After a devastating winter storm in Texas this week, almost three million homes and businesses are still without power on Wednesday (Feb. 17).

Due to the state’s coldest temperatures in decades, burst pipes and power outages at treatment plants have caused water restrictions and a number of deaths as residents struggle to keep warm.

According to to Vice, carbon monoxide poisoning cases have skyrocketed as people began using barbecue pits, generators and their cars to heat up. “With that number of patients going in, it’s turning into a mini mass casualty event,” Dr. Samuel Prater, an emergency room physician at Memorial Hermann Texas Medical Center, told the Houston Chronicle.

As hot water and power outages continue to cause desperation in Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi and surrounding areas — just days before a second storm is expected to hit — celebrities have taken to social media to share prayers and resources to help.

See below.

Donald Glover is on the move.

Sources tell The Hollywood Reporter that the Atlanta multihyphenate has exited his pact with Disney-owned FX for a multiple-year, eight-figure overall deal with Amazon. The pact is believed to include a content channel of sorts that will spotlight Glover’s work and other curated content on Amazon’s Prime Video hub. Additionally, Stephen Glover — who wrote and produced on Atlanta alongside his brother — has also signed an overall deal with Amazon.

Amazon declined comment.

The news comes days after Glover announced that he and Fleabag favorite Phoebe Waller-Bridge would be creating, starring and exec producing an update of New Regency’s Brad Pitt-Angelina Jolie feature Mr. and Mrs. Smith.

The Amazon deal, which has been in the works for weeks, will also see Glover exec produce other projects for the retail giant and streamer. Sources note one such project is already beginning to come together: a potential series called Hive, which is rumored to revolve around a Beyonce-like figure and stem from writer Janine Nabers (Watchmen, Away). The project has already begun staffing a writers room, with sources noting Malia Obama is among those recruited to work on the series. (Additional details were not readily available; Amazon declined comment on Hive, too.)

Glover’s move to Amazon will not impact FX’s critical darling Atlanta. The award-winning comedy has already been renewed for seasons three and four and, per sources, will begin production in March. Both seasons will be filmed back-to-back in a bid to return the comedy to the air as soon as possible. The series last aired in May 2018. The show’s future beyond season four has not yet been determined as Glover is said to have a carve out to continue work on Atlanta should that be something he wants to do.

The production schedule for Atlanta will also help clear up Glover’s schedule as he announced that Mr. and Mrs. Smith would be arriving in 2022 on Amazon.Glover is repped by WME.

This article was originally published by The Hollywood Reporter.

Paris Hilton received a special gift for her 40th birthday: an engagement.

Hilton announced her engagement to entrepreneur Carter Reum in a social media post on Wednesday (Feb. 17) — the same day as her birthday. She said on her website that the proposal was everything she had “dreamed of.”

Hilton said she and Reum took a pre-dinner walk on the beach before he dropped to one knee at a cabana with flowers. She said the proposal was followed by a celebration with family and close friends.

“There’s no one I’d rather spend forever with,” she said in the post.

Hilton shared a series of photos with her wearing a white dress and crown, while 40-year-old Reum sported an all-white suit.

The couple have been dating since 2019.

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The Mechanical Licensing Collective (MLC) has received a total of $424,384,787 in accrued historical unmatched royalties from digital service providers (DSPs), the organization announced Monday (Feb. 16). The MLC was also provided with corresponding data reports that identify the usage related to those royalties.

Also known as “black box” money, unmatched royalties are mechanical royalties that have yet to be distributed by streaming services because a composition’s owners could not be determined. Under the landmark 2018 Music Modernization Act (MMA) legislation, the MLC has a responsibility to match and distribute these unmatched mechanical royalties to rights holders within two years. After that period, it has the option of distributing any remaining unmatched money to music publishers on a market share basis.

The amount reported by the MLC is at the high end of Billboard’s previous estimate that DSPs would turn over between $250 million and $450 million in unmatched royalties to the organization. The money came from a total of 20 DSPs and was a requirement in order for DSPs to benefit from the MMA’s limitation on liability for past infringement relating to mechanical rights for uses before Jan. 1, 2019.

The highest amount of unmatched royalties came from Apple Music, which contributed over $163 million of the total, followed by Spotify, which contributed over $152 million. Elsewhere, more than $42 million came from Amazon Music and over $32 million came from Google/YouTube. These MLC payouts do not include money previously paid out in legal settlements.

