Avex Music Group and S10 Entertainment have unveiled a new round of executive appointments to fuel global growth and revealed a new East/West Coast structure for both companies.

The appointments, announced by CEO Brandon Silverstein on Thursday (Oct. 16), include:

  • Zeke Silvera as senior vp/head of East Coast operations/head of A&R. In the role, Silvera will focus on strategy across artist development, studios and marketing while also leading S10’s producer and writer management functions from Avex’s New York headquarters.
  • Spencer Leboff as senior vp/head of West Coast operations and publishing & acquisitions. Leboff will oversee West Coast operations from Avex’s new West Hollywood, Calif., headquarters, which includes two studio houses and creative offices for A&R, marketing and S10 management.
  • Megan Timko as head of operations for Avex and S10, overseeing day-to-day execution and infrastructure.
  • Jessica Roxana and Claudi Schumann, who will oversee marketing for Avex and S10.
  • Tay James (a longtime A&R for Justin Bieber) and Miles Beard (former head of A&R at Republic Records) as senior A&R consultants at Avex’s publishing division.
  • Rory Sever, who was promoted to chief of staff.

All of the newly-appointed executives join the current leadership at Avex, including Justin Hunter (vp of corporate), Nevin Sanitsky (director of A&R in the Avex publishing division), Ryan Kamada (CFO), Brennen Bryant (senior director of A&R in the publishing division) and Hajime Hirada (senior manager of A&R international in the publishing division).

“As we continue to expand our operations in the U.S. and globally, this team will be instrumental in advancing our mission to sign and develop the world’s most successful songwriters, producers, and artists, while growing Avex and S10’s influence on a truly global scale,” said Silverstein in a statement. “While we’re leading from the U.S., our focus is international — building a world-class roster, expanding into key markets around the world, and pursuing strategic partnerships and acquisitions that will further strengthen our creative ecosystem. Already in 2025, we’ve celebrated multiple No. 1 records and major success with talent like Grant Boutin (Tate McRae), Elkan (Drake, Rihanna), Elyas (Drake), Harv (Justin Bieber), Kamal Wilson (Kehlani), Shenseea, and many others. We’re just getting started.”

Silverstein was named CEO of Avex Music Group in March. Since that time, the company has enjoyed successes for clients including songwriter/producer Grant Boutin, who worked on Tate McRae‘s Billboard 200 chart-topping album So Close to What; recently signed producers Elkan (Drake‘s “Nokia”) and Elyas (Drake’s “What Did I Miss?”); and singer Shenseea, who recently scored a Billboard Rhythmic Airplay No. 1 hit with “Shake It to the Max (FLY)” alongside MOLIY, Silent Addy and Skillibeng. Recent signings also include Justin Bieber’s touring band We the Band and songwriter Kamal Wilson (Kehlani‘s “Folded”).


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Two Avenged Sevenfold superfans who were held hostage in Gaza during the two-year Israel-Hamas war, expressed their gratitude on Wednesday (Oct. 15) for a message of support and love from the hard rock band’s singer, M. Shadows.

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Evyatar David and Guy Gilboa-Dalal were both taken hostage on Oct. 7, 2023 while attending the Nova Music Festival in Israel and released this week as part of a ceasefire deal brokered by President Trump. During their captivity, the childhood friends reportedly bonded over their love of the “Nightmare” band’s music, prompting singer Shadows to send them a video message welcoming them home after an A7X Israeli fan group contacted the band about the men’s plight.

“Evyatar and Guy, I”m so excited to hear you guys are home today. We’ve been following the story closely. We knew you guys were devoted A7X fans and we appreciate it so much. The things you guys have been through, it’s just unspeakable, terrible,” Shadows said in the video.

“Hopefully we see you guys soon,” Shadows added. “Be safe. Spend time with your family. Get some rest and hopefully we can see you guys soon. Welcome home. Glad you guys are ok.”

In a response video shared by the A7X Israel group, Gilboa-Dalal watches Shadow’s video in disbelief, smiling and laughing. “No! ‘See you soon’!,” he says in amazement from what looks like a hospital room. When his brother notes that Shadows is “waiting for you,” Gilboa-Dalal says “no way… do you think he would meet me?”

