Game of Thrones' Final Season Has a Launch Date
Happy Monday, and welcome to another installment of The Monitor, WIRED's roundup of the latest in the world of culture. In today's news, HBO has finally coughed up a release date for the final season of Game of Thrones, Netflix is facing a lawsuit, and it looks like the Super Bowl won't be marooned without a halftime show act.
Finally, a Date to Watch the Thrones
Always one to keep fans waiting in anticipation, HBO waited until three months out before to announce the launch date for Season 8 of Game of Thrones. Sunday night, just before the season premiere of True Detective, the network aired a teaser revealing that the epic fantasy's final run will begin on April 14. What will the show look like when it does return? Snowy, as the Stark children—Arya, Sansa, Jon Snow—are about to confront some family demons at Winterfell. Or, at least, that’s what it seems like if the show's new vague-as-hell-trailer is to be believed. Don't worry, we're sure plenty of third cousins you don't remember will show up as well. And maybe Ed Sheeran.
If You Want to Sue Netflix, Turn to Page Petty-Seven
In "Huh, didn't see that coming!" news—there's a lot of that these days, admittedly—Chooseco, the publisher behind the Choose Your Own Adventure books, is suing Netflix over its interactive Black Mirror episode, Bandersnatch. In the interactive episode, a young videogame programmer designs a game based on a "choose your own adventure" book, and the episode itself lets viewers make choices about what the characters will do in the story. Chooseco's suit claims it has the trademark to the phrase "choose your own adventure" and that Netflix doesn't have a license to use it. The company is seeking at least $25 million in damages, though it's also possible that if the judge doesn't like the way the arguments proceed, she'll just bang her gavel and restart things from an earlier point.
Hold Up, Is That Adam Levine?!
After Rihanna, Adele, Jay-Z, and others reportedly passed on the gig, the NFL announced Sunday that Maroon 5 will be playing the halftime show at this year's Super Bowl. The band—along with Big Boi and Travis Scott, who are joining them in hopes of stemming a mass Puppy Bowl exodus—will bring their Jagger-like moves to Atlanta's Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on February 3. And while he's not part of the proceedings, we can only hope A$AP Ferg is nearby, his long quest at an end.