from their work.

“Now that we have the merch hub, there’s a destination for people to go [to], and what we’re testing out now is the ability to create unique pieces for the fans and super fans, which have elements of streetwear culture with drops and limited quantities and more ways for people to feel they’re getting a unique experience and a unique product,” Erlich says. “This is step two of a multi-step journey; it’s a pretty limited drop with only five artists, limited quantities, but it’s also helping us really learn the best ways to partner with artists, but also the best ways to contact our users and help them enjoy this.”

The capsule collection was intentionally limited to five artists, all of whom (with the exception of Pluma) had a pre-existing relationship with Ceremony of Roses. That allowed Spotify to test-drive the new feature in a limited capacity with a collection of artists who have a distinct image and track record in the fashion-merch world. Spotify is also using its Fans First tech to drive the drops, which allows an artist’s biggest fans, in terms of listening engagement, first dibs at the exclusive collections — a tactic the company has employed with ticket offerings and other exclusives in the past. Erlich says the company is trying to establish how to use, but not over-use, the Fans First feature “to find out what works in what ways.”

The collections were jointly designed through a collaborative partnership between the artists, Spotify and Ceremony of Roses, the latter of which handled the logistics of production and shipping. As Ehrlich noted, they’re also tapping into the rarities and exclusives elements of streetwear culture, which he acknowledges is “not necessarily native to what Spotify does normally.” It’s what he sees as part of the learning process as Spotify continues to deepen its forays into the merch space.

“Our plan is to go do this again in Q1 with another set of artists, maybe in a more fashion-facing line, and we’ll have learned a lot by then,” Ehrlich says. “It’ll become our primary method to drop exclusive merch throughout 2024 while we find ways to integrate commerce better in-platform. In 2025, hopefully, you’ll see much more integrated and seamless commerce on-platform around merch. And from the moment that we do that, then we can turbocharge the scale with which we do it.”

For Spotify, the merch space offers an additional revenue stream for both artists and itself, as it builds on the back of its first quarterly profit in over a year in Q3, as price hikes and user growth helped tip it into the black. Adding more integration into its sales offerings — ironic as it is for a company that is so associated with helping the music business move on from a music sales model — is what Erlich sees as the present and future of the hybrid model.

“Whether it’s tickets, concerts, physical goods, fans want to express fandom in different ways and that’s a great thing. And the ability to use our streaming platform and data to identify fandom and be much more targeted in what you’re offering is the competitive advantage that we have given our scale and knowledge,” he says. “So I’m excited for us to do more a la carte, but it’s around this expression of fandom rather than access to music.”

Functional content — think rain noises, whale sounds, recordings of wind rustling the leaves and the like — will be significantly devalued under Spotify‘s new royalty system: Plays of this audio will generate one fifth of the royalties generated by a play of a musical track, according to a source with knowledge of the streaming service’s new policy.
In response to a request for comment, a Spotify spokesperson pointed Billboard to the streaming service’s blog post from Tuesday (Nov. 21). The blog notes that, “over the coming months,” Spotify will “work with licensors to value noise streams at a fraction of the value of music streams.” The blog does not say what the fractional amount will be. 

Spotify’s decision to count functional content at 20% of the rate for music tracks is the culmination of nearly a year’s worth of bad press for rain sounds and the like. While this type of audio is often used for the seemingly innocuous purpose of relaxing after a long and stressful day, Spotify wrote on its blog that the space is “sometimes exploited by bad actors who cut their tracks artificially short — with no artistic merit — in order to maximize royalty-bearing streams.”

This initiative, says Spotify’s blog post, is intended to free up “extra money to go back into the royalty pool for honest, hard working artists.”

As a result, some of the most powerful executives in music have launched a sustained assault on rain and its various non-musical cousins over the course of 2023. “It can’t be that an Ed Sheeran stream is worth exactly the same as a stream of rain falling on the roof,” Warner Music Group CEO Robert Kyncl told analysts in May. 

Two months later, Universal Music Group CEO Lucian Grainge told analysts that streaming services must ensure that “real artists don’t have their royalties diluted by noise and other content that has no meaningful engagement from music fans.” He later amped up the rhetoric by describing companies that upload this content as “merchants of garbage” that were “flooding the platform with content that has absolutely no engagement with fans, doesn’t help churn, doesn’t merchandise great music and professional artists.”

When UMG rolled out a new royalty system with Deezer in September, the streaming service said it would replace “non-artist noise content” with its own functional music, while also excluding this audio from the royalty pool. “The sound of rain or a washing machine is not as valuable as a song from your favorite artist streamed in HiFi,” Deezer CEO Jeronimo Folgueira said. Deezer said plays of rain, washing machines and other non-music noise content counts for roughly 2% of all streams.

Spotify did not provide a comparable number in its blog post. It is taking one other step to limit the impact of functional content on the royalty pool: To generate royalties, a functional audio track must be longer than two minutes.

“These policies will right-size the revenue opportunity for noise uploaders,” Spotify wrote. “Currently, the opportunity is so large that uploaders flood streaming services with undifferentiated noise recordings, hoping to attract enough search traffic to generate royalties.”