His brother then says “why not?” and promises to try to make the meeting happen as Gilboa-Dalal insists that they show the clip to David as well. “I’m in shock,” Gilboa-Dalal says. “Yesterday we listened to their songs. It was overwhelming. It was so much better than imagining it for two years.” When his brother notes that the two former captives spent one of their first nights of freedom listening to their favorite band, Gilboa-Dalal says, “It felt like my soul had left my body. I’m not even joking. I can’t believe he made this video!”

The clip ends with footage of the two men post-release sitting side-by-side as they play air guitar to an A7X song.

Monday’s deal saw the return of 20 living Israeli hostages and the beginning of the repatriation of the bodies of the 28 dead captives who were held in Gaza during the devastating war as part of a ceasefire deal that, at press time, appeared to be holding.


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Spotify is partnering with Sony Music Group, Universal Music Group, Warner Music Group, Merlin and Believe on “artist-first” AI music tools, according to a blog post from Spotify. Little is known about what generative AI models will come out of this partnership but the post notes that the company has “already begun work on the first product” and that these forthcoming AI products will “empower the artists and songwriters they represent and connect them with the fans who support them.”

As part of the announcement, Spotify is touting four principles that it will follow with its AI models to “put artists and songwriters” first.

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It reads as follows:

  • Partnerships with record labels, distributors, and music publishers: We’ll develop new products for artists and fans through upfront agreements, not by asking for forgiveness later.
  • Choice in participation: We recognize there’s a wide range of views on use of generative music tools within the artistic community. Therefore, artists and rightsholders will choose if and how to participate to ensure the use of AI tools aligns with the values of the people behind the music.
  • Fair compensation and new revenue: We will build products that create wholly new revenue streams for rightsholders, artists, and songwriters, ensuring they are properly compensated for uses of their work and transparently credited for their contributions.
  • Artist-fan connection: AI tools we develop will not replace human artistry. They will give artists new ways to be creative and connect with fans. We will leverage our role as the place where more than 700 million people already come to listen to music every month to ensure that generative AI deepens artist-fan connections.

To create these forthcoming models, Spotify says in its blog post that it has started building a state-of-the-art generative AI research lab and product team.

The news comes just weeks after Spotify announced that it was strengthening its policies on negative use cases of AI-generated music. This includes updates to its spam, impersonation and content mismatch policies, among others. The streaming service also recently announced an integration with ChatGPT, allowing users to better personalize their song and podcast recommendations.

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See below for comments from top music industry executives on the new agreement:

Alex Norström, co-president and chief business officer at Spotify: “Technology should always serve artists, not the other way around. Our focus at Spotify is making sure innovation supports artists by protecting their rights, respecting their creative choices, and creating new ways for fans to discover and enjoy the music they love.”

Gustav Söderström, co-president and chief product and technology officer at Spotify: “AI is the most consequential technology shift since the smartphone, and it’s already reshaping how music is created and experienced. At Spotify, we want to build this future hand in hand with the music industry, guided by clear principles and deep respect for creators, just as we did in the days of piracy. Our company brings deep research expertise to this opportunity and we’re actively growing our AI team and capabilities to drive the continued growth of the entire music ecosystem.”

Rob Stringer, chairman of Sony Music Group: “We are pleased to be collaborating with Spotify to develop responsible generative AI offerings that broaden opportunities for artists and songwriters, whilst enhancing the music experience for fans. This is an acknowledgement that direct licensing in advance of launching new products is the only appropriate way to build them and demonstrates how a properly functioning market benefits everyone in the ecosystem and fuels innovation. We appreciate and applaud Spotify’s leadership at this critical period.”

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Sir Lucian Grainge, chairman & CEO of Universal Music Group: “For several years we’ve been driving initiatives with our partners to put artists at the center of the conversation about Gen AI and have struck Artist-Centric agreements that establish innovative new vehicles to unlock the opportunities presented by this revolutionary technology.  I commend Daniel, Alex and Gustav on taking these critical steps forward to advance this approach.  It is essential that we work with strategic partners such as Spotify to enable Gen AI products within a thriving commercial landscape in which artists, songwriters, fans, music companies and technology companies can all flourish.”