In a statement regarding the transfer, Garrett Levin, representative of the Digital Licensee Coordinator (DLC) — which represents streaming services in the new mechanical licensing system — said, “Today marks a critical milestone in the new mechanical licensing regime established by the Music Modernization Act (MMA) two years ago. As announced by The Mechanical Licensing Collective (The MLC), 20 digital music providers (DMPs) transferred a combined $424.4 million in historical unmatched royalties and accompanying historical usage information, representing the remaining royalties that have been unpaid to copyright owners after years of concerted effort by the streaming services and their partners. These royalties are a small fraction of the overall mechanical royalties that have been paid out during that time period.”

Levin continued, “The MLC now has in one centralized operation the usage data and corresponding royalties that are critical components for delivering on the promise of the MMA and allowing The MLC to meet its commitment to efficiently and effectively distribute royalties to those who have earned them.”

In his own statement, National Music Publishers Association (NMPA) president & CEO David Israelite added, “Songwriters and music publishers have for years fought to ensure they were paid accurately and fully by digital streaming services. ‘Unmatched money’ has plagued the industry and today, thanks to the Music Modernization Act (MMA), we know that it amounts to just under $425 million – not including money previously paid out in multiple million dollar settlements. This significant amount proves just how broken the system was, how much the MMA was needed, and how much songwriters have to benefit from the protections it has put in place. At long last, that money can make its way to its rightful owners. This is a massive win for music creators and the streaming services themselves. The Mechanical Licensing Collective (MLC) obtaining this historically unmatched money, doing the research to find its owners, and giving copyright owners a transparent process to claim what is theirs is exciting progress that paves the way for the future growth of streaming that will benefit the entire industry.”

Songwriters of North America also issued a statement, saying the organization is pleased to see the MMA begin to take effect. “This money will now be matched and find its way to the rightful songwriters and publishers that earned these royalties,” sad Michelle Lewis, SONA executive director. “We encourage all SONA members, along with every songwriter, to go to theMLC.com to learn how they are eligible to join or participate, which is critical to ensuring every writer who earned this money gets their fair share of these royalties.

Though the MMA made streaming services’ obligation to transfer unmatched royalties to the MLC clear, how to calculate them has been a source of contention. Among the disputed points is whether unmatched royalties already paid out through either legal settlements or direct “voluntary” licensing agreements between the streaming services and publishers should be deducted from the amount of unmatched royalties DSPs are required to hand over.

Both the MLC and the National Music Publishers Association (NMPA) — which settled a putative class action with Spotify in 2017 — claim the previous legal settlements shouldn’t count as royalty payments, but rather as payments for a release of liability for copyright infringement. Streaming services, meanwhile, argue that the settlement money paid out to publishers “de-obligated” those amounts and that they should thereby not be categorized as “accrued.”

After being asked to rule on the issue by the DLC, the Copyright Office issued a regulation on Jan. 11 that laid out how services should calculate what they owed but refrained from determining whether prior settlement payments should count as accrued royalties.

Going forward, the MLC will provide further information on historical unmatched royalties via a newly-created page on its website, theMLC.com.

Scooter Braun has been approached by former TikTok CEO and Disney honcho Kevin Mayer to acquire Braun’s company, Ithaca Holdings, though a source tells Billboard talks haven’t progressed beyond that initial overture.

Mayer has been in the process of raising money alongside former Disney COO Tom Staggs to form a new venture and has backing from Blackstone, which is expected to invest a minimum of $2 billion, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Mayer and Staggs are expected to focus on acquiring a portfolio of companies spanning music, entertainment, e-commerce and social media.

Braun, the SB Ventures founder and manager to A-list artists including Ariana Grande and Justin Bieber, made headlines in June 2019 when Ithaca purchased Taylor Swift’s former record label Big Machine for a reported $300 million. That led Swift to speak out against the acquisition, claiming Braun had engaged in “incessant, manipulative bullying” of her over a period of several years. Last November, Ithaca sold Swift’s master recordings to Shamrock Holdings, again drawing the pop star’s ire. Swift has since begun the process of re-recording her first six albums, with the first of them, Fearless, set to drop Apr. 9.

In addition to Big Machine, Ithaca’s music holdings include Schoolboy Records and the Universal Music Publishing Group co-venture Sheba Publishing.