Robert Kyncl, CEO of Warner Music Group: “We’ve been consistently focused on making sure AI works for artists and songwriters, not against them. That means collaborating with partners who understand the necessity for new AI licensing deals that protect and compensate rightsholders and the creative community. We support Spotify’s thoughtful AI guardrails, and welcome the opportunity to pioneer the future together.”

Charlie Lexton, COO of Merlin: “Merlin’s approach to the use of AI in music is straightforward. We actively look for partners who respect and value copyright, respect and value artists and want to enrich, not displace, the creative community. Spotify’s principles on AI announced today demonstrate that same commitment. We are excited to work together to ensure these principles translate into products that genuinely enhance the creative and commercial eco-system – for the benefit of our independent members, their artists and their fans.”

Denis Ladegaillerie, founder and CEO of Believe: “At Believe, we have always seen two sides to AI and GenAI. On the one side is ‘responsible AI,’ focused on artist and copyright protection, guided by our four principles of consent, control, compensation, and transparency. On the other side is ‘value-creative AI,’ innovations that place artists and their careers at the center, empowering creativity, accelerating music discovery, and deepening fan engagement. After supporting Spotify’s recent initiatives to strengthen AI protections, we are now thrilled to partner with Spotify to co-develop ‘value-creative AI’ tools that will fuel artist development and unlock new creative and commercial opportunities.”

After the release of a series of shocking passages from ex-husband Kevin Federline‘s upcoming memoir were published this week, Britney Spears responded on Wednesday night (Oct. 15) in a lengthy post in which she slammed the father of her two sons over his claims about her parenting.

“The constant gaslighting from ex-husband is extremely hurtful and exhausting,” Spears, 43, wrote. “I have always pleaded and screamed to have a life with my boys. Relationships with teenage boys is complex. I have felt demoralized by this situation and have always asked and almost begged for them to be a part of my life.”

In excerpts from You Thought You Knew that were published by the New York Times earlier this week, Federline, 47, claims that their son allegedly woke up one night to find Spears standing in the doorway holding a knife. Elsewhere, the former Spears back-up dancer claims that Spears drank wine while she was pregnant and did cocaine when she was breastfeeding.

While Spears did not directly confront those allegations in her post, she did hit out at Federline for what she claimed was the way he allegedly speaks about her to their children, sons Jayden, 19, and Preston, 20, while lamenting the lack of contact she’s had with the boys over the past decade-plus. “Sadly, they have always witnessed the lack of respect shown by own father for me. They need to take responsibility for themselves. With one son only seeing me for 45 min in the past 5 years and the other with only 4 visits in the past 5 years. I have pride too. From now on I will let them know when I am available,” she wrote.

As for the claims in the memoir, Spears referred to them as “those white lies in that book, they are going straight to the bank and I am the only one who genuinely gets hurt here. I will always love them and if you really know me, you won’t pay attention to the tabloids of my mental health and drinking.”

Spears and Federline were married in Sept. 2004 and singer filed for divorce two years later. Federline told The Hollywood Reporter this week that the couple’s sons were, “100 percent behind me telling my story,” describing their relationship with their mother as “fluid and they do talk. They’ve even gone and seen her and stuff.” In 2023, the boys moved to Hawaii with Federline, who was granted full custody of them during Spears 13-year conservatorship.

Though Spears lamented over the years that she rarely, if ever, got to see her sons, during Christmas 2024 she gleefully shared that she was able to spend time with Jayden after a long period apart. “Best Christmas of my life !!! I haven’t seen my boys in 2 years !!!” she wrote on Instagram at the time. “Tears of joy and literally in shock everyday koo koo crazy so in love and blessed !!! I’m speechless thank you Jesus !!!” Earlier this year Spears also posted some other pics of her with Jayden.

While Federline told THR that all he wants for Britney is “for her to be happy and healthy” and to be able to spend time with their children,” Spears’ team released a strongly worded statement slamming the book, which also alleges that Spears partied with Lindsay Lohan and Paris Hilton while her sons cried. “With news from Kevin’s book breaking, once again he and others are profiting off her and sadly it comes after child support has ended with Kevin. All she cares about are her kids, Sean Preston and Jayden James and their well-being during this sensationalism. She detailed her journey in her memoir,” read the statement.

Speaking to US Weekly on Wednesday, Federline denied that the book is a cash grab. “Money’s not the root of this thing,” he said. “I feel like, if she has the right to tell her story, Why don’t I?” Spears released her own memoir, The Woman in Me, in 2023, in which she detailed her relationship with first love Justin Timberlake, as well as her marriage to Federline and the impact of her conservatorship.

Among the other allegations in Federline’s book is a claim that on the night before his wedding to Spears she called Timberlake and that he caught her “full-on making out” with a female backup dancer during a night out in Amsterdam in 2004 on her Onxy Hotel Tour just weeks after the couple began dating.

In the Times excerpts, Federline said he worries about his ex’s well-being and questions whether the 2021 termination of her conservatorship — put in place in 2008 to manage her personal and professional affairs following a series of concerning mental health episodes — was the right choice. “The truth is, this situation with Britney feels like it’s racing toward something irreversible,” Federline writes in the book.

“It’s become impossible to pretend everything’s OK,” he adds. “From where I sit, the clock is ticking, and we’re getting close to the 11th hour. Something bad is going to happen if things don’t change, and my biggest fear is that our sons will be left holding the pieces.”

Spears’ post ended with the singer — who has claimed that she has no interest in returning to performing or recording music — saying that she is living her life exactly as she wishes now. “I am actually a pretty intelligent woman who has been trying to live a sacred and private life the past 5 years,” she wrote. “I speak on this because I have had enough and any real woman would do the same.”


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Anti Social Camp, which has previously been described as “SXSW for songwriters,” has unveiled the line-up for its maiden U.K. festival.

Taking place at north London creative hub Tileyard next month (Nov. 3-7), the free, four-day event will connect artists, songwriters and producers from across the globe, with the intention of giving them space to write and collaborate on new material.

Over the past five years, the Anti Social Camp has taken place in New York City, welcoming the likes of Nile Rodgers, Jacob Collier, Ava Max, Cigarettes After Sex, Cash Cobian and more along the way. Its more recent edition saw over 200 artists participating in recording sessions at 40 studios, as well as 10 public-facing events across the city.

Having established itself as a songwriting camp that doubles as a festival, Anti Social Camp’s inaugural expansion into the U.K. market will play host to some of the nation’s most prolific songwriters. 

PinkPantheress, Glass Animals frontman Dave Bayley, Jamie Cullum, and Billy Bragg have all signed up to take part in sessions at Tileyard. They will be joined by The Wanted’s Nathan Sykes, Parson James and Nicholas Petricca of WALK THE MOON, as well as a further 200 artists, who will be announced ahead of the event.

“While Anti Social Camp began in New York City, we’ve heard from creatives across the globe over the last five years who are hungry to unite with their community in person – making records and connecting with industry in the same place at the same time,” said Danny Ross, founder of Anti Social Camp, in a press release.

“We’re thrilled to announce our first ever expansion – Anti Social Camp U.K. presented by Tileyard,” he added. “Beyond recording hundreds of new songs, Anti Social Camp is a forum to interact with every sector of the music industry and shape the future we want to see as creators. Now we begin our work across the pond.” 

Since it opened in early 2011, Tileyard has become home to some of the U.K.’s most influential labels, publishers and hitmakers, as well as the HQ for trade association BPI. There are currently 150 recording studios across its campus. 

“When Danny contacted me about the opportunity to work together on the first ever Anti Social Camp outside of New York, I was very excited,” said Michael Harwood, Tileyard co-founder. “Tileyard is home to an amazing music community and is no stranger to running successful songwriting camps, so we immediately leapt at the opportunity to collaborate!”

Presenting partners for Anti Social Camp U.K. 2025 include TIDAL, Splice, TikTok, Believe Music Publishing, PRS, Bonza Music, Distrokid, Sound Royalties, Songtrust, SoundExchange, Jubel, Groover, Two Tribes, Muse, Tileyard Music, Tileyard Education, TYX Studios and Tileyard London. 

Venue partners include Samsung Kx, Colours Hoxton, One Hundred Shoreditch, Spiritland, The Victoria Dalston and Sensible Music. War Child UK, meanwhile, have been confirmed as the charity partner for the festival. 

A full camp itinerary is expected to be announced in the coming weeks. Organisers say there were 10,000 applications for Anti Social Camp U.K., with 200 artists selected.

Ninajirachi‘s breakthrough year continues with a red-hot chance to win the coveted Australian Music Prize.

The Australian singer and songwriter’s debut full length album I Love My Computer (via NLV Records) is one of nine titles shortlisted for the 2025 AMP, awarded to the outstanding Australian album of original work from the previous year, as decided by a music industry panel.

When the album dropped in August, the rising EDM star was named Billboard Dance “Rookie of the Month”. Next month, the 26-year-old songwriter, producer, DJ and artist (real name: Nina Wilson) will compete for a leading eight trophies at the annual ARIA Awards, where she’s nominated for album of the year, best solo artist, the Michael Gudinski breakthrough artist, best independent release, best dance/electronic release and more.

Also shortlisted for the AMP are LPs by Tropical F*** Storm, Folk B**** Trio, Mudrat, and others released during the period Oct. 1, 2025 to Sept. 30, 2026.

Now celebrating its 21st year and modeled on the U.K.’s Mercury Prize, the AMP is recognized as the most prestigious Australian award for the album format.

The initial judging process whittled down the longlist of 465 eligible albums to 50 nominees, focusing on creative merit over mainstream popularity. The winner will be announced Nov. 6, and will collect A$50,000 in prize money, courtesy of headline sponsor Soundmerch.

Previous winners include efforts by The Avalanches, Sampa the Great (twice), Gurrumul, A.B. Original, Courtney Barnett and last year’s recipient, Kankawa Nagarra for Wirlmarni.

Soundmerch Australian Music Prize 2025:

Bleak Squad — Strange Love

Divide And Dissolve — Insatiable

Floodlights — Underneath

Folk B**** Trio — Now Would Be A Good Time

Mia Wray Hi — It’s Nice To Meet 

Mudrat Social — Cohesion

NinajirachiI Love My Computer

Ruby Gill — Some Kind Of Control

Tropical F*ck Storm — Fairyland Codex

For just over a decade, Sam Smith has been extremely, unquestionably popular. Between their billions of streams, seven Billboard Hot 100 top 10 hits and five Grammy Awards, the English singer-songwriter has routinely sold out global arena tours, bringing their somber singing voice to massive crowds around the world.

Yet on Wednesday night (Oct. 15), Smith was not singing to a roaring crowd of 20,000 inside of a massive arena. Standing on the stage at Warsaw, the unassuming concert hall in Brooklyn’s Greenpoint neighborhood, Smith peered out at a crowd of mere hundreds. And they looked thrilled.

“I have been touring so much, since the age of 21. I went from playing in venues of this size to playing in arenas in one year — it was really f–king intense,” they told the hushed audience. “I stayed in those arenas for nearly 10 years, and it was a really amazing experience, and I love singing in those rooms … but my favorite shows, and the ones that changed me as an artist were the gigs that were shared in rooms like this, that are built for music.”

It’s fitting, then, that “built for music” could have been the tagline for Wednesday night’s edition of Smith’s To Be Free: New York City residency at Warsaw. Spanning a whopping 24 dates at the trusted local concert hall, the new show sees Smith pulling down the artistic scaffolding that they’ve constructed over the last decade and change. There’s no gimmicks, no glitz, no sets, no costumes; just Sam Smith, a small live band and their larger-than-life voice.

Over the course of two hours, Smith ran the gamut of their catalog, weaving in unreleased songs that fans haven’t had the chance to hear yet, covers of pop classics from throughout history and well-loved B-sides, while also making sure to give their eager audience the hits that they came to hear. Below, Billboard takes a look at the five best moments from Sam Smith’s remarkable, intimate performamce:


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SYDNEY, Australia — AC/DC, digital streaming and that loveable blue heeler Bluey helped push APRA AMCOS’s full-year revenue and distributions into unchartered territory.

The Australasian rights organization this week posted revenue of A$787.9 million for 2024-25, up 6.5% from the previous financial year, with net distributable revenue at A$683.4 million, up 7.8% year-on-year, also an all-time result.

For the reporting period, the group’s expense to revenue ratio was reduced to 13.26% from 14.32%.

Based on recent results, the A$800 million revenue milestone should be crushed in the next annual report, and the magical A$1 billion figure is on the near horizon.

Presented this week during the third annual SXSW Sydney, APRA AMCOS’s Year In Review is broadly solid, and perhaps spectacular, certainly for Subscription Video on Demand, which includes Netflix, Disney+, and Apple TV, the “standout” category that grew by 15.7% to A$88.2 million, fueled by increases in subscription charges and a rising base of subscribers.

Digital was the juggernaut for APRA AMCOS, generating A$404.3 million, up 9.5%, while business for public performance, lifted by 1.1% to A$133.9 million.

Australian crowds came out for local superstars Cold Chisel, Dom Dolla, Kylie Minogue, and The Kid LAROI, and for major international artists Coldplay, Luke Combs and Pearl Jam.

Music “exports” was another strong suit. Homegrown songwriters and composers are “still hitting the big time globally,” notes APRA AMCOS, pointing to AC/DC’s Power Up European tour to Bluey‘s flying high antics in the U.S. for helping lift international revenue to A$98.8 million, up 14.8% year-on-year.

One painful point, however, is the ongoing evaporation of streaming revenue from local content, despite the clamor to streaming platforms in full year 2025. Revenue from television and radio licensing dipped, too.

Consumption of music in Australia, both on music streaming and User Generated Content (UGC) services, has grown by 50% since FY21, though, “alarmingly,” the percentage of consumption that relates to local songwriter and composer content in that same period has declined by 31% to just 9.5% of total music streaming over the past five years, APRA AMCOS reports, and 25.4% in UGC over the past three years.

The results “reflect our focus on service – growing revenue across every channel, sharpening operational efficiency, deploying smart technology that works for our business and members, delivering meaningful creative programs and celebrating our members’ incredible success,” comments Dean Ormston, CEO of APRA AMCOS.

“They also confirm what we already know: Australians and New Zealanders are world-leading music fans. We consume more music per capita than almost anywhere else on the planet, yet the ability for our members to be seen and heard is becoming more difficult every year.”

Aussies are “hearing and discovering less local music,” reads a statement from the PRO, a reality that was brought into sharp focus with the full-year ARIA Charts for 2024, and triple j’s Hottest 100, both of which were dominated by trans-Atlantic artists.

The sharp “collapse” in clicks for local content on streaming platforms over five years “isn’t happening because our music isn’t good enough, and our surging export revenues prove our artists are among the best in the world,” Ormston continues. “They’re writing hits, filling venues internationally and competing at the highest level. The talent is undeniable. Our platforms are borderless, but algorithms favour scale and international repertoire dominate by default.”

APRA AMCOS represents more than 128,000 songwriters, composers and music publisher members. Splitting the bodies, APRA passed the half-billion-dollar figure for the first time with revenue of A$521.3 million, up from A$498.6 million. AMCOS surpassed A$250 million for the first time, reporting A$266.6 million, up from A$241.4 million.

Read the full report at apraamcos.com.au/year-in-review.

Pras Michél has linked with Mark Wahlberg for a documentary focused on the Fugees founder’s life and ongoing spy trial.

As Michél faces 22 years behind bars following a 2023 conviction on 10 charges including conspiracy, Wahlberg has struck a deal with the musician-turned-politician to make a feature documentary on both the sprawling criminal case and his rise in the Fugees.

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“Everyone is fascinated by all the twists and turns, like it’s some kind of thriller,” Michél tells Variety, who broke the story. “But for me, this is just my life — the real, messy, complicated truth of what I’ve been living through.”

The film will be produced under Wahlberg’s Unrealistic Ideas banner and will investigate Michél’s musical legacy as well as the personal impact of navigating a high-profile legal proceeding that resulted in a jury finding him guilty on 10 counts, including conspiracy, witness tampering and failing to register as an unregistered foreign agent of China.

“I’m rooting for Pras and excited to tell his story,” Wahlberg told Variety. He’ll be creating the documentary alongside Unrealistic Ideas president Archie Gips, who called the story, “a surprising mix of pop culture and geopolitical intrigue that feels like a spy thriller come to life.”

Michél was first charged in the case in 2019 after he was accused of funneling money from fugitive Malaysian financier Jho Low through straw donors to Obama’s 2012 re-election campaign. He was also accused of trying to help scuttle a Justice Department investigation into an extradition case on behalf of China during Trump’s first term.